1.\" Copyright (c) 1990, 1991, 1993 2.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by 5.\" Chris Torek and the American National Standards Committee X3, 6.\" on Information Processing Systems. 7.\" 8.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 9.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 10.\" are met: 11.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 12.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 13.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 14.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 15.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 16.\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 17.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 18.\" without specific prior written permission. 19.\" 20.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 21.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 22.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 23.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 24.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 25.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 26.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 27.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 28.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 29.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 30.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 31.\" 32.\" @(#)printf.3 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/4/93 33.\" $FreeBSD: head/lib/libc/stdio/printf.3 303524 2016-07-30 01:00:16Z bapt $ 34.\" 35.Dd August 31, 2016 36.Dt PRINTF 3 37.Os 38.Sh NAME 39.Nm printf , 40.Nm fprintf , 41.Nm sprintf , 42.Nm snprintf , 43.Nm asprintf , 44.Nm dprintf , 45.Nm vprintf , 46.Nm vfprintf , 47.Nm vsprintf , 48.Nm vsnprintf , 49.Nm vasprintf , 50.Nm vdprintf 51.Nd formatted output conversion 52.Sh LIBRARY 53.Lb libc 54.Sh SYNOPSIS 55.In stdio.h 56.Ft int 57.Fn printf "const char * restrict format" ... 58.Ft int 59.Fn fprintf "FILE * restrict stream" "const char * restrict format" ... 60.Ft int 61.Fn sprintf "char * restrict str" "const char * restrict format" ... 62.Ft int 63.Fn snprintf "char * restrict str" "size_t size" "const char * restrict format" ... 64.Ft int 65.Fn asprintf "char **ret" "const char *format" ... 66.Ft int 67.Fn dprintf "int" "const char * restrict format" ... 68.In stdarg.h 69.Ft int 70.Fn vprintf "const char * restrict format" "va_list ap" 71.Ft int 72.Fn vfprintf "FILE * restrict stream" "const char * restrict format" "va_list ap" 73.Ft int 74.Fn vsprintf "char * restrict str" "const char * restrict format" "va_list ap" 75.Ft int 76.Fn vsnprintf "char * restrict str" "size_t size" "const char * restrict format" "va_list ap" 77.Ft int 78.Fn vasprintf "char **ret" "const char *format" "va_list ap" 79.Ft int 80.Fn vdprintf "int fd" "const char * restrict format" "va_list ap" 81.Sh DESCRIPTION 82The 83.Fn printf 84family of functions produces output according to a 85.Fa format 86as described below. 87The 88.Fn printf 89and 90.Fn vprintf 91functions 92write output to 93.Dv stdout , 94the standard output stream; 95.Fn fprintf 96and 97.Fn vfprintf 98write output to the given output 99.Fa stream ; 100.Fn dprintf 101and 102.Fn vdprintf 103write output to the given file descriptor; 104.Fn sprintf , 105.Fn snprintf , 106.Fn vsprintf , 107and 108.Fn vsnprintf 109write to the character string 110.Fa str ; 111and 112.Fn asprintf 113and 114.Fn vasprintf 115dynamically allocate a new string with 116.Xr malloc 3 . 117.Pp 118These functions write the output under the control of a 119.Fa format 120string that specifies how subsequent arguments 121(or arguments accessed via the variable-length argument facilities of 122.Xr stdarg 3 ) 123are converted for output. 124.Pp 125The 126.Fn asprintf 127and 128.Fn vasprintf 129functions 130set 131.Fa *ret 132to be a pointer to a buffer sufficiently large to hold the formatted string. 133This pointer should be passed to 134.Xr free 3 135to release the allocated storage when it is no longer needed. 