David Miller says:
The canonical way to validate if the set bits are in a valid
range is to have a "_ALL" macro, and test:
if (val & ~XT_HASHLIMIT_ALL)
goto err;"
make it so.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
XT_HASHLIMIT_HASH_SPT = 1 << 3,
XT_HASHLIMIT_INVERT = 1 << 4,
XT_HASHLIMIT_BYTES = 1 << 5,
+};
#ifdef __KERNEL__
- XT_HASHLIMIT_MAX = 1 << 6,
+#define XT_HASHLIMIT_ALL (XT_HASHLIMIT_HASH_DIP | XT_HASHLIMIT_HASH_DPT | \
+ XT_HASHLIMIT_HASH_SIP | XT_HASHLIMIT_HASH_SPT | \
+ XT_HASHLIMIT_INVERT | XT_HASHLIMIT_BYTES)
#endif
-};
struct hashlimit_cfg {
__u32 mode; /* bitmask of XT_HASHLIMIT_HASH_* */
return -EINVAL;
}
- if (info->cfg.mode >= XT_HASHLIMIT_MAX) {
+ if (info->cfg.mode & ~XT_HASHLIMIT_ALL) {
pr_info("Unknown mode mask %X, kernel too old?\n",
info->cfg.mode);
return -EINVAL;