glibc/elf/dl-tunables.c
Siddhesh Poyarekar 2c9083f93d Fix SXID_ERASE behavior in setuid programs (BZ #27471)
When parse_tunables tries to erase a tunable marked as SXID_ERASE for
setuid programs, it ends up setting the envvar string iterator
incorrectly, because of which it may parse the next tunable
incorrectly.  Given that currently the implementation allows malformed
and unrecognized tunables pass through, it may even allow SXID_ERASE
tunables to go through.

This change revamps the SXID_ERASE implementation so that:

- Only valid tunables are written back to the tunestr string, because
  of which children of SXID programs will only inherit a clean list of
  identified tunables that are not SXID_ERASE.

- Unrecognized tunables get scrubbed off from the environment and
  subsequently from the child environment.

- This has the side-effect that a tunable that is not identified by
  the setxid binary, will not be passed on to a non-setxid child even
  if the child could have identified that tunable.  This may break
  applications that expect this behaviour but expecting such tunables
  to cross the SXID boundary is wrong.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>

(cherry picked from commit 2ed18c5b53)
2021-04-14 11:08:02 +05:30

400 lines
9.7 KiB
C

/* The tunable framework. See the README.tunables to know how to use the
tunable in a glibc module.
Copyright (C) 2016-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#include <startup.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sysdep.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <ldsodefs.h>
#define TUNABLES_INTERNAL 1
#include "dl-tunables.h"
#include <not-errno.h>
#if TUNABLES_FRONTEND == TUNABLES_FRONTEND_valstring
# define GLIBC_TUNABLES "GLIBC_TUNABLES"
#endif
#if TUNABLES_FRONTEND == TUNABLES_FRONTEND_valstring
static char *
tunables_strdup (const char *in)
{
size_t i = 0;
while (in[i++] != '\0');
char *out = __sbrk (i);
/* FIXME: In reality if the allocation fails, __sbrk will crash attempting to
set the thread-local errno since the TCB has not yet been set up. This
needs to be fixed with an __sbrk implementation that does not set
errno. */
if (out == (void *)-1)
return NULL;
i--;
while (i-- > 0)
out[i] = in[i];
return out;
}
#endif
static char **
get_next_env (char **envp, char **name, size_t *namelen, char **val,
char ***prev_envp)
{
while (envp != NULL && *envp != NULL)
{
char **prev = envp;
char *envline = *envp++;
int len = 0;
while (envline[len] != '\0' && envline[len] != '=')
len++;
/* Just the name and no value, go to the next one. */
if (envline[len] == '\0')
continue;
*name = envline;
*namelen = len;
*val = &envline[len + 1];
*prev_envp = prev;
return envp;
}
return NULL;
}
#define TUNABLE_SET_VAL_IF_VALID_RANGE(__cur, __val, __type) \
({ \
__type min = (__cur)->type.min; \
__type max = (__cur)->type.max; \
\
if ((__type) (__val) >= min && (__type) (val) <= max) \
{ \
(__cur)->val.numval = val; \
(__cur)->initialized = true; \
} \
})
static void
do_tunable_update_val (tunable_t *cur, const void *valp)
{
uint64_t val;
if (cur->type.type_code != TUNABLE_TYPE_STRING)
val = *((int64_t *) valp);
switch (cur->type.type_code)
{
case TUNABLE_TYPE_INT_32:
{
TUNABLE_SET_VAL_IF_VALID_RANGE (cur, val, int64_t);
break;
}
case TUNABLE_TYPE_UINT_64:
{
TUNABLE_SET_VAL_IF_VALID_RANGE (cur, val, uint64_t);
break;
}
case TUNABLE_TYPE_SIZE_T:
{
TUNABLE_SET_VAL_IF_VALID_RANGE (cur, val, uint64_t);
break;
}
case TUNABLE_TYPE_STRING:
{
cur->val.strval = valp;
break;
}
default:
__builtin_unreachable ();
}
}
/* Validate range of the input value and initialize the tunable CUR if it looks
good. */
static void
tunable_initialize (tunable_t *cur, const char *strval)
{
uint64_t val;
const void *valp;
if (cur->type.type_code != TUNABLE_TYPE_STRING)
{
val = _dl_strtoul (strval, NULL);
valp = &val;
}
else
{
cur->initialized = true;
valp = strval;
}
do_tunable_update_val (cur, valp);
}
void
__tunable_set_val (tunable_id_t id, void *valp)
{
tunable_t *cur = &tunable_list[id];
do_tunable_update_val (cur, valp);
}
#if TUNABLES_FRONTEND == TUNABLES_FRONTEND_valstring
/* Parse the tunable string TUNESTR and adjust it to drop any tunables that may
be unsafe for AT_SECURE processes so that it can be used as the new
environment variable value for GLIBC_TUNABLES. VALSTRING is the original
environment variable string which we use to make NULL terminated values so
that we don't have to allocate memory again for it. */
static void
parse_tunables (char *tunestr, char *valstring)
{
if (tunestr == NULL || *tunestr == '\0')
return;
char *p = tunestr;
size_t off = 0;
while (true)
{
char *name = p;
size_t len = 0;
