gecko-dev/mfbt/Tainting.h

349 lines
12 KiB
C++

/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 8; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */
/* vim: set ts=8 sts=2 et sw=2 tw=80: */
/* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
* License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
* file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */
/*
* Creates a Tainted<> wrapper to enforce data validation before use.
*/
#ifndef mozilla_Tainting_h
#define mozilla_Tainting_h
#include <utility>
#include "mozilla/MacroArgs.h"
namespace mozilla {
template <typename T>
class Tainted;
namespace ipc {
template <typename>
struct IPDLParamTraits;
}
/*
* The Tainted<> class allows data to be wrapped and considered 'tainted'; which
* requires explicit validation of the data before it can be used for
* comparisons or in arithmetic.
*
* Tainted<> objects are intended to be passed down callstacks (still in
* Tainted<> form) to whatever location is appropriate to validate (or complete
* validation) of the data before finally unwrapping it.
*
* Tainting data ensures that validation actually occurs and is not forgotten,
* increase consideration of validation so it can be as strict as possible, and
* makes it clear from a code point of view where and what validation is
* performed.
*/
// ====================================================================
// ====================================================================
/*
* Simple Tainted<foo> class
*
* Class should not support any de-reference or comparison operator and instead
* force all access to the member variable through the MOZ_VALIDATE macros.
*
* While the Coerce() function is publicly accessible on the class, it should
* only be used by the MOZ_VALIDATE macros, and static analysis will prevent
* it being used elsewhere.
*/
template <typename T>
class Tainted {
private:
T mValue;
public:
explicit Tainted() = default;
template <typename U>
explicit Tainted(U&& aValue) : mValue(std::forward<U>(aValue)) {}
T& Coerce() { return this->mValue; }
const T& Coerce() const { return this->mValue; }
friend struct mozilla::ipc::IPDLParamTraits<Tainted<T>>;
};
// ====================================================================
// ====================================================================
/*
* This section contains obscure, non-user-facing C++ to support
* variable-argument macros.
*/
#define MOZ_TAINT_GLUE(a, b) a b
// We use the same variable name in the nested scope, shadowing the outer
// scope - this allows the user to write the same variable name in the
// macro's condition without using a magic name like 'value'.
//
// We explicitly do not mark it MOZ_MAYBE_UNUSED because the condition
// should always make use of tainted_value, not doing so should cause an
// unused variable warning. That would only happen when we are bypssing
// validation.
//
// The separate bool variable is required to allow condition to be a lambda
// expression; lambdas cannot be placed directly inside ASSERTs.
#define MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET_HELPER3(tainted_value, condition, \
assertionstring) \
[&]() { \
auto& tmp = tainted_value.Coerce(); \
auto& tainted_value = tmp; \
bool test = (condition); \
MOZ_RELEASE_ASSERT(test, assertionstring); \
return tmp; \
}()
#define MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET_HELPER2(tainted_value, condition) \
MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET_HELPER3(tainted_value, condition, \
"MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET(" #tainted_value \
", " #condition ") has failed")
// ====================================================================
// ====================================================================
/*
* Macros to validate and un-taint a value.
*
* All macros accept the tainted variable as the first argument, and a
* condition as the second argument. If the condition is satisfied,
* then the value is considered valid.
*
* This file contains documentation and examples for the functions;
* more usage examples are present in mfbt/tests/gtest/TestTainting.cpp
*/
/*
* MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET is the bread-and-butter validation function.
* It confirms the value abides by the condition specified and then
* returns the untainted value.
*
* If the condition is not satisified, we RELEASE_ASSERT.
*
* Examples:
*
* int bar;
* Tainted<int> foo;
* int comparisonVariable = 20;
*
* bar = MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET(foo, foo < 20);
* bar = MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET(foo, foo < comparisonVariable);
*
* Note that while the comparison of foo < 20 works inside the macro,
* doing so outside the macro (such as with `if (foo < 20)` will
* (intentionally) fail during compilation. We do this to ensure that
* all validation logic is self-contained inside the macro.
*
*
* The macro also supports supplying a custom string to the
* MOZ_RELEASE_ASSERT. This is strongly encouraged because it
* provides the author the opportunity to explain by way of an
* english comment what is happening.
*
* Good things to include in the comment:
* - What the validation is doing or what it means
* - The impact that could occur if validation was bypassed.
* e.g. 'This value is used to allocate memory, so sane values
* should be enforced.''
* - How validation could change in the future to be more or less
* restrictive.
*
* Example:
*
* bar = MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET(
* foo, foo < 20,
* "foo must be less than 20 because higher values represent decibel"
* "levels greater than a a jet engine inside your ear.");
*
*
* The condition can also be a lambda function if you need to
* define temporary variables or perform more complex validation.
*
* Square brackets represent the capture group - local variables
* can be specified here to capture them and use them inside the
* lambda. Prefacing the variable with '&' means the variable is
* captured by-reference. It is typically better to capture
* variables by reference rather than making them parameters.
*
* When using this technique:
* - the tainted value must be present and should be captured
* by reference. (You could make it a parameter if you wish, but
* it's more typing.)
* - the entire lambda function must be enclosed in parens
* (if you omit this, you might get errors of the form:
* 'use of undeclared identifier 'MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET_HELPER4')
*
* Example:
*
* bar = MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET(foo, ([&foo, &comparisonVariable]() {
* bool intermediateResult = externalFunction(foo);
* if (intermediateResult || comparisonVariable < 4) {
* return true;
* }
* return false;
* }()));
*
*
* You can also define a lambda external to the macro if you prefer
* this over a static function.
