`libclamav/libmspack.c`: Initialize variables before first `goto done;`
to fix unitialized variable use in an error condition.
`libclamav/others.c`: Explicitly ignore return values for calls to add
JSON values when subsequent calls don't depend on them.
If we were to add error handling here, the only thing we'd do is debug-
log it. I don't think it's worth adding the extra lines of code.
`libclamav/unarj.c`: Removed dead code.
The `status` variable is immediately set afterwards based on whether or
not any files may be extracted.
`libclamav/unzip.c`: Removed dead code.
The `ret` variable is checked immediately after being set, above. This
check after the `do`-`while()` loop is dead code.
`sigtool/sigtool.c`: Fix potential NULL deref in error handling.
This is a fix for the same issue as was fixed in a previous commit.
I somehow overlooked this one. Copy/paste bug.
`libclamav/pdfdecode.c`: Fix leaked `stream` memory when
`filter_lzwdecode()` fails.
`clamdtop/clamdtop.c`: Fix possible NULL dereference if `strchr` returns
NULL in `read_version()` and `check_stats_available()`.
`libclamav/rtf.c`: Fix memory leak in `rtf_object_process()` if
`cli_gentemp_with_prefix()` fails.
Also change empty for-loop to resolve clang-format weirdness and make it
more obvious the for-loop has no body.
`libclamav/aspack.c`: Ensure that `endoff - old` is not negative in
`build_decrypt_array()` before passing to `CLI_ISCONTAINED()` which expects
unsigned values.
`libclamav/upx.c`: Fix integer overflow checks in multiple functions.
`libclamav/vba_extract.c`: Set `entries` pointer back to NULL after free in
`word_read_macro_entry()` error condition.
`libclamav/unzip.c`: Remove logic to return `CL_EMAXFILES` from
`index_local_file_headers()`. It seems it only overwrote the status when
not `CL_SUCCESS` in which case it could be overriding a more serious failure.
Further, updates to the how the ZIP parser works has made it so this needs
to return `CL_SUCCESS` in order for the caller to at least scan the files
found so far.
Finally, the calling function has checks of its own to make sure we don't
exceeds the max-files limit.
`libclamav/unzip.c`: Fix issue where `cli_append_potentially_unwanted()` in
`index_local_file_headers()` might overwrite an error in `status` with
`CL_CLEAN`. Instead, it now checks the return value and only overwrites the
`CL_EFORMAT` status with a different value if not `CL_SUCCESS`.
`libclamav/unzip.c`: Fix a potential leak with `combined_catalogue` and
`temp_catalogue` in an error condition. We should always free them if not NULL,
not just if the function failed. And to make this safe, we must set
`combined_catalogue` to NULL when we give ownership to `*catalogue`.
`libclamav/scanners.c`: Fix a potential leak in error handling for the
`cli_ole2_tempdir_scan_vba()` function.
CLAM-2768
Temp directory recursion in ClamAV is when each layer of a scan gets its
own temp directory in the parent layer's temp directory.
In addition to temp directory recursion, ClamAV has been creating a new
subdirectory for each file scan as a risk-adverse method to ensure
no temporary file leaks fill up the disk.
Creating a directory is relatively slow on Windows in particular if
scanning a lot of very small files.
This commit:
1. Separates the temp directory recursion feature from the leave-temps
feature so that libclamav can leave temp files without making
subdirectories for each file scanned.
2. Makes it so that when temp directory recursion is off, libclamav
will just use the configure temp directory for all files.
The new option to enable temp directory recursion is for libclamav-only
at this time. It is off by default, and you can enable it like this:
```c
cl_engine_set_num(engine, CL_ENGINE_TMPDIR_RECURSION, 1);
```
For the `clamscan` and `clamd` programs, temp directory recursion will
be enabled when `--leave-temps` / `LeaveTemporaryFiles` is enabled.
The difference is that when disabled, it will return to using the
configured temp directory without making a subdirectory for each file
scanned, so as to improve scan performance for small files, mostly on
Windows.
Under the hood, this commit also:
1. Cleans up how we keep track of tmpdirs for each layer.
The goal here is to align how we keep track of layer-specific stuff
using the scan_layer structure.
2. Cleans up how we record metadata JSON for embedded files.
Note: Embedded files being different from Contained files, as they
are extracted not with a parser, but by finding them with
file type magic signatures.
