85f9017393
==9999== Syscall param writev(vector[...]) points to uninitialised byte(s) ==9999== at 0x4AB5154: writev (writev.c:51) ==9999== by 0x7C7C3: _XSERVTransWritev (Xtrans.c:912) ==9999== by 0x61C8B: FlushClient (io.c:924) ==9999== by 0x62423: WriteToClient (io.c:846) ==9999== by 0xCE39B: XkbSendMap (xkb.c:1408) ==9999== by 0xD247B: ProcXkbGetKbdByName (xkb.c:5814) ==9999== by 0x4AB53: Dispatch (dispatch.c:432) ==9999== by 0x205BF: main (main.c:291) ==9999== Address 0x557eb68 is 40 bytes inside a block of size 4,096 alloc'd ==9999== at 0x48334A4: calloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:467) ==9999== by 0x62567: WriteToClient (io.c:1065) ==9999== by 0x452EB: ProcEstablishConnection (dispatch.c:3685) ==9999== by 0x4AB53: Dispatch (dispatch.c:432) ==9999== by 0x205BF: main (main.c:291) ==9999== Uninitialised value was created by a stack allocation ==9999== at 0xD1910: ProcXkbGetKbdByName (xkb.c:5559) Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net> Reviewed-by: Oliver McFadden <oliver.mcfadden@nokia.com> Signed-off-by: Ander Conselvan de Oliveira <ander.conselvan-de-oliveira@nokia.com> |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
ddxBeep.c | ||
ddxCtrls.c | ||
ddxKillSrv.c | ||
ddxLEDs.c | ||
ddxList.c | ||
ddxLoad.c | ||
ddxPrivate.c | ||
ddxVT.c | ||
Makefile.am | ||
maprules.c | ||
README.compiled | ||
xkb.c | ||
xkb.h | ||
xkbAccessX.c | ||
xkbActions.c | ||
XKBAlloc.c | ||
xkbDflts.h | ||
xkbEvents.c | ||
xkbfmisc.c | ||
XKBGAlloc.c | ||
xkbgeom.h | ||
xkbInit.c | ||
xkbLEDs.c | ||
XKBMAlloc.c | ||
XKBMisc.c | ||
xkbout.c | ||
xkbPrKeyEv.c | ||
xkbSwap.c | ||
xkbtext.c | ||
xkbUtils.c | ||
XKM_file_format.txt | ||
xkmread.c |
The X server uses this directory to store the compiled version of the current keymap and/or any scratch keymaps used by clients. The X server or some other tool might destroy or replace the files in this directory, so it is not a safe place to store compiled keymaps for long periods of time. The default keymap for any server is usually stored in: X<num>-default.xkm where <num> is the display number of the server in question, which makes it possible for several servers *on the same host* to share the same directory. Unless the X server is modified, sharing this directory between servers on different hosts could cause problems.