17285 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tom Lane
c30e3d82db Update release notes with security issues.
Security: CVE-2010-1169, CVE-2010-1170
2010-05-13 21:27:44 +00:00
Tom Lane
765b01b6c8 Use an entity instead of non-ASCII letter. Thom Brown 2010-05-13 19:16:52 +00:00
Tom Lane
4aadfba465 Prevent PL/Tcl from loading the "unknown" module from pltcl_modules unless
that is a regular table or view owned by a superuser.  This prevents a
trojan horse attack whereby any unprivileged SQL user could create such a
table and insert code into it that would then get executed in other users'
sessions whenever they call pltcl functions.

Worse yet, because the code was automatically loaded into both the "normal"
and "safe" interpreters at first use, the attacker could execute unrestricted
Tcl code in the "normal" interpreter without there being any pltclu functions
anywhere, or indeed anyone else using pltcl at all: installing pltcl is
sufficient to open the hole.  Change the initialization logic so that the
"unknown" code is only loaded into an interpreter when the interpreter is
first really used.  (That doesn't add any additional security in this
particular context, but it seems a prudent change, and anyway the former
behavior violated the principle of least astonishment.)

Security: CVE-2010-1170
2010-05-13 18:29:54 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan
60028fda9f Abandon the use of Perl's Safe.pm to enforce restrictions in plperl, as it is
fundamentally insecure. Instead apply an opmask to the whole interpreter that
imposes restrictions on unsafe operations. These restrictions are much harder
to subvert than is Safe.pm, since there is no container to be broken out of.
Backported to release 7.4.

In releases 7.4, 8.0 and 8.1 this also includes the necessary backporting of
the two interpreters model for plperl and plperlu adopted in release 8.2.

In versions 8.0 and up, the use of Perl's POSIX module to undo its locale
mangling on Windows has become insecure with these changes, so it is
replaced by our own routine, which is also faster.

Nice side effects of the changes include that it is now possible to use perl's
"strict" pragma in a natural way in plperl, and that perl's $a and
$b variables now work as expected in sort routines, and that function
compilation is significantly faster.

Tim Bunce and Andrew Dunstan, with reviews from Alex Hunsaker and
Alexey Klyukin.

Security: CVE-2010-1169
2010-05-13 16:44:35 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
e2740649a0 Translation update 2010-05-13 07:05:04 +00:00
Tom Lane
03bbb02999 Preliminary release notes for releases 8.4.4, 8.3.11, 8.2.17, 8.1.21, 8.0.25,
7.4.29.
2010-05-12 23:28:06 +00:00
Tom Lane
47bdd80dc1 Work around a subtle portability problem in use of printf %s format.
Depending on which spec you read, field widths and precisions in %s may be
counted either in bytes or characters.  Our code was assuming bytes, which
is wrong at least for glibc's implementation, and in any case libc might
have a different idea of the prevailing encoding than we do.  Hence, for
portable results we must avoid using anything more complex than just "%s"
unless the string to be printed is known to be all-ASCII.

This patch fixes the cases I could find, including the psql formatting
failure reported by Hernan Gonzalez.  In HEAD only, I also added comments
to some places where it appears safe to continue using "%.*s".
2010-05-08 16:40:52 +00:00
Tom Lane
79c712aae8 Add code to InternalIpcMemoryCreate() to handle the case where shmget()
returns EINVAL for an existing shared memory segment.  Although it's not
terribly sensible, that behavior does meet the POSIX spec because EINVAL
is the appropriate error code when the existing segment is smaller than the
requested size, and the spec explicitly disclaims any particular ordering of
error checks.  Moreover, it does in fact happen on OS X and probably other
BSD-derived kernels.  (We were able to talk NetBSD into changing their code,
but purging that behavior from the wild completely seems unlikely to happen.)
We need to distinguish collision with a pre-existing segment from invalid size
request in order to behave sensibly, so it's worth some extra code here to get
it right.  Per report from Gavin Kistner and subsequent investigation.