*
* This is possible, and supported, but requires a different syntax.
* Instead of specifying the tainted value in the capture group [&foo],
* it must be provided as an argument of the unwrapped type.
* (The argument name can be anything you choose of course.)
*
* Example:
*
* auto lambda1 = [](int foo) {
* bool intermediateResult = externalFunction(foo);
* if (intermediateResult) {
* return true;
* }
* return false;
* };
* bar = MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET(foo, lambda1(foo));
*
*
* Arguments:
* tainted_value - the name of the Tainted<> variable
* condition - a comparison involving the tainted value
* assertionstring [optional] - A string to include in the RELEASE_ASSERT
*/
#define MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET(...) \
MOZ_TAINT_GLUE(MOZ_PASTE_PREFIX_AND_ARG_COUNT(MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET_HELPER, \
__VA_ARGS__), \
(__VA_ARGS__))
/*
* MOZ_IS_VALID is the other most common use, it allows one to test
* validity without asserting, for use in a if/else statement.
*
* It supports the same lambda behavior, but does not support a
* comment explaining the validation.
*
* Example:
*
* if (MOZ_IS_VALID(foo, foo < 20)) {
* ...
* }
*
*
* Arguments:
* tainted_value - the name of the Tainted<> variable
* condition - a comparison involving the tainted value
*/
#define MOZ_IS_VALID(tainted_value, condition) \
[&]() { \
auto& tmp = tainted_value.Coerce(); \
auto& tainted_value = tmp; \
return (condition); \
}()
/*
* MOZ_VALIDATE_OR is a shortcut that tests validity and if invalid,
* return an alternate value.
*
* Note that the following will not work:
* MOZ_RELEASE_ASSERT(MOZ_VALIDATE_OR(foo, foo < 20, 100) == EXPECTED_VALUE);
* MOZ_ASSERT(MOZ_VALIDATE_OR(foo, foo < 20, 100) == EXPECTED_VALUE);
* This is because internally, many MOZ_VALIDATE macros use lambda
* expressions (for variable shadowing purposes) and lambas cannot be
* expressions in (potentially) unevaluated operands.
*
* Example:
*
* bar = MOZ_VALIDATE_OR(foo, foo < 20, 100);
*
*
* Arguments:
* tainted_value - the name of the Tainted<> variable
* condition - a comparison involving the tainted value
* alternate_value - the value to use if the condition is false
*/
#define MOZ_VALIDATE_OR(tainted_value, condition, alternate_value) \
(MOZ_IS_VALID(tainted_value, condition) ? tainted_value.Coerce() \
: alternate_value)
/*
* MOZ_FIND_AND_VALIDATE is for testing validity of a tainted value by comparing
* it against a list of known safe values. Returns a pointer to the matched
* safe value or nullptr if none was found.
*
* Note that for the comparison the macro will loop over the list and that the
* current element being tested against is provided as list_item.
*
* Example:
*
* Tainted<int> aId;
* NSTArray<Person> list;
* const Person* foo = MOZ_FIND_AND_VALIDATE(aId, list_item.id == aId, list);
*
* // Typically you would do nothing if invalid data is passed:
* if (MOZ_UNLIKELY(!foo)) {
* return;
* }
*
* // Or alternately you can crash on invalid data
* MOZ_RELEASE_ASSERT(foo != nullptr, "Invalid person id sent from content
* process.");
*
* Arguments:
* tainted_value - the name of the Tainted<> variable
* condition - a condition involving the tainted value and list_item
* validation_list - a list of known safe values to compare against
*/
#define MOZ_FIND_AND_VALIDATE(tainted_value, condition, validation_list) \
[&]() { \
auto& tmp = tainted_value.Coerce(); \
auto& tainted_value = tmp; \
const auto macro_find_it = \
std::find_if(validation_list.cbegin(), validation_list.cend(), \
[&](const auto& list_item) { return condition; }); \
return macro_find_it != validation_list.cend() ? &*macro_find_it \
: nullptr; \
}()
/*
* MOZ_NO_VALIDATE allows unsafe removal of the Taint wrapper.
* A justification string is required to explain why this is acceptable.
*
* Example:
*
* bar = MOZ_NO_VALIDATE(
* foo,
* "Value is used to match against a dictionary key in the parent."
* "If there's no key present, there won't be a match."
* "There is no risk of grabbing a cross-origin value from the dictionary,"
* "because the IPC actor is instatiated per-content-process and the "
* "dictionary is not shared between actors.");
*
*
* Arguments:
* tainted_value - the name of the Tainted<> variable
* justification - a human-understandable string explaining why it is
* permissible to omit validation
*/
#define MOZ_NO_VALIDATE(tainted_value, justification) \
[&tainted_value] { \
static_assert(sizeof(justification) > 3, \
"Must provide a justification string."); \
return tainted_value.Coerce(); \
}()
/*
TODO:
- Figure out if there are helpers that would be useful for Strings and
Principals
- Write static analysis to enforce invariants:
- No use of .Coerce() except in the header file.
- No constant passed to the condition of MOZ_VALIDATE_AND_GET
*/
} // namespace mozilla
#endif /* mozilla_Tainting_h */