136If sufficient space cannot be allocated, 137.Fn asprintf 138and 139.Fn vasprintf 140will return \-1 and set 141.Fa ret 142to be a 143.Dv NULL 144pointer. 145.Pp 146The 147.Fn snprintf 148and 149.Fn vsnprintf 150functions 151will write at most 152.Fa size Ns \-1 153of the characters printed into the output string 154(the 155.Fa size Ns 'th 156character then gets the terminating 157.Ql \e0 ) ; 158if the return value is greater than or equal to the 159.Fa size 160argument, the string was too short 161and some of the printed characters were discarded. 162The output is always null-terminated, unless 163.Fa size 164is 0. 165.Pp 166The 167.Fn sprintf 168and 169.Fn vsprintf 170functions 171effectively assume a 172.Fa size 173of 174.Dv INT_MAX 175+ 1. 176.Pp 177The format string is composed of zero or more directives: 178ordinary 179.\" multibyte 180characters (not 181.Cm % ) , 182which are copied unchanged to the output stream; 183and conversion specifications, each of which results 184in fetching zero or more subsequent arguments. 185Each conversion specification is introduced by 186the 187.Cm % 188character. 189The arguments must correspond properly (after type promotion) 190with the conversion specifier. 191After the 192.Cm % , 193the following appear in sequence: 194.Bl -bullet 195.It 196An optional field, consisting of a decimal digit string followed by a 197.Cm $ , 198specifying the next argument to access. 199If this field is not provided, the argument following the last 200argument accessed will be used. 201Arguments are numbered starting at 202.Cm 1 . 203If unaccessed arguments in the format string are interspersed with ones that 204are accessed the results will be indeterminate. 205.It 206Zero or more of the following flags: 207.Bl -tag -width ".So \ Sc (space)" 208.It Sq Cm # 209The value should be converted to an 210.Dq alternate form . 211For 212.Cm c , d , i , n , p , s , 213and 214.Cm u 215conversions, this option has no effect. 216For 217.Cm o 218conversions, the precision of the number is increased to force the first 219character of the output string to a zero. 220For 221.Cm x 222and 223.Cm X 224conversions, a non-zero result has the string 225.Ql 0x 226(or 227.Ql 0X 228for 229.Cm X 230conversions) prepended to it. 231For 232.Cm a , A , e , E , f , F , g , 233and 234.Cm G 235conversions, the result will always contain a decimal point, even if no 236digits follow it (normally, a decimal point appears in the results of 237those conversions only if a digit follows). 238For 239.Cm g 240and 241.Cm G 242conversions, trailing zeros are not removed from the result as they 243would otherwise be. 244.It So Cm 0 Sc (zero) 245Zero padding. 246For all conversions except 247.Cm n , 248the converted value is padded on the left with zeros rather than blanks. 249If a precision is given with a numeric conversion 250.Cm ( d , i , o , u , i , x , 251and 252.Cm X ) , 253the 254.Cm 0 255flag is ignored. 256.It Sq Cm \- 257A negative field width flag; 258the converted value is to be left adjusted on the field boundary. 259Except for 260.Cm n 261conversions, the converted value is padded on the right with blanks, 262rather than on the left with blanks or zeros. 263A 264.Cm \- 265overrides a 266.Cm 0 267if both are given. 268.It So "\ " Sc (space) 269A blank should be left before a positive number 270produced by a signed conversion 271.Cm ( a , A , d , e , E , f , F , g , G , 272or 273.Cm i ) . 274.It Sq Cm + 275A sign must always be placed before a 276number produced by a signed conversion. 277A 278.Cm + 279overrides a space if both are used. 280.It So "'" Sc (apostrophe) 281Decimal conversions 282.Cm ( d , u , 283or 284.Cm i ) 285or the integral portion of a floating point conversion 286.Cm ( f 287or 288.Cm F ) 289should be grouped and separated by thousands using 290the non-monetary separator returned by 291.Xr localeconv 3 . 292.El 293.It 294An optional decimal digit string specifying a minimum field width. 295If the converted value has fewer characters than the field width, it will 296be padded with spaces on the left (or right, if the left-adjustment 297flag has been given) to fill out 298the field width. 