Use get() and use_count() instead. Add #define
NO_POINTERHOLDER_DEPRECATION to remove deprecation markers for these
only.
This commit also removes all deprecated PointerHolder API calls from
qpdf's code except in PointerHolder's test suite, which must continue
to test the deprecated APIs.
Since the introduction of fuzz testing, there has never been a problem
found because of a failure of a file in the fuzzer seed corpus. As the
fuzzer has found problems, they have been added to the test suite, and
that should be adequate to exercise the fuzzers in the tesing
environment as well as providing adequate regression testing.
Removing these original files shaves many minutes off the builds in CI.
When making resources indirect in from_dr, the code was using the
wrong owning QPDF, forgetting that from_dr had already been copied
using CopyForeignObject.
The jpeg library has some assembly code that is missed by the compiler
instrumentation used by memory sanitization. There is a runtime
environment variable that is used to work around this issue.
There isn't really an issue with these files causing a real problem,
but malware and virus checkers trip on them, and the value to leaving
them in the test suite is too low to be worth the hassle.
Ordinarily the trailer doesn't contain any strings, so this is usually
a non-issue, but if the trailer contains strings, linearizing and
encrypting with object streams would include encrypted strings in the
trailer, which would blow out the padding because encrypted strings
are longer than their cleartext counterparts.
It's detected in QPDFWriter instead of at parse time because I can't
figure out how to construct a test case in a reasonable time. This
commit moves the fuzz file into the regular test suite for a QTC
coverage case.
This change works around STL problems with Embarcadero C++ Builder
version 10.2, but std::vector is more common than std::list in qpdf,
and this is a relatively new API, so an API change is tolerable.
Thanks to Thorsten Schöning <6223655+ams-tschoening@users.noreply.github.com>
for the fix.
This makes all integer type conversions that have potential data loss
explicit with calls that do range checks and raise an exception. After
this commit, qpdf builds with no warnings when -Wsign-conversion
-Wconversion is used with gcc or clang or when -W3 -Wd4800 is used
with MSVC. This significantly reduces the likelihood of potential
crashes from bogus integer values.
There are some parts of the code that take int when they should take
size_t or an offset. Such places would make qpdf not support files
with more than 2^31 of something that usually wouldn't be so large. In
the event that such a file shows up and is valid, at least qpdf would
raise an error in the right spot so the issue could be legitimately
addressed rather than failing in some weird way because of a silent
overflow condition.
This is the set of files from the latest corpus of running the older
fuzzer (qpdf_read_memory_fuzzer) at the time of adding the new fuzzer
(qpdf_fuzzer) after running a merge operation to minimize the corpus.