CLAM-1583
As of ClamAV 0.105, libjson-c is required.
There is also no option to disable libjson-c support.
This commit removes the dead code associated with the old build
option.
We add the _OR_GOTO_DONE suffix to the macros that go to done if the
allocation fails. This makes it obvious what is different about the
macro versus the equivalent function, and that error handling is
built-in.
Renamed the cli_strdup to safer_strdup to make it obvious that it exists
because it is safer than regular strdup. Regular strdup doesn't have the
NULL check before trying to dup, and so may result in a NULL-deref
crash.
Also remove unused STRDUP (_OR_GOTO_DONE) macro, since the one with the
NULL-check is preferred.
We have some special functions to wrap malloc, calloc, and realloc to
make sure we don't allocate more than some limit, similar to the
max-filesize and max-scansize limits. Our wrappers are really only
needed when allocating memory for scans based on untrusted user input,
where a scan file could have bytes that claim you need to allocate
some ridiculous amount of memory. Right now they're named:
- cli_malloc
- cli_calloc
- cli_realloc
- cli_realloc2
... and these names do not convey their purpose
This commit renames them to:
- cli_max_malloc
- cli_max_calloc
- cli_max_realloc
- cli_max_realloc2
The realloc ones also have an additional feature in that they will not
free your pointer if you try to realloc to 0 bytes. Freeing the memory
is undefined by the C spec, and only done with some realloc
implementations, so this stabilizes on the behavior of not doing that,
which should prevent accidental double-free's.
So for the case where you may want to realloc and do not need to have a
maximum, this commit adds the following functions:
- cli_safer_realloc
- cli_safer_realloc2
These are used for the MPOOL_REALLOC and MPOOL_REALLOC2 macros when
MPOOL is disabled (e.g. because mmap-support is not found), so as to
match the behavior in the mpool_realloc/2 functions that do not make use
of the allocation-limit.
There are a large number of allocations for fix sized buffers using the
`cli_malloc` and `cli_calloc` calls that check if the requested size is
larger than our allocation threshold for allocations based on untrusted
input. These allocations will *always* be higher than the threshold, so
the extra stack frame and check for these calls is a waste of CPU.
This commit replaces needless calls with A -> B:
- cli_malloc -> malloc
- cli_calloc -> calloc
- CLI_MALLOC -> MALLOC
- CLI_CALLOC -> CALLOC
I also noticed that our MPOOL_MALLOC / MPOOL_CALLOC are not limited by
the max-allocation threshold, when MMAP is found/enabled. But the
alternative was set to cli_malloc / cli_calloc when disabled. I changed
those as well.
I didn't change the cli_realloc/2 calls because our version of realloc
not only implements a threshold but also stabilizes the undefined
behavior in realloc to protect against accidental double-free's.
It may be worth implementing a cli_realloc that doesn't have the
threshold built-in, however, so as to allow reallocaitons for things
like buffers for loading signatures, which aren't subject to the same
concern as allocations for scanning possible malware.
There was one case in mbox.c where I changed MALLOC -> CLI_MALLOC,
because it appears to be allocating based on untrusted input.
Previous behaviour would remove temp files by deleting the subdirectory
This caused issues in cases (on Windows) where subdirectories aren't created
due to performance concerns
This commit removes tempfiles individually if keeptemp is off
Original patch authored by Thomas Vy
Add a new cl_engine_set_clcb_vba() function to set a cb_vba callback
function and add clcb_generic_data handler prototype to the clamav.h
public API.
The cb_vba callback function will be run whenever VBA is extracted from
office documents. The provided data will be a normalized copy of the
original VBA. This callback is added to support Sigtool so it can use
the same VBA extraction logic as when scanning documents.
Change the Sigtool temp directory creation for any commands that use
temp directories so that you can select a custom temp directory with the
`--tempdir=PATH` option, and can retain the temp files with the
`--leave-temps` option.
Added `--tempdir` and `--leave-temps` to the Sigtool `--help` output.
Added `--tempdir` and `--leave-temps` to the Sigtool manpage.
The current implementation sets a "next layer attributes" flag field
in the scan context. This may introduce bugs if accidentally not cleared
during error handling, causing that attribute to be applied to a
different layer than intended.
