ID: 26847 User updated by: nutbar at innocent dot com Reported By: nutbar at innocent dot com Status: Bogus Bug Type: Mail related Operating System: any - source code issue PHP Version: 4.3.4 New Comment:
I know they check to_len and subject_len - that's not really the problem. The problem is that the for loops above that decrement to_len and subject_len - thus modifying them from their original values. to_len and subject_len will always be 0, even if they weren't 0 to begin with. Do you see what I'm referring to? Previous Comments: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2004-01-08 15:38:41] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Impossible leak. if (to_len > 0) { efree(to_r); } if (subject_len > 0) { efree(subject_r); } Is what the code in CVS does. If to_len or subject_len are < 1 then no allocation happens in the 1st place. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2004-01-08 15:34:23] nutbar at innocent dot com I guess an alternate fix would also be when the efree()'s are called. If you init all your char *'s to NULL, then you can simply do: if (to_r != NULL) { efree(to_r); } if (subject_r != NULL) { efree(subject_r); } ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2004-01-08 15:31:12] nutbar at innocent dot com By the way, very simple fix: Add this to the variable declarations: int j = 0; Then the lines of code as mentioned before, but fixed: if (to_len > 0) { to_r = estrndup(to, to_len); for (j = to_len; j > 0; j--) { if (!isspace((unsigned char) to_r[j - 1])) { break; } to_r[j - 1] = '\0'; } and: if (subject_len > 0) { subject_r = estrndup(subject, subject_len); for (j = subject_len; j > 0; j--) { if (!isspace((unsigned char) subject_r[j - 1])) { break; } subject_r[j - 1] = '\0'; } I just initialized j in the for loop to be the value of to_len and subject_len, then I use j everywhere rather than to_len or subject_len so that they stay unmodified. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2004-01-08 13:22:55] nutbar at innocent dot com Description: ------------ In the actual source code for the PHP mail() function (ext/standard/mail.c), it sets some variables up to hold the To: and Subject: headers up, and other stuff. The problem is that if you look at the initial code that checks if the "to_len" count is greater than 0, it duplicates the "to" string to "to_r" and does some stuff to it. It does the same sort of thing with subject_len, subject, and subject_r in the exact same fashion. After the new to_r and subject_r strings are used, it goes to free them, but it does an if () test to see if it should or not - the if test compares to_len and subject_len to see if they are greater than 0 and if so, efree()'s them. The problem is that in the code that does stuff with to_r and subject_r, there are for loops which decrement to_len and subject_len so it can walk the strings. By doing this, you bring the to_len and subject_len variables to 0, thus nothing is ever efree()'d in the end, and you've got a memory leak. The leak is small and not noticable typically, but with mass mailing scripts that loop using mail(), it could be huge. Reproduce code: --------------- See mail.c - lines 106 to 113, 129 to 136, and then 160 to 165. Actual result: -------------- I have not tested for an actual memory leak by calling mail() in a loop - I was just going to write my own mail() function and was using the code in mail.c to do it with, and came across this. If this is a false report, I am sorry, but I do believe it's real. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=26847&edit=1