PVK files with abnormally large length or salt fields can cause an
integer overflow which can result in an OOB read and heap corruption.
However this is an rarely used format and private key files do not
normally come from untrusted sources the security implications not
significant.
Fix by limiting PVK length field to 100K and salt to 10K: these should be
more than enough to cover any files encountered in practice.
Issue reported by Guido Vranken.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit 5f57abe2b150139b8b057313d52b1fe8f126c952)
Performance penalty varies from platform to platform, and even
key length. For rsa2048 sign it was observed to reach almost 10%.
CVE-2016-0702
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
In the BN_hex2bn function the number of hex digits is calculated using
an int value |i|. Later |bn_expand| is called with a value of |i * 4|.
For large values of |i| this can result in |bn_expand| not allocating any
memory because |i * 4| is negative. This leaves ret->d as NULL leading
to a subsequent NULL ptr deref. For very large values of |i|, the
calculation |i * 4| could be a positive value smaller than |i|. In this
case memory is allocated to ret->d, but it is insufficiently sized
leading to heap corruption. A similar issue exists in BN_dec2bn.
This could have security consequences if BN_hex2bn/BN_dec2bn is ever
called by user applications with very large untrusted hex/dec data. This is
anticipated to be a rare occurrence.
All OpenSSL internal usage of this function uses data that is not expected
to be untrusted, e.g. config file data or application command line
arguments. If user developed applications generate config file data based
on untrusted data then it is possible that this could also lead to security
consequences. This is also anticipated to be a rare.
Issue reported by Guido Vranken.
CVE-2016-0797
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit c175308407858afff3fc8c2e5e085d94d12edc7d)
This reverts commit 23a58779f53a9060c823d00d76b3070cad61d9a3.
This broke existing engines that didn't properly implement the sign and verify
functions.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
MR: #2077
The internal |fmtstr| function used in processing a "%s" format string
in the BIO_*printf functions could overflow while calculating the length
of a string and cause an OOB read when printing very long strings.
Additionally the internal |doapr_outch| function can attempt to write to
an OOB memory location (at an offset from the NULL pointer) in the event of
a memory allocation failure. In 1.0.2 and below this could be caused where
the size of a buffer to be allocated is greater than INT_MAX. E.g. this
could be in processing a very long "%s" format string. Memory leaks can also
occur.
These issues will only occur on certain platforms where sizeof(size_t) >
sizeof(int). E.g. many 64 bit systems. The first issue may mask the second
issue dependent on compiler behaviour.
These problems could enable attacks where large amounts of untrusted data
is passed to the BIO_*printf functions. If applications use these functions
in this way then they could be vulnerable. OpenSSL itself uses these
functions when printing out human-readable dumps of ASN.1 data. Therefore
applications that print this data could be vulnerable if the data is from
untrusted sources. OpenSSL command line applications could also be
vulnerable where they print out ASN.1 data, or if untrusted data is passed
as command line arguments.
Libssl is not considered directly vulnerable. Additionally certificates etc
received via remote connections via libssl are also unlikely to be able to
trigger these issues because of message size limits enforced within libssl.
CVE-2016-0799
Issue reported by Guido Vranken.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit 578b956fe741bf8e84055547b1e83c28dd902c73)
The SRP user database lookup method SRP_VBASE_get_by_user had confusing
memory management semantics; the returned pointer was sometimes newly
allocated, and sometimes owned by the callee. The calling code has no
way of distinguishing these two cases.
Specifically, SRP servers that configure a secret seed to hide valid
login information are vulnerable to a memory leak: an attacker
connecting with an invalid username can cause a memory leak of around
300 bytes per connection.
Servers that do not configure SRP, or configure SRP but do not configure
a seed are not vulnerable.
In Apache, the seed directive is known as SSLSRPUnknownUserSeed.
To mitigate the memory leak, the seed handling in SRP_VBASE_get_by_user
is now disabled even if the user has configured a seed.
