On Thu, May 30, 2013 at 10:13 AM, René Scharfe
<rene.scha...@lsrfire.ath.cx> wrote:
> Am 30.05.2013 15:34, schrieb Felipe Contreras:
>> We don't free 'istate->cache' properly.
>>
>> Apparently 'initialized' doesn't really mean initialized, but loaded, or
>> rather 'not-empty', and the cache can be used even if it's not
>> 'initialized', so we can't rely on this variable to keep track of the
>> 'istate->cache'.
>>
>> So assume it always has data, and free it before overwriting it.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contre...@gmail.com>
>> ---
>>   read-cache.c | 4 ++++
>>   1 file changed, 4 insertions(+)
>>
>> diff --git a/read-cache.c b/read-cache.c
>> index 04ed561..e5dc96f 100644
>> --- a/read-cache.c
>> +++ b/read-cache.c
>> @@ -1449,6 +1449,7 @@ int read_index_from(struct index_state *istate, const 
>> char *path)
>>       istate->version = ntohl(hdr->hdr_version);
>>       istate->cache_nr = ntohl(hdr->hdr_entries);
>>       istate->cache_alloc = alloc_nr(istate->cache_nr);
>> +     free(istate->cache);
>
> With that change, callers of read_index_from need to set ->cache to
> NULL for uninitialized (on-stack) index_state variables.  They only had
> to set ->initialized to 0 before in that situation.  It this chunk safe
> for all existing callers?  Shouldn't the same free in discard_index
> (added below) be enough?

We can remove that line, but then if some code does this:

discard_cache();
# add entries
read_cache();

There will be a memory leak.

-- 
Felipe Contreras
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