The create_obj handler of InternalIterator is overwritten, but not the
clone_obj handler. This is not allowed.
In PHP 8.2 this didn't cause a segfault because the standard object
handler was used for the clone instead of the internal handler.
So then it allocates and frees the object using the standard object handlers.
In 8.3 however, the object is created using the standard object handler and
freed using the custom handler, resulting in the buffer overflow.
Even though bisect points to 1e1ea4f this only reveals the bug.
Closes GH-14882.
is_zend_ptr() expected zend_mm_heap.huge_list to be circular, but it's in fact NULL-terminated. It could crash when at least one huge block exists and the ptr did not belong to any block.
Although the issue was demonstrated using Curl, the issue is purely in
the streams layer of PHP.
Full analysis is written in GH-11078 [1], but here is the brief version:
Here's what actually happens:
1) We're creating a FILE handle from a stream using the casting mechanism.
This will create a cookie-based FILE handle using funopen.
2) We're reading stream data using fread from the userspace stream. This will
temporarily set a buffer into a field _bf.base [2]. This buffer is now equal
to the upload buffer that Curl allocated and note that that buffer is owned
by Curl.
3) The fatal error occurs and we bail out from the fread function, notice how
the reset code is never executed and so the buffer will still point to
Curl's upload buffer instead of FILE's own buffer [3].
4) The resources are destroyed, this includes our opened stream and because the
FILE handle is cached, it gets destroyed as well.
In fact, the stream code calls through fclose on purpose in this case.
5) The fclose code frees the _bs.base buffer [4].
However, this is not the buffer that FILE owns but the one that Curl owns
because it isn't reset properly due to the bailout!
6) The objects are getting destroyed, and so the curl free logic is invoked.
When Curl tries to gracefully clean up, it tries to free the buffer.
But that buffer is actually already freed mistakingly by the C library!
This also explains why we can't reproduce it on Linux: this bizarre buffer
swapping only happens on macOS and BSD, not on Linux.
To solve this, we switch to an unbuffered mode for cookie-based FILEs.
This avoids any stateful problems related to buffers especially when the
bailout mechanism triggers. As streams have their own buffering
mechanism, I don't expect this to impact performance.
[1] https://github.com/php/php-src/issues/11078#issuecomment-2155616843
[2] 5e566be7a7/stdio/FreeBSD/fread.c (L102-L103)
[3] 5e566be7a7/stdio/FreeBSD/fread.c (L117)
[4] 5e566be7a7/stdio/FreeBSD/fclose.c (L66-L67)
Closes GH-14524.
Some modules may reset _fmode, which causes mangling of line endings.
Always be explicit like we do in other places where the native open call
is used.
Closes GH-14218.
Fixes GH-13970
Closes GH-14105
We cannot validate at compile-time for multiple reasons:
* Evaluating the argument naively with zend_get_attribute_value can lead to code
execution at compile time through the new expression, leading to possible
reentrance of the compiler.
* Even if the evaluation was possible, it would need to be restricted to the
current file, because constant values coming from other files can change
without affecting the current compilation unit. For this reason, validation
would need to be repeated at runtime anyway.
* Enums cannot be instantiated at compile-time (the actual bug report). This
could be allowed here, because the value is immediately destroyed. But given
the other issues, this won't be needed.
Instead, we just move it to runtime entirely. It's only needed for
ReflectionAttribute::newInstance(), which is not particularly a hot path. The
checks are also simple.
This also fixes skipped tests due to different naming "zend-test"
instead of "zend_test" and "PDO" instead of "pdo":
- ext/dom/tests/libxml_global_state_entity_loader_bypass.phpt
- ext/simplexml/tests/libxml_global_state_entity_loader_bypass.phpt
- ext/xmlreader/tests/libxml_global_state_entity_loader_bypass.phpt
- ext/zend_test/tests/observer_sqlite_create_function.phpt
EXTENSIONS section is used for the Windows build to load the non-static
extensions.
Closes GH-13276
* fix segfault in `ZEND_BIND_STATIC`
In case a `ZEND_BIND_STATIC` is being executed, while the current chunk is full,
the `zend_array_dup()` call will trigger a OOM in ZendMM which will crash, as
the opline might be a dangling pointer.
* add missing test
* `assert()`ing seems easier than trying to make the compiler to not optimize
* moved from function call to INI setting, so we can use this in other places as well
* make `assert()` work no NDEBUG builds
* document magic number
* fix segfault in `ZEND_FUNC_GET_ARGS`
In case a `ZEND_FUNC_GET_ARGS` is being executed, while the current chunk is
full, the `zend_new_array()` call will trigger a OOM in ZendMM which will crash,
as the opline might be a dangling pointer.
---------
Co-authored-by: Florian Engelhardt <florian@engelhardt.tc>
- GH-11958: DNF types in trait properties do not get bound properly
- GH-11883: Memory leak in zend_type_release() for non-arena allocated DNF types
- Internal trait bound to userland class would not be arena allocated
- Property DNF types were not properly deep copied during lazy loading
Co-authored-by: Ilija Tovilo <ilija.tovilo@me.com>
Co-authored-by: ju1ius <jules.bernable@gmail.com>
It looks like the config.w32 uses CHECK_HEADER_ADD_INCLUDE to add the include
path to libxml into the search path.
That doesn't happen in zend-test.
To add to the Windows trouble, libxml is statically linked in, ext/libxml can
only be built statically but ext/zend-test can be built both statically and
dynamically.
So the regression tests won't work in all possible configurations anyway on Windows.
All of this is no problem on Linux because it just uses dynamic linking
and pkg-config, without any magic.
Signed-off-by: Ben Ramsey <ramsey@php.net>
Fixes GHSA-3qrf-m4j2-pcrr.
To parse a document with libxml2, you first need to create a parsing context.
The parsing context contains parsing options (e.g. XML_NOENT to substitute
entities) that the application (in this case PHP) can set.
Unfortunately, libxml2 also supports providing default set options.
For example, if you call xmlSubstituteEntitiesDefault(1) then the XML_NOENT
option will be added to the parsing options every time you create a parsing
context **even if the application never requested XML_NOENT**.
Third party extensions can override these globals, in particular the
substitute entity global. This causes entity substitution to be
unexpectedly active.
Fix it by setting the parsing options to a sane known value.
For API calls that depend on global state we introduce
PHP_LIBXML_SANITIZE_GLOBALS() and PHP_LIBXML_RESTORE_GLOBALS().
For other APIs that work directly with a context we introduce
php_libxml_sanitize_parse_ctxt_options().
Fixes GH-8646
See https://github.com/php/php-src/issues/8646 for thorough discussion.
Interned strings that hold class entries can get a corresponding slot in map_ptr for the CE cache.
map_ptr works like a bump allocator: there is a counter which increases to allocate the next slot in the map.
For class name strings in non-opcache we have:
- on startup: permanent + interned
- on request: interned
For class name strings in opcache we have:
- on startup: permanent + interned
- on request: either not interned at all, which we can ignore because they won't get a CE cache entry
or they were already permanent + interned
or we get a new permanent + interned string in the opcache persistence code
Notice that the map_ptr layout always has the permanent strings first, and the request strings after.
In non-opcache, a request string may get a slot in map_ptr, and that interned request string
gets destroyed at the end of the request. The corresponding map_ptr slot can thereafter never be used again.
This causes map_ptr to keep reallocating to larger and larger sizes.
We solve it as follows:
We can check whether we had any interned request strings, which only happens in non-opcache.
If we have any, we reset map_ptr to the last permanent string.
We can't lose any permanent strings because of map_ptr's layout.
Closes GH-10783.