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From 646679da4d79bf7f8af22c44c7ae8498086a88a6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Mounir IDRASSI <mounir.idrassi@idrix.fr>
Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2016 16:25:48 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] Linux: Completely fix gcc-5 "Invalid characters encountered"
issue on mount. It was caused by an issue of gcc-5 STL implementation that is
causing char* pointers retrieved from std::string using c_str method to
become invalid in the child of a child process (after two fork calls). The
workaround is to first copy the std:string values in the child before calling
the second fork.
---
Platform/Unix/Process.cpp | 24 ++++++++++++++++++++++--
1 file changed, 22 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/Platform/Unix/Process.cpp b/Platform/Unix/Process.cpp
index 388bda6..0770364 100644
--- a/Platform/Unix/Process.cpp
+++ b/Platform/Unix/Process.cpp
@@ -53,13 +53,33 @@ namespace VeraCrypt
try
{
int argIndex = 0;
+ /* Workaround for gcc 5.X issue related to the use of STL (string and list) with muliple fork calls.
+ *
+ * The char* pointers retrieved from the elements of parameter "arguments" are no longer valid after
+ * a second fork is called. "arguments" was created in the parent of the current child process.
+ *
+ * The only solution is to copy the elements of "arguments" parameter in a local string array on this
+ * child process and then use char* pointers retrieved from this local copies before calling fork.
+ *
+ * gcc 4.x doesn't suffer from this issue.
+ *
+ */
+ string argsCopy[array_capacity (args)];
if (!execFunctor)
- args[argIndex++] = const_cast <char*> (processName.c_str());
+ {
+ argsCopy[argIndex++] = processName;
+ }
foreach (const string &arg, arguments)
{
- args[argIndex++] = const_cast <char*> (arg.c_str());
+ argsCopy[argIndex++] = arg;
}
+
+ for (int i = 0; i < argIndex; i++)
+ {
+ args[i] = const_cast <char*> (argsCopy[i].c_str());
+ }
+
args[argIndex] = nullptr;
if (inputData)
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