Back-patch to all supported versions, since any of them could get used
with a kernel having the debatable behavior.
2010-05-01 22:47:15 +00:00
Tom Lane
25681e0a19 Fix multiple memory leaks in PLy_spi_execute_fetch_result: it would leak
memory if the result had zero rows, and also if there was any sort of error
while converting the result tuples into Python data.  Reported and partially
fixed by Andres Freund.

Back-patch to all supported versions.  Note: I haven't tested the 7.4 fix.
7.4's configure check for python is so obsolete it doesn't work on my
current machines :-(.  The logic change is pretty straightforward though.
2010-04-30 19:16:27 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan
f9f0683593 Sync perl's ppport.h on all branches back to 7.4 with recent update on HEAD, ensuring we can build older branches with modern Perl installations. 2010-04-03 17:55:24 +00:00
Tom Lane
2154452ca4 Ensure that contrib/pgstattuple functions respond to cancel interrupts
reasonably promptly, by adding CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS in the per-page loops.

Tatsuhito Kasahara
2010-04-02 16:17:31 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera
b60e3ddc2e Prevent ALTER USER f RESET ALL from removing the settings that were put there
by a superuser -- "ALTER USER f RESET setting" already disallows removing such a
setting.

Apply the same treatment to ALTER DATABASE d RESET ALL when run by a database
owner that's not superuser.
2010-03-25 14:46:06 +00:00
Tom Lane
26ef5e9b2a Clear error_context_stack and debug_query_string at the beginning of proc_exit,
so that we won't try to attach any context printouts to messages that get
emitted while exiting.  Per report from Dennis Koegel, the context functions
won't necessarily work after we've started shutting down the backend, and it
seems possible that debug_query_string could be pointing at freed storage
as well.  The context information doesn't seem particularly relevant to
such messages anyway, so there's little lost by suppressing it.

Back-patch to all supported branches.  I can only demonstrate a crash with
log_disconnections messages back to 8.1, but the risk seems real in 8.0 and
before anyway.
2010-03-20 00:58:46 +00:00
Magnus Hagander
2eec67aac8 Typo fixes.
Fujii Masao
2010-03-17 18:04:01 +00:00
Marc G. Fournier
249271d387 tag 7.4.28 REL7_4_28 2010-03-12 04:06:01 +00:00
Tom Lane
d0d6885015 Preliminary release notes for releases 8.4.3, 8.3.10, 8.2.16, 8.1.20, 8.0.24,
7.4.28.
2010-03-10 01:59:30 +00:00
Magnus Hagander
f9ed879d7f Add missing space in example.
Tim Landscheidt
2010-03-08 12:38:54 +00:00
Tom Lane
821ed69bde When reading pg_hba.conf and similar files, do not treat @file as an inclusion
unless (1) the @ isn't quoted and (2) the filename isn't empty.  This guards
against unexpectedly treating usernames or other strings in "flat files"
as inclusion requests, as seen in a recent trouble report from Ed L.
The empty-filename case would be guaranteed to misbehave anyway, because our
subsequent path-munging behavior results in trying to read the directory
containing the current input file.

I think this might finally explain the report at
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-bugs/2004-05/msg00132.php
of a crash after printing "authentication file token too long, skipping",
since I was able to duplicate that message (though not a crash) on a
platform where stdio doesn't refuse to read directories.  We never got
far in investigating that problem, but now I'm suspicious that the trigger
condition was an @ in the flat password file.

