This fix removes a use after free which can be triggered by
the internal cookie fuzzer, but otherwise is probably
impossible to trigger from an ordinary application.
The following program reproduces it:
curl_global_init(CURL_GLOBAL_DEFAULT);
CURL* handle=curl_easy_init();
CookieInfo* info=Curl_cookie_init(handle,NULL,NULL,false);
curl_easy_setopt(handle, CURLOPT_COOKIEJAR, "/dev/null");
Curl_flush_cookies(handle, true);
Curl_cookie_cleanup(info);
curl_easy_cleanup(handle);
curl_global_cleanup();
This was found through fuzzing.
Closes#4454
The 'share object' only sets the storage area for cookies. The "cookie
engine" still needs to be enabled or activated using the normal cookie
options.
This caused the curl command line tool to accidentally use cookies
without having been told to, since curl switched to using shared cookies
in 7.66.0.
Test 1166 verifies
Updated test 506
Fixes#4429Closes#4434
As the loop discards cookies without domain set. This bug would lead to
qsort() trying to sort uninitialized pointers. We have however not found
it a security problem.
Reported-by: Paul Dreik
Closes#4386
Several reasons:
- we can't add everyone who's helping out so its unfair to just a few
selected ones.
- we already list all helpers in THANKS and in RELEASE-NOTES for each
release
- we don't want to give the impression that some parts of the code is
"owned" or "controlled" by specific persons
Assisted-by: Daniel Gustafsson
Closes#4129
Some editors and IDEs assume that source files use UTF-8 file encodings.
It also fixes the build with MSVC when /utf-8 command line option is
used (this option is mandatory for some other open-source projects, this
is useful when using the same options is desired for building all
libraries of a project).
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/4087
In case the name pointer isn't set (due to memory pressure most likely)
we need to skip the prefix matching and reject with a badcookie to avoid
a possible NULL pointer dereference.
Closes#3820#3821
Reported-by: Jonathan Moerman
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg <daniel@haxx.se>
ALTSVC requires Curl_get_line which is defined in lib/cookie.c inside a #if
check of HTTP and COOKIES. That makes Curl_get_line undefined if COOKIES is
disabled. Fix by splitting out the function into a separate file which can
be included where needed.
Closes#3717
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Reviewed-by: Marcel Raad <Marcel.Raad@teamviewer.com>
Follow-up to 8eddb8f425.
If the cookieinfo pointer is NULL there really is nothing to save.
Without this fix, we got a problem when a handle was using shared object
with cookies and is told to "FLUSH" it to file (which worked) and then
the share object was removed and when the easy handle was closed just
afterwards it has no cookieinfo and no cookies so it decided to save an
empty jar (overwriting the file just flushed).
Test 1905 now verifies that this works.
Assisted-by: Michael Wallner
Assisted-by: Marcel Raad
Closes#3621
The draft-ietf-httpbis-rfc6265bis-02 draft, specify a set of prefixes
and how they should affect cookie initialization, which has been
adopted by the major browsers. This adds support for the two prefixes
defined, __Host- and __Secure, and updates the testcase with the
supplied examples from the draft.
Closes#3554
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg <daniel@haxx.se>
Ensure to perform the checks we have to enforce a sane domain in
the cookie request. The check for non-PSL enabled builds is quite
basic but it's better than nothing.
Closes#2964
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg <daniel@haxx.se>
Only allow secure origins to be able to write cookies with the
'secure' flag set. This reduces the risk of non-secure origins
to influence the state of secure origins. This implements IETF
Internet-Draft draft-ietf-httpbis-cookie-alone-01 which updates
RFC6265.
Closes#2956
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg <daniel@haxx.se>
Important for when the file is going to be read again and thus must not
contain old contents!
Adds test 327 to verify.
Reported-by: daboul on github
Fixes#3299Closes#3300
Rather than jumping backwards to where failure cleanup happens
to be performed, move the failure case to end of the function
where it is expected per existing coding convention.
Closes#2965
If the formatting fails, we error out on a fatal error and
clean up on the way out. The array was however freed within
the wrong scope and was thus never freed in case the cookies
were written to a file instead of STDOUT.
