The ungetc()
function pushes a character onto an input stream. This pushed character can then be read by subsequent calls to functions that read from that stream. However, the ungetc()
function has serious limitations. A call to a file positioning function, such as fseek()
, will discard any character pushed back by ungetc()
. Also, the C standard only guarantees that the pushing back of one character will succeed. Therefore, subsequent calls to ungetc()
must be separated by a call to a read function or a file positioning function (which will discard any data pushed by ungetc()
). If more than one character needs to be pushed by ungetc()
, then an update stream should be used instead of calling ungetc()
.
FILE* fptr = fopen("myfile.ext", "rb"); if (fptr == NULL) { /* handle error condition */ } /* Read data */ ungetc('\n', fptr); ungetc('\r', fptr); /* Continue on */ |
(none known) |
If used improperly, ungetc()
can cause data to be truncated or lost.
Recommendation |
Severity |
Likelihood |
Remediation Cost |
Priority |
Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
FIO13-A |
2 (medium) |
2 (probable) |
1 (high) |
P4 |
L3 |
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
\[[ISO/IEC 9899-1999|AA. C References#ISO/IEC 9899-1999]\] Section 7.19.7.11, "The {{ungetc}} function" |
FIO12-A. Prefer setvbuf() to setbuf() 09. Input Output (FIO) FIO14-A. Understand the difference between text mode and binary mode with file streams