Back-patch to all active branches since the problem can be demonstrated in all
branches except HEAD.  The test case, creating a user named "@", doesn't cause
a problem in HEAD since we got rid of the flat password file.  Nonetheless it
seems like a good idea to not consider quoted @ as a file inclusion spec,
so I changed HEAD too.
2010-03-06 00:46:27 +00:00
Tom Lane
f82e8e7f6f Fix a couple of places that would loop forever if attempts to read a stdio file
set ferror() but never set feof().  This is known to be the case for recent
glibc when trying to read a directory as a file, and might be true for other
platforms/cases too.  Per report from Ed L.  (There is more that we ought to
do about his report, but this is one easily identifiable issue.)
2010-03-03 20:31:50 +00:00
Tom Lane
8b33d83cc5 Back-patch addition of ssl_renegotiation_limit into 7.4 through 8.1. 2010-02-25 23:45:29 +00:00
Joe Conway
a0b3d52af1 Check to ensure the number of primary key fields supplied does not
exceed the total number of non-dropped source table fields for
dblink_build_sql_*(). Addresses bug report from Rushabh Lathia.

Backpatch all the way to the 7.3 branch.
2010-02-03 23:02:28 +00:00
Tom Lane
572f4758c3 Change regexp engine's ccondissect/crevdissect routines to perform DFA
matching before recursing instead of after.  The DFA match eliminates
unworkable midpoint choices a lot faster than the recursive check, in most
cases, so doing it first can speed things up; particularly in pathological
cases such as recently exhibited by Michael Glaesemann.

In addition, apply some cosmetic changes that were applied upstream (in the
Tcl project) at the same time, in order to sync with upstream version 1.15
of regexec.c.

Upstream apparently intends to backpatch this, so I will too.  The
pathological behavior could be unpleasant if encountered in the field,
which seems to justify any risk of introducing new bugs.

Tom Lane, reviewed by Donal K. Fellows of Tcl project
2010-02-01 02:46:08 +00:00
Tom Lane
cd79a50880 Apply Tcl_Init() to the "hold" interpreter created by pltcl.
You might think this is unnecessary since that interpreter is never used
to run code --- but it turns out that's wrong.  As of Tcl 8.5, the "clock"
command (alone among builtin Tcl commands) is partially implemented by
loaded-on-demand Tcl code, which means that it fails if there's not
unknown-command support, and also that it's impossible to run it directly
in a safe interpreter.  The way they get around the latter is that
Tcl_CreateSlave() automatically sets up an alias command that forwards any
execution of "clock" in a safe slave interpreter to its parent interpreter.
Thus, when attempting to execute "clock" in trusted pltcl, the command
actually executes in the "hold" interpreter, where it will fail if
unknown-command support hasn't been introduced by sourcing the standard
init.tcl script, which is done by Tcl_Init().  (This is a pretty dubious
design decision on the Tcl boys' part, if you ask me ... but they didn't.)

Back-patch all the way.  It's not clear that anyone would try to use ancient
versions of pltcl with a recent Tcl, but it's not clear they wouldn't, either.
Also add a regression test using "clock", in branches that have regression
test support for pltcl.

Per recent trouble report from Kyle Bateman.
2010-01-25 01:58:57 +00:00
Tom Lane
10dedbf709 Make bit/varbit substring() treat any negative length as meaning "all the rest
of the string".  The previous coding treated only -1 that way, and would
produce an invalid result value for other negative values.

We ought to fix it so that 2-parameter bit substring() is a different C
function and the 3-parameter form throws error for negative length, but
that takes a pg_proc change which is impractical in the back branches;
and in any case somebody might be relying on -1 working this way.
So just do this as a back-patchable fix.
2010-01-07 19:53:47 +00:00
Marc G. Fournier
df4b86a004 tag 7.4.27 REL7_4_27 2009-12-10 03:26:04 +00:00
Tom Lane
1b4f16b5e1 Update release notes for releases 8.4.2, 8.3.9, 8.2.15, 8.1.19, 8.0.23,
7.4.27.
2009-12-10 00:32:06 +00:00
Tom Lane
9d97bb7f27 Prevent indirect security attacks via changing session-local state within
an allegedly immutable index function.  It was previously recognized that
we had to prevent such a function from executing SET/RESET ROLE/SESSION
AUTHORIZATION, or it could trivially obtain the privileges of the session
user.  However, since there is in general no privilege checking for changes
of session-local state, it is also possible for such a function to change
settings in a way that might subvert later operations in the same session.
Examples include changing search_path to cause an unexpected function to
be called, or replacing an existing prepared statement with another one
that will execute a function of the attacker's choosing.

