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json_pointer: move array out-of-bounds check outside of is_valid_index()

The out-of-bounds check is useful when trying to index/obtain a value from
an array.
However, when we set a value to a specific JSON pointer, we can allow
values that are outside the length of the current array.
The RFC6901 doc isn't clear on that aspect, and doing so is a bit more
in-line with how json_object_array_{put,insert}_idx() functions behave.

This changes the behavior of json_pointer_set{f}() because now a value can
be set anywhere in the array.

Also, added a test-case for this behavior change.

Signed-off-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
tags/json-c-0.17-20230812
Alexandru Ardelean Eric Hawicz 4 years ago
parent
commit
1c38dea651
2 changed files with 26 additions and 11 deletions
  1. +10
    -11
      json_pointer.c
  2. +16
    -0
      tests/test_json_pointer.c

+ 10
- 11
json_pointer.c View File

@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ static void string_replace_all_occurrences_with_char(char *s, const char *occur,
}
}

static int is_valid_index(struct json_object *jo, const char *path, size_t *idx)
static int is_valid_index(const char *path, size_t *idx)
{
size_t i, len = strlen(path);
/* this code-path optimizes a bit, for when we reference the 0-9 index range
@@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ static int is_valid_index(struct json_object *jo, const char *path, size_t *idx)
if (is_plain_digit(path[0]))
{
*idx = (path[0] - '0');
goto check_oob;
return 1;
}
errno = EINVAL;
return 0;
@@ -77,13 +77,6 @@ static int is_valid_index(struct json_object *jo, const char *path, size_t *idx)
// We know it's all digits, so the only error case here is overflow,
// but ULLONG_MAX will be longer than any array length so that's ok.
*idx = strtoull(path, NULL, 10);
check_oob:
len = json_object_array_length(jo);
if (*idx >= len)
{
errno = ENOENT;
return 0;
}

return 1;
}
@@ -93,8 +86,14 @@ static int json_pointer_get_single_path(struct json_object *obj, char *path,
{
if (json_object_is_type(obj, json_type_array))
{
if (!is_valid_index(obj, path, idx))
if (!is_valid_index(path, idx))
return -1;
if (*idx >= json_object_array_length(obj))
{
errno = ENOENT;
return -1;
}

obj = json_object_array_get_idx(obj, *idx);
if (obj)
{
@@ -129,7 +128,7 @@ static int json_pointer_set_single_path(struct json_object *parent, const char *
/* RFC (Chapter 4) states that '-' may be used to add new elements to an array */
if (path[0] == '-' && path[1] == '\0')
return json_object_array_add(parent, value);
if (!is_valid_index(parent, path, &idx))
if (!is_valid_index(path, &idx))
return -1;
return json_object_array_put_idx(parent, idx, value);
}


+ 16
- 0
tests/test_json_pointer.c View File

@@ -269,6 +269,22 @@ static void test_example_set(void)
printf("%s\n", json_object_get_string(jo1));

json_object_put(jo1);

jo1 = json_tokener_parse("[0, 1, 2, 3]");
jo2 = json_tokener_parse("[0, 1, 2, 3, null, null, null, 7]");

assert(0 == json_pointer_set(&jo1, "/7", json_object_new_int(7)));
assert(1 == json_object_equal(jo1, jo2));

json_object_put(jo1);

jo1 = json_tokener_parse("[0, 1, 2, 3]");

assert(0 == json_pointer_setf(&jo1, json_object_new_int(7), "/%u", 7));
assert(1 == json_object_equal(jo1, jo2));

json_object_put(jo1);
json_object_put(jo2);
}

static void test_wrong_inputs_set(void)


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