view src/event/ngx_event_posted.c @ 7119:fef61d26da39

Fixed buffer overread with unix sockets after accept(). Some OSes (notably macOS, NetBSD, and Solaris) allow unix socket addresses larger than struct sockaddr_un. Moreover, some of them (macOS, Solaris) return socklen of the socket address before it was truncated to fit the buffer provided. As such, on these systems socklen must not be used without additional check that it is within the buffer provided. Appropriate checks added to ngx_event_accept() (after accept()), ngx_event_recvmsg() (after recvmsg()), and ngx_set_inherited_sockets() (after getsockname()). We also obtain socket addresses via getsockname() in ngx_connection_local_sockaddr(), but it does not need any checks as it is only used for INET and INET6 sockets (as there can be no wildcard unix sockets).
author Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru>
date Wed, 04 Oct 2017 21:19:33 +0300
parents 3f5f0ab59b35
children 9d2ad2fb4423
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/*
 * Copyright (C) Igor Sysoev
 * Copyright (C) Nginx, Inc.
 */


#include <ngx_config.h>
#include <ngx_core.h>
#include <ngx_event.h>


ngx_queue_t  ngx_posted_accept_events;
ngx_queue_t  ngx_posted_events;


void
ngx_event_process_posted(ngx_cycle_t *cycle, ngx_queue_t *posted)
{
    ngx_queue_t  *q;
    ngx_event_t  *ev;

    while (!ngx_queue_empty(posted)) {

        q = ngx_queue_head(posted);
        ev = ngx_queue_data(q, ngx_event_t, queue);

        ngx_log_debug1(NGX_LOG_DEBUG_EVENT, cycle->log, 0,
                      "posted event %p", ev);

        ngx_delete_posted_event(ev);

        ev->handler(ev);
    }
}