12.02.2011 12:34, Daniel K. wrote:Jesper Juhl wrote:sprintf() is dangerous - given the wrong source string it willWhat if "rd1234" get truncated to "rd123" and you remove the wrong link.
overflow the destination. snprintf() is safer in that at least we'll
never overflow the destination. Even if overflow will never happen
today, code changes over time and snprintf() is just safer in the long
run.
- sprintf(nm,"rd%d", rdev->raid_disk);
+ snprintf(nm, sizeof(nm), "rd%d", rdev->raid_disk);
sysfs_remove_link(&mddev->kobj, nm);
(No, I didn't actually bother to check how much room was allocated.)
That allocation is in the line above first sprintf which you deleted.
Sure, didn't bother, it's very difficult.
C'mon guys, this is pointless. 20 bytes allocated for the device
name, and this is for raid disk number. It is impossible to have
more than 10^17 (20 bytes total, 2 for "rd" and on for the zero
terminator) drives in a single array.