The first multi-letter extension after the single-letter extensions does
not have to be preceded by an underscore, which could cause the parser
to mistakenly find a single-letter extension after the start of the
multi-letter portion of the string.
Three letters precede multi-letter extensions (s, x & z), none of which
are valid single-letter extensions. The dt-binding also allows
multi-letter extensions starting with h, but no such extension have been
frozen or ratified, and the unprivileged spec no longer uses "h" as a
prefix for multi-letter hypervisor extensions, having moved to "sh"
instead. For that reason, modify the parser to stop at s, x & z to prevent
this overrun, ignoring h.
Signed-off-by: Conor Dooley <conor.dooley@microchip.com>
Reviewed-by: Heinrich Schuchardt <heinrich.schuchardt@canonical.com>
}
if (!cpu_get_desc(dev, desc, sizeof(desc))) {
/*
- * skip the first 4 characters (rv32|rv64) and
- * check until underscore
+ * skip the first 4 characters (rv32|rv64)
*/
for (i = 4; i < sizeof(desc); i++) {
- if (desc[i] == '_' || desc[i] == '\0')
- break;
- if (desc[i] == ext)
- return true;
+ switch (desc[i]) {
+ case 's':
+ case 'x':
+ case 'z':
+ case '_':
+ case '\0':
+ /*
+ * Any of these characters mean the single
+ * letter extensions have all been consumed.
+ */
+ return false;
+ default:
+ if (desc[i] == ext)
+ return true;
+ }
}
}