The present patch secures VACUUM, ANALYZE, and CREATE INDEX/REINDEX against
these threats, which are the same places previously deemed to need protection
against the SET ROLE issue.  GUC changes are still allowed, since there are
many useful cases for that, but we prevent security problems by forcing a
rollback of any GUC change after completing the operation.  Other cases are
handled by throwing an error if any change is attempted; these include temp
table creation, closing a cursor, and creating or deleting a prepared
statement.  (In 7.4, the infrastructure to roll back GUC changes doesn't
exist, so we settle for rejecting changes of "search_path" in these contexts.)

Original report and patch by Gurjeet Singh, additional analysis by
Tom Lane.

Security: CVE-2009-4136
2009-12-09 21:59:07 +00:00
Magnus Hagander
5293cc8eb9 Reject certificates with embedded NULLs in the commonName field. This stops
attacks where an attacker would put <attack>\0<propername> in the field and
trick the validation code that the certificate was for <attack>.

This is a very low risk attack since it reuqires the attacker to trick the
CA into issuing a certificate with an incorrect field, and the common
PostgreSQL deployments are with private CAs, and not external ones. Also,
default mode in 8.4 does not do any name validation, and is thus also not
vulnerable - but the higher security modes are.

Backpatch all the way. Even though versions 8.3.x and before didn't have
certificate name validation support, they still exposed this field for
the user to perform the validation in the application code, and there
is no way to detect this problem through that API.

Security: CVE-2009-4034
2009-12-09 06:37:09 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
32eb4823db Translation updates 2009-12-08 21:54:26 +00:00
Tom Lane
8fa541943a Ignore attempts to set "application_name" in the connection startup packet.
This avoids a useless connection retry and complaint in the postmaster log
when receiving a connection from 8.5 or later libpq.

Backpatch in all supported branches, but of course *not* HEAD.
2009-12-02 17:42:02 +00:00
Alvaro Herrera
b88ad6ef96 Fix longstanding problems in VACUUM caused by untimely interruptions
In VACUUM FULL, an interrupt after the initial transaction has been recorded
as committed can cause postmaster to restart with the following error message:
PANIC: cannot abort transaction NNNN, it was already committed
This problem has been reported many times.

In lazy VACUUM, an interrupt after the table has been truncated by
lazy_truncate_heap causes other backends' relcache to still point to the
removed pages; this can cause future INSERT and UPDATE queries to error out
with the following error message:
could not read block XX of relation 1663/NNN/MMMM: read only 0 of 8192 bytes
The window to this race condition is extremely narrow, but it has been seen in
the wild involving a cancelled autovacuum process.

The solution for both problems is to inhibit interrupts in both operations
until after the respective transactions have been committed.  It's not a
complete solution, because the transaction could theoretically be aborted by
some other error, but at least fixes the most common causes of both problems.
2009-11-10 18:01:46 +00:00
Tom Lane
7c0e8048c5 Make the overflow guards in ExecChooseHashTableSize be more protective.
The original coding ensured nbuckets and nbatch didn't exceed INT_MAX,
which while not insane on its own terms did nothing to protect subsequent
code like "palloc(nbatch * sizeof(BufFile *))".  Since enormous join size
estimates might well be planner error rather than reality, it seems best
to constrain the initial sizes to be not more than work_mem/sizeof(pointer),
thus ensuring the allocated arrays don't exceed work_mem.  We will allow
nbatch to get bigger than that during subsequent ExecHashIncreaseNumBatches
calls, but we should still guard against integer overflow in those palloc
requests.  Per bug #5145 from Bernt Marius Johnsen.