299.It 300An optional precision, in the form of a period 301.Cm \&. 302followed by an 303optional digit string. 304If the digit string is omitted, the precision is taken as zero. 305This gives the minimum number of digits to appear for 306.Cm d , i , o , u , x , 307and 308.Cm X 309conversions, the number of digits to appear after the decimal-point for 310.Cm a , A , e , E , f , 311and 312.Cm F 313conversions, the maximum number of significant digits for 314.Cm g 315and 316.Cm G 317conversions, or the maximum number of characters to be printed from a 318string for 319.Cm s 320conversions. 321.It 322An optional length modifier, that specifies the size of the argument. 323The following length modifiers are valid for the 324.Cm d , i , n , o , u , x , 325or 326.Cm X 327conversion: 328.Bl -column ".Cm q Em (deprecated)" ".Vt signed char" ".Vt unsigned long long" ".Vt long long *" 329.It Sy Modifier Ta Cm d , i Ta Cm o , u , x , X Ta Cm n 330.It Cm hh Ta Vt "signed char" Ta Vt "unsigned char" Ta Vt "signed char *" 331.It Cm h Ta Vt short Ta Vt "unsigned short" Ta Vt "short *" 332.It Cm l No (ell) Ta Vt long Ta Vt "unsigned long" Ta Vt "long *" 333.It Cm ll No (ell ell) Ta Vt "long long" Ta Vt "unsigned long long" Ta Vt "long long *" 334.It Cm j Ta Vt intmax_t Ta Vt uintmax_t Ta Vt "intmax_t *" 335.It Cm t Ta Vt ptrdiff_t Ta (see note) Ta Vt "ptrdiff_t *" 336.It Cm z Ta (see note) Ta Vt size_t Ta (see note) 337.It Cm q Em (deprecated) Ta Vt quad_t Ta Vt u_quad_t Ta Vt "quad_t *" 338.El 339.Pp 340Note: 341the 342.Cm t 343modifier, when applied to a 344.Cm o , u , x , 345or 346.Cm X 347conversion, indicates that the argument is of an unsigned type 348equivalent in size to a 349.Vt ptrdiff_t . 350The 351.Cm z 352modifier, when applied to a 353.Cm d 354or 355.Cm i 356conversion, indicates that the argument is of a signed type equivalent in 357size to a 358.Vt size_t . 359Similarly, when applied to an 360.Cm n 361conversion, it indicates that the argument is a pointer to a signed type 362equivalent in size to a 363.Vt size_t . 364.Pp 365The following length modifier is valid for the 366.Cm a , A , e , E , f , F , g , 367or 368.Cm G 369conversion: 370.Bl -column ".Sy Modifier" ".Cm a , A , e , E , f , F , g , G" 371.It Sy Modifier Ta Cm a , A , e , E , f , F , g , G 372.It Cm l No (ell) Ta Vt double 373(ignored, same behavior as without it) 374.It Cm L Ta Vt "long double" 375.El 376.Pp 377The following length modifier is valid for the 378.Cm c 379or 380.Cm s 381conversion: 382.Bl -column ".Sy Modifier" ".Vt wint_t" ".Vt wchar_t *" 383.It Sy Modifier Ta Cm c Ta Cm s 384.It Cm l No (ell) Ta Vt wint_t Ta Vt "wchar_t *" 385.El 386.It 387A character that specifies the type of conversion to be applied. 388.El 389.Pp 390A field width or precision, or both, may be indicated by 391an asterisk 392.Ql * 393or an asterisk followed by one or more decimal digits and a 394.Ql $ 395instead of a 396digit string. 397In this case, an 398.Vt int 399argument supplies the field width or precision. 400A negative field width is treated as a left adjustment flag followed by a 401positive field width; a negative precision is treated as though it was 402missing. 403If a single format directive mixes positional 404.Pq Li nn$ 405and non-positional arguments, the results are undefined. 406.Pp 407The conversion specifiers and their meanings are: 408.Bl -tag -width ".Cm diouxX" 409.It Cm diouxX 410The 411.Vt int 412(or appropriate variant) argument is converted to signed decimal 413.Cm ( d 414and 415.Cm i ) , 416unsigned octal 417.Pq Cm o , 418unsigned decimal 419.Pq Cm u , 420or unsigned hexadecimal 421.Cm ( x 422and 423.Cm X ) 424notation. 425The letters 426.Dq Li abcdef 427are used for 428.Cm x 429conversions; the letters 430.Dq Li ABCDEF 431are used for 432.Cm X 433conversions. 434The precision, if any, gives the minimum number of digits that must 435appear; if the converted value requires fewer digits, it is padded on 436the left with zeros. 