On Fri, Jul 30, 2021 at 12:00:54PM +0300, Dan Carpenter wrote:
On Fri, Jul 30, 2021 at 10:38:45AM +0200, David Sterba wrote:
quoted
Then is explicit memset the only reliable way accross all compiler
flavors and supported versions?
The = { } initializer works. It's only when you start partially
initializing the struct that it doesn't initialize holes.
No, partial works. It's when you _fully_ initialize the struct where the
padding doesn't get initialized. *sob*
struct foo {
u8 flag;
/* padding */
void *ptr;
};
These are fine:
struct foo ok1 = { };
struct foo ok2 = { .flag = 7 };
struct foo ok3 = { .ptr = NULL };
This is not:
struct foo bad = { .flag = 7, .ptr = NULL };
(But, of course, it depends on padding size, compiler version, and
architecture. i.e. things remain unreliable.)
--
Kees Cook