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authorVito Caputo <vcaputo@pengaru.com>2019-07-14 17:48:01 -0700
committerVito Caputo <vcaputo@pengaru.com>2019-07-14 17:48:01 -0700
commit8f241509d127f114f46c95769c0ec66e51be222b (patch)
treeb4883ce17646b80d53aea648977813824941117f /src/launch.c
parentb6a393bc55476bb65a974e8bd81482287b7f72f3 (diff)
charts: clamp %n length to buffer size
It appears I overlooked that %n returns the length that would have been printed regardless of the destination buffer size, not what was actually written. The man page is misleading here: n The number of characters written so far is stored into the integer pointed to by the corresponding argument. That argument shall be an int *, or variant whose size matches the (optionally) supplied integer length modifier. No argu‐ ment is converted. (This specifier is not supported by the bionic C library.) The behavior is undefined if the conver‐ sion specification includes any flags, a field width, or a precision. In testing, it isn't the count of what's actually written. It's oblivious of truncated output scenarios where the output buffer has been exhausted before reaching the %n. The man page should be clarified here. This commit does the simplest thing and simply clamps the length to the destination buffer - 1 (for the \0). %n is being used to avoid needing an strlen() in this somewhat hot path, but it might make sense to instead use the snprintf return value similarly clamped instead of %n since %n isn't doing what was expected.
Diffstat (limited to 'src/launch.c')
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