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author | 2020-12-30 08:59:17 +0000 | |
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committer | 2020-12-30 08:59:17 +0000 | |
commit | e9fc75e03edbd6cf31060526ccc13ce94d42498f (patch) | |
tree | 50c5a779a478d94e507f09cc9c8f74a7d1c3617d /sys/dev/pci/drm/drm_linux.c | |
parent | Constify the strings in regerror.c and make use of the strlcpy() (diff) | |
download | wireguard-openbsd-e9fc75e03edbd6cf31060526ccc13ce94d42498f.tar.xz wireguard-openbsd-e9fc75e03edbd6cf31060526ccc13ce94d42498f.zip |
regcomp.c uses the "start + count < end" idiom to check that there are
"count" bytes available in an array of char "start" and "end" both point
to.
This is fine, unless "start + count" goes beyond the last element of the
array. In this case, pedantic interpretation of the C standard makes
the comparison of such a pointer against "end" undefined, and optimizers
from hell will happily remove as much code as possible because of this.
An example of this occurs in regcomp.c's bothcases(), which defines
bracket[3], sets "next" to "bracket" and "end" to "bracket + 2". Then it
invokes p_bracket(), which starts with "if (p->next + 5 < p->end)"...
Because bothcases() and p_bracket() are static functions in regcomp.c,
there is a real risk of miscompilation if aggressive inlining happens.
The following diff rewrites the "start + count < end" constructs into
"end - start > count". Assuming "end" and "start" are always pointing in
the array (such as "bracket[3]" above), "end - start" is well-defined
and can be compared without trouble.
As a bonus, MORE2() implies MORE() therefore SEETWO() can be simplified
a bit.
from miod, ok millert
Diffstat (limited to 'sys/dev/pci/drm/drm_linux.c')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions