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git/alias.c

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#include "git-compat-util.h"
#include "alias.h"
#include "alloc.h"
#include "config.h"
#include "gettext.h"
#include "string-list.h"
struct config_alias_data {
const char *alias;
char *v;
struct string_list *list;
};
static int config_alias_cb(const char *key, const char *value, void *d)
{
struct config_alias_data *data = d;
const char *p;
if (!skip_prefix(key, "alias.", &p))
return 0;
if (data->alias) {
if (!strcasecmp(p, data->alias))
return git_config_string((const char **)&data->v,
key, value);
} else if (data->list) {
string_list_append(data->list, p);
}
return 0;
}
char *alias_lookup(const char *alias)
{
struct config_alias_data data = { alias, NULL };
read_early_config(config_alias_cb, &data);
return data.v;
}
void list_aliases(struct string_list *list)
{
struct config_alias_data data = { NULL, NULL, list };
read_early_config(config_alias_cb, &data);
}
#define SPLIT_CMDLINE_BAD_ENDING 1
#define SPLIT_CMDLINE_UNCLOSED_QUOTE 2
alias.c: reject too-long cmdline strings in split_cmdline() This function improperly uses an int to represent the number of entries in the resulting argument array. This allows a malicious actor to intentionally overflow the return value, leading to arbitrary heap writes. Because the resulting argv array is typically passed to execv(), it may be possible to leverage this attack to gain remote code execution on a victim machine. This was almost certainly the case for certain configurations of git-shell until the previous commit limited the size of input it would accept. Other calls to split_cmdline() are typically limited by the size of argv the OS is willing to hand us, so are similarly protected. So this is not strictly fixing a known vulnerability, but is a hardening of the function that is worth doing to protect against possible unknown vulnerabilities. One approach to fixing this would be modifying the signature of `split_cmdline()` to look something like: int split_cmdline(char *cmdline, const char ***argv, size_t *argc); Where the return value of `split_cmdline()` is negative for errors, and zero otherwise. If non-NULL, the `*argc` pointer is modified to contain the size of the `**argv` array. But this implies an absurdly large `argv` array, which more than likely larger than the system's argument limit. So even if split_cmdline() allowed this, it would fail immediately afterwards when we called execv(). So instead of converting all of `split_cmdline()`'s callers to work with `size_t` types in this patch, instead pursue the minimal fix here to prevent ever returning an array with more than INT_MAX entries in it. Signed-off-by: Kevin Backhouse <kevinbackhouse@github.com> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
2022-09-29 00:53:32 +02:00
#define SPLIT_CMDLINE_ARGC_OVERFLOW 3
static const char *split_cmdline_errors[] = {
N_("cmdline ends with \\"),
alias.c: reject too-long cmdline strings in split_cmdline() This function improperly uses an int to represent the number of entries in the resulting argument array. This allows a malicious actor to intentionally overflow the return value, leading to arbitrary heap writes. Because the resulting argv array is typically passed to execv(), it may be possible to leverage this attack to gain remote code execution on a victim machine. This was almost certainly the case for certain configurations of git-shell until the previous commit limited the size of input it would accept. Other calls to split_cmdline() are typically limited by the size of argv the OS is willing to hand us, so are similarly protected. So this is not strictly fixing a known vulnerability, but is a hardening of the function that is worth doing to protect against possible unknown vulnerabilities. One approach to fixing this would be modifying the signature of `split_cmdline()` to look something like: int split_cmdline(char *cmdline, const char ***argv, size_t *argc); Where the return value of `split_cmdline()` is negative for errors, and zero otherwise. If non-NULL, the `*argc` pointer is modified to contain the size of the `**argv` array. But this implies an absurdly large `argv` array, which more than likely larger than the system's argument limit. So even if split_cmdline() allowed this, it would fail immediately afterwards when we called execv(). So instead of converting all of `split_cmdline()`'s callers to work with `size_t` types in this patch, instead pursue the minimal fix here to prevent ever returning an array with more than INT_MAX entries in it. Signed-off-by: Kevin Backhouse <kevinbackhouse@github.com> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
