On 20.10.13 08:05, Ondřej Bílka wrote: > On Sun, Oct 20, 2013 at 07:47:06AM +0200, Torsten Bögershausen wrote: >> (may be s/path is too big/path is too long/ ?) >> >> On 19.10.13 12:52, Antoine Pelisse wrote: >>> Currently, most buffers created with PATH_MAX length, are not checked >>> when being written, and can overflow if PATH_MAX is not big enough to >>> hold the path. >>> >>> Fix that by using strlcpy() where strcpy() was used, and also run some >>> extra checks when copy is done with memcpy(). >>> >>> Reported-by: Wataru Noguchi <wnoguchi.0727@xxxxxxxxx> >>> Signed-off-by: Antoine Pelisse <apelisse@xxxxxxxxx> >>> --- >>> diff --git a/abspath.c b/abspath.c >>> index 64adbe2..0e60ba4 100644 >>> --- a/abspath.c >>> +++ b/abspath.c >>> @@ -216,11 +216,15 @@ const char *absolute_path(const char *path) >>> const char *prefix_filename(const char *pfx, int pfx_len, const char *arg) >>> { >>> static char path[PATH_MAX]; > > Why do you need static there? Good point. get_pathname() from path.c may be better. >>> + >>> + if (pfx_len > PATH_MAX) >> I think this should be >> if (pfx_len > PATH_MAX-1) /* Keep 1 char for '\0' >>> + die("Too long prefix path: %s", pfx); >>> + >>> #ifndef GIT_WINDOWS_NATIVE >>> if (!pfx_len || is_absolute_path(arg)) >>> return arg; >>> memcpy(path, pfx, pfx_len); >>> - strcpy(path + pfx_len, arg); >>> + strlcpy(path + pfx_len, arg, PATH_MAX - pfx_len); >> >> I'm not sure how to handle overlong path in general, there are several ways: >> a) Silently overwrite memory (with help of memcpy() and/or strcpy() >> b) Silently shorten the path using strlcpy() instead of strcpy() >> c) Avoid the overwriting and call die(). >> d) Prepare a longer buffer using xmalloc() >> > There is also > e) modify allocation to place write protected page after buffer end. Yes, I think this is what electric fence, DUMA or valgrind do: http://sourceforge.jp/projects/freshmeat_efence/ http://duma.sourceforge.net/ http://valgrind.sourceforge.net/ Theses are very good tools for developers, finding memory corruption (or other bugs like using uninitialized memory). One of the motivation I asked for test cases is that a git developer can run these test cases under valgrind and can verify that we are never out of range. For an end user a git "crash" caused by trying to write to a write protected page is better than silently corrupting memory. And a range check, followed by die(), is even easier to debug. For an end user. /Torsten -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html