Closes#2957
According to RFC6265 section 5.4, cookies with equal path lengths
SHOULD be sorted by creation-time (earlier first). This adds a
creation-time record to the cookie struct in order to make cookie
sorting more deterministic. The creation-time is defined as the
order of the cookies in the jar, the first cookie read fro the
jar being the oldest. The creation-time is thus not serialized
into the jar. Also remove the strcmp() matching in the sorting as
there is no lexicographic ordering in RFC6265. Existing tests are
updated to match.
Closes#2524
- Get rid of variable that was generating false positive warning
(unitialized)
- Fix issues in tests
- Reduce scope of several variables all over
etc
Closes#2631
The latest psl is cached in the multi or share handle. It is refreshed
before use after 72 hours.
New share lock CURL_LOCK_DATA_PSL controls the psl cache sharing.
If the latest psl is not available, the builtin psl is used.
Reported-by: Yaakov Selkowitz
Fixes#2553Closes#2601
RFC 6265 section 4.2.1 does not set restrictions on cookie names.
This is a follow-up to commit 7f7fcd0.
Also explicitly check proper syntax of cookie name/value pair.
New test 1155 checks that cookie names are not reserved words.
Reported-By: anshnd at github
Fixes#2564Closes#2566
This fixes a segfault occurring when a name of the (invalid) form "domain..tld"
is processed.
test46 updated to cover this case.
Follow-up to commit c990ead.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/2440
... instead of truncating them.
There's no fixed limit for acceptable cookie names in RFC 6265, but the
entire cookie is said to be less than 4096 bytes (section 6.1). This is
also what browsers seem to implement.
We now allow max 5000 bytes cookie header. Max 4095 bytes length per
cookie name and value. Name + value together may not exceed 4096 bytes.
Added test 1151 to verify
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2017-09/0062.html
Reported-by: Kevin Smith
Closes#1894
This repairs cookies for localhost.
Non-PSL builds will now only accept "localhost" without dots, while PSL
builds okeys everything not listed as PSL.
Added test 1258 to verify.
This was a regression brought in a76825a5ef
... to make it less likely that we forget that the function actually
does case insentive compares. Also replaced several invokes of the
function with a plain strcmp when case sensitivity is not an issue (like
comparing with "-").
Previously it only held references to them, which was reckless as the
thread lock was released so the cookies could get modified by other
handles that share the same cookie jar over the share interface.
CVE-2016-8623
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/docs/adv_20161102I.html
Reported-by: Cure53
Cokie with the same domain but different tailmatching property are now
considered different and do not replace each other. If header contains
following lines then two cookies will be set: Set-Cookie: foo=bar;
domain=.foo.com; expires=Thu Mar 3 GMT 8:56:27 2033 Set-Cookie: foo=baz;
domain=foo.com; expires=Thu Mar 3 GMT 8:56:27 2033
This matches Chrome, Opera, Safari, and Firefox behavior. When sending
stored tokens to foo.com Chrome, Opera, Firefox store send them in the
stored order, while Safari pre-sort the cookies.
Closes#1050
curl_printf.h defines printf to curl_mprintf, etc. This can cause
problems with external headers which may use
__attribute__((format(printf, ...))) markers etc.
To avoid that they cause problems with system includes, we include
curl_printf.h after any system headers. That makes the three last
headers to always be, and we keep them in this order:
curl_printf.h
curl_memory.h
memdebug.h
None of them include system headers, they all do funny #defines.
Reported-by: David Benjamin
Fixes#743
RFC 6265 section 4.1.1 spells out that the first name/value pair in the
header is the actual cookie name and content, while the following are
the parameters.
libcurl previously had a more liberal approach which causes significant
problems when introducing new cookie parameters, like the suggested new
cookie priority draft.
The previous logic read all n/v pairs from left-to-right and the first
name used that wassn't a known parameter name would be used as the
cookie name, thus accepting "Set-Cookie: Max-Age=2; person=daniel" to be
a cookie named 'person' while an RFC 6265 compliant parser should
consider that to be a cookie named 'Max-Age' with an (unknown) parameter
'person'.
Fixes#709
Prior to this change cookies with an expiry date that failed parsing
and were converted to session cookies could be purged in remove_expired.
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/697
Reported-by: Seth Mos
It turns out Firefox and Chrome both allow spaces in cookie names and
there are sites out there using that.
Turned out the code meant to strip off trailing space from cookie names
didn't work. Fixed now.
