From: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com> Use 'virFileReadAllQuiet' since the function doesn't want to report errors on other code paths. The function also assumed that the file which it reads always 7 bytes isn't true at least in the test suite. This didn't cause a problem because the test data had strings 6 bytes long so it didn't cause a write beyond the end of the buffer. Clear the newline by using strchrnul instead to find it rather than assuming where it is. Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com> --- src/util/virpci.c | 9 +++++---- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/util/virpci.c b/src/util/virpci.c index 2e32ed17ff..48cdffe3d4 100644 --- a/src/util/virpci.c +++ b/src/util/virpci.c @@ -1760,19 +1760,20 @@ virPCIDeviceReadID(virPCIDevice *dev, const char *id_name) { g_autofree char *path = NULL; g_autofree char *id_str = NULL; + int len; path = virPCIFile(dev->name, id_name); /* ID string is '0xNNNN\n' ... i.e. 7 bytes */ - if (virFileReadAll(path, 7, &id_str) < 0) + if ((len = virFileReadAllQuiet(path, 7, &id_str)) < 0) return NULL; - /* Check for 0x suffix */ + /* Check for 0x prefix */ if (id_str[0] != '0' || id_str[1] != 'x') return NULL; - /* Chop off the newline; we know the string is 7 bytes */ - id_str[6] = '\0'; + /* Chop off the newline */ + *(strchrnul(id_str, '\n')) = '\0'; return g_steal_pointer(&id_str); } -- 2.53.0