Re: [PATCH] trace-cmd: prevent print_graph_duration buffer overflow

From: Steven Rostedt
Date: Mon Jun 14 2010 - 20:16:19 EST


On Mon, 2010-06-14 at 17:40 -0400, Valdis.Kletnieks@xxxxxx wrote:
> On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 17:01:34 EDT, Chase Douglas said:
> > On Sun, 2010-06-13 at 16:52 -0400, Valdis.Kletnieks@xxxxxx wrote:
> > > On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 13:11:48 EDT, Chase Douglas said:
> > > > Passing n > sizeof(string) to snprintf can cause a glibc buffer overflow
> > > > condition. We know the exact size of nsecs_str, so use it instead of
> > > > math that may overflow.
> > >
> > > > /* Print nsecs (we don't want to exceed 7 numbers) */
> > > > if ((s->len - len) < 7) {
> > > > - snprintf(nsecs_str, 8 - (s->len - len), "%03lu", nsecs_rem);
> > > > + snprintf(nsecs_str, sizeof(nsecs_str), "%03lu", nsecs_rem);
> > >
> > > We only get into this code after we've checked that the length is under 7
> > > characters. How much overflow can happen as long as the sizeof(nsecs_str) is a
> > > sane size (like at least 8 chars)? Probably a better bet would be doing the
> > > right thing and 'BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(nsecs_str) < 8);'?
> >
> > nsecs_str is a local variable defined just above this block of code as:
> >
> > char nsecs_str[5];
> >
> > I was hitting cases where s->len == 64 and len == 63, leading to the
> > size argument of snprintf being 7 on a 5 byte string. I didn't delve too
> > much into the reasoning for the if statement, but I think it's math is
> > not actually related to the size of nsecs_rem but to some other string
> > length.
>
> This is starting to smell like that patch is just papering over a bug...
>
> I saw that '8 -' and made the rash assumption that was the size of the array.
> Is 5 in fact big enough and the 's->len - len' calculation is broken, or
> should it be bigger? As you noted, that length calculation is looking a tad
> sketchy. (And if we're stuck with '5' because it's a magic number for
> somebody's formatting purposes, maybe it needs to be a #define?)
>

Ouch, this is worse than that. this code was cut & pasted almost
directly from the Linux kernel (kernel/trace/trace_function_graph.c).
And it looks like any bug here is also a bug there. The difference is
that if we trigger the bug there we crash the kernel :-p

-- Steve


--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/