Pergunta

I was reading from a c++ reference about memcpyand memmove and they seems to be doing the same thing except that memmove has a specific think called (allowing the destination and source to overlap).

What is overlapping and when that happens?

Foi útil?

Solução

It's very simple. Consider memmove(dest, source, length).

If the range of bytes specified by the range source to source + length - 1 include any bytes in the range specified by dest to dest + length - 1, the two ranges overlap.

This is most likely to happen when moving elements within an array. Example:

// Slide array down by one:
char array[N];
memmove( (void*) &array[0], (void*) &array[1], N - 1 );

That overlaps on elements 1 through N-2. Sliding the other direction has a similar overlap:

// Slide array up by one:
memmove( (void*) &array[1], (void*) &array[0], N - 1 );

If you were to attempt this same operation with memcpy(), the resulting behavior is undefined. Some implementations will work correctly if you use memcpy in both examples above. Others will fail for one or both of the two if you use memcpy here instead of memmove. This is a consequence of the fact C and C++ leave the behavior undefined for memcpy() when the ranges overlap like this.

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