Author: rmeggins
Update of /cvs/dirsec/ldapserver/ldap/servers/plugins/passthru
In directory
cvs1.fedora.phx.redhat.com:/tmp/cvs-serv26931/ldapserver/ldap/servers/plugins/passthru
Modified Files:
ptconfig.c
Log Message:
Bug Description: Need to address 64-bit compiler warnings - part 1
Reviewed by: nhosoi (Thanks!)
Fix Description: The intptr_t and uintptr_t are types which are defined as integer types
that are the same size as the pointer (void *) type. On the platforms we currently
support, this is the same as long and unsigned long, respectively (ILP32 and LP64).
However, intptr_t and uintptr_t are more portable. These can be used to assign a value
passed as a void * to get an integer value, then "cast down" to an int or
PRBool, and vice versa. This seems to be a common idiom in other applications where
values must be passed as void *.
For the printf/scanf formats, there is a standard header called inttypes.h which defines
formats to use for various 64 bit quantities, so that you don't need to figure out if
you have to use %lld or %ld for a 64-bit value - you just use PRId64 which is set to the
correct value. I also assumed that size_t is defined as the same size as a pointer so I
used the PRIuPTR format macro for size_t.
I removed many unused variables and some unused functions.
I put parentheses around assignments in conditional expressions to tell the compiler not
to complain about them.
I cleaned up some #defines that were defined more than once.
I commented out some unused goto labels.
Some of our header files shared among several source files define static variables. I
made it so that those variables are not defined unless a macro is set in the source file.
This avoids a lot of unused variable warnings.
I added some return values to functions that were declared as returning a value but did
not return a value. In all of these cases no one was checking the return value anyway.
I put explicit parentheses around cases like this: expr || expr && expr - the
&& has greater precedence than the ||. The compiler complains because it wants
you to make sure you mean expr || (expr && expr), not (expr || expr) &&
expr.
I cleaned up several places where the compiler was complaining about possible use of
uninitialized variables. There are still a lot of these cases remaining.
There are a lot of warnings like this:
lib/ldaputil/certmap.c:1279: warning: dereferencing type-punned pointer will break
strict-aliasing rules
These are due to our use of void ** to pass in addresses of addresses of structures. Many
of these are calls to slapi_ch_free, but many are not - they are cases where we do not
know what the type is going to be and may have to cast and modify the structure or
pointer. I started replacing the calls to slapi_ch_free with slapi_ch_free_string, but
there are many many more that need to be fixed.
The dblayer code also contains a fix for
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=463991 - instead of checking for
dbenv->foo_handle to see if a db "feature" is enabled, instead check the
flags passed to open the dbenv. This works for bdb 4.2 through bdb 4.7 and probably other
releases as well.
Platforms tested: RHEL5 x86_64, Fedora 8 i386
Flag Day: no
Doc impact: no
Index: ptconfig.c
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/dirsec/ldapserver/ldap/servers/plugins/passthru/ptconfig.c,v
retrieving revision 1.8
retrieving revision 1.9
diff -u -r1.8 -r1.9
--- ptconfig.c 14 Nov 2007 17:53:44 -0000 1.8
+++ ptconfig.c 8 Oct 2008 17:29:02 -0000 1.9
@@ -102,7 +102,7 @@
passthru_config( int argc, char **argv )
{
int i, j, rc, tosecs, using_def_connlifetime;
- char *p, **suffixarray;
+ char **suffixarray;
PassThruServer *prevsrvr, *srvr;
PassThruSuffix *suffix, *prevsuffix;
LDAPURLDesc *ludp;
@@ -144,7 +144,7 @@
and that the url does not look like this: ldap://host
also assumes suffixes do not have any / in them
*/
- if (p = strrchr(srvr->ptsrvr_url, '/')) { /* look for last / */
+ if ((p = strrchr(srvr->ptsrvr_url, '/'))) { /* look for last / */
p = strchr(p, ' '); /* look for first space after last / */
if (p) {
if (!strchr(p, ',')) { /* no comma */