This commit resolves that by adding an attribute flag to the major
internal scan functions and removing the "next layer attributes" from
the scan context. This attributes flag shares the same flag fields as
the attributes flag in the new file inspection callback and the flags
are defined in `clamav.h`.
Refactored the clamscan code that determines 'what to scan' in order
to clean up some very messy logic and also to get around a difference in
how vscode and clang-format handle formatting #ifdef blocks in the
middle of an else/if.
In addition to refactoring, there is a slight behavior improvement. With
this change, doing `clamscan blah -` will now scan `blah` and then also
scan `stdin`. You can even do `clamscan - blah` to now scan `stdin` and
then scan `blah`. Before, The `-` had to be the only "filename" argument
in order to scan from stdin.
In addition, added a bunch of extra empty lines or changing multi-line
function calls to single-line function calls in order to get around a
bug in clang-format with these two options do not playing nice together:
- AlignConsecutiveAssignments: true
- AlignAfterOpenBracket: true
AlignAfterOpenBracket is not taking account the spaces inserted by
AlignConsecutiveAssignments, so you end up with stuff like this:
```c
bleeblah = 1;
blah = function(arg1,
arg2,
arg3);
// ^--- these args 4-left from where they should be.
```
VSCode, meanwhile, somehow fixes this whitespace issue so code that is
correctly formatted by VSCode doesn't have this bug, meaning that:
1. The clang-format check in GH Actions fails.
2. We'd all have to stop using format-on-save in VSCode and accept the
bug if we wanted those GH Actions tests to pass.
Adding an empty line before variable assignments from multi-line
function calls evades the buggy behavior.
This commit should resolve the clang-format github action test failures,
for now.
* Added loglevel parameter to logg()
* Fix logg and mprintf internals with new loglevels
* Update all logg calls to set loglevel
* Update all mprintf calls to set loglevel
* Fix hidden logg calls
* Executed clam-format
This patch adds experimental-quality CMake build tooling.
The libmspack build required a modification to use "" instead of <> for
header #includes. This will hopefully be included in the libmspack
upstream project when adding CMake build tooling to libmspack.
Removed use of libltdl when using CMake.
Flex & Bison are now required to build.
If -DMAINTAINER_MODE, then GPERF is also required, though it currently
doesn't actually do anything. TODO!
I found that the autotools build system was generating the lexer output
but not actually compiling it, instead using previously generated (and
manually renamed) lexer c source. As a consequence, changes to the .l
and .y files weren't making it into the build. To resolve this, I
removed generated flex/bison files and fixed the tooling to use the
freshly generated files. Flex and bison are now required build tools.
On Windows, this adds a dependency on the winflexbison package,
which can be obtained using Chocolatey or may be manually installed.
CMake tooling only has partial support for building with external LLVM
library, and no support for the internal LLVM (to be removed in the
future). I.e. The CMake build currently only supports the bytecode
interpreter.
Many files used include paths relative to the top source directory or
relative to the current project, rather than relative to each build
target. Modern CMake support requires including internal dependency
headers the same way you would external dependency headers (albeit
with "" instead of <>). This meant correcting all header includes to
be relative to the build targets and not relative to the workspace.
For example, ...
```c
include "../libclamav/clamav.h"
include "clamd/clamd_others.h"
```
... becomes:
```c
// libclamav
include "clamav.h"
// clamd
include "clamd_others.h"
```
Fixes header name conflicts by renaming a few of the files.
Converted the "shared" code into a static library, which depends on
libclamav. The ironically named "shared" static library provides
features common to the ClamAV apps which are not required in
libclamav itself and are not intended for use by downstream projects.
This change was required for correct modern CMake practices but was
also required to use the automake "subdir-objects" option.
This eliminates warnings when running autoreconf which, in the next
version of autoconf & automake are likely to break the build.
libclamav used to build in multiple stages where an earlier stage is
a static library containing utils required by the "shared" code.
Linking clamdscan and clamdtop with this libclamav utils static lib
allowed these two apps to function without libclamav. While this is
nice in theory, the practical gains are minimal and it complicates
the build system. As such, the autotools and CMake tooling was
simplified for improved maintainability and this feature was thrown
out. clamdtop and clamdscan now require libclamav to function.