437.It Cm DOU 438The 439.Vt "long int" 440argument is converted to signed decimal, unsigned octal, or unsigned 441decimal, as if the format had been 442.Cm ld , lo , 443or 444.Cm lu 445respectively. 446These conversion characters are deprecated, and will eventually disappear. 447.It Cm eE 448The 449.Vt double 450argument is rounded and converted in the style 451.Sm off 452.Oo \- Oc Ar d Li \&. Ar ddd Li e \(+- Ar dd 453.Sm on 454where there is one digit before the 455decimal-point character 456and the number of digits after it is equal to the precision; 457if the precision is missing, 458it is taken as 6; if the precision is 459zero, no decimal-point character appears. 460An 461.Cm E 462conversion uses the letter 463.Ql E 464(rather than 465.Ql e ) 466to introduce the exponent. 467The exponent always contains at least two digits; if the value is zero, 468the exponent is 00. 469.Pp 470For 471.Cm a , A , e , E , f , F , g , 472and 473.Cm G 474conversions, positive and negative infinity are represented as 475.Li inf 476and 477.Li -inf 478respectively when using the lowercase conversion character, and 479.Li INF 480and 481.Li -INF 482respectively when using the uppercase conversion character. 483Similarly, NaN is represented as 484.Li nan 485when using the lowercase conversion, and 486.Li NAN 487when using the uppercase conversion. 488.It Cm fF 489The 490.Vt double 491argument is rounded and converted to decimal notation in the style 492.Sm off 493.Oo \- Oc Ar ddd Li \&. Ar ddd , 494.Sm on 495where the number of digits after the decimal-point character 496is equal to the precision specification. 497If the precision is missing, it is taken as 6; if the precision is 498explicitly zero, no decimal-point character appears. 499If a decimal point appears, at least one digit appears before it. 500.It Cm gG 501The 502.Vt double 503argument is converted in style 504.Cm f 505or 506.Cm e 507(or 508.Cm F 509or 510.Cm E 511for 512.Cm G 513conversions). 514The precision specifies the number of significant digits. 515If the precision is missing, 6 digits are given; if the precision is zero, 516it is treated as 1. 517Style 518.Cm e 519is used if the exponent from its conversion is less than \-4 or greater than 520or equal to the precision. 521Trailing zeros are removed from the fractional part of the result; a 522decimal point appears only if it is followed by at least one digit. 523.It Cm aA 524The 525.Vt double 526argument is rounded and converted to hexadecimal notation in the style 527.Sm off 528.Oo \- Oc Li 0x Ar h Li \&. Ar hhhp Oo \(+- Oc Ar d , 529.Sm on 530where the number of digits after the hexadecimal-point character 531is equal to the precision specification. 532If the precision is missing, it is taken as enough to represent 533the floating-point number exactly, and no rounding occurs. 534If the precision is zero, no hexadecimal-point character appears. 535The 536.Cm p 537is a literal character 538.Ql p , 539and the exponent consists of a positive or negative sign 540followed by a decimal number representing an exponent of 2. 541The 542.Cm A 543conversion uses the prefix 544.Dq Li 0X 545(rather than 546.Dq Li 0x ) , 547the letters 548.Dq Li ABCDEF 549(rather than 550.Dq Li abcdef ) 551to represent the hex digits, and the letter 552.Ql P 553(rather than 554.Ql p ) 555to separate the mantissa and exponent. 556.Pp 557Note that there may be multiple valid ways to represent floating-point 558numbers in this hexadecimal format. 559For example, 560.Li 0x1.92p+1 , 0x3.24p+0 , 0x6.48p-1 , 561and 562.Li 0xc.9p-2 563are all equivalent. 564.Fx 8.0 565and later always prints finite non-zero numbers using 566.Ql 1 567as the digit before the hexadecimal point. 568Zeroes are always represented with a mantissa of 0 (preceded by a 569.Ql - 570if appropriate) and an exponent of 571.Li +0 . 572.It Cm C 573Treated as 574.Cm c 575with the 576.Cm l 577(ell) modifier. 578.It Cm c 579The 580.Vt int 581argument is converted to an 582.Vt "unsigned char" , 583and the resulting character is written. 