On Tue, Oct 3, 2017 at 12:57 PM, Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Currently the argv is only allocated on the stack, and then assigned to > process->argv. When the start_subprocess function goes out of scope, > the local argv variable is eliminated from the stack, but the pointer is > still kept around in process->argv. > > Much later when we try to access the same process->argv in > finish_command, this leads us to access a memory location that no longer > contains what we want. As argv0 is only used for printing errors, this > is not easily noticed in normal git operations. However when running > t0021-conversion.sh through valgrind, valgrind rightfully complains: > > ==21024== Invalid read of size 8 > ==21024== at 0x2ACF64: finish_command (run-command.c:869) > ==21024== by 0x2D6B18: subprocess_exit_handler (sub-process.c:72) > ==21024== by 0x2AB41E: cleanup_children (run-command.c:45) > ==21024== by 0x2AB526: cleanup_children_on_exit (run-command.c:81) > ==21024== by 0x54AD487: __run_exit_handlers (in /usr/lib/libc-2.26.so) > ==21024== by 0x54AD4D9: exit (in /usr/lib/libc-2.26.so) > ==21024== by 0x11A9EF: handle_builtin (git.c:550) > ==21024== by 0x11ABCC: run_argv (git.c:602) > ==21024== by 0x11AD8E: cmd_main (git.c:679) > ==21024== by 0x1BF125: main (common-main.c:43) > ==21024== Address 0x1ffeffec00 is on thread 1's stack > ==21024== 1504 bytes below stack pointer > ==21024== > > Fix this by allocating the memory on properly on the heap. This memory > is allocated on the heap, and never free'd. However the same seems to be > true for struct child_process, so it should be fine to just let the > memory be free'd when the process terminates. Uh. :( The broken window theory at work. The patch below seems correct, but as you eluded to, now we'd be leaking memory. The run_command API has two fields 'char **argv' and 'argv_array args'. The argv is kept around for historical reasons as well as when the caller wants to be in control of the array (the caller needs to free the memory, but could also just reuse it for a slightly different invocation), whereas the args argument is owned by the child process, such that the memory is freed by finish_command. As we're doing a memory allocation now anyway, how about: - const char *argv[] = { cmd, NULL }; ... child_process_init(process); + argv_array_push(process.args, cmd);