From: David Laight <[email protected]> The length of the string is calculated in order to allocate the correct sized memory block, use the same length to copy the string.
Signed-off-by: David Laight <[email protected]> --- This is one of a group of patches that remove potentially unbounded strcpy() calls. They are mostly replaced by strscpy() or, when strlen() has just been called, with memcpy() (usually including the '\0'). Calls with copy string literals into arrays are left unchanged. They are safe and easily detected as such. The changes were made by getting the compiler to detect the calls and then fixing the code by hand. Note that all the changes are only compile tested. Some Makefiles were changed to allow files to contain strcpy(). As well as 'difficult to fix' files, this included 'show' functions as they really need to use sysfs_emit() or seq_printf(). All the patches are being sent individually to avoid very long cc lists. Apologies for the terse commit messages and likely unexpected tags. (There are about 100 patches in total.) kernel/params.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/kernel/params.c b/kernel/params.c index 74d620bc2521..a4ae0120457c 100644 --- a/kernel/params.c +++ b/kernel/params.c @@ -279,7 +279,7 @@ int param_set_charp(const char *val, const struct kernel_param *kp) *(char **)kp->arg = kmalloc_parameter(len + 1); if (!*(char **)kp->arg) return -ENOMEM; - strcpy(*(char **)kp->arg, val); + memcpy(*(char **)kp->arg, val, len + 1); } else *(const char **)kp->arg = val; -- 2.39.5