584.Pp 585If the 586.Cm l 587(ell) modifier is used, the 588.Vt wint_t 589argument shall be converted to a 590.Vt wchar_t , 591and the (potentially multi-byte) sequence representing the 592single wide character is written, including any shift sequences. 593If a shift sequence is used, the shift state is also restored 594to the original state after the character. 595.It Cm S 596Treated as 597.Cm s 598with the 599.Cm l 600(ell) modifier. 601.It Cm s 602The 603.Vt "char *" 604argument is expected to be a pointer to an array of character type (pointer 605to a string). 606Characters from the array are written up to (but not including) 607a terminating 608.Dv NUL 609character; 610if a precision is specified, no more than the number specified are 611written. 612If a precision is given, no null character 613need be present; if the precision is not specified, or is greater than 614the size of the array, the array must contain a terminating 615.Dv NUL 616character. 617.Pp 618If the 619.Cm l 620(ell) modifier is used, the 621.Vt "wchar_t *" 622argument is expected to be a pointer to an array of wide characters 623(pointer to a wide string). 624For each wide character in the string, the (potentially multi-byte) 625sequence representing the 626wide character is written, including any shift sequences. 627If any shift sequence is used, the shift state is also restored 628to the original state after the string. 629Wide characters from the array are written up to (but not including) 630a terminating wide 631.Dv NUL 632character; 633if a precision is specified, no more than the number of bytes specified are 634written (including shift sequences). 635Partial characters are never written. 636If a precision is given, no null character 637need be present; if the precision is not specified, or is greater than 638the number of bytes required to render the multibyte representation of 639the string, the array must contain a terminating wide 640.Dv NUL 641character. 642.It Cm p 643The 644.Vt "void *" 645pointer argument is printed in hexadecimal (as if by 646.Ql %#x 647or 648.Ql %#lx ) . 649.It Cm n 650The number of characters written so far is stored into the 651integer indicated by the 652.Vt "int *" 653(or variant) pointer argument. 654No argument is converted. 655.It Cm % 656A 657.Ql % 658is written. 659No argument is converted. 660The complete conversion specification 661is 662.Ql %% . 663.El 664.Pp 665The decimal point 666character is defined in the program's locale (category 667.Dv LC_NUMERIC ) . 668.Pp 669In no case does a non-existent or small field width cause truncation of 670a numeric field; if the result of a conversion is wider than the field 671width, the 672field is expanded to contain the conversion result. 673.Sh RETURN VALUES 674These functions return the number of characters printed 675(not including the trailing 676.Ql \e0 677used to end output to strings), 678except for 679.Fn snprintf 680and 681.Fn vsnprintf , 682which return the number of characters that would have been printed if the 683.Fa size 684were unlimited 685(again, not including the final 686.Ql \e0 ) . 687These functions return a negative value if an error occurs. 688.Sh EXAMPLES 689To print a date and time in the form 690.Dq Li "Sunday, July 3, 10:02" , 691where 692.Fa weekday 693and 694.Fa month 695are pointers to strings: 696.Bd -literal -offset indent 697#include <stdio.h> 698fprintf(stdout, "%s, %s %d, %.2d:%.2d\en", 699 weekday, month, day, hour, min); 700.Ed 701.Pp 702To print \*(Pi 703to five decimal places: 704.Bd -literal -offset indent 705#include <math.h> 706#include <stdio.h> 707fprintf(stdout, "pi = %.5f\en", 4 * atan(1.0)); 708.Ed 709.Pp 710To allocate a 128 byte string and print into it: 711.Bd -literal -offset indent 712#include <stdio.h> 713#include <stdlib.h> 714#include <stdarg.h> 715char *newfmt(const char *fmt, ...) 716{ 717 char *p; 718 va_list ap; 719 if ((p = malloc(128)) == NULL) 720 return (NULL); 721 va_start(ap, fmt); 722 (void) vsnprintf(p, 128, fmt, ap); 723 va_end(ap); 724 return (p); 725} 726.Ed 727.Sh COMPATIBILITY 728The conversion formats 729.Cm \&%D , \&%O , 730and 731.Cm \&%U 732are not standard and 733are provided only for backward compatibility. 