Commit f0e5311a authored by Jann Horn's avatar Jann Horn Committed by Greg Kroah-Hartman

firmware_loader: Block path traversal

Most firmware names are hardcoded strings, or are constructed from fairly
constrained format strings where the dynamic parts are just some hex
numbers or such.

However, there are a couple codepaths in the kernel where firmware file
names contain string components that are passed through from a device or
semi-privileged userspace; the ones I could find (not counting interfaces
that require root privileges) are:

 - lpfc_sli4_request_firmware_update() seems to construct the firmware
   filename from "ModelName", a string that was previously parsed out of
   some descriptor ("Vital Product Data") in lpfc_fill_vpd()
 - nfp_net_fw_find() seems to construct a firmware filename from a model
   name coming from nfp_hwinfo_lookup(pf->hwinfo, "nffw.partno"), which I
   think parses some descriptor that was read from the device.
   (But this case likely isn't exploitable because the format string looks
   like "netronome/nic_%s", and there shouldn't be any *folders* starting
   with "netronome/nic_". The previous case was different because there,
   the "%s" is *at the start* of the format string.)
 - module_flash_fw_schedule() is reachable from the
   ETHTOOL_MSG_MODULE_FW_FLASH_ACT netlink command, which is marked as
   GENL_UNS_ADMIN_PERM (meaning CAP_NET_ADMIN inside a user namespace is
   enough to pass the privilege check), and takes a userspace-provided
   firmware name.
   (But I think to reach this case, you need to have CAP_NET_ADMIN over a
   network namespace that a special kind of ethernet device is mapped into,
   so I think this is not a viable attack path in practice.)

Fix it by rejecting any firmware names containing ".." path components.

For what it's worth, I went looking and haven't found any USB device
drivers that use the firmware loader dangerously.

Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Reviewed-by: default avatarDanilo Krummrich <dakr@kernel.org>
Fixes: abb139e7 ("firmware: teach the kernel to load firmware files directly from the filesystem")
Signed-off-by: default avatarJann Horn <jannh@google.com>
Acked-by: default avatarLuis Chamberlain <mcgrof@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240828-firmware-traversal-v3-1-c76529c63b5f@google.comSigned-off-by: default avatarGreg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
parent 888f67e6
......@@ -849,6 +849,26 @@ static void fw_log_firmware_info(const struct firmware *fw, const char *name,
{}
#endif
/*
* Reject firmware file names with ".." path components.
* There are drivers that construct firmware file names from device-supplied
* strings, and we don't want some device to be able to tell us "I would like to
* be sent my firmware from ../../../etc/shadow, please".
*
* Search for ".." surrounded by either '/' or start/end of string.
*
* This intentionally only looks at the firmware name, not at the firmware base
* directory or at symlink contents.
*/
static bool name_contains_dotdot(const char *name)
{
size_t name_len = strlen(name);
return strcmp(name, "..") == 0 || strncmp(name, "../", 3) == 0 ||
strstr(name, "/../") != NULL ||
(name_len >= 3 && strcmp(name+name_len-3, "/..") == 0);
}
/* called from request_firmware() and request_firmware_work_func() */
static int
_request_firmware(const struct firmware **firmware_p, const char *name,
......@@ -869,6 +889,14 @@ _request_firmware(const struct firmware **firmware_p, const char *name,
goto out;
}
if (name_contains_dotdot(name)) {
dev_warn(device,
"Firmware load for '%s' refused, path contains '..' component\n",
name);
ret = -EINVAL;
goto out;
}
ret = _request_firmware_prepare(&fw, name, device, buf, size,
offset, opt_flags);
if (ret <= 0) /* error or already assigned */
......@@ -946,6 +974,8 @@ _request_firmware(const struct firmware **firmware_p, const char *name,
* @name will be used as $FIRMWARE in the uevent environment and
* should be distinctive enough not to be confused with any other
* firmware image for this or any other device.
* It must not contain any ".." path components - "foo/bar..bin" is
* allowed, but "foo/../bar.bin" is not.
*
* Caller must hold the reference count of @device.
*
......
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