There is no need to make sure that the memory is zeroed after the
allocation if we also immediatly fill the whole buffer afterwards
with memcpy(). Thus g_new0 should be g_new instead. But since we
are also doing a memcpy() here, we can also simply replace both
with g_memdup() instead.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Huth <th...@redhat.com>
---
 target-sparc/cpu.c | 3 +--
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/target-sparc/cpu.c b/target-sparc/cpu.c
index 5b74cfc..7b43192 100644
--- a/target-sparc/cpu.c
+++ b/target-sparc/cpu.c
@@ -115,8 +115,7 @@ static int cpu_sparc_register(SPARCCPU *cpu, const char 
*cpu_model)
         return -1;
     }
 
-    env->def = g_new0(sparc_def_t, 1);
-    memcpy(env->def, def, sizeof(*def));
+    env->def = g_memdup(def, sizeof(*def));
 
     featurestr = strtok(NULL, ",");
     cc->parse_features(CPU(cpu), featurestr, &err);
-- 
1.8.3.1


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