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Home/ Questions/Q 578691
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T14:17:15+00:00 2026-05-13T14:17:15+00:00

My program is reading a text file containing various lines of text for a

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My program is reading a text file containing various lines of text for a settings file. Some of the lines could get very large. Currently the buffer size is 4096 chars. It is possible that some lines could exceed this, whether through maliciousness or due to various factors operating within the program.

The current routines were rather tedious to write and now I want to expand the possible contents of the file which will require more of this tedious repetitive code. (This is for a settings type file, consisting of name value pairs and the occasional section header. Some numerical values need to be read as strings due to multiple precision).

The main thing I want is to read an arbitrary length line without buffer overflow. I’ve just discovered getline can do this for me, but, is there for heavens sake a library that will just do the whole lot of this tediousness for me?

edit:

I don’t wish to be forced to place an = sign between the name and values, a blank space should suffice as separator.

By widespread, I mean the library should be available in the standard packages of the popular Linux distributions.

I’m aware of libconfig but it seems complete overkill for my requirements.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T14:17:16+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 2:17 pm

    My suggestion is, DIY, since it’s quite easy.

    • Read each line

    • count chars until your separator and after your separator

    • allocate buffers

    • and read name value pairs with sscanf

      like:

      sscanf(line, "%[^:]: %[^\n]", key, value);

    You will be safe since you counted chars before sccanf.

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