When importing an extension on Windows, the code reads the PE 'import

table' of the dll, to make sure that the dll really was build for the
correct Python version.  It does this by looking for an entry
'pythonXY.dll' (X.Y is the Python version number).

The code now checks the size of the dll's import table before reading
entries from it.  Before this patch, the code crashed trying to read
the import table when the size was zero (as in Win2k's wmi.dll, for
example).

Look for imports of 'pythonXY_d.dll' in a debug build instead of
'pythonXY.dll'.

Fixes SF 951851: Crash when reading "import table" of certain windows dlls.

Already backported to the 2.3 branch.
This commit is contained in:
Thomas Heller 2004-07-02 08:53:57 +00:00
parent 32b8f8052a
commit 1df04617b7
1 changed files with 12 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -116,6 +116,10 @@ static char *GetPythonImport (HINSTANCE hModule)
string constant holding the import name is located. */
if (DWORD_AT(dllbase + opt_offset + num_dict_off) >= 2) {
/* We have at least 2 tables - the import table is the second
one. But still it may be that the table size is zero */
if (0 == DWORD_AT(dllbase + opt_offset + import_off + sizeof(DWORD)))
return NULL;
import_data = dllbase + DWORD_AT(dllbase +
opt_offset +
import_off);
@ -128,7 +132,11 @@ static char *GetPythonImport (HINSTANCE hModule)
/* Ensure python prefix is followed only
by numbers to the end of the basename */
pch = import_name + 6;
#ifdef _DEBUG
while (*pch && pch[0] != '_' && pch[1] != 'd' && pch[2] != '.') {
#else
while (*pch && *pch != '.') {
#endif
if (*pch >= '0' && *pch <= '9') {
pch++;
} else {
@ -221,7 +229,11 @@ dl_funcptr _PyImport_GetDynLoadFunc(const char *fqname, const char *shortname,
} else {
char buffer[256];
#ifdef _DEBUG
PyOS_snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "python%d%d_d.dll",
#else
PyOS_snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "python%d%d.dll",
#endif
PY_MAJOR_VERSION,PY_MINOR_VERSION);
import_python = GetPythonImport(hDLL);