Applications are advised to migrate to SRP_VBASE_get1_by_user. However,
note that OpenSSL makes no strong guarantees about the
indistinguishability of valid and invalid logins. In particular,
computations are currently not carried out in constant time.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Fix double free bug when parsing malformed DSA private keys.
Thanks to Adam Langley (Google/BoringSSL) for discovering this bug using
libFuzzer.
CVE-2016-0705
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit 6c88c71b4e4825c7bc0489306d062d017634eb88)
It's never problem if CRYPTO_ctr128_encrypt is called from EVP, because
buffer in question is always aligned within EVP_CIPHER_CTX structure.
RT#4218
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit 5e4bbeb49fb6522d858703201b5adee9611e7b7b)
Found by clang scan-build.
Signed-off-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@roeckx.be>
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
RT: #4184, MR: #1496
(cherry picked from commit 679d87515d23ca31491effdc264edc81c695a72a)
BIO_int_ctrl isn't made for the purpose BIO_get_conn_int_port used it
for.
This also changes BIO_C_GET_CONNECT to actually return the port
instead of assigning it to a pointer that was never returned back to
the caller.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit 2a60fccdd9b696e01fddaa268e92ea210beb0e8f)
Some URLs in the source code ended up getting mangled by indent. This fixes
it. Based on a patch supplied by Arnaud Lacombe <al@aerilon.ca>
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Commit 2b0180c37fa6ffc48ee40caa831ca398b828e680 attempted to do this but
only hit one of many BN_mod_exp codepaths. Fix remaining variants and add
a test for each method.
Thanks to Hanno Boeck for reporting this issue.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Dr. Stephen Henson <steve@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit d911097d7c93e4cfeab624b34d73fe51da158b69)
(cherry picked from commit 44e4f5b04b43054571e278381662cebd3f3555e6)
Avoid seg fault by checking mgf1 parameter is not NULL. This can be
triggered during certificate verification so could be a DoS attack
against a client or a server enabling client authentication.
Thanks to Loïc Jonas Etienne (Qnective AG) for discovering this bug.
CVE-2015-3194
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
When parsing a combined structure pass a flag to the decode routine
so on error a pointer to the parent structure is not zeroed as
this will leak any additional components in the parent.
This can leak memory in any application parsing PKCS#7 or CMS structures.
CVE-2015-3195.
Thanks to Adam Langley (Google/BoringSSL) for discovering this bug using
libFuzzer.
PR#4131
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Thanks to Guido Vranken <guidovranken@gmail.com> for reporting this issue.
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit 158e5207a794603f5d64ffa95e0247c7808ab445)
Conflicts:
crypto/asn1/asn1_par.c
Strict ISO confirming C compilers only define __sun
Reviewed-by: Viktor Dukhovni <openssl-users@dukhovni.org>
RT #4144, MR #1353
(cherry picked from commit 3d32218812e87221344f2985512e42e4aaa88745)
During work on a larger change in master a number of locations were
identified where return value checks were missing. This backports the
relevant fixes.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit 903738ac63e60c10552741e2d6de9753c67e0ff3)
Conflicts:
crypto/cms/cms_sd.c
In X509_cmp, if cert digest is equal, look at DER of the
signed part. This is what master and 1.0.2 already do.
Reviewed-by: Dr. Stephen Henson <steve@openssl.org>
The function int_rsa_verify is an internal function used for verifying an
RSA signature. It takes an argument |dtype| which indicates the digest type
that was used. Dependant on that digest type the processing of the
signature data will vary. In particular if |dtype == NID_mdc2| and the
signature data is a bare OCTETSTRING then it is treated differently to the
default case where the signature data is treated as a DigestInfo (X509_SIG).
Due to a missing "else" keyword the logic actually correctly processes the
OCTETSTRING format signature first, and then attempts to continue and
process it as DigestInfo. This will invariably fail because we already know
that it is a bare OCTETSTRING.
This failure doesn't actualy make a real difference because it ends up at
the |err| label regardless and still returns a "success" result. This patch
just cleans things up to make it look a bit more sane.
RT#4076
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit dffe51091f412dcbc18f6641132f0b4f0def6bce)