Releases: cyphar/filepath-securejoin
v0.3.6
This release lowers the minimum Go version to Go 1.18 as well as some
library dependencies, in order to make it easier for folks that need to
backport patches using the new filepath-securejoin API onto branches
that are stuck using old Go compilers. For users using Go >= 1.21, this
release contains no functional changes.
-
The minimum Go version requirement for
filepath-securejoin
is now Go 1.18
(we use generics internally).For reference,
filepath-securejoin@v0.3.0
somewhat-arbitrarily bumped the
Go version requirement to 1.21.While we did make some use of Go 1.21 stdlib features (and in principle Go
versions <= 1.21 are no longer even supported by upstream anymore), some
downstreams have complained that the version bump has meant that they have to
do workarounds when backporting fixes that use the newfilepath-securejoin
API onto old branches. This is not an ideal situation, but since using this
library is probably better for most downstreams than a hand-rolled
workaround, we now have compatibility shims that allow us to build on older
Go versions. -
Lower minimum version requirement for
golang.org/x/sys
tov0.18.0
(we
need the wrappers forfsconfig(2)
), which should also make backporting
patches to older branches easier.
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
v0.3.5
This release primarily includes a fix for an issue involving two
programs racing to MkdirAll the same directory, which caused a
regression with BuildKit.
MkdirAll
will now no longer return anEEXIST
error if two racing
processes are creating the same directory. We will still verify that the path
is a directory, but this will avoid spurious errors when multiple threads or
programs are trying toMkdirAll
the same path. opencontainers/runc#4543
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
v0.3.4
This release primarily includes a fix that blocked using
filepath-securejoin in Kubernetes.
- Previously, some testing mocks we had resulted in us doing
import "testing"
in non-_test.go
code, which made some downstreams like Kubernetes unhappy.
This has been fixed. (#32)
Thanks to all of the contributors who made this release possible:
- Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
- Stephen Kitt skitt@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
v0.3.3
This release primarily includes fixes for spurious errors we hit when
checking that directories created by MkdirAll "look right". Upon further
consideration, these checks were fundamentally buggy and didn't offer
any practical protection anyway.
- The mode and owner verification logic in
MkdirAll
has been removed. This
was originally intended to protect against some theoretical attacks but upon
further consideration these protections don't actually buy us anything and
they were causing spurious errors with more complicated filesystem setups. - The "is the created directory empty" logic in
MkdirAll
has also been
removed. This was not causing us issues yet, but some pseudofilesystems (such
ascgroup
) create non-empty directories and so this logic would've been
wrong for such cases.
Thanks to all of the contributors who made this release possible:
- Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
- Kir Kolyshkin kolyshkin@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
v0.3.2
This release includes a few fixes for MkdirAll when dealing with S_ISUID
and S_ISGID, to solve a regression runc hit when switching to MkdirAll.
-
Passing the S_ISUID or S_ISGID modes to MkdirAllInRoot will now return
an explicit error saying that those bits are ignored by mkdirat(2). In
the past a different error was returned, but since the silent ignoring
behaviour is codified in the man pages a more explicit error seems
apt. While silently ignoring these bits would be the most compatible
option, it could lead to users thinking their code sets these bits
when it doesn't. Programs that need to deal with compatibility can
mask the bits themselves. (#23, #25) -
If a directory has S_ISGID set, then all child directories will have
S_ISGID set when created and a different gid will be used for any
inode created under the directory. Previously, the "expected owner and
mode" validation in securejoin.MkdirAll did not correctly handle this.
We now correctly handle this case. (#24, #25)
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
v0.3.1
-
By allowing
Open(at)InRoot
to opt-out of the extra work done byMkdirAll
to do the necessary "partial lookups",Open(at)InRoot
now does less work
for both implementations (resulting in a many-fold decrease in the number of
operations foropenat2
, and a modest improvement for non-openat2
) and is
far more guaranteed to match the correctopenat2(RESOLVE_IN_ROOT)
behaviour. -
We now use
readlinkat(fd, "")
where possible. ForOpen(at)InRoot
this
effectively just means that we no longer risk getting spurious errors during
rename races. However, for our hardened procfs handler, this in theory should
prevent mount attacks from tricking us when doing magic-link readlinks (even
when using the unsafe host/proc
handle). UnfortunatelyReopen
is still
potentially vulnerable to those kinds of somewhat-esoteric attacks.Technically this will only work on post-2.6.39 kernels
but it seems incredibly unlikely anyone is usingfilepath-securejoin
on a
pre-2011 kernel. -
Several improvements were made to the errors returned by
Open(at)InRoot
and
MkdirAll
when dealing with invalid paths under the emulated (ie.
non-openat2
) implementation. Previously, some paths would return the wrong
error (ENOENT
when the last component was a non-directory), and other paths
would be returned as though they were acceptable (trailing-slash components
after a non-directory would be ignored byOpen(at)InRoot
).These changes were done to match
openat2
's behaviour and purely is a
consistency fix (most users are going to be usingopenat2
anyway).
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
v0.3.0
This release contains no changes to SecureJoin.
However, it does introduce a new *os.File
-based API which is much safer
to use for most usecases. These are adapted from libpathrs and are
the bare minimum to be able to operate more safely on an untrusted
rootfs where an attacker has write access (something that SecureJoin
cannot protect against). The new APIs are:
-
OpenInRoot, which resolves a path inside a rootfs and returns an
*os.File
handle to the path. Note that the file handle returned by
OpenInRoot is an O_PATH handle, which cannot be used for reading or
writing (as well as some other operations -- see open(2) for more
details). -
Reopen, which takes an O_PATH file handle and safely re-opens it to
"upgrade" it to a regular handle. -
MkdirAll, which is a safe implementation of os.MkdirAll that can be
used to create directory trees inside a rootfs.
As these are new APIs, it is possible they may change in the future.
However, they should be safe to start migrating to as we have extensive
tests ensuring they behave correctly and are safe against various races
and other attacks.
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
v0.2.5
This release makes some minor improvements to SecureJoin:
-
Some changes were made to how lexical components are handled during
resolution. There is no change in behaviour, and both implementations
are safe, however the newer implementation is much easier to reason
about. -
The error returned when a symlink loop has been detected will now
reference the correct path. #10
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
v0.2.4
This release fixes a potential security issue in filepath-securejoin
when used on Windows (GHSA-6xv5-86q9-7xr8, which could be used to
generate paths outside of the provided rootfs in certain cases), as well
as improving the overall behaviour of filepath-securejoin when dealing
with Windows paths that contain volume names. Thanks to Paulo Gomes for
discovering and fixing these issues.
In addition, we've switched (at long last) to GitHub Actions and have
continuous integration testing on Linux, MacOS, and Windows.
Thanks to the following contributors for making this release possible:
- Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
- Paulo Gomes pjbgf@linux.com
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
v0.2.3
This release removes the dependency on github.com/pkg/errors in favour
of Go's built-in %w
error wrapping support (available since Go 1.13).
Thanks to the following contributors for making this release possible:
- Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com
- Jakub Wilk jwilk@jwilk.net
- Kir Kolyshkin kolyshkin@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai cyphar@cyphar.com