| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The device initialize function currently performs 2 jobs. Firstly,
it fills out the device_procs. Secondly, it performs any minimal
initialization required by the device (typically none).
At various points in the code we want to be able to copy procs
from one 'prototype' device to another, so we call initialize
for that. This populates the device procs, but does other work
that typically requires a 'derived device' structure rather
than a vanilla gx_device to work in.
Accordingly, we split the job into two; initialize_device_procs
(the first part) and initialize_device (the second part). The
initialize_device_procs function will set up the initialize_device
function pointer along with the rest if required.
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Move the initialize procedure out of the device procs table,
and into a bare function pointer at the start of the device proc.
Devices just initialise this, and the rest should fall into place.
This means changes to the device instantion macros (and all the uses
thereof), but makes the code nicer overall. In particular, this
removes the vestigial 'static_procs' structure.
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Discovered these when working on bug 701845 'devicen' device. Checking
uncovered a plethora of other places that used one of these functions
assuming success.
Also the gdev_prn_copy_scan_lines had places that assumed the return code
was a valid line_count, so if negative, could memset many lines in front of
an allocated buffer.
The code in a few of these usages is strange, and we don't have a way to
check them, so this may not match the original intent.
Also, while perusing all of these files, check devices for alloc's that
assume success and fix them (usually return gs_error_VMerror).
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Fixes:
./sanbin/gs -dBATCH -dNOPAUSE -dSAFER -dFIXEDMEDIA -sPAPERSIZE=legal -sOutputFile=tmp -sDEVICE=lp8000 ../bug-701844.pdf
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(squash of commits from filesec branch)
Most of this commit is donkeywork conversions of calls from
FILE * -> gp_file *, fwrite -> gp_fwrite etc. Pretty much every
device is touched, along with the clist and parsing code.
The more interesting changes are within gp.h (where the actual
new API is defined), gpmisc.c (where the basic implementations
live), and the platform specific levels (gp_mswin.c, gp_unifs.c
etc where the platform specific implementations have been
tweaked/renamed).
File opening path validation
All file opening routines now call a central routine for
path validation.
This then consults new entries in gs_lib_ctx to see if validation
is enabled or not. If so, it validates the paths by seeing if
they match.
Simple C level functions for adding/removing/clearing paths, exposed
through the gsapi level.
Add 2 postscript operators for path control.
<name> <string> .addcontrolpath -
Add the given <string> (path) to the list of paths for
controlset <name>, where <name> can be:
/PermitFileReading
/PermitFileWriting
/PermitFileControl
(Anything else -> rangecheck)
- .activatepathcontrol -
Enable path control. At this point PS cannot make any
more changes, and all file access is checked.
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Also update copyright dates.
Remove gs_cmdl.ps as we no longer use it, and remove its entry from
psfiles.htm.
Remove xfonts.htm as this feature (xfont support) is long, long gone.
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I *think* this will solve the Coverity complaint about the sprintf
mismatch. Only way to find out is to try it.
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Nothing contentious here.
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Squashed into one commit (see branch for details of the evolution of the
branch).
This brings gpcl6 and gxps into the Ghostscript build system, and a shared
set of graphics library object files for all the interpreters.
Also, brings the same configuration options to the pcl and xps products as we
have for Ghostscript.
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