Files
advisory-db/crates/linked_list_allocator/RUSTSEC-2022-0063.md
2023-06-13 15:10:24 +02:00

1.5 KiB

[advisory]
id = "RUSTSEC-2022-0063"
package = "linked_list_allocator"
date = "2022-09-07"
url = "https://github.com/advisories/GHSA-xg8p-34w2-j49j"
categories = ["memory-corruption"]
aliases = ["CVE-2022-36086", "GHSA-xg8p-34w2-j49j"]
cvss = "CVSS:3.1/AV:L/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:H"

[versions]
patched = [">= 0.10.2"]
unaffected = []

Multiple vulnerabilities resulting in out-of-bounds writes

  • The heap initialization methods were missing a minimum size check for the given heap size argument. This could lead to out-of-bound writes when a heap was initialized with a size smaller than 3 * size_of::<usize> because of metadata write operations.
  • When calling Heap::extend with a size smaller than two usizes (e.g., 16 on x86_64), the size was erroneously rounded up to the minimum size, which could result in an out-of-bounds write.
  • Calling Heap::extend on an empty heap tried to construct a heap starting at address 0, which is also an out-of-bounds write.
    • One specific way to trigger this accidentally is to call Heap::new (or a similar constructor) with a heap size that is smaller than two usizes. This was treated as an empty heap as well.
  • Calling Heap::extend on a heap whose size is not a multiple of the size of two usizes resulted in unaligned writes. It also left the heap in an unexpected state, which might lead to subsequent issues. We did not find a way to exploit this undefined behavior yet (apart from DoS on platforms that fault on unaligned writes).