'res->owners' is allocated to 'res->nOwners' elements, but unfortunately
'res->nOwners' doesn't contain the proper value until after the
allocation so 0 elements are allocated. The following loop which assumes
that the array has the right number of elements then accesses the
pointer out of bounds. The bug was also faithfully converted from
VIR_ALLOC_N to g_new0.

Fixes: 4a3d6ed5ee0
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkre...@redhat.com>
---
 src/util/virlockspace.c | 4 +---
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/src/util/virlockspace.c b/src/util/virlockspace.c
index 9e80db6a0c..0d6cff3707 100644
--- a/src/util/virlockspace.c
+++ b/src/util/virlockspace.c
@@ -324,7 +324,6 @@ virLockSpacePtr 
virLockSpaceNewPostExecRestart(virJSONValuePtr object)
         const char *tmp;
         virJSONValuePtr owners;
         size_t j;
-        size_t m;

         res = g_new0(virLockSpaceResource, 1);
         res->fd = -1;
@@ -384,9 +383,8 @@ virLockSpacePtr 
virLockSpaceNewPostExecRestart(virJSONValuePtr object)
             goto error;
         }

-        m = virJSONValueArraySize(owners);
+        res->nOwners = virJSONValueArraySize(owners);
         res->owners = g_new0(pid_t, res->nOwners);
-        res->nOwners = m;

         for (j = 0; j < res->nOwners; j++) {
             unsigned long long int owner;
-- 
2.29.2

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