Re: fix for palloc() of user-supplied length - Mailing list pgsql-patches
From | Bruce Momjian |
---|---|
Subject | Re: fix for palloc() of user-supplied length |
Date | |
Msg-id | 200209120004.g8C04IH12257@candle.pha.pa.us Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: fix for palloc() of user-supplied length ("Serguei Mokhov" <sa_mokho@alcor.concordia.ca>) |
Responses |
Re: fix for palloc() of user-supplied length
|
List | pgsql-patches |
This was already applied by Tom Lane. I was not sure you were informed. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- revision 1.91 date: 2002/09/04 23:31:34; author: tgl; state: Exp; lines: +4 -5 Guard against send-lots-and-lots-of-data DoS attack from unauthenticated users, by limiting the length of string we will accept for a password. Patch by Serguei Mokhov, some editorializing by Tom Lane. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Serguei Mokhov wrote: > Hello, > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Bruce Momjian" <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us> > Sent: September 02, 2002 1:05 AM > > > Would someone submit a patch for this? > > Attached please find an attempt to fix the volunerability issue below. > > Affected files are: > > /src/include/libpq/libpq.h > /src/include/libpq/pqformat.h > /src/backend/libpq/pqformat.c > /src/backend/libpq/pqcomm.c > /src/backend/libpq/auth.c > > "Briefly" the changes: > > Main victims for the change were pq_getstring() and pq_getstr() > (which calls the former) in pqformat.c and pqcomm.c. pq_getstring() is the one reading > until \0 and might possibly render the system run out of memory. > > Changing pq_getstring() alone would break a lot code, so I > added a two more functions: pq_getstring_common() and > pq_getstring_bounded(). The former is a big part of what used to be > pq_getstring() and the latter is a copy of the new pq_getstring() > with the string length check. Creating pq_getstring_common() > was suggested by its reuse in pq_getstring() and pq_getstring_bounded() > avoiding code duplication. > > Similar changes were done for pq_getstr(). Its common code converting > to MULTIBYTE was placed in pq_getstr_multibyte() and pq_getstr() and > (newly added) pq_getstr_bounded() both call it before returning a result. > > WRT above, two places in auth.c were changed to call pq_getstr_bounded() > instead of pq_getstr() on password read. I'm not sure if > there are other places where that might be needed... > > Might look ugly for some, but looks like a not-so-bad solution > to me. If I'm completely wrong, I'd like to have some guidance then :) > Please review with care. I'm off to bed. > > Thanks, > -s > > PS: The patch also fixes a typo in the be-secure.c comment :) > > > Tom Lane wrote: > > > Neil Conway <neilc@samurai.com> writes: > > > > (2) The length supplied by the user is completely ignored by > > > > the code, and it simply reads the input until it sees a > > > > NULL terminator (read the comments in the code about 10 > > > > lines down.) Therefore, any sanity checking on the length > > > > specified by the user is a waste of time. > > > > > > Agreed; the fact that the protocol requires a length word at all is just > > > a hangover from the past. We can read the length word and forget it. > > > > > > I wonder though if it'd be worthwhile to limit the length of the string > > > that we are willing to read from the client in the second step. We are > > > at this point dealing with an unauthenticated user, so we should be > > > untrusting. And I think Sir Mordred has a point: forcing a backend to > > > allocate a lot of memory can be a form of DoS attack. > > > > > > regards, tom lane [ Attachment, skipping... ] > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command > (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to majordomo@postgresql.org) -- Bruce Momjian | http://candle.pha.pa.us pgman@candle.pha.pa.us | (610) 359-1001 + If your life is a hard drive, | 13 Roberts Road + Christ can be your backup. | Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073
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