问题
I'm converting this code from C++ to Delphi but I don't get the following part of the code. Can anyone explain me what the following code means; what's happening to the szBuff buffer ?
I'm pretty sure it's such kind of formatting (replacement), but I don't even know what is expected as a result and I can't find any sensible documentation of the used functions (maybe I'm just a lame :)
Can anyone help me with the translation of this code to Delphi (or direct me to proper documentation) ?
I don't like this how do you convert kind of questions by myself, so I mentioned at least function names in the question title so it might searchable to someone else in the future.
function TSecInfo.BuildSecurityAttributes(var SecAttrs: TSecurityAttributes): boolean;
var
pszSidUser: PChar;
szBuff: array [0..1024] of Char;
begin
// pszSidUser at this time contains user SID like this
// S-1-5-21-1454471165-1004336348-1606980848-5555
// TCHAR szBuff[1024]; // I'm not sure with array [0..1024] of Char;
_tcscpy(szBuff, _T("D:"));
_tcscat(szBuff, _T("(A;;GA;;;"));
_tcscat(szBuff, pszSidUser);
_tcscat(szBuff, _T(")"));
_tcscat(szBuff, _T("(A;;GWGR;;;AN)"));
_tcscat(szBuff, _T("(A;;GWGR;;;WD)"));
...
_tcscat(szBuff, _T("S:(ML;;NW;;;S-1-16-0)"));
end;
For those who are interested in what's the whole code from the link about I can tell it should be a trick how to access network pipes for writing as an anonymous user on Windows Vista above. To the whole article follow this link.
Thanks for your time
Regards
回答1:
_tcscpy
and _tcscat
are TCHAR
macro versions of C standard library functions strcpy
and strcat
for copying and concatenating C strings. They evaluate to ANSI or Unicode versions depending on whether or the type of project you are targeting. It's really C code rather than C++ code in my view.
In Delphi you would simply use string variables like this:
function TSecInfo.BuildSecurityAttributes(var SecAttrs: TSecurityAttributes): boolean;
var
pszSidUser: PChar;
Buff: string;
begin
// pszSidUser at this time contains user SID like this
// S-1-5-21-1454471165-1004336348-1606980848-5555
Buff := 'D:(A;;GA;;;'+pszSidUser+')(A;;GWGR;;;AN)(A;;GWGR;;;WD)S:(ML;;NW;;;S-1-16-0)';
SomeOtherWindowsAPICall(PChar(Buff));
end;
Presumably in the C code there is a call to another Windows API function that receives an LPCTSTR
. The C code will pass szBuff
but you can simply pass PChar(Buff)
as I have shown above.
The C code is using a fixed length buffer because it doesn't have available a dynamically allocated string class like Delphi's string
or std::string
in C++. Fixed length buffers like this often lead to buffer overruns. In Delphi don't use a fixed length buffer if you can avoid it.
This is a classic example of why languages with built in string handling are so much easier to work with than C.
回答2:
It looks like the code is using TCHARS, basically they are a macro which makes going from unicode to non-unicode easier. _tcscpy
is copying the parameter to szBuff
, _tcscat
is appending the parameter to szBuff
. If you are familar with strcpy
and strcat
they do the same thing.
_tcscpy(szBuff, _T("D:")); //szBuff == "D:"
_tcscat(szBuff, _T("(A;;GA;;;")); //szBuff == "D:A;;GA;;;"
...
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6538227/how-do-you-convert-c-tcscpy-tcscat-to-delphi