I wrote: > Meh --- the hazards of back-patching seem to me to be more hypothetical > than the benefits. Still, I seem to be in the minority, so I withdraw > the proposal to back-patch.
Actually, after digging around a bit, I'm excited about this again. There are only a couple dozen places in our tree that pay any attention to the result of (v)snprintf, but with the exception of psnprintf, appendPQExpBufferVA, and one or two other places, *they're all assuming C99 semantics*, and will fail to detect buffer overflow with the pre-C99 behavior. Probably a lot of these are not live bugs because buffer overrun is not ever going to occur in practice. But at least pg_upgrade and pg_regress are constructing command strings including externally supplied paths, so overrun doesn't seem impossible. If it happened, they'd merrily proceed to execute a truncated command. If we don't backpatch the snprintf change, we're morally obliged to back-patch some other fix for these places. At least one of them, in plperl's pport.h, is not our code and so changing it seems like a bad idea. Still want to argue for no backpatch? regards, tom lane PS: I also found a couple of places that are just wrong regardless of semantics: they're checking overflow by "result > bufsize", not "result >= bufsize". Will fix those in any case.