view auto/endianness @ 9049:a10210a45c8b

Core: stricter UTF-8 handling in ngx_utf8_decode(). An UTF-8 octet sequence cannot start with a 11111xxx byte (above 0xf8), see https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3629#section-3. Previously, such bytes were accepted by ngx_utf8_decode() and misinterpreted as 11110xxx bytes (as in a 4-byte sequence). While unlikely, this can potentially cause issues. Fix is to explicitly reject such bytes in ngx_utf8_decode().
author Yugo Horie <u5.horie@gmail.com>
date Thu, 23 Feb 2023 08:09:50 +0900
parents e3faa5fb7772
children
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# Copyright (C) Igor Sysoev
# Copyright (C) Nginx, Inc.


echo $ngx_n "checking for system byte ordering ...$ngx_c"

cat << END >> $NGX_AUTOCONF_ERR

----------------------------------------
checking for system byte ordering

END


cat << END > $NGX_AUTOTEST.c

int main(void) {
    int i = 0x11223344;
    char *p;

    p = (char *) &i;
    if (*p == 0x44) return 0;
    return 1;
}

END

ngx_test="$CC $CC_TEST_FLAGS $CC_AUX_FLAGS \
          -o $NGX_AUTOTEST $NGX_AUTOTEST.c $NGX_LD_OPT $ngx_feature_libs"

eval "$ngx_test >> $NGX_AUTOCONF_ERR 2>&1"

if [ -x $NGX_AUTOTEST ]; then
    if $NGX_AUTOTEST >/dev/null 2>&1; then
        echo " little endian"
        have=NGX_HAVE_LITTLE_ENDIAN . auto/have
    else
        echo " big endian"
    fi

    rm -rf $NGX_AUTOTEST*

else
    rm -rf $NGX_AUTOTEST*

    echo
    echo "$0: error: cannot detect system byte ordering"
    exit 1
fi