Magnus Hagander <magnus@hagander.net> writes:
> Tom Lane wrote:
>> The Single Unix Spec's definition of wcsftime says that the above
>> risks a buffer overrun, and the correct second argument would be
>> MAX_L10N_DATA. Now I realize that SUS is a poor guide for
>> Windows-specific code, but are you sure this is right?
> Now that I read it again, I think you're right. What MS says is:
> "If the total number of characters, including the terminating null, is
> more than maxsize, both strftime and wcsftime return 0 and the contents
> of strDest are indeterminate."
> The important difference being "character" vs "bytes", right?
SUS phrases it as
"If the total number of resulting wide-character codes including the
terminating null wide-character code is no more than maxsize, wcsftime()
returns the number of wide-character codes placed into the array pointed
to by wcs, not including the terminating null wide-character
code. Otherwise 0 is returned and the contents of the array are
indeterminate."
so it's very clear that maxsize is counted in wchars.
Perhaps someone could experiment to double-check what Windows does.
regards, tom lane