snprintf() should be given the full buffer size, not one less. And it
guarantees nul-termination, so doing it manually afterwards is
pointless.
It's even potentially harmful (though probably not in practice because
CPER_REC_LEN is 256), due to the "return how much would have been
written had the buffer been big enough" semantics. I.e., if the bank
and/or device strings are long enough that the "DIMM location ..."
output gets truncated, writing to msg[n] is a buffer overflow.
Signed-off-by: Rasmus Villemoes <linux@rasmusvillemoes.dk>
Fixes:
3760cd20402d4 ("CPER: Adjust code flow of some functions")
Signed-off-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ardb@kernel.org>
if (!msg || !(mem->validation_bits & CPER_MEM_VALID_MODULE_HANDLE))
return 0;
- n = 0;
- len = CPER_REC_LEN - 1;
+ len = CPER_REC_LEN;
dmi_memdev_name(mem->mem_dev_handle, &bank, &device);
if (bank && device)
n = snprintf(msg, len, "DIMM location: %s %s ", bank, device);
"DIMM location: not present. DMI handle: 0x%.4x ",
mem->mem_dev_handle);
- msg[n] = '\0';
return n;
}