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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 7, 20262026-06-07T00:46:47+00:00 2026-06-07T00:46:47+00:00

I’ve developed a small (very small) ftp client and server. Both of these programs

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I’ve developed a small (very small) ftp client and server.
Both of these programs compile and run well only if they use the same arch.

  1. If client is Ubuntu amd64 and server is Ubuntu i386 i got a segfault (i think it is a pointer problem)
  2. If client is Ubuntu amd64 and server is Ubuntu amd64 all ok
  3. If client is Ubuntu i386 and server is Ubuntu i386 all ok

How can i made these 2 programs working on different archs?
It is a code problem? If so what i have to do?
Thanks in advance!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-07T00:46:49+00:00Added an answer on June 7, 2026 at 12:46 am

    It is probably a difference in the size of various types and you are sending and receiving them across the network. Since the sizes don’t match up, the protocol will become desynchronized.

    Linux uses the LP64 data model for x86_64 so int is still 32-bits but long is 64-bits. On x86 long is 32-bits.

    Fortunately, the C standard defines several fixed-width integer types in the stdint.h header file. If you include that you can use the unsigned types uintn_t and the signed types intn_t with n being 8, 16, 32 or 64. Another thing you have take into consideration for network protocols is byte order. POSIX supplies the functions htonl, htons, ntohl, and ntohs that convert 32- and 16-bit integers from host order to network order and vice versa, respectively.

    Edit:

    As Variable Length Coder notes, sending whole structures is also not portable (though it is between x86 and x86_64). If you are sending a structure over the network you should send it member by member one at a time and assign into the appropriate fields on the receiving end.

    Edit 2:

    size_t is also not a portable data type. You should pick an explicitly sized type appropriate for the protocol. Probably uint32_t is a good choice.

    Also, since all the size modifiers for printf are based on the standard short/int/long types, you need to use the macros in <inttypes.h> to make the format strings. For example:

    #include <inttypes.h>
    
    /* ... */
    
    int32_t signed32;
    uint16_t unsigned16;
    
    printf("Signed 32 is %"PRIu32" and unsigned 16 is %"PRId16"\n", signed32, unsigned16);
    

    Your system may have man pages on these header files (my fedora system does) so at a command prompt you can use

    man stdint.h
    

    and

    man inttypes.h
    

    to get more information on the types, macros and functions defined in these headers.

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