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author | Rob Landley | 2005-05-18 05:56:16 +0000 |
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committer | Rob Landley | 2005-05-18 05:56:16 +0000 |
commit | 5797c7f0ef93f3efd0ba6634640f9591716214e3 (patch) | |
tree | 76722f5b18215592a6b9c7c36693812df84cf3d8 /testsuite/sed/sed-branch-conditional-inverted | |
parent | 1fb7961e081f43fcfdb12bc588cc294115841f9c (diff) | |
download | busybox-5797c7f0ef93f3efd0ba6634640f9591716214e3.zip busybox-5797c7f0ef93f3efd0ba6634640f9591716214e3.tar.gz |
Doug Swarin pointed out a security bug in the -i option of sed.
While the permissions on the temp file are correct to prevent it from being
maliciously mangled by passing strangers, (created with 600, opened O_EXCL,
etc), the permissions on the _directory_ might not be, and we re-open the
file to convert the filehandle to a FILE * (and automatically get an error
message and exit if the directory's read-only or out of space or some such).
This opens a potential race condition if somebody's using dnotify on the
directory, deletes/renames the tempfile, and drops a symlink or something
there. Somebody running sed -i as root in a world writeable directory could
do damage.
I dug up notes on an earlier discussion where we looked at the security
implications of this (unfortunately on the #uclibc channel rather than email;
I don't have a transcript, just notes-to-self) which pointed out that if the
permissions on the directory allow other people's files to be deleted/renamed
then the original file is vulnerable to sabotage anyway. However, there are
two cases that discussion apparently didn't take into account:
1) Using another user's permissions to damage files in other directories you
can't access (standard symlink attack).
2) Reading data another user couldn't otherwise access by having the new file
belong to that other user.
This patch uses fdopen to convert the filehandle into a FILE *, rather than
reopening the file.
Diffstat (limited to 'testsuite/sed/sed-branch-conditional-inverted')
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