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Assigning strlen() to a uint32_t and then asserting that it isn't too large doesn't catch the case of an input string 4G in length. Thankfully, the incoming strings can never be that large: if the export name or query is reflecting a string the client got from the server, we already guarantee that we dropped the NBD connection if the server sent more than 32M in a single reply to our NBD_OPT_* request; if the export name is coming from qemu, nbd_receive_negotiate() asserted that strlen(info->name) <= NBD_MAX_STRING_SIZE; and similarly, a query string via x->dirty_bitmap coming from the user was bounds-checked in either qemu-nbd or by the limitations of QMP. Still, it doesn't hurt to be more explicit in how we write our assertions to not have to analyze whether inadvertent wraparound is possible. Fixes: 93676c88 ("nbd: Don't send oversize strings", v4.2.0) Reported-by: Dr. David Alan Gilbert <dave@treblig.org> Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy <vsementsov@yandex-team.ru> Message-ID: <20230608135653.2918540-2-eblake@redhat.com>