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authorLasse Collin <lasse.collin@tukaani.org>2022-03-29 19:19:12 +0300
committerLasse Collin <lasse.collin@tukaani.org>2022-03-29 20:10:50 +0300
commit69d1b3fc29677af8ade8dc15dba83f0589cb63d6 (patch)
tree4197a66c412fa5093a94fbccc1881f0ca8d51797 /debug/README
parentliblzma: Fix a deadlock in threaded decoder. (diff)
downloadxz-69d1b3fc29677af8ade8dc15dba83f0589cb63d6.tar.xz
xzgrep: Fix escaping of malicious filenames (ZDI-CAN-16587).
Malicious filenames can make xzgrep to write to arbitrary files or (with a GNU sed extension) lead to arbitrary code execution. xzgrep from XZ Utils versions up to and including 5.2.5 are affected. 5.3.1alpha and 5.3.2alpha are affected as well. This patch works for all of them. This bug was inherited from gzip's zgrep. gzip 1.12 includes a fix for zgrep. The issue with the old sed script is that with multiple newlines, the N-command will read the second line of input, then the s-commands will be skipped because it's not the end of the file yet, then a new sed cycle starts and the pattern space is printed and emptied. So only the last line or two get escaped. One way to fix this would be to read all lines into the pattern space first. However, the included fix is even simpler: All lines except the last line get a backslash appended at the end. To ensure that shell command substitution doesn't eat a possible trailing newline, a colon is appended to the filename before escaping. The colon is later used to separate the filename from the grep output so it is fine to add it here instead of a few lines later. The old code also wasn't POSIX compliant as it used \n in the replacement section of the s-command. Using \<newline> is the POSIX compatible method. LC_ALL=C was added to the two critical sed commands. POSIX sed manual recommends it when using sed to manipulate pathnames because in other locales invalid multibyte sequences might cause issues with some sed implementations. In case of GNU sed, these particular sed scripts wouldn't have such problems but some other scripts could have, see: info '(sed)Locale Considerations' This vulnerability was discovered by: cleemy desu wayo working with Trend Micro Zero Day Initiative Thanks to Jim Meyering and Paul Eggert discussing the different ways to fix this and for coordinating the patch release schedule with gzip.
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