is_ntfs_dotgit: use a size_t for traversing string
We walk through the "name" string using an int, which can wrap to a negative value and cause us to read random memory before our array (e.g., by creating a tree with a name >2GB, since "int" is still 32 bits even on most 64-bit platforms). Worse, this is easy to trigger during the fsck_tree() check, which is supposed to be protecting us from malicious garbage. Note one bit of trickiness in the existing code: we sometimes assign -1 to "len" at the end of the loop, and then rely on the "len++" in the for-loop's increment to take it back to 0. This is still legal with a size_t, since assigning -1 will turn into SIZE_MAX, which then wraps around to 0 on increment. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
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path.c
2
path.c
@ -1224,7 +1224,7 @@ static int only_spaces_and_periods(const char *path, size_t len, size_t skip)
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int is_ntfs_dotgit(const char *name)
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int is_ntfs_dotgit(const char *name)
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{
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{
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int len;
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size_t len;
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for (len = 0; ; len++)
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for (len = 0; ; len++)
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if (!name[len] || name[len] == '\\' || is_dir_sep(name[len])) {
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if (!name[len] || name[len] == '\\' || is_dir_sep(name[len])) {
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