The qobject_from_jsonf() function implements a pseudo-printf
language for creating a QObject; however, it is hard-coded to
only parse a subset of formats understood by -Wformat, and is
not a straight synonym to bare printf(). In particular, any
use of an int64_t integer works only if the system's
definition of PRId64 matches what the parser expects; which
works on glibc (%lld or %ld depending on 32- vs. 64-bit) and
mingw (%I64d), but not on Mac OS (%qd). Rather than enhance
the parser, it is just as easy to use 'long long', which we
know always works. There are few enough callers of
qobject_from_json[fv]() that it is easy to audit that this is
the only non-testsuite caller that was actually relying on
this particular conversion.
Reported by: G 3 <programmingkidx@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Message-Id: <
1479922617-4400-2-git-send-email-eblake@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
[Cast tv.tv_sec, tv.tv_usec to long long for type correctness]
Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
int err;
QObject *obj;
qemu_timeval tv;
- int64_t sec, usec;
err = qemu_gettimeofday(&tv);
- if (err < 0) {
- /* Put -1 to indicate failure of getting host time */
- sec = -1;
- usec = -1;
- } else {
- sec = tv.tv_sec;
- usec = tv.tv_usec;
- }
-
- obj = qobject_from_jsonf("{ 'seconds': %" PRId64 ", "
- "'microseconds': %" PRId64 " }",
- sec, usec);
+ /* Put -1 to indicate failure of getting host time */
+ obj = qobject_from_jsonf("{ 'seconds': %lld, 'microseconds': %lld }",
+ err < 0 ? -1LL : (long long)tv.tv_sec,
+ err < 0 ? -1LL : (long long)tv.tv_usec);
qdict_put_obj(qdict, "timestamp", obj);
}