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+# 2 Bugs 1 Day
+
+2023-11-23
+
+If I had a nickel every time I encountered a cursed bug today, I'd have
+two. It's not a lot but weird how it happened twice.
+
+## Bug 1
+
+My roommate asked me about a bug in his C code. He passed a value to
+a function. The value is not supposed to be zero, but in the output, it
+apparently is. Why?
+
+We could not find any lines of code that could have changed this value. It
+was initialized with a command line argument (i.e. `atoi(argv[2])`), then
+remains read-only.
+
+After ruling out off-by-one errors and floating point rounding,
+I hypothesize it has something to do with the data structure. The value is
+within a struct as follows:
+
+```c
+struct foo_t {
+ bar_t bar[256];
+ int value;
+} foo;
+```
+
+`foo` is a global instance of `struct foo_t`. To initialize it, we set
+`value` to a command line argument and initialize `bar` with a for loop,
+which looks like:
+
+```c
+for (int i = 0; i < arg1; i++) {
+ for (int j = 0; j < arg2; j++) {
+ foo.bar[i * arg2 * arg3 + j] = 0;
+ }
+}
+```
+
+I realized that `arg3` was unnecessary. By multiplying it, we're spacing
+out the indices too much. If `arg1` gets big enough, we'll get a buffer
+overflow.
+
+It just so happens that all arguments are powers of 2, and `bar` is an
+array of 256. Which means… You'll overwrite `value`!
+
+We removed `arg3` and sure enough, it worked.
+
+Conclusion: Lack of bound checking in C.
+
+## Bug 2
+
+Right after we hunted down this bug, my roommate said there's another bug
+in VSCode that has bothered him for a while. It seems like whenever he
+types the word "store" in a Markdown code block, the syntax highlighting
+(regardless of language) breaks. He looked through the VSCode repo and
+didn't find anything particular.
+
+We found that the keyword doesn't have to be "store", it just needs to be
+"re" + whitespace.
+
+![Some C code in a Markdown code block, containing a string literal "re ".
+Highlighter refuses to match curly braces surrounding it, and completely
+stops working below.](img/2bugs1day/re.png)
+
+What does `re` stand for? The Python package?
+
+This is so cursed that I decided to make the ultimate sacrifice — to
+install VSCode on my own machine.
+
+However, I failed to reproduce. My roommate correctly suggests it's
+a problem with a plugin. He disabled all the Markdown-related plugins on
+his machine. The bug is still there.
+
+He then disabled all plugins (except those bundled). The bug is gone.
+
+VSCode has a "plugin bisect" tool that does a binary search to find the
+problematic plugin in O(log(# plugins)) time. I did that and the problem
+is…
+
+OCaml Platform.
+
+Do you realize how shocked we were? Like, we would rather believe it was
+ghosts or something. OCaml is literally the single most innocent plugin.
+
+We looked at OCaml Platform's code and found something interesting.
+
+```json
+{
+ "repository": {
+ "reason-code-block": {
+ "begin": "(re|reason|reasonml)(\\s+[^`~]*)?$",
+ "end": "(^|\\G)(?=\\s*[`~]{3,}\\s*$)",
+ ...
+ },
+ ...
+}
+```
+
+I do not know how this works, but boy I sure know regex checks out. We
+tried `reason`, and yes, it broke as well.
+
+This code was added in a 2020 commit, and remains unchanged since. It's
+such a minor bug that I believe 90% its users didn't even notice.
+I encouraged my roommate to file a bug report — or even a pull request.
+
+My hypothesis is OCaml programmers simply don't program in anything else.
+
+Conclusion: OCaml plugin ships a regex with false positives.
+
+## Takeaway
+
+1. There is a reason for every bug.
+2. There is not an obvious reason for every bug.
+3. C will just silently overflow your buffer without you knowing. Can't
+ wait till Linux is 100% Rust
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diff --git a/docs/random/index.md b/docs/random/index.md
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+++ b/docs/random/index.md
@@ -20,3 +20,4 @@ Nevertheless, occasionally I leave a permanent trace along the way.
- [xkcdbot](xkcdbot.md)
- [Playlist to put on on my deathbed](deathbed_playlist.md)
- [Of Potato Chips And Food Globalization](potato_chips.md)
+- [2 Bugs 1 Day](2bugs1day.md)