Test case 8 modified to verify both these changes.
Closes#639
In 3013bb6 I had changed cookie export to ignore any-domain cookies,
however the logic I used to do so was incorrect, and would lead to a
busy loop in the case of exporting a cookie list that contained
any-domain cookies. The result of that is worse though, because in that
case the other cookies would not be written resulting in an empty file
once the application is terminated to stop the busy loop.
Prior to this change any-domain cookies (cookies without a domain that
are sent to any domain) were exported with domain name "unknown".
Bug: https://github.com/bagder/curl/issues/292
- Change fopen calls to use FOPEN_READTEXT instead of "r" or "rt"
- Change fopen calls to use FOPEN_WRITETEXT instead of "w" or "wt"
This change is to explicitly specify when we need to read/write text.
Unfortunately 't' is not part of POSIX fopen so we can't specify it
directly. Instead we now have FOPEN_READTEXT, FOPEN_WRITETEXT.
Prior to this change we had an issue on Windows if an application that
uses libcurl overrides the default file mode to binary. The default file
mode in Windows is normally text mode (translation mode) and that's what
libcurl expects.
Bug: https://github.com/bagder/curl/pull/258#issuecomment-107093055
Reported-by: Orgad Shaneh
The internal libcurl function called sanitize_cookie_path() that cleans
up the path element as given to it from a remote site or when read from
a file, did not properly validate the input. If given a path that
consisted of a single double-quote, libcurl would index a newly
allocated memory area with index -1 and assign a zero to it, thus
destroying heap memory it wasn't supposed to.
CVE-2015-3145
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/docs/adv_20150422C.html
Reported-by: Hanno Böck
"name =value" is fine and the space should just be skipped.
Updated test 31 to also test for this.
Bug: https://github.com/bagder/curl/issues/195
Reported-by: cromestant
Help-by: Frank Gevaerts
This header file must be included after all header files except
memdebug.h, as it does similar memory function redefinitions and can be
similarly affected by conflicting definitions in system or dependent
library headers.
Since we just started make use of free(NULL) in order to simplify code,
this change takes it a step further and:
- converts lots of Curl_safefree() calls to good old free()
- makes Curl_safefree() not check the pointer before free()
The (new) rule of thumb is: if you really want a function call that
frees a pointer and then assigns it to NULL, then use Curl_safefree().
But we will prefer just using free() from now on.
The function "free" is documented in the way that no action shall occur for
a passed null pointer. It is therefore not needed that a function caller
repeats a corresponding check.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18775608/free-a-null-pointer-anyway-or-check-first
This issue was fixed by using the software Coccinelle 1.0.0-rc24.
Signed-off-by: Markus Elfring <elfring@users.sourceforge.net>
This fixes the test 506 torture test. The internal cookie API really
ought to be improved to separate cookie parsing errors (which may be
ignored) with OOM errors (which should be fatal).
By not detecting and rejecting domain names for partial literal IP
addresses properly when parsing received HTTP cookies, libcurl can be
fooled to both send cookies to wrong sites and to allow arbitrary sites
to set cookies for others.
CVE-2014-3613
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/docs/adv_20140910A.html
1 - allow >31 bit max-age values
2 - don't overflow on extremely large max-age values when we add the
value to the current time
3 - make sure max-age takes precedence over expires as dictated by
RFC6265
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2014-01/0130.html
Reported-by: Chen Prog
Following commit 0aafd77fa4, replaced the internal usage of
FORMAT_OFF_T and FORMAT_OFF_TU with the external versions that we
expect API programmers to use.
This negates the need for separate definitions which were subtly
different under different platforms/compilers.
Implement: Expired Cookies These following situation, curl removes
cookie(s) from struct CookieInfo if the cookie expired.
- Curl_cookie_add()
- Curl_cookie_getlist()
- cookie_output()
The initial fix to only compare full path names were done in commit
04f52e9b4d but found out to be incomplete. This takes should make the
change more complete and there's now two additional tests to verify
(test 31 and 62).
1 - don't skip host names with a colon in them in an attempt to bail out
on HTTP headers in the cookie file parser. It was only a shortcut anyway
and trying to parse a file with HTTP headers will still be handled, only
slightly slower.
