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bug#24703: Store references in 8-byte chunks in compiled code


From: Ludovic Courtès
Subject: bug#24703: Store references in 8-byte chunks in compiled code
Date: Tue, 18 Oct 2016 10:59:02 +0200
User-agent: Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/25.1 (gnu/linux)

Mark H Weaver <address@hidden> skribis:

> address@hidden (Ludovic Courtès) writes:

[...]

>> We could use a self symlink, or we could use something like
>> <http://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/guix.git/commit/?id=9d50da70608de32d9db0c29859caec6f2cddb95f>.
>>
>> Mark, WDYT?
>>
>> What remains to be seen is how many packages are affected by this issue,
>> and whether a generic solution needs to be found.
>
> Unfortunately, it is too widespread.  As I just pointed out in
>
>   https://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=24712#13
>
> Among the many packages that include these obfuscated store references,
> one is 'glibc-final'.  My attempt to graft 'bash' in 'master' to fix
> CVE-2016-0634 and CVE-2016-7543 has resulted in a system where I cannot
> build *any* derivation, because 'guile-final' crashes during boot while
> its 'glibc-final' tries to find its 'gconv' modules in the ungrafted
> 'glibc-final', which is not available in the build environment.

Out of curiosity, Guile crashes while loading iconv modules, right?

This is surprising because the guile-for-build is always the ungrafted
‘guile-final’ (see ‘gnu-build’ in (guix build-system gnu)).

> So, if our approach is to use -fno-builtin-strcpy, then we will have to
> apply it system-wide, and rebuild all of 'core-updates' from scratch.

Another approach would be to patch GCC, specifically ‘expand_movstr’ in
gcc/builtins.c, which is the part responsible for this optimization,
along these lines (untested):

--- gcc-5.3.0/gcc/builtins.c.orig       2016-10-18 10:45:35.042826368 +0200
+++ gcc-5.3.0/gcc/builtins.c    2016-10-18 10:50:46.080616285 +0200
@@ -3470,6 +3470,19 @@ expand_builtin_mempcpy_args (tree dest,
 # define CODE_FOR_movstr CODE_FOR_nothing
 #endif
 
+/* Return true if STR is a string denoting a "/gnu/store" file name.  */
+
+static bool
+store_reference_p (tree str)
+{
+  const char *store;
+
+  store = getenv ("NIX_STORE") ?: "/gnu/store";
+
+  return (TREE_STRING_LENGTH (str) > strlen (store)
+         && strncmp (TREE_STRING_POINTER (str), store, strlen (store)));
+}
+
 /* Expand into a movstr instruction, if one is available.  Return NULL_RTX if
    we failed, the caller should emit a normal call, otherwise try to
    get the result in TARGET, if convenient.  If ENDP is 0 return the
@@ -3484,7 +3497,9 @@ expand_movstr (tree dest, tree src, rtx
   rtx dest_mem;
   rtx src_mem;
 
-  if (!HAVE_movstr)
+  /* When SRC denotes a store item, do not perform any optimization.  See
+     <http://bugs.gnu.org/24703> for background.  */
+  if (!HAVE_movstr || store_reference_p (src))
     return NULL_RTX;
 
   dest_mem = get_memory_rtx (dest, NULL);
WDYT?

In the meantime, we need a workaround.  The only option I can think of
is to retain a reference to the ungrafted item by adding a symlink to
it, like:

diff --git a/guix/grafts.scm b/guix/grafts.scm
index 80ae27e..4de19ae 100644
--- a/guix/grafts.scm
+++ b/guix/grafts.scm
@@ -127,7 +127,14 @@ recursively applied to dependencies of DRV."
                       files))
                    (match %outputs
                      (((names . files) ...)
-                      files))))))
+                      files)))
+
+         (for-each (match-lambda
+                     ((name . file)
+                      (symlink file
+                               (string-append (assoc-ref %outputs name)
+                                              "/ungrafted"))))
+                   old-outputs))))
 
   (define add-label
     (cut cons "x" <>))
> I've been investigating another approach: to enhance our scanner and
> grafter to handle these 8-byte-chunked references.  I believe it is
> feasible, but only if we abandon the ability to change the file names of
> grafts outside of the hash.  The reason is that the hash portion of
> store references are surrounded by enough other known characters on both
> sides that the hash portion is almost always contained entirely within
> 8-byte chunks.

I think that would add complexity, would make grafting slower, and
abandoning the ability to change file names would be a regression.

So I’m more in favor of a GCC patch like above, or another compilation
tweak.

WDYT?

Thanks,
Ludo’.

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