From: Shawn O. Pearce Date: Fri, 14 Sep 2007 22:59:53 +0000 (-0400) Subject: Fix builtin-fetch memory corruption by not overstepping array X-Git-Tag: v1.5.4-rc0~292^2~52 X-Git-Url: https://git.tokkee.org/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=e8a37b89f7c4fd4a10104a1c4d6021a707f70613;p=git.git Fix builtin-fetch memory corruption by not overstepping array A long time ago Junio added this line to always ensure that the output array created by remove_duplicates() had a NULL as its terminating node. Today none of the downstream consumers of this array care about a NULL terminator; they only pay attention to the size of the array (as indicated by nr_heads). In (nearly?) all cases passing a NULL element will cause SIGSEGV failures. So this NULL terminal is not actually necessary. Unfortunately we cannot continue to NULL terminate the array at this point as the array may only have been allocated large enough to match the input of nr_heads. If there are no duplicates than we would be trying to store NULL into heads[nr_heads] and that may be outside of the array. My recent series to cleanup builtin-fetch changed the allocation of the heads array from 256 entries to exactly nr_heads thus ensuring we were always overstepping the array and causing memory corruption. Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano --- diff --git a/builtin-fetch-pack.c b/builtin-fetch-pack.c index b0936ccf0..2977a9419 100644 --- a/builtin-fetch-pack.c +++ b/builtin-fetch-pack.c @@ -654,7 +654,6 @@ static int remove_duplicates(int nr_heads, char **heads) heads[dst] = heads[src]; dst++; } - heads[dst] = 0; return dst; }