The function compat_getdelim_ is used for tor_getline if tor is compiled
on a system that lacks getline and getdelim. These systems should be
very rare, considering that getdelim is POSIX.
If this system is further a 32 bit architecture, it is possible to
trigger a double free with huge files.
If bufsiz has been already increased to 2 GB, the next chunk would
be 4 GB in size, which wraps around to 0 due to 32 bit limitations.
A realloc(*buf, 0) could be imagined as "free(*buf); return malloc(0);"
which therefore could return NULL. The code in question considers
that an error, but will keep the value of *buf pointing to already
freed memory.
The caller of tor_getline() would free the pointer again, therefore
leading to a double free.
This code can only be triggered in dirserv_read_measured_bandwidths
with a huge measured bandwith list file on a system that actually
allows to reach 2 GB of space through realloc.
It is not possible to trigger this on Linux with glibc or other major
*BSD systems even on unit tests, because these systems cannot reach
so much memory due to memory fragmentation.
This patch is effectively based on the penetration test report of
cure53 for curl available at https://cure53.de/pentest-report_curl.pdf
and explained under section "CRL-01-007 Double-free in aprintf() via
unsafe size_t multiplication (Medium)".
Prior to this commit, the testsuite was failing on OpenBSD. After
this commit the testsuite runs fine on OpenBSD.
It was previously decided to test for the OpenBSD macro (rather than
__OpenBSD__, etc.) because OpenBSD forks seem to have the former
macro defined. sys/param.h must be included for the OpenBSD macro
definition; however, many files tested for the OpenBSD macro without
having this header included.
This commit includes sys/param.h in the files where the OpenBSD macro
is used (and sys/param.h is not already included), and it also
changes some instances of the __OpenBSD__ macro to OpenBSD.
See commit 27df23abb6 which changed
everything to use OpenBSD instead of __OpenBSD__ or OPENBSD. See
also tickets #6982 and #20980 (the latter ticket is where it was
decided to use the OpenBSD macro).
Signed-off-by: Kris Katterjohn <katterjohn@gmail.com>
It's possible for a unit test to report success via its pipe, but to
fail as it tries to clean up and exit. Notably, this happens on a
leak sanitizer failure.
Fixes bug 27658; bugfix on 0.2.2.4-alpha when tinytest was
introduced.
We need this in our unit tests, since otherwise NSS will notice
we've forked and start cussing us out.
I suspect we'll need a different hack for daemonizing, but this
should be enough for tinytest to work.
* ADD new /src/common/crypto_rand.[ch] module.
* ADD new /src/common/crypto_util.[ch] module (contains the memwipe()
function, since all crypto_* modules need this).
* FIXES part of #24658: https://bugs.torproject.org/24658
Included crypto_digest.h in some files in order to solve xof+digest module
dependency issues. Removed crypto.h where it isn't needed anymore.
Follows #24658.
Signed-off-by: Fernando Fernandez Mancera <ffmancera@riseup.net>
If "1" is not 64 bits wide already, then "1 << i" will not actually
work.
This bug only affects the TEST_BITOPS code, and shouldn't matter for
the actual use of the timeout code (except if/when it causes this
test to fail).
Reported by dcb314@hotmail.com. Fix for bug 23583. Not adding a
changes file, since this code is never compiled into Tor.
- HT_FOREACH_FN defined in an additional place because nickm did that
in an old kist prototype
- Make channel_more_to_flush mockable for future sched tests
- Add empty scheduler_{vanilla,kist}.c files and put in include.am
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>