StringCbCopyNA function (strsafe.h)

Copies the specified number of bytes from one string to another. The size of the destination buffer is provided to the function to ensure that it does not write past the end of this buffer.

StringCbCopyN is a replacement for the following functions:

Syntax

STRSAFEAPI StringCbCopyNA(
  [out] STRSAFE_LPSTR  pszDest,
  [in]  size_t         cbDest,
  [in]  STRSAFE_PCNZCH pszSrc,
  [in]  size_t         cbToCopy
);

Parameters

[out] pszDest

Type: LPTSTR

The destination buffer, which receives the copied characters.

[in] cbDest

Type: size_t

The size of pszDest, in bytes. This value must be large enough to hold the copied bytes (the size of pszSrc or the value of cbSrc, whichever is smaller) and also account for the terminating null character. The maximum number of characters allowed is STRSAFE_MAX_CCH * sizeof(TCHAR).

[in] pszSrc

Type: LPCTSTR

The source string. This string must be null-terminated.

[in] cbToCopy

Type: size_t

The maximum number of bytes to be copied from pszSrc to pszDest.

Return value

Type: HRESULT

This function can return one of the following values. It is strongly recommended that you use the SUCCEEDED and FAILED macros to test the return value of this function.

Return code Description
S_OK
Source data was present, the data was copied from pszSrc without truncation, and the resultant destination buffer is null-terminated.
STRSAFE_E_INVALID_PARAMETER
The value in cbDest is either larger than STRSAFE_MAX_CCH * sizeof(TCHAR), or the destination buffer is already full.
STRSAFE_E_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER
The copy operation failed due to insufficient buffer space. The destination buffer contains a truncated, null-terminated version of the intended result. In situations where truncation is acceptable, this may not necessarily be seen as a failure condition.
 

Note that this function returns an HRESULT value, unlike the functions that it replaces.

Remarks

StringCbCopyN provides additional processing for proper buffer handling in your code. Poor buffer handling is implicated in many security issues that involve buffer overruns. StringCbCopyN always null-terminates and never overflows a valid destination buffer, even if the contents of the source string change during the operation.

While this routine is meant as a replacement for strncpy, there are differences in behavior. If cbSrc is larger than the number of bytes in pszSrc, StringCbCopyN—unlike strncpy—does not continue to pad pszDest with null characters until cbSrc bytes have been copied.

Behavior is undefined if the strings pointed to by pszSrc and pszDest overlap.

Neither pszSrc nor pszDest should be NULL. See StringCbCopyNEx if you require the handling of null string pointer values.

StringCbCopyN can be used in its generic form, or in its more specific forms. The data type of the string determines the form of this function that you should use, as shown in the following table.

String Data Type String Literal Function
char "string" StringCbCopyNA
TCHAR TEXT("string") StringCbCopyN
WCHAR L"string" StringCbCopyNW
 

Note

The strsafe.h header defines StringCbCopyN as an alias that automatically selects the ANSI or Unicode version of this function based on the definition of the UNICODE preprocessor constant. Mixing usage of the encoding-neutral alias with code that is not encoding-neutral can lead to mismatches that result in compilation or runtime errors. For more information, see Conventions for Function Prototypes.

Requirements

Requirement Value
Minimum supported client Windows XP with SP2 [desktop apps | UWP apps]
Minimum supported server Windows Server 2003 with SP1 [desktop apps | UWP apps]
Target Platform Windows
Header strsafe.h

See also

Reference

StringCbCopy

StringCbCopyNEx

StringCchCopyN