From 08e3451d7b3b714ad63a27f1b9c2a23ee75d15ee Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Father Chrysostomos <sprout@cpan.org> Date: Sat, 2 Jul 2016 22:56:51 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] =?utf8?q?Don=E2=80=99t=20let=20XSLoader=20load=20relative?= =?utf8?q?=20paths?= MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit [rt.cpan.org #115808] The logic in XSLoader for determining the library goes like this: my $c = () = split(/::/,$caller,-1); $modlibname =~ s,[\\/][^\\/]+$,, while $c--; # Q&D basename my $file = "$modlibname/auto/$modpname/$modfname.bundle"; (That last line varies by platform.) $caller is the calling package. $modlibname is the calling file. It removes as many path segments from $modlibname as there are segments in $caller. So if you have Foo/Bar/XS.pm calling XSLoader from the Foo::Bar package, the $modlibname will end up containing the path in @INC where XS.pm was found, followed by "/Foo". Usually the fallback to Dynaloader::bootstrap_inherit, which does an @INC search, makes things Just Work. But if our hypothetical Foo/Bar/XS.pm actually calls XSLoader::load from inside a string eval, then path ends up being "(eval 1)/auto/Foo/Bar/Bar.bundle". So if someone creates a directory named â(eval 1)â with a naughty binary file in it, it will be loaded if a script using Foo::Bar is run in the parent directory. This commit makes XSLoader fall back to Dynaloaderâs @INC search if the calling file has a relative path that is not found in @INC. --- dist/XSLoader/XSLoader_pm.PL | 25 +++++++++++++++++++++++++ dist/XSLoader/t/XSLoader.t | 27 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++- 2 files changed, 51 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/dist/XSLoader/XSLoader_pm.PL b/dist/XSLoader/XSLoader_pm.PL index 8a8852e..749f72d 100644 --- perl-5.20.1/dist/XSLoader/XSLoader_pm.PL.orig 2014-05-14 19:51:25.000000000 -0400 +++ perl-5.20.1/dist/XSLoader/XSLoader_pm.PL 2016-07-07 09:18:29.244745265 -0400 @@ -86,6 +86,31 @@ print OUT <<'EOT'; my $modpname = join('/',@modparts); my $c = @modparts; $modlibname =~ s,[\\/][^\\/]+$,, while $c--; # Q&D basename + # Does this look like a relative path? + if ($modlibname !~ m|^[\\/]|) { + # Someone may have a #line directive that changes the file name, or + # may be calling XSLoader::load from inside a string eval. We cer- + # tainly do not want to go loading some code that is not in @INC, + # as it could be untrusted. + # + # We could just fall back to DynaLoader here, but then the rest of + # this function would go untested in the perl core, since all @INC + # paths are relative during testing. That would be a time bomb + # waiting to happen, since bugs could be introduced into the code. + # + # So look through @INC to see if $modlibname is in it. A rela- + # tive $modlibname is not a common occurrence, so this block is + # not hot code. + FOUND: { + for (@INC) { + if ($_ eq $modlibname) { + last FOUND; + } + } + # Not found. Fall back to DynaLoader. + goto \&XSLoader::bootstrap_inherit; + } + } EOT my $dl_dlext = quotemeta($Config::Config{'dlext'}); --- perl-5.20.1/dist/XSLoader/t/XSLoader.t.orig 2012-05-07 09:40:32.000000000 -0400 +++ perl-5.20.1/dist/XSLoader/t/XSLoader.t 2016-07-07 09:19:01.869263133 -0400 @@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ my %modules = ( 'Time::HiRes'=> q| ::can_ok( 'Time::HiRes' => 'usleep' ) |, # 5.7.3 ); -plan tests => keys(%modules) * 3 + 8; +plan tests => keys(%modules) * 3 + 9; # Try to load the module use_ok( 'XSLoader' ); @@ -96,3 +96,28 @@ SKIP: { like $@, "/^Invalid version format/", 'correct error msg for invalid versions'; } + +SKIP: { + skip "File::Path not available", 1 + unless eval { require File::Path }; + my $name = "phooo$$"; + File::Path::make_path("$name/auto/Foo/Bar"); + open my $fh, + ">$name/auto/Foo/Bar/Bar.$Config::Config{'dlext'}"; + close $fh; + my $fell_back; + local *XSLoader::bootstrap_inherit = sub { + $fell_back++; + # Break out of the calling subs + goto the_test; + }; + eval <<END; +#line 1 $name +package Foo::Bar; +XSLoader::load("Foo::Bar"); +END + the_test: + ok $fell_back, + 'XSLoader will not load relative paths based on (caller)[1]'; + File::Path::remove_tree($name); +}