diff options
author | Gunnar Kudrjavets <gunnarku@microsoft.com> | 2015-05-06 10:16:55 +0100 |
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committer | Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org> | 2015-05-06 13:06:46 +0100 |
commit | 4c9b0a0314c8bab3c9faeac06d0aa734836b2f81 (patch) | |
tree | 5acabe389517b31d1d3d2dad29fdfac426a0165c /apps/s_server.c | |
parent | 4407d070e591cc8dc3f4b34779933f97cf2df222 (diff) |
Initialize potentially uninitialized local variables
Compiling OpenSSL code with MSVC and /W4 results in a number of warnings.
One category of warnings is particularly interesting - C4701 (potentially
uninitialized local variable 'name' used). This warning pretty much means
that there's a code path which results in uninitialized variables being used
or returned. Depending on compiler, its options, OS, values in registers
and/or stack, the results can be nondeterministic. Cases like this are very
hard to debug so it's rational to fix these issues.
This patch contains a set of trivial fixes for all the C4701 warnings (just
initializing variables to 0 or NULL or appropriate error code) to make sure
that deterministic values will be returned from all the execution paths.
RT#3835
Signed-off-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
Matt's note: All of these appear to be bogus warnings, i.e. there isn't
actually a code path where an unitialised variable could be used - its just
that the compiler hasn't been able to figure that out from the logic. So
this commit is just about silencing spurious warnings.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'apps/s_server.c')
-rw-r--r-- | apps/s_server.c | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/apps/s_server.c b/apps/s_server.c index 55781ac2d4..7f8a2a6b81 100644 --- a/apps/s_server.c +++ b/apps/s_server.c @@ -631,7 +631,7 @@ static tlsextstatusctx tlscstatp = { NULL, NULL, NULL, 0, -1, 0 }; static int cert_status_cb(SSL *s, void *arg) { tlsextstatusctx *srctx = arg; - char *host, *port, *path; + char *host = NULL, *port = NULL, *path = NULL; int use_ssl; unsigned char *rspder = NULL; int rspderlen; |