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Home/ Questions/Q 872575
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Editorial Team
  • 0
Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T10:48:13+00:00 2026-05-15T10:48:13+00:00

I don’t normally go to stackoverflow for sigsegv errors, but I have done all

  • 0

I don’t normally go to stackoverflow for sigsegv errors, but I have done all I can with my debugger at the moment.

The segmentation fault error is thrown following the completion of the function. Any ideas what I’m overlooking? I suspect that it is due to the casting of the sockaddr to the sockaddr_in, but I am unable to find any mistakes there. (Removing that line gets rid of the seg fault — but I know that may not be the root cause here).

// basic setup
int sockfd;
char str[INET_ADDRSTRLEN];
sockaddr* sa;
socklen_t* sl;
struct addrinfo hints, *servinfo, *p;
int rv;
memset(&hints, 0, sizeof hints);
hints.ai_family = AF_UNSPEC;
hints.ai_socktype = SOCK_DGRAM;

// return string
string foundIP;

// setup the struct for a connection with selected IP
if ((rv = getaddrinfo("4.2.2.1", NULL, &hints, &servinfo)) != 0) {
    fprintf(stderr, "getaddrinfo: %s\n", gai_strerror(rv));
    return "1";
}

// loop through all the results and make a socket
for(p = servinfo; p != NULL; p = p->ai_next) {
    if ((sockfd = socket(p->ai_family, p->ai_socktype,
            p->ai_protocol)) == -1) {
        perror("talker: socket");
        continue;
    }

    break;
}

if (p == NULL) {
    fprintf(stderr, "talker: failed to bind socket\n");
    return "2";
}

// connect the UDP socket to something
connect(sockfd, p->ai_addr, p->ai_addrlen); // we need to connect to get the systems local IP

// get information on the local IP from the socket we created
getsockname(sockfd, sa, sl);

// convert the sockaddr to a sockaddr_in via casting
struct sockaddr_in *sa_ipv4 = (struct sockaddr_in *)sa;

// get the IP from the sockaddr_in and print it
inet_ntop(AF_INET, &(sa_ipv4->sin_addr), str, INET_ADDRSTRLEN);
printf("%s\n", str);

// return the IP
return foundIP;

}

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T10:48:13+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 10:48 am

    It doesn’t look like you ever initialize the pointer sa to point at a valid sockaddr (or sockaddr_in) object.

    If you replace

    sockaddr* sa;
    

    with

    sockaddr addr;
    

    and replace all uses of sa with &addr you should be in better shape.

    The same is also true of sl. At least according to the documentation for my getsockname the socklen_t* parameter needs to point at a valid socklen_t object initialized to the size in bytes of the address buffer.

    E.g.

    socklen_t slen = sizeof addr;
    

    and use &slen instead of sl.

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