File 9pfs-prevent-opening-special-files-CVE-2.patch of Package qemu.30221

From: Christian Schoenebeck <qemu_oss@crudebyte.com>
Date: Wed, 7 Jun 2023 18:29:33 +0200
Subject: 9pfs: prevent opening special files (CVE-2023-2861)

Git-commit: f6b0de53fb87ddefed348a39284c8e2f28dc4eda
References: bsc#1212968 CVE-2023-2861

The 9p protocol does not specifically define how server shall behave when
client tries to open a special file, however from security POV it does
make sense for 9p server to prohibit opening any special file on host side
in general. A sane Linux 9p client for instance would never attempt to
open a special file on host side, it would always handle those exclusively
on its guest side. A malicious client however could potentially escape
from the exported 9p tree by creating and opening a device file on host
side.

With QEMU this could only be exploited in the following unsafe setups:

  - Running QEMU binary as root AND 9p 'local' fs driver AND 'passthrough'
    security model.

or

  - Using 9p 'proxy' fs driver (which is running its helper daemon as
    root).

These setups were already discouraged for safety reasons before,
however for obvious reasons we are now tightening behaviour on this.

Fixes: CVE-2023-2861
Reported-by: Yanwu Shen <ywsPlz@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Jietao Xiao <shawtao1125@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Jinku Li <jkli@xidian.edu.cn>
Reported-by: Wenbo Shen <shenwenbo@zju.edu.cn>
Signed-off-by: Christian Schoenebeck <qemu_oss@crudebyte.com>
Reviewed-by: Greg Kurz <groug@kaod.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Tokarev <mjt@tls.msk.ru>
Message-Id: <E1q6w7r-0000Q0-NM@lizzy.crudebyte.com>
Signed-off-by: Li Zhang <lizhang@suse.de>
---
 fsdev/virtfs-proxy-helper.c |  27 +++++++-
 hw/9pfs/9p-util.h           | 122 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 2 files changed, 147 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/fsdev/virtfs-proxy-helper.c b/fsdev/virtfs-proxy-helper.c
index 6f132c5ff15a7f77667d32215502..b4ab483113e3c7103eca8ecdd14e 100644
--- a/fsdev/virtfs-proxy-helper.c
+++ b/fsdev/virtfs-proxy-helper.c
@@ -26,6 +26,7 @@
 #include "qemu/xattr.h"
 #include "9p-iov-marshal.h"
 #include "hw/9pfs/9p-proxy.h"
+#include "hw/9pfs/9p-util.h"
 #include "fsdev/9p-iov-marshal.h"
 
 #define PROGNAME "virtfs-proxy-helper"
@@ -350,6 +351,28 @@ static void resetugid(int suid, int sgid)
     }
 }
 
+/*
+ * Open regular file or directory. Attempts to open any special file are
+ * rejected.
+ *
+ * returns file descriptor or -1 on error
+ */
+static int open_regular(const char *pathname, int flags, mode_t mode)
+{
+    int fd;
+
+    fd = open(pathname, flags, mode);
+    if (fd < 0) {
+        return fd;
+    }
+
+    if (close_if_special_file(fd) < 0) {
+        return -1;
+    }
+
+    return fd;
+}
+
 /*
  * send response in two parts
  * 1) ProxyHeader
@@ -694,7 +717,7 @@ static int do_create(struct iovec *iovec)
     if (ret < 0) {
         goto unmarshal_err_out;
     }
-    ret = open(path.data, flags, mode);
+    ret = open_regular(path.data, flags, mode);
     if (ret < 0) {
         ret = -errno;
     }
@@ -719,7 +742,7 @@ static int do_open(struct iovec *iovec)
     if (ret < 0) {
         goto err_out;
     }
-    ret = open(path.data, flags);
+    ret = open_regular(path.data, flags, 0);
     if (ret < 0) {
         ret = -errno;
     }
diff --git a/hw/9pfs/9p-util.h b/hw/9pfs/9p-util.h
index 546f46dc7dc636aaf4dff762468b..3d98e599ef2ab35461193f435c1e 100644
--- a/hw/9pfs/9p-util.h
+++ b/hw/9pfs/9p-util.h
@@ -13,12 +13,98 @@
 #ifndef QEMU_9P_UTIL_H
 #define QEMU_9P_UTIL_H
 
+#include "qemu/error-report.h"
+
 #ifdef O_PATH
 #define O_PATH_9P_UTIL O_PATH
 #else
 #define O_PATH_9P_UTIL 0
 #endif
 
+#if !defined(CONFIG_LINUX)
+
+/*
+ * Generates a Linux device number (a.k.a. dev_t) for given device major
+ * and minor numbers.
+ *
+ * To be more precise: it generates a device number in glibc's format
+ * (MMMM_Mmmm_mmmM_MMmm, 64 bits) actually, which is compatible with
+ * Linux's format (mmmM_MMmm, 32 bits), as described in <bits/sysmacros.h>.
+ */
+static inline uint64_t makedev_dotl(uint32_t dev_major, uint32_t dev_minor)
+{
+    uint64_t dev;
+
+    /* from glibc sysmacros.h: */
+    dev  = (((uint64_t) (dev_major & 0x00000fffu)) <<  8);
+    dev |= (((uint64_t) (dev_major & 0xfffff000u)) << 32);
+    dev |= (((uint64_t) (dev_minor & 0x000000ffu)) <<  0);
+    dev |= (((uint64_t) (dev_minor & 0xffffff00u)) << 12);
+    return dev;
+}
+
+#endif
+
+/*
+ * Converts given device number from host's device number format to Linux
+ * device number format. As both the size of type dev_t and encoding of
+ * dev_t is system dependant, we have to convert them for Linux guests if
+ * host is not running Linux.
+ */
+static inline uint64_t host_dev_to_dotl_dev(dev_t dev)
+{
+#ifdef CONFIG_LINUX
+    return dev;
+#else
+    return makedev_dotl(major(dev), minor(dev));
+#endif
+}
+
+/* Translates errno from host -> Linux if needed */
+static inline int errno_to_dotl(int err)
+{
+#if defined(CONFIG_LINUX)
+    /* nothing to translate (Linux -> Linux) */
+#elif defined(CONFIG_DARWIN)
+    /*
+     * translation mandatory for macOS hosts
+     *
+     * FIXME: Only most important errnos translated here yet, this should be
+     * extended to as many errnos being translated as possible in future.
+     */
+    if (err == ENAMETOOLONG) {
+        err = 36; /* ==ENAMETOOLONG on Linux */
+    } else if (err == ENOTEMPTY) {
+        err = 39; /* ==ENOTEMPTY on Linux */
+    } else if (err == ELOOP) {
+        err = 40; /* ==ELOOP on Linux */
+    } else if (err == ENOATTR) {
+        err = 61; /* ==ENODATA on Linux */
+    } else if (err == ENOTSUP) {
+        err = 95; /* ==EOPNOTSUPP on Linux */
+    } else if (err == EOPNOTSUPP) {
+        err = 95; /* ==EOPNOTSUPP on Linux */
+    }
+#else
+#error Missing errno translation to Linux for this host system
+#endif
+    return err;
+}
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_DARWIN
+#define qemu_fgetxattr(...) fgetxattr(__VA_ARGS__, 0, 0)
+#else
+#define qemu_fgetxattr fgetxattr
+#endif
+
+#define qemu_openat     openat
+#define qemu_fstat      fstat
+#define qemu_fstatat    fstatat
+#define qemu_mkdirat    mkdirat
+#define qemu_renameat   renameat
+#define qemu_utimensat  utimensat
+#define qemu_unlinkat   unlinkat
+
 static inline void close_preserve_errno(int fd)
 {
     int serrno = errno;
@@ -26,6 +112,38 @@ static inline void close_preserve_errno(int fd)
     errno = serrno;
 }
 
+/**
+ * close_if_special_file() - Close @fd if neither regular file nor directory.
+ *
+ * @fd: file descriptor of open file
+ * Return: 0 on regular file or directory, -1 otherwise
+ *
+ * CVE-2023-2861: Prohibit opening any special file directly on host
+ * (especially device files), as a compromised client could potentially gain
+ * access outside exported tree under certain, unsafe setups. We expect
+ * client to handle I/O on special files exclusively on guest side.
+ */
+static inline int close_if_special_file(int fd)
+{
+    struct stat stbuf;
+
+    if (qemu_fstat(fd, &stbuf) < 0) {
+        close_preserve_errno(fd);
+        return -1;
+    }
+    if (!S_ISREG(stbuf.st_mode) && !S_ISDIR(stbuf.st_mode)) {
+        error_report_once(
+            "9p: broken or compromised client detected; attempt to open "
+            "special file (i.e. neither regular file, nor directory)"
+        );
+        close(fd);
+        errno = ENXIO;
+        return -1;
+    }
+
+    return 0;
+}
+
 static inline int openat_dir(int dirfd, const char *name)
 {
     return openat(dirfd, name,
@@ -56,6 +174,10 @@ again:
         return -1;
     }
 
+    if (close_if_special_file(fd) < 0) {
+        return -1;
+    }
+
     serrno = errno;
     /* O_NONBLOCK was only needed to open the file. Let's drop it. We don't
      * do that with O_PATH since fcntl(F_SETFL) isn't supported, and openat()
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