result when integers appear on both sides of a compare. Worked around the
others by forcing the strict-overflow setting in the relevant functions to
a level where they are not reported.
Changed "FALL THROUGH" comments to "FALLTHROUGH" because GCC doesn't like
the space.
Worked around some C-style casts from (void*) because g++ 5.4.0 objects
to them.
Increased the buffer size for 'sprint' to pass the gcc 7.1.0 'sprint
overflow' check that is on by default with -Wall -Wextra.
This removes the use of a macro containing the pre-processor 'defined'
operator. It is unclear whether this is valid; a macro which
"generates" 'defined' is not permitted, but the use of the work
"generates" within the C90 standard seems to imply more than simple
substitution of an expression itself containing a well-formed defined
operation.
Signed-off-by: John Bowler <jbowler@acm.org>
Remove all currently detected cases of unsigned overflow. Detection is
runtime, so test case dependent. The changes to pngvalid.c eliminate
spurious and probably invalid tests with one while loop exception.
Apart from that and the change to the dependence on the intended
unsigned overflow in pngtrans.c the changes are limited to altering the
meme for an unsigned 'x' from:
while (x-- > 0)
to
for (; x > 0; --x)
This works because, in all cases, the control variable is not used in
the loop. The 'while' meme was, at one time, warn'ed by GCC so it is
probably a good change, for some weird religious value of good.
Signed-off-by: John Bowler <jbowler@acm.org>
In libpng 1.7 pngimage needs to check PNG_WRITE_PNG_SUPPORTED (new in 1.7), not
PNG_WRITE_SUPPORTED because png_write_png can be disabled without disabling
PNG_WRITE_SUPPORTED. Copied the approach from 1.6 pngcp.c (so this still works
in 1.6 as well.)
This adds pngcp to the build together with a pngcp.dfa configuration test; the
test revealed some configuration bugs which are fixed by corrections to the
_SUPPORTED macros.
pngcp builds on all tested configurations and a number of bugs have been fixed
to make this happen relative to the version in libpng 1.7 contrib/examples.
pngcp.dfa will have to be different for 1.7 but pngcp.c should work fine (not
yet tested). pngcp itself is still missing a usage message; this is a
preliminary version, although since it behaves the same way as 'cp' most unoids
shouldn't have a problem using it correctly.
Signed-off-by: John Bowler <jbowler@acm.org>
The SKIP definition needs to come after the png.h include (see all the other .c
files in contrib/libtests) because it depends on PNG_LIBPNG_VER. This commit
puts it in the correct place.
Signed-off-by: John Bowler <jbowler@acm.org>
MSVC does not like (uInt) = -(unsigned) (i.e. as an initializer), but it is fine
with it if the conversion is explicitly invoked by a cast.
Signed-off-by: John Bowler <jbowler@acm.org>
Coverity rejects code where an array element count has type size_t, this
elminates the code in question from contrib/libtests/pngvalid.c
Signed-off-by: John Bowler <jbowler@acm.org>
The previous version of the code invariably passed just one byte at a time to
libpng. The intention was to pass a random number of bytes in the range 0..511
(and this is what happens now).
Signed-off-by: John Bowler <jbowler@acm.org>
The code no longer gives up/fails on invalid PNG data, it just skips it (with
error messages). The code no longer fails on PNG files with data beyond IEND.
Options exist to use png_read_png (reading the whole image, not by row) and, in
that case, to apply any of the supported transforms. This makes for more
realistic testing; the decoded data actually gets used in a meaningful fashion.
Signed-off-by: John Bowler <jbowler@acm.org>
The macro underreported the size (by up to 512 bytes) of an 8-bit non-color
palette based memory format because it failed to take into account that the
memory palette has to be expanded to full RGB when it is written to PNG.
This is not likely to be a serious bug because the macro is new, the memory
format in question is likely to be rarely used and the result of an undersized
buffer fails in a safe way.
Signed-off-by: John Bowler <jbowler@acm.org>