Thread
Commits
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Improve pglz_decompress's defenses against corrupt compressed data.
- 9b103f861ea9 17.0 landed
- cfa4eba02c87 16.1 landed
- 985ac5ce292a 15.5 landed
- 817669ea27c4 13.13 landed
- 2c63dc0356b3 14.10 landed
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Insufficient memory access checks in pglz_decompress
Flavien GUEDEZ <flav.pg@oopacity.net> — 2023-10-18T14:21:57Z
Hi, After some investigations about very corrupted toast data in one postgres instance, I found that the pglz_decompress function (in common/pg_lzcompress.c) does not check correctly where it copies data from using memcpy(), which could result in segfault. In this function, there are other checks to ensure that we do not copy after the destination end, but not if we copy data from "before the beginning". Apologize, I am not a C developer and I am not used to submitting patches. Though I have tried and attached kind of PoC with a relatively random corrupted payload (it was beginning with those bytes in my storage for obscure reasons). Also attached a simple patch of what could be done just before the memcpy calls. Regards, Flavien
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Re: Insufficient memory access checks in pglz_decompress
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2023-10-18T15:14:27Z
Flavien GUEDEZ <flav.pg@oopacity.net> writes: > After some investigations about very corrupted toast data in one > postgres instance, I found that the pglz_decompress function (in > common/pg_lzcompress.c) does not check correctly where it copies data > from using memcpy(), which could result in segfault. > In this function, there are other checks to ensure that we do not copy > after the destination end, but not if we copy data from "before the > beginning". Hmm, would it not be better to add this check to the existing "Check for corrupt data" a bit further up? Then you'd only need one instance of the test, and only need to do it once per tag (note the comment pointing out that dp - off stays the same), and overall it'd be less surprising IMO. regards, tom lane
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Re: Insufficient memory access checks in pglz_decompress
Flavien GUEDEZ <flav.pg@oopacity.net> — 2023-10-18T16:46:56Z
Thanks for your feedback, you are definitely right, I did not notice that (dp - off) was staying the same in the while loop. Here is another much smaller patch. Flavien Le 18/10/2023 à 17:14, Tom Lane a écrit : > Flavien GUEDEZ <flav.pg@oopacity.net> writes: >> After some investigations about very corrupted toast data in one >> postgres instance, I found that the pglz_decompress function (in >> common/pg_lzcompress.c) does not check correctly where it copies data >> from using memcpy(), which could result in segfault. >> In this function, there are other checks to ensure that we do not copy >> after the destination end, but not if we copy data from "before the >> beginning". > Hmm, would it not be better to add this check to the existing "Check for > corrupt data" a bit further up? Then you'd only need one instance of > the test, and only need to do it once per tag (note the comment pointing > out that dp - off stays the same), and overall it'd be less surprising IMO. > > regards, tom lane
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Re: Insufficient memory access checks in pglz_decompress
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2023-10-19T00:48:03Z
Flavien GUEDEZ <flav.pg@oopacity.net> writes: > Thanks for your feedback, you are definitely right, I did not notice > that (dp - off) was staying the same in the while loop. > Here is another much smaller patch. I thought of another thing we should change: it's better to perform the test as "off > (dp - dest)" than the way you formulated it. "dp - dest" is certainly computable, since it's the number of bytes we've written to the output buffer so far. But "dp - off" could, with bad luck and a buffer near the start of memory, wrap around to look like it's after "dest". Pushed with that change and a little fiddling with the comment. Thanks for the report! regards, tom lane
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Re: Insufficient memory access checks in pglz_decompress
Flavien GUEDEZ <flav.pg@oopacity.net> — 2023-10-19T07:05:17Z
Le 19/10/2023 à 02:48, Tom Lane a écrit : > I thought of another thing we should change: it's better to perform > the test as "off > (dp - dest)" than the way you formulated it. > "dp - dest" is certainly computable, since it's the number of bytes > we've written to the output buffer so far. But "dp - off" could, > with bad luck and a buffer near the start of memory, wrap around > to look like it's after "dest". > > Pushed with that change and a little fiddling with the comment. > Thanks for the report! > > regards, tom lane Thank you for the details ! Best, Flavien