commit
ac4cbedfdf55455b4c447f17f0fa027dbf02b2a6 upstream.
There are still a couple of minor issues in the X.509 leap year handling:
(1) To avoid doing a modulus-by-400 in addition to a modulus-by-100 when
determining whether the year is a leap year or not, I divided the year
by 100 after doing the modulus-by-100, thereby letting the compiler do
one instruction for both, and then did a modulus-by-4.
Unfortunately, I then passed the now-modified year value to mktime64()
to construct a time value.
Since this isn't a fast path and since mktime64() does a bunch of
divisions, just condense down to "% 400". It's also easier to read.
(2) The default month length for any February where the year doesn't
divide by four exactly is obtained from the month_length[] array where
the value is 29, not 28.
This is fixed by altering the table.
Reported-by: Rudolf Polzer <rpolzer@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Acked-by: David Woodhouse <David.Woodhouse@intel.com>
Acked-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
unsigned char tag,
const unsigned char *value, size_t vlen)
{
- static const unsigned char month_lengths[] = { 31, 29, 31, 30, 31, 30,
+ static const unsigned char month_lengths[] = { 31, 28, 31, 30, 31, 30,
31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31 };
const unsigned char *p = value;
unsigned year, mon, day, hour, min, sec, mon_len;
if (year % 4 == 0) {
mon_len = 29;
if (year % 100 == 0) {
- year /= 100;
- if (year % 4 != 0)
- mon_len = 28;
+ mon_len = 28;
+ if (year % 400 == 0)
+ mon_len = 29;
}
}
}