The manual came out in editions, but the code, man pages, etc. changed continuously. So what you hear about in a particular paper is not necessarily correlated with a particular state of the manual.
I've done research on
this, but I'm confused and would appreciate some help to
understand what's going on. In the 7th edition manual, vol 2,
there's an ADB tutorial (pp. 323-336). In the tutorial, the
authors, Maranzano and Bourne, walk the reader through a debugging
session. The first example is predicated on a buffer overflow bug
and the code includes:
struct buf {
int fildes;
int nleft;
char *nextp; char buff[512]; }bb;
struct buf *obuf;
...
if((fcreat(argv[1],obuf)) < 0){
...
Well, this isn't v7 code. As discussed in the v7 manual vol 1 (p.
VII):
Standard I/O. The old fopen, getc, putc complex and the old –lp
package are both dead, and even getchar has changed. All have been
replaced by the clean, highly efficient, stdio(3) package. The
first things to know are that getchar(3) returns the integer EOF
(–1), which is not a possible byte value, on end of file, that
518-byte buffers are out, and that there is a defined FILE data
type.
The buffers are out, fcreat is gone, etc. So, what's up with this?
I don't think adb was in v6, where the fcreat function and buf
struct are used... Were Maranzano and Bourne using some kind of
hybrid 6+ system?
Thanks,
Will
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