2.0 KiB
[advisory]
id = "RUSTSEC-2020-0006"
package = "bumpalo"
aliases = ["CVE-2020-35861"]
cvss = "CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:N/A:N"
categories = ["memory-exposure"]
date = "2020-03-24"
url = "https://github.com/fitzgen/bumpalo/issues/69"
[versions]
patched = [">= 3.2.1"]
unaffected = ["< 3.0.0"]
Flaw in realloc allows reading unknown memory
When reallocing, if we allocate new space, we need to copy the old
allocation's bytes into the new space. There are old_size number of bytes in
the old allocation, but we were accidentally copying new_size number of bytes,
which could lead to copying bytes into the realloc'd space from past the chunk
that we're bump allocating out of, from unknown memory.
If an attacker can cause reallocs, and can read the realoced data back,
this could allow them to read things from other regions of memory that they
shouldn't be able to. For example, if some crypto keys happened to live in
memory right after a chunk we were bump allocating out of, this could allow
the attacker to read the crypto keys.
Beyond just fixing the bug and adding a regression test, I've also taken two additional steps:
-
While we were already running the testsuite under
valgrindin CI, becausevalgrindexits with the same code that the program did, if there are invalid reads/writes that happen not to trigger a segfault, the program can still exit OK and we will be none the wiser. I've enabled the--error-exitcode=1flag forvalgrindin CI so that tests eagerly fail in these scenarios. -
I've written a quickcheck test to exercise
realloc. Without the bug fix in this patch, this quickcheck immediately triggers invalid reads when run undervalgrind. We didn't previously have quickchecks that exercisedreallocbecausereallocisn't publicly exposed directly, and instead can only be indirectly called. This new quickcheck test exercisesreallocviabumpalo::collections::Vec::resizeandbumpalo::collections::Vec::shrink_to_fitcalls.