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Davi Arnaut authored
The problem is that the logic which checks if a pointer is valid relies on a poor heuristic based on the start and end addresses of the data segment and heap. Apart from miscalculating the heap bounds, this approach also suffers from the fact that memory can come from places other than the heap. See Bug#58528 for a more detailed explanation. On Linux, the solution is to access the process's memory through /proc/self/task/<tid>/mem, which allows for retrieving the contents of pages within the virtual address space of the calling process. If a address range is not mapped, a input/output error is returned.
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