On Sun, 24 Aug 2008, Vincent Danjean wrote:
Mirsad Todorovac wrote:
Carlos,
I have verified your claim. On x86 system
ii libc6 2.3.6.ds1-13etch5GNU C Library
the result is truly so.
I have, however, verified the bug both on Debian x86_64 system and on
Mirsad Todorovac wrote:
Carlos,
I have verified your claim. On x86 system
ii libc6 2.3.6.ds1-13etch5GNU C Library
the result is truly so.
I have, however, verified the bug both on Debian x86_64 system and on
CentOS 4 x64. It seems that the bug is tied
On Fri, Aug 15, 2008 at 9:03 AM, Mirsad Todorovac [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have came across a bug in dirname() function of GNU libc.
It is triggered by the following minimal source:
#include stdio.h
#include string.h
int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
char *buf = usr/;
Dear Sirs,
I have came across a bug in dirname() function of GNU libc.
It is triggered by the following minimal source:
#include stdio.h
#include string.h
int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
char *buf = usr/;
char *word = strdup (buf);
printf (dirname ('%s')='%s'\n,
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