Link [ NetBSD | NetBSD OpenGrok source search | PR fulltext-search | Summary of daily snapshot builds | history of daily build result | pkgsrc commit viewer ]


   
        usage: [branch:branch] [user:user] [path@revision] keyword [... [-excludekeyword [...]]] (e.g. branch:MAIN sys/arch/arm, if_wm.c@1.234 )




switch to index mode

recent branches: MAIN (1h)  netbsd-10 (30d)  netbsd-9 (30d)  netbsd-8 (35d) 

2024-06-15 23:14:39 UTC Now

2018-04-05 14:33:42 UTC netbsd-8 commitmail json YAML

Pull up following revision(s) (requested by maxv in ticket #695):

sys/kern/uipc_mbuf.c: revision 1.182
sys/netinet6/frag6.c: revision 1.67
sys/netinet/ip_reass.c: revision 1.14
sys/sys/mbuf.h: revision 1.179

Remove M_PKTHDR from secondary mbufs when reassembling packets.

This is a real problem, because I found at least one component that relies
on the fact that only the first mbuf has M_PKTHDR: far from here, in
m_splithdr, we don't update m->m_pkthdr.len if M_PKTHDR is found in a
secondary mbuf. (The initial intention there was to avoid updating
m_pkthdr.len twice, the assumption was that if M_PKTHDR is set then we're
dealing with the first mbuf.) Therefore, when handling fragmented IPsec
packets (in particular IPv6, IPv4 is a bit more complicated), we may end
up with an incorrect m_pkthdr.len after authentication or decryption. In
the case of ESP, this can lead to a remote crash on this instruction:
        m_copydata(m, m->m_pkthdr.len - 3, 3, lastthree);
m_pkthdr.len is bigger than the actual mbuf chain.

It seems possible to me to trigger this bug even if you don't have the ESP
key, because the fragmentation part is outside of the encrypted ESP
payload.

So if you MITM the target, and intercept an incoming ESP packet (which you
can't decrypt), you should be able to forge a new specially-crafted,
fragmented packet and stuff the ESP payload (still encrypted, as you
intercepted it) into it. The decryption succeeds and the target crashes.

(martin)