Dan,
After tracking down a very obscure bug in hivex & libguestfs Perl
bindings, I started looking for places where we call newSVpv with a
variable length argument that could be zero. In such cases, one
should call newSVpvn instead, otherwise Perl will try to use strlen()
to calculate the length of the data buffer when length is passed in as
zero [I'm sure you are aware of this already].
There seems to be one such case in the Sys::Virt bindings:
http://cpansearch.perl.org/src/DANBERR/Sys-Virt-0.2.3/Virt.xs
CODE:
if ((bytes = virSecretGetValue(sec, &len, flags)) == NULL) {
_croak_error(virConnGetLastError(virSecretGetConnect(sec)));
}
RETVAL = newSVpv((char*)bytes, len);
Maybe 'len' can never be zero here, but I think it's safer to turn
this into a call to newSVpvn anyway.
Also, if you look at the source to newSVpv:
http://github.com/mirrors/perl/blob/blead/sv.c#L7752
You'll see there is an extra test, not present with newSVpvn. So it's
better to always call newSVpvn wherever there is a constant-sized
buffer, eg in code like this:
if ((virDomainGetUUID(dom, rawuuid)) < 0) {
_croak_error(virConnGetLastError(virDomainGetConnect(dom)));
}
RETVAL = newSVpv((char*)rawuuid, sizeof(rawuuid));
Rich.
--
Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat
http://people.redhat.com/~rjones
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