This happens to work, but is not guaranteed to work. Indeed, most memcpy
interfaces in Linux-land annotate these arguments as nonnull, and GCC
and LLVM both can and do optimized based upon that. When they do so,
they might legitimately have miscompiled code calling this routine with
two valid iterators, 'nullptr' and 'nullptr'. There was even code doing
precisely this because StringRef().begin() and StringRef().end() both
produce null pointers.
This was found by UBSan.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@243927
91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-
96231b3b80d8
T2>::value>::type * = nullptr) {
// Use memcpy for PODs iterated by pointers (which includes SmallVector
// iterators): std::uninitialized_copy optimizes to memmove, but we can
- // use memcpy here.
- memcpy(Dest, I, (E-I)*sizeof(T));
+ // use memcpy here. Note that I and E are iterators and thus might be
+ // invalid for memcpy if they are equal.
+ if (I != E)
+ memcpy(Dest, I, (E - I) * sizeof(T));
}
/// Double the size of the allocated memory, guaranteeing space for at