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authorLibravatar Jeff King <peff@peff.net>2021-08-09 21:01:52 -0400
committerLibravatar Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2021-08-10 11:38:13 -0700
commit46d723ce57f2dd3c50504dc6f4ca73b4c392fa6f (patch)
tree1518e7fc1d64be9eb10cf8e2ca48527b49fc36b9 /ewah/ewah_bitmap.c
parentGit 2.22.5 (diff)
downloadtgif-46d723ce57f2dd3c50504dc6f4ca73b4c392fa6f.tar.xz
apply: keep buffer/size pair in sync when parsing binary hunks
We parse through binary hunks by looping through the buffer with code like: llen = linelen(buffer, size); ...do something with the line... buffer += llen; size -= llen; However, before we enter the loop, there is one call that increments "buffer" but forgets to decrement "size". As a result, our "size" is off by the length of that line, and subsequent calls to linelen() may look past the end of the buffer for a newline. The fix is easy: we just need to decrement size as we do elsewhere. This bug goes all the way back to 0660626caf (binary diff: further updates., 2006-05-05). Presumably nobody noticed because it only triggers if the patch is corrupted, and even then we are often "saved" by luck. We use a strbuf to store the incoming patch, so we overallocate there, plus we add a 16-byte run of NULs as slop for memory comparisons. So if this happened accidentally, the common case is that we'd just read a few uninitialized bytes from the end of the strbuf before producing the expected "this patch is corrupted" error complaint. However, it is possible to carefully construct a case which reads off the end of the buffer. The included test does so. It will pass both before and after this patch when run normally, but using a tool like ASan shows that we get an out-of-bounds read before this patch, but not after. Reported-by: Xingman Chen <xichixingman@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'ewah/ewah_bitmap.c')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions