When a cache contains no fonts, it will be unloaded immediately.
Previously the certain alias and UUID entries will be purged at that time though,
this doesn't work when the targeted directory has sub-directories.
To avoid the unnecessary cache creation with the md5-based naming, try to keep them
as far as possible.
Although this way seems not perfectly working if the first directory to look up is like that
Reject caches when FcPattern isn't a constant.
This is usually unlikely to happen but reported.
I've decided to add more validation since this isn't reproducible
and easy to have a workaround rather than investigating 'why'.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=103237
Validation fails when the FcValueList contains more than font->num.
this logic was wrong because font->num contains a number of the elements
in FcPatternElt but FcValue in FcValueList.
This corrects 7a4a5bd7.
Patch from Tobias Stoeckmann
The cache files are insufficiently validated. Even though the magic
number at the beginning of the file as well as time stamps are checked,
it is not verified if contained offsets are in legal ranges or are
even pointers.
The lack of validation allows an attacker to trigger arbitrary free()
calls, which in turn allows double free attacks and therefore arbitrary
code execution. Due to the conversion from offsets into pointers through
macros, this even allows to circumvent ASLR protections.
This attack vector allows privilege escalation when used with setuid
binaries like fbterm. A user can create ~/.fonts or any other
system-defined user-private font directory, run fc-cache and adjust
cache files in ~/.cache/fontconfig. The execution of setuid binaries will
scan these files and therefore are prone to attacks.
If it's not about code execution, an endless loop can be created by
letting linked lists become circular linked lists.
This patch verifies that:
- The file is not larger than the maximum addressable space, which
basically only affects 32 bit systems. This allows out of boundary
access into unallocated memory.
- Offsets are always positive or zero
- Offsets do not point outside file boundaries
- No pointers are allowed in cache files, every "pointer or offset"
field must be an offset or NULL
- Iterating linked lists must not take longer than the amount of elements
specified. A violation of this rule can break a possible endless loop.
If one or more of these points are violated, the cache is recreated.
This is current behaviour.
Even though this patch fixes many issues, the use of mmap() shall be
forbidden in setuid binaries. It is impossible to guarantee with these
checks that a malicious user does not change cache files after
verification. This should be handled in a different patch.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Stoeckmann <tobias@stoeckmann.org>
Take a look at the nano second in the mtime to figure out
if the cache needs to be updated if available.
and do the mutex lock between scanning and writing a cache
to avoid the conflict.
Also we don't need to scan directories again after writing
caches. so getting rid of the related code as well.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=69845
and for reference:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1236034
config.h is read from fcint.h now so having a line of the sort of #include "config.h"
is duplicate.
Bug 69833 - Incorrect SIZEOF_VOID_P and ALIGNOF_DOUBLE definitions causes nasty warnings on MacOSX when building fat libraries
Add an ability to set the system root to generate the caches.
In order to do this, new APIs, FcConfigGetSysRoot() and
FcConfigSetSysRoot() is available.
X_OK checking was added back in 8ae1e3d5dc
which was removed due to the same reason in
238489030a.
apparently the test case in Bug#18934 still works without it.
so I'm removing it again to get this working on Windows.
Windows does not update mtime of directory on FAT filesystem when
file is added to it or removed from it. Fontconfig uses mtime of
directory to check cache file aging and hence fails to detect
newly added or recently removed files.
This changeset detects FAT filesystem (currently implemented for
Linux) and adds generating checksum of directory entries instead
of using mtime which guarantees proper cache rebuild.
For non-FAT filesystems this patch adds single syscall per directory
which is negligeable overhead.
This fixes bug https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=25535
Signed-off-by: Mikhail Gusarov <dottedmag@dottedmag.net>
FcStat() logic is quite complicated in presence of various semi-broken operating
systems and filesystems, split it out in order to make it a bit easier.
Signed-off-by: Mikhail Gusarov <dottedmag@dottedmag.net>
Stop using mmap() if the cache file is stored on NFS.
also added FONTCONFIG_USE_MMAP environment variable to enforce the use of
or not the use of mmap(2) regardless of what the filesystem the cache files
are stored on.
Given that fontconfig will scan all of the cache file data during the
first font search, ask the kernel to start reading the pages right away.
Signed-off-by: Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com>