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Re: [PATCH] gdbstub: Fix buffer overflow in handle_read_all_regs


From: Alex Bennée
Subject: Re: [PATCH] gdbstub: Fix buffer overflow in handle_read_all_regs
Date: Thu, 14 Nov 2019 13:47:32 +0000
User-agent: mu4e 1.3.5; emacs 27.0.50

Damien Hedde <address@hidden> writes:

> On 11/8/19 5:50 PM, Alex Bennée wrote:
>>
>> Damien Hedde <address@hidden> writes:
>>
>>> On 11/8/19 3:09 PM, Alex Bennée wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Damien Hedde <address@hidden> writes:
>>>>
>>>>> Ensure we don't put too much register data in buffers. This avoids
>>>>> a buffer overflow (and stack corruption) when a target has lots
>>>>> of registers.
>>>>>
>>>>> Signed-off-by: Damien Hedde <address@hidden>
>>>>> ---
>>>>>
>>>>> Hi all,
>>>>>
>>>>> While working on a target with many registers. I found out the gdbstub
>>>>> may do buffer overflows when receiving a 'g' query (to read general
>>>>> registers). This patch prevents that.
>>>>>
>>>>> Gdb is pretty happy with a partial set of registers and queries
>>>>> remaining registers one by one when needed.
>>>>
>>>> Heh I was just looking at this code with regards to SVE (which can get
>>>> quite big).
>>>
>>> SVE ?
>>
>> ARM's Scalable Vector Registers which currently can get upto 16 vector
>> quads (256 bytes) but are likely to get bigger.
>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Regards,
>>>>> Damien
>>>>> ---
>>>>>  gdbstub.c | 13 +++++++++++--
>>>>>  1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
>>>>>
>>>>> diff --git a/gdbstub.c b/gdbstub.c
>>>>> index 4cf8af365e..dde0cfe0fe 100644
>>>>> --- a/gdbstub.c
>>>>> +++ b/gdbstub.c
>>>>> @@ -1810,8 +1810,17 @@ static void handle_read_all_regs(GdbCmdContext 
>>>>> *gdb_ctx, void *user_ctx)
>>>>>      cpu_synchronize_state(gdb_ctx->s->g_cpu);
>>>>>      len = 0;
>>>>>      for (addr = 0; addr < gdb_ctx->s->g_cpu->gdb_num_g_regs; addr++) {
>>>>> -        len += gdb_read_register(gdb_ctx->s->g_cpu, gdb_ctx->mem_buf + 
>>>>> len,
>>>>> -                                 addr);
>>>>> +        int size = gdb_read_register(gdb_ctx->s->g_cpu, gdb_ctx->mem_buf 
>>>>> + len,
>>>>> +                                     addr);
>>>>> +        if (len + size > MAX_PACKET_LENGTH / 2) {
>>>>> +            /*
>>>>> +             * Prevent gdb_ctx->str_buf overflow in memtohex() below.
>>>>> +             * As a consequence, send only the first registers content.
>>>>> +             * Gdb will query remaining ones if/when needed.
>>>>> +             */
>>>>
>>>> Haven't we already potentially overflowed gdb_ctx->mem_buf though? I
>>>> suspect the better fix is for str_buf is to make it growable with
>>>> g_string and be able to handle arbitrary size conversions (unless the
>>>> spec limits us). But we still don't want a hostile gdbstub to be able to
>>>> spam memory by asking for registers that might be bigger than
>>>> MAX_PACKET_LENGTH bytes.
>>>
>>> For gdb_ctx->mem_buf  it's ok because it has also a size of
>>> MAX_PACKET_LENGTH. (assuming no single register can be bigger than
>>> MAX_PACKET_LENGTH)
>>> str_buf has a size of MAX_PACKET_LENGTH + 1
>>
>> Are these limits of the protocol rather than our own internal limits?
>
> gdb has a dynamic sized packet buffer. Remote protocol doc says:
>
> ‘qSupported [:gdbfeature [;gdbfeature]… ]’
>     [...] Any GDB which sends a ‘qSupported’ packet supports receiving
> packets of unlimited length (earlier versions of GDB may reject overly
> long responses).

OK so it seems worth cleaning this up. I'm currently putting together a
patch set to support these large SVE registers and I'm cleaning up the
core gdbstub code while I go. If you are interested the current WIP
branch is:

  https://github.com/stsquad/qemu/commits/gdbstub/sve-registers

but I can include you on the review CC when I post (hopefully this
week)?

>
>
>>
>>> I'm not sure I've understood the second part but if we increase the size
>>> of str_buf then we will need also a bigger packet buffer.
>>
>> Glib provides some nice functions for managing arbitrary sized strings
>> in a nice flexible way which grow on demand. There is also a nice
>> growable GByteArray type which we can use for the packet buffer. I think
>> I'd started down this road of re-factoring but never got around to
>> posting the patches.
>>
>>> The size here only depends on what are the target declared registers, so
>>> it depends only on the cpu target code.
>>
>> Sure - but guest registers are growing all the time!
>>
>> --
>> Alex Bennée
>>


--
Alex Bennée



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