If set_path() or set_str_noslash() are called with a bad value, they
ignore it and continue to use the old value. But they weren't freeing
the bad value, causing a memory leak.

Signed-off-by: Benjamin Marzinski <bmarz...@redhat.com>
---
 libmultipath/dict.c | 2 ++
 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)

diff --git a/libmultipath/dict.c b/libmultipath/dict.c
index 97f43387..f4233882 100644
--- a/libmultipath/dict.c
+++ b/libmultipath/dict.c
@@ -130,6 +130,7 @@ set_path(vector strvec, void *ptr, const char *file, int 
line_nr)
        if ((*str_ptr)[0] != '/'){
                condlog(1, "%s line %d, %s is not an absolute path. Ignoring",
                        file, line_nr, *str_ptr);
+               free(*str_ptr);
                *str_ptr = old_str;
        } else
                free(old_str);
@@ -150,6 +151,7 @@ set_str_noslash(vector strvec, void *ptr, const char *file, 
int line_nr)
        if (strchr(*str_ptr, '/')) {
                condlog(1, "%s line %d, %s cannot contain a slash. Ignoring",
                        file, line_nr, *str_ptr);
+               free(*str_ptr);
                *str_ptr = old_str;
        } else
                free(old_str);
-- 
2.17.2

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