1// Test strict_string_checks option in strstr function
2// RUN: %clang_asan %s -o %t && %run %t 2>&1
3
4// Newer versions of Android's strstr() uses memchr() internally, which actually
5// does trigger a heap-buffer-overflow (as it tries to find the
6// null-terminator). The same applies to FreeBSD.
7// UNSUPPORTED: android, target={{.*freebsd.*}}
8// RUN: %env_asan_opts=strict_string_checks=false %run %t 2>&1
9
10// RUN: %env_asan_opts=strict_string_checks=true not %run %t 2>&1 | FileCheck %s
11
12#include <assert.h>
13#include <stdlib.h>
14#include <string.h>
15
16int main(int argc, char **argv) {
17 size_t size = 100;
18 char fill = 'o';
19 char *s1 = (char*)malloc(size: size);
20 char *s2 = (char*)malloc(size: size);
21 memset(s: s1, c: fill, n: size);
22 memset(s: s2, c: fill, n: size);
23 s2[size - 1]='\0';
24 char* r = strstr(haystack: s1, needle: s2);
25 // CHECK: {{.*ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-buffer-overflow on address}}
26 // CHECK: READ of size {{101|100}}
27 assert(r == s1);
28 free(ptr: s1);
29 free(ptr: s2);
30 return 0;
31}
32

source code of compiler-rt/test/asan/TestCases/strstr_strict.c