On Thu, Dec 02, 2010 at 07:51:26AM +0300, Dan Carpenter wrote: > On Fri, Nov 26, 2010 at 08:06:35PM +0300, Vasiliy Kulikov wrote: > > count = n / sizeof(int); > > - if (count > LIRCBUF_SIZE || count % 2 == 0) > > + if (count > LIRCBUF_SIZE || count % 2 == 0 || n % sizeof(int) != 0) > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > > Wait, what? We just checked this a couple lines before. Bah. I'd only looked at the diff, which didn't have enough context. I thought that looked familiar. Indeed, this part seems to be unnecessary. > The rest of the patch is right and a clever catch. It would affect > x86_64 systems and not i386. This doesn't have security implications > does it? You'd just catch the kmalloc() stack trace for insanely large > allocations. Even on x86_64, it looks to my (relatively untrained) eye like you'd actually be fine. n is a size_t (so, 64-bit on x86_64). count is an int (so 32-bit on x86_64). We initialize count to some 64-bit value / 4, so at most, 16 bits, which always fits just fine in the 32-bit int, no? -- Jarod Wilson jarod@xxxxxxxxxx -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html