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This manual page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual. The Linux implementation of this interface

Application Usage

       For  functions that allocate memory as if by malloc(), the application should release such memory when it
       is no longer required by a call to free().  For strdup() and strndup(), this is the return value.

       Implementations are free to malloc() a buffer containing either (size + 1) bytes or (strnlen( s, size)  +
       1) bytes. Applications should not assume that strndup() will allocate (size + 1) bytes when strlen( s) is
       smaller than size.

Description

       The  strdup() function shall return a pointer to a new string, which is a duplicate of the string pointed
       to by s.  The returned pointer can be passed to free().  A null pointer is returned  if  the  new  string
       cannot be created.

       The  strndup() function shall be equivalent to the strdup() function, duplicating the provided s in a new
       block of memory allocated as if by using malloc(), with the exception being that strndup() copies at most
       size plus one bytes into the newly allocated memory, terminating the new string with a NUL character.  If
       the  length  of  s  is  larger than size, only size bytes shall be duplicated. If size is larger than the
       length of s, all bytes in s shall be copied into the new memory buffer,  including  the  terminating  NUL
       character. The newly created string shall always be properly terminated.

Errors

       These functions shall fail if:

       ENOMEM Storage space available is insufficient.

       Thefollowingsectionsareinformative.

Examples

       None.

Future Directions

       None.

Name

       strdup, strndup — duplicate a specific number of bytes from a string

Prolog

       This  manual  page  is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux implementation of this interface
       may differ (consult the corresponding Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior), or the  interface
       may not be implemented on Linux.

Rationale

       None.

Return Value

       The  strdup()  function  shall  return a pointer to a new string on success. Otherwise, it shall return a
       null pointer and set errno to indicate the error.

       Upon successful completion, the strndup() function shall return a pointer to the newly  allocated  memory
       containing the duplicated string. Otherwise, it shall return a null pointer and set errno to indicate the
       error.

See Also

free(), wcsdup()

       The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2017, <string.h>

Synopsis

       #include <string.h>

       char *strdup(const char *s);
       char *strndup(const char *s, size_t size);

See Also