2 - don't skip domain names based on number of dots. The original
netscape cookie spec had this oddity mentioned and while our code
decreased the check to only check for two, the existing cookie spec has
no such dot counting required.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1221
Reported-by: Stefan Neis
I found a bug which cURL sends cookies to the path not to aim at.
For example:
- cURL sends a request to http://example.fake/hoge/
- server returns cookie which with path=/hoge;
the point is there is NOT the '/' end of path string.
- cURL sends a request to http://example.fake/hogege/ with the cookie.
The reason for this old "feature" is because that behavior is what is
described in the original netscape cookie spec:
http://curl.haxx.se/rfc/cookie_spec.html
The current cookie spec (RFC6265) clarifies the situation:
http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6265#section-5.2.4
Cookies set for 'example.com' could accidentaly also be sent by libcurl
to the 'bexample.com' (ie with a prefix to the first domain name).
This is a security vulnerabilty, CVE-2013-1944.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/docs/adv_20130412.html
Since qsort implementations vary with regards to handling the order
of similiar elements, this change makes the internal sort function
more deterministic by comparing path length first, then domain length
and finally the cookie name. Spotted with testcase 62 on Windows.
This commit renames lib/setup.h to lib/curl_setup.h and
renames lib/setup_once.h to lib/curl_setup_once.h.
Removes the need and usage of a header inclusion guard foreign
to libcurl. [1]
Removes the need and presence of an alarming notice we carried
in old setup_once.h [2]
----------------------------------------
1 - lib/setup_once.h used __SETUP_ONCE_H macro as header inclusion guard
up to commit ec691ca3 which changed this to HEADER_CURL_SETUP_ONCE_H,
this single inclusion guard is enough to ensure that inclusion of
lib/setup_once.h done from lib/setup.h is only done once.
Additionally lib/setup.h has always used __SETUP_ONCE_H macro to
protect inclusion of setup_once.h even after commit ec691ca3, this
was to avoid a circular header inclusion triggered when building a
c-ares enabled version with c-ares sources available which also has
a setup_once.h header. Commit ec691ca3 exposes the real nature of
__SETUP_ONCE_H usage in lib/setup.h, it is a header inclusion guard
foreign to libcurl belonging to c-ares's setup_once.h
The renaming this commit does, fixes the circular header inclusion,
and as such removes the need and usage of a header inclusion guard
foreign to libcurl. Macro __SETUP_ONCE_H no longer used in libcurl.
2 - Due to the circular interdependency of old lib/setup_once.h and the
c-ares setup_once.h header, old file lib/setup_once.h has carried
back from 2006 up to now days an alarming and prominent notice about
the need of keeping libcurl's and c-ares's setup_once.h in sync.
Given that this commit fixes the circular interdependency, the need
and presence of mentioned notice is removed.
All mentioned interdependencies come back from now old days when
the c-ares project lived inside a curl subdirectory. This commit
removes last traces of such fact.
This reverts renaming and usage of lib/*.h header files done
28-12-2012, reverting 2 commits:
f871de0... build: make use of 76 lib/*.h renamed files
ffd8e12... build: rename 76 lib/*.h files
This also reverts removal of redundant include guard (redundant thanks
to changes in above commits) done 2-12-2013, reverting 1 commit:
c087374... curl_setup.h: remove redundant include guard
This also reverts renaming and usage of lib/*.c source files done
3-12-2013, reverting 3 commits:
13606bb... build: make use of 93 lib/*.c renamed files
5b6e792... build: rename 93 lib/*.c files
7d83dff... build: commit 13606bbfde follow-up 1
Start of related discussion thread:
http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-01/0012.html
Asking for confirmation on pushing this revertion commit:
http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-01/0048.html
Confirmation summary:
http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-01/0079.html
NOTICE: The list of 2 files that have been modified by other
intermixed commits, while renamed, and also by at least one
of the 6 commits this one reverts follows below. These 2 files
will exhibit a hole in history unless git's '--follow' option
is used when viewing logs.
lib/curl_imap.h
lib/curl_smtp.h
There are two keywords in cookie headers that don't follow the regular
name=value style: secure and httponly. Still we must support that they
are written like 'secure=' and then treat them as if they were written
'secure'. Test case 31 was much extended by Rob Ward to test this.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3349227
Reported by: "gnombat"