/* First, find where the name ends. */
while (p[len] != '=' && p[len] != ':' && p[len] != '\0')
len++;
/* If we reach the end of the string before getting a valid name-value
pair, bail out. */
if (p[len] == '\0')
{
if (__libc_enable_secure)
tunestr[off] = '\0';
return;
}
/* We did not find a valid name-value pair before encountering the
colon. */
if (p[len]== ':')
{
p += len + 1;
continue;
}
p += len + 1;
/* Take the value from the valstring since we need to NULL terminate it. */
char *value = &valstring[p - tunestr];
len = 0;
while (p[len] != ':' && p[len] != '\0')
len++;
/* Add the tunable if it exists. */
for (size_t i = 0; i < sizeof (tunable_list) / sizeof (tunable_t); i++)
{
tunable_t *cur = &tunable_list[i];
if (tunable_is_name (cur->name, name))
{
/* If we are in a secure context (AT_SECURE) then ignore the
tunable unless it is explicitly marked as secure. Tunable
values take precedence over their envvar aliases. We write
the tunables that are not SXID_ERASE back to TUNESTR, thus
dropping all SXID_ERASE tunables and any invalid or
unrecognized tunables. */
if (__libc_enable_secure)
{
if (cur->security_level != TUNABLE_SECLEVEL_SXID_ERASE)
{
if (off > 0)
tunestr[off++] = ':';
const char *n = cur->name;
while (*n != '\0')
tunestr[off++] = *n++;
tunestr[off++] = '=';
for (size_t j = 0; j < len; j++)
tunestr[off++] = value[j];
}
if (cur->security_level != TUNABLE_SECLEVEL_NONE)
break;
}
value[len] = '\0';
tunable_initialize (cur, value);
break;
}
}
if (p[len] != '\0')
p += len + 1;
}
}
#endif
/* Enable the glibc.malloc.check tunable in SETUID/SETGID programs only when
the system administrator has created the /etc/suid-debug file. This is a
special case where we want to conditionally enable/disable a tunable even
for setuid binaries. We use the special version of access() to avoid
setting ERRNO, which is a TLS variable since TLS has not yet been set
up. */
static inline void
__always_inline
maybe_enable_malloc_check (void)
{
tunable_id_t id = TUNABLE_ENUM_NAME (glibc, malloc, check);
if (__libc_enable_secure && __access_noerrno ("/etc/suid-debug", F_OK) == 0)
tunable_list[id].security_level = TUNABLE_SECLEVEL_NONE;
}
/* Initialize the tunables list from the environment. For now we only use the
ENV_ALIAS to find values. Later we will also use the tunable names to find
values. */
void
__tunables_init (char **envp)
{
char *envname = NULL;
char *envval = NULL;
size_t len = 0;
char **prev_envp = envp;
maybe_enable_malloc_check ();
while ((envp = get_next_env (envp, &envname, &len, &envval,
&prev_envp)) != NULL)
{
#if TUNABLES_FRONTEND == TUNABLES_FRONTEND_valstring
if (tunable_is_name (GLIBC_TUNABLES, envname))
{
char *new_env = tunables_strdup (envname);
if (new_env != NULL)
parse_tunables (new_env + len + 1, envval);
/* Put in the updated envval. */
*prev_envp = new_env;
continue;
}
#endif
for (int i = 0; i < sizeof (tunable_list) / sizeof (tunable_t); i++)
{
tunable_t *cur = &tunable_list[i];
/* Skip over tunables that have either been set already or should be
skipped. */
if (cur->initialized || cur->env_alias == NULL)
continue;
const char *name = cur->env_alias;
/* We have a match. Initialize and move on to the next line. */
if (tunable_is_name (name, envname))
{
/* For AT_SECURE binaries, we need to check the security settings of
the tunable and decide whether we read the value and also whether
we erase the value so that child processes don't inherit them in
the environment. */
if (__libc_enable_secure)
{
if (cur->security_level == TUNABLE_SECLEVEL_SXID_ERASE)
{
/* Erase the environment variable. */
char **ep = prev_envp;
while (*ep != NULL)
{
if (tunable_is_name (name, *ep))
{
char **dp = ep;
do
dp[0] = dp[1];
while (*dp++);
}
else
++ep;
}
/* Reset the iterator so that we read the environment again
from the point we erased. */
envp = prev_envp;
}
if (cur->security_level != TUNABLE_SECLEVEL_NONE)
continue;
}
tunable_initialize (cur, envval);
break;
}
}
}
}
/* Set the tunable value. This is called by the module that the tunable exists
in. */
void
__tunable_get_val (tunable_id_t id, void *valp, tunable_callback_t callback)
{
tunable_t *cur = &tunable_list[id];
switch (cur->type.type_code)
{
case TUNABLE_TYPE_UINT_64:
{
*((uint64_t *) valp) = (uint64_t) cur->val.numval;
break;
}
case TUNABLE_TYPE_INT_32:
{
*((int32_t *) valp) = (int32_t) cur->val.numval;
break;
}
case TUNABLE_TYPE_SIZE_T:
{
*((size_t *) valp) = (size_t) cur->val.numval;
break;
}
case TUNABLE_TYPE_STRING:
{
*((const char **)valp) = cur->val.strval;
break;
}
default:
__builtin_unreachable ();
}
if (cur->initialized && callback != NULL)
callback (&cur->val);
}
rtld_hidden_def (__tunable_get_val)