On 2019-09-15 at 12:10:28, René Scharfe wrote:
> Reject values that don't fit into an int, as get_parent() and
> get_nth_ancestor() cannot handle them.  That's better than potentially
> returning a random object.
> 
> If this restriction turns out to be too tight then we can switch to a
> wider data type, but we'd still have to check for overflow.

Certainly we want Git to perform as well as possible on large
repositories, but I doubt if it will scale to more than 2 billion
revisions, even with significant effort.  I think this restriction
should be fine.

> diff --git a/sha1-name.c b/sha1-name.c
> index c665e3f96d..7a047e9e2b 100644
> --- a/sha1-name.c
> +++ b/sha1-name.c
> @@ -1160,13 +1160,22 @@ static enum get_oid_result get_oid_1(struct 
> repository *r,
>       }
> 
>       if (has_suffix) {
> -             int num = 0;
> +             unsigned int num = 0;
>               int len1 = cp - name;
>               cp++;
> -             while (cp < name + len)
> -                     num = num * 10 + *cp++ - '0';
> +             while (cp < name + len) {
> +                     unsigned int digit = *cp++ - '0';
> +                     if (unsigned_mult_overflows(num, 10))
> +                             return MISSING_OBJECT;
> +                     num *= 10;
> +                     if (unsigned_add_overflows(num, digit))
> +                             return MISSING_OBJECT;

I was worried whether these functions only handled size_t or if they
also handle unsigned int, but I checked and they seem to be fine for any
unsigned type.

> +                     num += digit;
> +             }
>               if (!num && len1 == len - 1)
>                       num = 1;
> +             else if (num > INT_MAX)
> +                     return MISSING_OBJECT;
>               if (has_suffix == '^')
>                       return get_parent(r, name, len1, oid, num);
>               /* else if (has_suffix == '~') -- goes without saying */

This approach seems reasonable.  I must admit some curiosity as to how
you discovered this issue, though.  Did you have a cat assisting you in
typing revisions?
-- 
brian m. carlson: Houston, Texas, US
OpenPGP: https://keybase.io/bk2204

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