2022-09-29 00:53:32 +02:00
N_("unclosed quote"),
N_("too many arguments"),
};
int split_cmdline(char *cmdline, const char ***argv)
{
alias.c: reject too-long cmdline strings in split_cmdline() This function improperly uses an int to represent the number of entries in the resulting argument array. This allows a malicious actor to intentionally overflow the return value, leading to arbitrary heap writes. Because the resulting argv array is typically passed to execv(), it may be possible to leverage this attack to gain remote code execution on a victim machine. This was almost certainly the case for certain configurations of git-shell until the previous commit limited the size of input it would accept. Other calls to split_cmdline() are typically limited by the size of argv the OS is willing to hand us, so are similarly protected. So this is not strictly fixing a known vulnerability, but is a hardening of the function that is worth doing to protect against possible unknown vulnerabilities. One approach to fixing this would be modifying the signature of `split_cmdline()` to look something like: int split_cmdline(char *cmdline, const char ***argv, size_t *argc); Where the return value of `split_cmdline()` is negative for errors, and zero otherwise. If non-NULL, the `*argc` pointer is modified to contain the size of the `**argv` array. But this implies an absurdly large `argv` array, which more than likely larger than the system's argument limit. So even if split_cmdline() allowed this, it would fail immediately afterwards when we called execv(). So instead of converting all of `split_cmdline()`'s callers to work with `size_t` types in this patch, instead pursue the minimal fix here to prevent ever returning an array with more than INT_MAX entries in it. Signed-off-by: Kevin Backhouse <kevinbackhouse@github.com> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
2022-09-29 00:53:32 +02:00
size_t src, dst, count = 0, size = 16;
char quoted = 0;
ALLOC_ARRAY(*argv, size);
/* split alias_string */
(*argv)[count++] = cmdline;
for (src = dst = 0; cmdline[src];) {
char c = cmdline[src];
if (!quoted && isspace(c)) {
cmdline[dst++] = 0;
while (cmdline[++src]
&& isspace(cmdline[src]))
; /* skip */
ALLOC_GROW(*argv, count + 1, size);
(*argv)[count++] = cmdline + dst;
} else if (!quoted && (c == '\'' || c == '"')) {
quoted = c;
src++;
} else if (c == quoted) {
quoted = 0;
src++;
} else {
if (c == '\\' && quoted != '\'') {
src++;
c = cmdline[src];
if (!c) {
FREE_AND_NULL(*argv);
return -SPLIT_CMDLINE_BAD_ENDING;
}
}
cmdline[dst++] = c;
src++;
}
}
cmdline[dst] = 0;
if (quoted) {
FREE_AND_NULL(*argv);
return -SPLIT_CMDLINE_UNCLOSED_QUOTE;
}
alias.c: reject too-long cmdline strings in split_cmdline() This function improperly uses an int to represent the number of entries in the resulting argument array. This allows a malicious actor to intentionally overflow the return value, leading to arbitrary heap writes. Because the resulting argv array is typically passed to execv(), it may be possible to leverage this attack to gain remote code execution on a victim machine. This was almost certainly the case for certain configurations of git-shell until the previous commit limited the size of input it would accept. Other calls to split_cmdline() are typically limited by the size of argv the OS is willing to hand us, so are similarly protected. So this is not strictly fixing a known vulnerability, but is a hardening of the function that is worth doing to protect against possible unknown vulnerabilities. One approach to fixing this would be modifying the signature of `split_cmdline()` to look something like: int split_cmdline(char *cmdline, const char ***argv, size_t *argc); Where the return value of `split_cmdline()` is negative for errors, and zero otherwise. If non-NULL, the `*argc` pointer is modified to contain the size of the `**argv` array. But this implies an absurdly large `argv` array, which more than likely larger than the system's argument limit. So even if split_cmdline() allowed this, it would fail immediately afterwards when we called execv(). So instead of converting all of `split_cmdline()`'s callers to work with `size_t` types in this patch, instead pursue the minimal fix here to prevent ever returning an array with more than INT_MAX entries in it. Signed-off-by: Kevin Backhouse <kevinbackhouse@github.com> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
2022-09-29 00:53:32 +02:00
if (count >= INT_MAX) {
FREE_AND_NULL(*argv);
return -SPLIT_CMDLINE_ARGC_OVERFLOW;
}
ALLOC_GROW(*argv, count + 1, size);
(*argv)[count] = NULL;
return count;
}
const char *split_cmdline_strerror(int split_cmdline_errno)
{
return split_cmdline_errors[-split_cmdline_errno - 1];
}