Although the given test case only seems to fail back to 8.2, previous
releases have variants of this issue, so patch all supported branches.
2009-10-30 20:59:23 +00:00
Tom Lane
4ce82365d0 Rewrite pam_passwd_conv_proc to be more robust: avoid assuming that the
pam_message array contains exactly one PAM_PROMPT_ECHO_OFF message.
Instead, deal with however many messages there are, and don't throw error
for PAM_ERROR_MSG and PAM_TEXT_INFO messages.  This logic is borrowed from
openssh 5.2p1, which hopefully has seen more real-world PAM usage than we
have.  Per bug #5121 from Ryan Douglas, which turned out to be caused by
the conv_proc being called with zero messages.  Apparently that is normal
behavior given the combination of Linux pam_krb5 with MS Active Directory
as the domain controller.

Patch all the way back, since this code has been essentially untouched
since 7.4.  (Surprising we've not heard complaints before.)
2009-10-16 22:09:16 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
f0e9229058 Fix off-by-one bug in bitncmp(): When comparing a number of bits divisible by
8, bitncmp() may dereference a pointer one byte out of bounds.

Chris Mikkelson (bug #5101)
2009-10-08 04:47:06 +00:00
Tom Lane
693cebff4f Fix RelationCacheInitializePhase2 (Phase3, in HEAD) to cope with the
possibility of shared-inval messages causing a relcache flush while it tries
to fill in missing data in preloaded relcache entries.  There are actually
two distinct failure modes here:

1. The flush could delete the next-to-be-processed cache entry, causing
the subsequent hash_seq_search calls to go off into the weeds.  This is
the problem reported by Michael Brown, and I believe it also accounts
for bug #5074.  The simplest fix is to restart the hashtable scan after
we've read any new data from the catalogs.  It appears that pre-8.4
branches have not suffered from this failure, because by chance there were
no other catalogs sharing the same hash chains with the catalogs that
RelationCacheInitializePhase2 had work to do for.  However that's obviously
pretty fragile, and it seems possible that derivative versions with
additional system catalogs might be vulnerable, so I'm back-patching this
part of the fix anyway.

2. The flush could delete the *current* cache entry, in which case the
pointer to the newly-loaded data would end up being stored into an
already-deleted Relation struct.  As long as it was still deleted, the only
consequence would be some leaked space in CacheMemoryContext.  But it seems
possible that the Relation struct could already have been recycled, in
which case this represents a hard-to-reproduce clobber of cached data
structures, with unforeseeable consequences.  The fix here is to pin the
entry while we work on it.

In passing, also change RelationCacheInitializePhase2 to Assert that
formrdesc() set up the relation's cached TupleDesc (rd_att) with the
correct type OID and hasoids values.  This is more appropriate than
silently updating the values, because the original tupdesc might already
have been copied into the catcache.  However this part of the patch is
not in HEAD because it fails due to some questionable recent changes in
formrdesc :-(.  That will be cleaned up in a subsequent patch.
2009-09-26 18:25:35 +00:00
Tom Lane
b8218dcfa2 Remove outside-the-scanner references to "yyleng".
It seems the flex developers have decided to change yyleng from int to size_t.
This has already happened in the latest release of OS X, and will start
happening elsewhere once the next release of flex appears.  Rather than trying
to divine how it's declared in any particular build, let's just remove the one
existing not-very-necessary external usage.

Back-patch to all supported branches; not so much because users in the field
are likely to care about building old branches with cutting-edge flex, as
to keep OSX-based buildfarm members from having problems with old branches.
2009-09-08 04:26:17 +00:00
Marc G. Fournier
ef31ff159f Tag 7.4.26 REL7_4_26 2009-09-04 05:33:18 +00:00
Tom Lane
02a87f18f2 Final updates of release notes for 8.4.1, 8.3.8, 8.2.14, 8.1.18, 8.0.22,
7.4.26.
2009-09-03 22:14:41 +00:00
Tom Lane
fd28d83bdc Disallow RESET ROLE and RESET SESSION AUTHORIZATION inside security-definer
functions.

