opt/rpcbind/rpcbind-0.2.3.patch

139 lines
4.3 KiB
Diff

commit de47f6323d8fb20feefee21d0195cf0529151e04
Author: Steve Dickson <steved@redhat.com>
Date: Thu Sep 17 15:57:35 2015 -0400
security.c: removed warning
src/security.c:100:8: warning: implicit declaration of function 'xlog'
[-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
Signed-off-by: Steve Dickson <steved@redhat.com>
diff --git a/src/security.c b/src/security.c
index 0c9453f..c54ce26 100644
--- a/src/security.c
+++ b/src/security.c
@@ -17,6 +17,8 @@
#include <syslog.h>
#include <netdb.h>
+#include "xlog.h"
+
/*
* XXX for special case checks in check_callit.
*/
commit d5dace219953c45d26ae42db238052b68540649a
Author: Olaf Kirch <okir@suse.de>
Date: Fri Oct 30 10:18:20 2015 -0400
Fix memory corruption in PMAP_CALLIT code
- A PMAP_CALLIT call comes in on IPv4 UDP
- rpcbind duplicates the caller's address to a netbuf and stores it in
FINFO[0].caller_addr. caller_addr->buf now points to a memory region A
with a size of 16 bytes
- rpcbind forwards the call to the local service, receives a reply
- when processing the reply, it does this in xprt_set_caller:
xprt->xp_rtaddr = *FINFO[0].caller_addr
It sends out the reply, and then frees the netbuf caller_addr and
caller_addr.buf.
However, it does not clear xp_rtaddr, so xp_rtaddr.buf now refers
to memory region A, which is free.
- When the next call comes in on the UDP/IPv4 socket, svc_dg_recv will
be called, which will set xp_rtaddr to the client's address.
It will reuse the buffer inside xp_rtaddr, ie it will write a
sockaddr_in to region A
Some time down the road, an incoming TCP connection is accepted,
allocating a fresh SVCXPRT. The memory region A is inside the
new SVCXPRT
- While processing the TCP call, another UDP call comes in, again
overwriting region A with the client's address
- TCP client closes connection. In svc_destroy, we now trip over
the garbage left in region A
We ran into the case where a commercial scanner was triggering
occasional rpcbind segfaults. The core file that was captured showed
a corrupted xprt->xp_netid pointer that was really a sockaddr_in.
Signed-off-by: Olaf Kirch <okir@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Steve Dickson <steved@redhat.com>
diff --git a/src/rpcb_svc_com.c b/src/rpcb_svc_com.c
index ff9ce6b..4ae93f1 100644
--- a/src/rpcb_svc_com.c
+++ b/src/rpcb_svc_com.c
@@ -1183,12 +1183,33 @@ check_rmtcalls(struct pollfd *pfds, int nfds)
return (ncallbacks_found);
}
+/*
+ * This is really a helper function defined in libtirpc,
+ * but unfortunately, it hasn't been exported yet.
+ */
+static struct netbuf *
+__rpc_set_netbuf(struct netbuf *nb, const void *ptr, size_t len)
+{
+ if (nb->len != len) {
+ if (nb->len)
+ mem_free(nb->buf, nb->len);
+ nb->buf = mem_alloc(len);
+ if (nb->buf == NULL)
+ return NULL;
+
+ nb->maxlen = nb->len = len;
+ }
+ memcpy(nb->buf, ptr, len);
+ return nb;
+}
+
static void
xprt_set_caller(SVCXPRT *xprt, struct finfo *fi)
{
+ const struct netbuf *caller = fi->caller_addr;
u_int32_t *xidp;
- *(svc_getrpccaller(xprt)) = *(fi->caller_addr);
+ __rpc_set_netbuf(svc_getrpccaller(xprt), caller->buf, caller->len);
xidp = __rpcb_get_dg_xidp(xprt);
*xidp = fi->caller_xid;
}
commit 9194122389f2a56b1cd1f935e64307e2e963c2da
Author: Steve Dickson <steved@redhat.com>
Date: Mon Nov 2 17:05:18 2015 -0500
handle_reply: Don't use the xp_auth pointer directly
In the latest libtirpc version to access the xp_auth
one must use the SVC_XP_AUTH macro. To be backwards
compatible a couple ifdefs were added to use the
macro when it exists.
Signed-off-by: Steve Dickson <steved@redhat.com>
diff --git a/src/rpcb_svc_com.c b/src/rpcb_svc_com.c
index 4ae93f1..22d6c84 100644
--- a/src/rpcb_svc_com.c
+++ b/src/rpcb_svc_com.c
@@ -1295,10 +1295,17 @@ handle_reply(int fd, SVCXPRT *xprt)
a.rmt_localvers = fi->versnum;
xprt_set_caller(xprt, fi);
+#if defined(SVC_XP_AUTH)
+ SVC_XP_AUTH(xprt) = svc_auth_none;
+#else
xprt->xp_auth = &svc_auth_none;
+#endif
svc_sendreply(xprt, (xdrproc_t) xdr_rmtcall_result, (char *) &a);
+#if !defined(SVC_XP_AUTH)
SVCAUTH_DESTROY(xprt->xp_auth);
xprt->xp_auth = NULL;
+#endif
+
done:
if (buffer)
free(buffer);