gfileutils: Correctly reset start value when canonicalising paths

If a path starts with more than two slashes, the `start` value was
previously incorrect:
 1. As per the `g_path_skip_root()` call, `start` was set to point to
    after the final initial slash. For a path with three initial
    slashes, this is the character after the third slash.
 2. The canonicalisation loop to find the first dir separator sets
    `output` to point to the character after the first slash (and it
    overwrites the first slash to be `G_DIR_SEPARATOR`).
 3. At this point, with a string `///usr`, `output` points to the second
    `/`; and `start` points to the `u`. This is incorrect, as `start`
    should point to the starting character for output, as per the
    original call to `g_path_skip_root()`.
 4. For paths which subsequently include a `..`, this results in the
    `output > start` check in the `..` loop below not skipping all the
    characters of a preceding path component, which is then caught by
    the `G_IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (output[-1])` assertion.

Fix this by resetting `start` to `output` after finding the final slash
to keep in the output, but before starting the main parsing loop.

Relatedly, split `start` into two variables: `after_root` and
`output_start`, since the variable actually has two roles in the two
parts of the function.

Includes a test.

This commit is heavily based on suggestions by Sebastian Wilhemi and
Sebastian Dröge.

Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>

oss-fuzz#41563
This commit is contained in:
Philip Withnall 2021-12-02 11:33:09 +00:00
parent 3421a703ca
commit fc25f8d7ef
2 changed files with 13 additions and 9 deletions

View File

@ -2736,7 +2736,7 @@ gchar *
g_canonicalize_filename (const gchar *filename,
const gchar *relative_to)
{
gchar *canon, *input, *output, *start;
gchar *canon, *input, *output, *after_root, *output_start;
g_return_val_if_fail (relative_to == NULL || g_path_is_absolute (relative_to), NULL);
@ -2758,9 +2758,9 @@ g_canonicalize_filename (const gchar *filename,
canon = g_strdup (filename);
}
start = (char *)g_path_skip_root (canon);
after_root = (char *)g_path_skip_root (canon);
if (start == NULL)
if (after_root == NULL)
{
/* This shouldn't really happen, as g_get_current_dir() should
return an absolute pathname, but bug 573843 shows this is
@ -2770,7 +2770,7 @@ g_canonicalize_filename (const gchar *filename,
}
/* Find the first dir separator and use the canonical dir separator. */
for (output = start - 1;
for (output = after_root - 1;
(output >= canon) && G_IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (*output);
output--)
*output = G_DIR_SEPARATOR;
@ -2783,10 +2783,11 @@ g_canonicalize_filename (const gchar *filename,
* (as does windows too). So, "//" != "/", but more than two slashes
* is treated as "/".
*/
if (start - output == 1)
if (after_root - output == 1)
output++;
input = start;
input = after_root;
output_start = output;
while (*input)
{
/* input points to the next non-separator to be processed. */
@ -2811,13 +2812,13 @@ g_canonicalize_filename (const gchar *filename,
else if (input[0] == '.' && input[1] == '.' &&
(input[2] == 0 || G_IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (input[2])))
{
if (output > start)
if (output > output_start)
{
do
{
output--;
}
while (!G_IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (output[-1]) && output > start);
while (!G_IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (output[-1]) && output > output_start);
}
if (input[2] == 0)
break;
@ -2837,7 +2838,7 @@ g_canonicalize_filename (const gchar *filename,
}
/* Remove a potentially trailing dir separator */
if (output > start && G_IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (output[-1]))
if (output > output_start && G_IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (output[-1]))
output--;
*output = '\0';

View File

@ -1063,6 +1063,7 @@ test_paths (void)
{ "/", "./", "/" },
{ "/", "/.", "/" },
{ "/", "/./", "/" },
{ "/", "///usr/../usr", "/usr" },
#else
{ "/etc", "../usr/share", "\\usr\\share" },
{ "/", "/foo/bar", "\\foo\\bar" },
@ -1090,6 +1091,7 @@ test_paths (void)
{ "/", "./", "/" },
{ "/", "/.", "/" },
{ "/", "/./", "/" },
{ "/", "///usr/../usr", "/usr" },
{ "\\etc", "..\\usr\\share", "\\usr\\share" },
{ "\\", "\\foo\\bar", "\\foo\\bar" },
@ -1117,6 +1119,7 @@ test_paths (void)
{ "\\", ".\\", "\\" },
{ "\\", "\\.", "\\" },
{ "\\", "\\.\\", "\\" },
{ "\\", "\\\\\\usr\\..\\usr", "\\usr" },
#endif
};
const guint n_canonicalize_filename_checks = G_N_ELEMENTS (canonicalize_filename_checks);