wext: verify buffer size for SIOCSIWENCODEEXT

Another design flaw in wireless extensions (is anybody
surprised?) in the way it handles the iw_encode_ext
structure: The structure is part of the 'extra' memory
but contains the key length explicitly, instead of it
just being the length of the extra buffer - size of
the struct and using the explicit key length only for
the get operation (which only writes it).

Therefore, we have this layout:

extra: +-------------------------+
       | struct iw_encode_ext  { |
       |     ...                 |
       |     u16 key_len;        |
       |     u8 key[0];          |
       | };                      |
       +-------------------------+
       | key material            |
       +-------------------------+

Now, all drivers I checked use ext->key_len without
checking that both key_len and the struct fit into the
extra buffer that has been copied from userspace. This
leads to a buffer overrun while reading that buffer,
depending on the driver it may be possible to specify
arbitrary key_len or it may need to be a proper length
for the key algorithm specified.

Thankfully, this is only exploitable by root, but root
can actually cause a segfault or use kernel memory as
a key (which you can even get back with siocgiwencode
or siocgiwencodeext from the key buffer).

Fix this by verifying that key_len fits into the buffer
along with struct iw_encode_ext.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes@sipsolutions.net>
Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
This commit is contained in:
Johannes Berg 2009-05-13 12:04:30 +02:00 committed by John W. Linville
parent 2b611cb6ee
commit 88f16db7a2
1 changed files with 7 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -786,6 +786,13 @@ static int ioctl_standard_iw_point(struct iw_point *iwp, unsigned int cmd,
err = -EFAULT;
goto out;
}
if (cmd == SIOCSIWENCODEEXT) {
struct iw_encode_ext *ee = (void *) extra;
if (iwp->length < sizeof(*ee) + ee->key_len)
return -EFAULT;
}
}
err = handler(dev, info, (union iwreq_data *) iwp, extra);