The current code incorrectly accesses buffer[strlen(buffer)], which points to the null terminator ('\0') at the end of the string. This is technically out-of-bounds access since valid string content ends at index strlen(buffer)-1. Fix by: 1. Declaring strlen() result variable at function scope 2. Adding bounds check (len > 0) to handle empty strings 3. Using buffer[len-1] to correctly access the last character before the null terminator Signed-off-by: Kaushlendra Kumar --- Changes in v2: - Move variable declaration to function scope to avoid mixing declarations with statements (feedback from reviewer) Changes in v3: - Move changelog to comment section (feedback from reviewer) - Remove unnecessary blank lines Changes in v4: - Remove changelog from comment section --- tools/mm/slabinfo.c | 7 +++++-- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/tools/mm/slabinfo.c b/tools/mm/slabinfo.c index 1433eff99feb..80cdbd3db82d 100644 --- a/tools/mm/slabinfo.c +++ b/tools/mm/slabinfo.c @@ -155,6 +155,7 @@ static void usage(void) static unsigned long read_obj(const char *name) { + size_t len; FILE *f = fopen(name, "r"); if (!f) { @@ -165,8 +166,10 @@ static unsigned long read_obj(const char *name) if (!fgets(buffer, sizeof(buffer), f)) buffer[0] = 0; fclose(f); - if (buffer[strlen(buffer)] == '\n') - buffer[strlen(buffer)] = 0; + len = strlen(buffer); + + if (len > 0 && buffer[len - 1] == '\n') + buffer[len - 1] = 0; } return strlen(buffer); } -- 2.34.1