diff options
author | Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com> | 2021-11-08 19:11:51 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com> | 2021-11-08 19:11:51 +0000 |
commit | db6c4935fae6005d46af413b32aa92f4f6059dce (patch) | |
tree | bb9b95c9809eccb2ce76727a91ae4f6f4cbb813b /login/getlogin.c | |
parent | 3a523ccd78de1a7eff5acf6850ecae47a78cc611 (diff) | |
download | glibc-db6c4935fae6005d46af413b32aa92f4f6059dce.tar.gz glibc-db6c4935fae6005d46af413b32aa92f4f6059dce.tar.xz glibc-db6c4935fae6005d46af413b32aa92f4f6059dce.zip |
Fix memmove call in vfprintf-internal.c:group_number
A recent GCC mainline change introduces errors of the form: vfprintf-internal.c: In function 'group_number': vfprintf-internal.c:2093:15: error: 'memmove' specified bound between 9223372036854775808 and 18446744073709551615 exceeds maximum object size 9223372036854775807 [-Werror=stringop-overflow=] 2093 | memmove (w, s, (front_ptr -s) * sizeof (CHAR_T)); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is a genuine bug in the glibc code: s > front_ptr is always true at this point in the code, and the intent is clearly for the subtraction to be the other way round. The other arguments to the memmove call here also appear to be wrong; w and s point just *after* the destination and source for copying the rest of the number, so the size needs to be subtracted to get appropriate pointers for the copying. Adjust the memmove call to conform to the apparent intent of the code, so fixing the -Wstringop-overflow error. Now, if the original code were ever executed, a buffer overrun would result. However, I believe this code (introduced in commit edc1686af0c0fc2eb535f1d38cdf63c1a5a03675, "vfprintf: Reuse work_buffer in group_number", so in glibc 2.26) is unreachable in prior glibc releases (so there is no need for a bug in Bugzilla, no need to consider any backports unless someone wants to build older glibc releases with GCC 12 and no possibility of this buffer overrun resulting in a security issue). work_buffer is 1000 bytes / 250 wide characters. This case is only reachable if an initial part of the number, plus a grouped copy of the rest of the number, fail to fit in that space; that is, if the grouped number fails to fit in the space. In the wide character case, grouping is always one wide character, so even with a locale (of which there aren't any in glibc) grouping every digit, a number would need to occupy at least 125 wide characters to overflow, and a 64-bit integer occupies at most 23 characters in octal including a leading 0. In the narrow character case, the multibyte encoding of the grouping separator would need to be at least 42 bytes to overflow, again supposing grouping every digit, but MB_LEN_MAX is 16. So even if we admit the case of artificially constructed locales not shipped with glibc, given that such a locale would need to use one of the character sets supported by glibc, this code cannot be reached at present. (And POSIX only actually specifies the ' flag for grouping for decimal output, though glibc acts on it for other bases as well.) With binary output (if you consider use of grouping there to be valid), you'd need a 15-byte multibyte character for overflow; I don't know if any supported character set has such a character (if, again, we admit constructed locales using grouping every digit and a grouping separator chosen to have a multibyte encoding as long as possible, as well as accepting use of grouping with binary), but given that we have this code at all (clearly it's not *correct*, or in accordance with the principle of avoiding arbitrary limits, to skip grouping on running out of internal space like that), I don't think it should need any further changes for binary printf support to go in. On the other hand, support for large sizes of _BitInt in printf (see the N2858 proposal) *would* require something to be done about such arbitrary limits (presumably using dynamic allocation in printf again, for sufficiently large _BitInt arguments only - currently only floating-point uses dynamic allocation, and, as previously discussed, that could actually be replaced by bounded allocation given smarter code). Tested with build-many-glibcs.py for aarch64-linux-gnu (GCC mainline). Also tested natively for x86_64.
Diffstat (limited to 'login/getlogin.c')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions