Note that on the input side, the 3-digits flag may be left false when the MNC
is >99 anyway. On the decoded side, the flag is set accurately.
Change-Id: I89765613d8c5bd939a6957f7443ac88475f1b93c
Add gsm48_encode_ra() which takes appropriate struct as [out] parameter
instead of generic buffer. Using uint8_t buffer instead of proper struct
type prooved to be error-prone - see Coverity CID57877, CID57876.
Old gsm48_construct_ra() is made into tiny wrapper around new
function. The test output is adjusted because of the change in function
return value which was constant and hence ignored anyway.
Related: OS#1640
Change-Id: I31f9605277f4945f207c2c44ff82e62399f8db74
Remove initial msgb talloc context creation: if we create a root ctx for msgb
that all msgb are allocated in, we would in a final cleanup discard all msgbs,
i.e. we would not verify that all msgb are cleaned up properly.
If we create the msgb context and *don't* clean it up in the end, the sanitizer
build fails because the context root is not cleaned up.
Easiest is to actually allocate all msgb at NULL ctx, because then any msgb
that aren't cleaned up properly would still linger, while we don't leave a root
ctx that we need to clean up either.
Helps fix sanitizer build on debian 9.
Change-Id: I1f2d1d05c75bbf4d92787f9735083f18cdc90f6f
The &buf[3] is unlikely to be aligned properly. Use memcpy instead
of an assignment. Add a small testcase that verifies that I didn't
mess up the conversion.
Alignment trap: osmo-nitb (3293) PC=0x492b7094 Instr=0xe5803003 Address=0xbeb259db FSR 0x801