This extends the previous patch that forbade SETting these variables inside
security-definer functions.  RESET is equally a security hole, since it
would allow regaining privileges of the caller; furthermore it can trigger
Assert failures and perhaps other internal errors, since the code is not
expecting these variables to change in such contexts.  The previous patch
did not cover this case because assign hooks don't really have enough
information, so move the responsibility for preventing this into guc.c.

Problem discovered by Heikki Linnakangas.

Security: no CVE assigned yet, extends CVE-2007-6600
2009-09-03 22:09:06 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
8422728a2b Translation updates 2009-09-03 18:49:05 +00:00
Peter Eisentraut
199c6d5ed1 Improve picksplit debug message
Missed this earlier because the translation site was broken for the 7.4
branch.
2009-09-02 13:23:13 +00:00
Bruce Momjian
322404c958 Update release notes for 7.4.26, 8.0.22, 8.1.18, 8.2.14, 8.3.8, 8.4.1. 2009-08-27 01:26:40 +00:00
Tom Lane
deab233a9e Fix inclusions of readline/editline header files so that we only attempt to
#include the version of history.h that is in the same directory as the
readline.h we are using.  This avoids problems in some scenarios where both
readline and editline are installed.  Report and patch by Zdenek Kotala.
2009-08-24 16:18:49 +00:00
Tom Lane
2e78dc85e0 Fix overflow for INTERVAL 'x ms' where x is more than a couple million,
and integer datetimes are in use.  Per bug report from Hubert Depesz
Lubaczewski.

Alex Hunsaker
2009-08-18 21:23:58 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan
c5b758bcb9 Re-add documentation for --no-readline option of psql, mistakenly removed a decade ago. Backpatch to release 7.4. 2009-08-10 02:39:09 +00:00
Tom Lane
6119329e23 Try to defend against the possibility that libpq is still in COPY_IN state
when we reach the post-COPY "pump it dry" error recovery code that was added
2006-11-24.  Per a report from Neil Best, there is at least one code path
in which this occurs, leading to an infinite loop in code that's supposed
to be making it more robust not less so.  A reasonable response seems to be
to call PQputCopyEnd() again, so let's try that.

Back-patch to all versions that contain the cleanup loop.
2009-08-07 20:16:49 +00:00
Tom Lane
34f662dd65 Fix an ancient error in dist_ps (distance from point to line segment), which
a number of other geometric operators also depend on.  It miscalculated the
slope of the perpendicular to the given line segment anytime that slope was
other than 0, infinite, or +/-1.  In some cases the error would be masked
because the true closest point on the line segment was one of its endpoints
rather than the intersection point, but in other cases it could give an
arbitrarily bad answer.  Per bug #4872 from Nick Roosevelt.

Bug goes clear back to Berkeley days, so patch all supported branches.
Make a couple of cosmetic adjustments while at it.
2009-06-23 16:25:35 +00:00
Tom Lane
b99bb3b218 Fix cash_in() to behave properly in locales where frac_digits is zero,
eg Japan.  Report and fix by Itagaki Takahiro.  Also fix CASHDEBUG printout
format for branches with 64-bit money type, and some minor comment cleanup.

Back-patch to 7.4, because it's broken all the way back.
2009-06-10 16:32:02 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan
bc4df3bf8e Adjust recent PERL_SYS_INIT3 call to avoid platforms where it might fail, and to remove compilation warning. Backpatch the release 7.4 2009-06-05 20:33:59 +00:00
Andrew Dunstan
d68475eb96 Initialise perl library as documented in perl API. Backpatch to release 7.4. 2009-06-04 16:01:23 +00:00