734The effect of padding the 735.Cm %p 736format with zeros (either by the 737.Cm 0 738flag or by specifying a precision), and the benign effect (i.e., none) 739of the 740.Cm # 741flag on 742.Cm %n 743and 744.Cm %p 745conversions, as well as other 746nonsensical combinations such as 747.Cm %Ld , 748are not standard; such combinations 749should be avoided. 750.Sh ERRORS 751In addition to the errors documented for the 752.Xr write 2 753system call, the 754.Fn printf 755family of functions may fail if: 756.Bl -tag -width Er 757.It Bq Er EILSEQ 758An invalid wide character code was encountered. 759.It Bq Er ENOMEM 760Insufficient storage space is available. 761.It Bq Er EOVERFLOW 762The 763.Fa size 764argument exceeds 765.Dv INT_MAX + 1 , 766or the return value would be too large to be represented by an 767.Vt int . 768.El 769.Sh SEE ALSO 770.Xr printf 1 , 771.Xr fmtcheck 3 , 772.Xr scanf 3 , 773.Xr setlocale 3 , 774.Xr wprintf 3 775.Sh STANDARDS 776Subject to the caveats noted in the 777.Sx BUGS 778section below, the 779.Fn fprintf , 780.Fn printf , 781.Fn sprintf , 782.Fn vprintf , 783.Fn vfprintf , 784and 785.Fn vsprintf 786functions 787conform to 788.St -ansiC 789and 790.St -isoC-99 . 791With the same reservation, the 792.Fn snprintf 793and 794.Fn vsnprintf 795functions conform to 796.St -isoC-99 , 797while 798.Fn dprintf 799and 800.Fn vdprintf 801conform to 802.St -p1003.1-2008 . 803.Sh HISTORY 804The functions 805.Fn asprintf 806and 807.Fn vasprintf 808first appeared in the 809.Tn GNU C 810library. 811These were implemented by 812.An Peter Wemm Aq Mt peter@FreeBSD.org 813in 814.Fx 2.2 , 815but were later replaced with a different implementation 816from 817.Ox 2.3 818by 819.An Todd C. Miller Aq Mt Todd.Miller@courtesan.com . 820The 821.Fn dprintf 822and 823.Fn vdprintf 824functions were added in 825.Fx 8.0 . 826.Sh BUGS 827The 828.Nm 829family of functions do not correctly handle multibyte characters in the 830.Fa format 831argument. 832.Sh SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS 833The 834.Fn sprintf 835and 836.Fn vsprintf 837functions are easily misused in a manner which enables malicious users 838to arbitrarily change a running program's functionality through 839a buffer overflow attack. 840Because 841.Fn sprintf 842and 843.Fn vsprintf 844assume an infinitely long string, 845callers must be careful not to overflow the actual space; 846this is often hard to assure. 847For safety, programmers should use the 848.Fn snprintf 849interface instead. 850For example: 851.Bd -literal 852void 853foo(const char *arbitrary_string, const char *and_another) 854{ 855 char onstack[8]; 856 857#ifdef BAD 858 /* 859 * This first sprintf is bad behavior. Do not use sprintf! 860 */ 861 sprintf(onstack, "%s, %s", arbitrary_string, and_another); 862#else 863 /* 864 * The following two lines demonstrate better use of 865 * snprintf(). 866 */ 867 snprintf(onstack, sizeof(onstack), "%s, %s", arbitrary_string, 868 and_another); 869#endif 870} 871.Ed 872.Pp 873The 874.Fn printf 875and 876.Fn sprintf 877family of functions are also easily misused in a manner 878allowing malicious users to arbitrarily change a running program's 879functionality by either causing the program 880to print potentially sensitive data 881.Dq "left on the stack" , 882or causing it to generate a memory fault or bus error 883by dereferencing an invalid pointer. 884.Pp 885.Cm %n 886can be used to write arbitrary data to potentially carefully-selected 887addresses. 888Programmers are therefore strongly advised to never pass untrusted strings 889as the 890.Fa format 891argument, as an attacker can put format specifiers in the string 892to mangle your stack, 893leading to a possible security hole. 894This holds true even if the string was built using a function like 895.Fn snprintf , 896as the resulting string may still contain user-supplied conversion specifiers 897for later interpolation by 898.Fn printf . 899.Pp 900Always use the proper secure idiom: 901.Pp 902.Dl "snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), \*q%s\*q, string);" 903