Removed the nopthreads version of the autotools
libclamav_internal_utils static library and added pthread linking to
a couple apps that may have issues building on some platforms without
it, with the intention of removing needless complexity from the
source. Kept the regular version of libclamav_internal_utils.la
though it is no longer used anywhere but in libclamav.
Added an experimental doxygen build option which attempts to build
clamav.h and libfreshclam doxygen html docs.
The CMake build tooling also may build the example program(s), which
isn't a feature in the Autotools build system.
Changed C standard to C90+ due to inline linking issues with socket.h
when linking libfreshclam.so on Linux.
Generate common.rc for win32.
Fix tabs/spaces in shared Makefile.am, and remove vestigial ifndef
from misc.c.
Add CMake files to the automake dist, so users can try the new
CMake tooling w/out having to build from a git clone.
clamonacc changes:
- Renamed FANOTIFY macro to HAVE_SYS_FANOTIFY_H to better match other
similar macros.
- Added a new clamav-clamonacc.service systemd unit file, based on
the work of ChadDevOps & Aaron Brighton.
- Added missing clamonacc man page.
Updates to clamdscan man page, add missing options.
Remove vestigial CL_NOLIBCLAMAV definitions (all apps now use
libclamav).
Rename Windows mspack.dll to libmspack.dll so all ClamAV-built
libraries have the lib-prefix with Visual Studio as with CMake.
Notably the commit adds a heuristic alert when VBA is extracted using
the new VBA extraction code and similarly adds "HasMacros":true to the
JSON scan properties.
In addition, a change was added to the cli_sanitize_filepath() function
so it converts posix pathseps to Windows pathseps on Windows and also
outputs a sanitized basename pointer (optional) which is used when
generating a temporary filename so that using a prefix with pathseps in
it won't cause file creation failures (observed with --leave-temps where
original filenames are incorporated into temporarily filenames).
Included soem error handling improvements for cli_vba_scandir() to
better track alert and macro detections.
Downgraded utf8 conversion error messages to debug messages because they
are too verbose in files with invalid filenames (observed in some
malware).
Changed the xlm macro and vba project temp filenames to include
"xlm_macros" and "vba_project" prefix, to make it easier to find them.
Relocated XLM and VBA temp files from the top-level tmp directory to the
current sub_tmpdir, so tempfiles for a given scan are more organized.
Fixes bound checks in recently rewritten VBA parser code (i.e. issue
does not affect prior versions).
Also improves VBA terminator header parsing to better match the spec,
per recommendation by Jonas Zaddach.
This commit includes bug fixes and minor modifications based on
warnings generated by Coverity. These include:
- 287096 - In cli_xlm_extract_macros: Leak of memory or pointers
to system resources (CWE-404). This was a legitimate leak of a
generated temp filename and could occur frequently.
- 287095 - In scan_for_xlm_macros: Use of an uninitialized
variable. The uninitialized value (state.length) was likely
never used unitialized, but we now initialize it just in case.
- 287094 - In cli_vba_readdir_new: Out-of-bounds access to a
buffer (CWE-119). This looks like a copy-paste error and was
a legitimate read past the bounds of a buffer in an error case.
- 284479 - In hfsplus_walk_catalog: All paths that lead to this
null pointer comparison already dereference the pointer earlier
(CWE-476). In certain cases a NULL pointer could be returned
in the success case of hfsplus_scanfile, which was not handled
correctly. This case may have been prevented in practice by
an earlier check, but adding a check for NULL just in case.
- 284478 - In hfsplus_walk_catalog: A value assigned to a
variable is never used. ret would be set if zlib's inflateEnd
function fails. The fix is to just not set ret in this case,
since the error doesn't seem fatal (although would result in
a memory leak by the zlib code...).
- 284477 - In hfsplus_check_attribute: Pointer is checked against
null but then dereferenced anyway. I just took out the NULL check
of record and recordSize, since the code requires these values
to not be NULL elsewhere and there's no way an error could
occur as currently used (stack var addresses are passed via these
parameters).
I also fixed up some of the function identifiers in debug print
messages.
At present many parsers create tmp subdirectories to store extracted
files. For parsers like the vba parser, this is required as the
directory is later scanned. For other parsers, these subdirectories are
probably not helpful now that we provide recursive sub-dirs when
--leave-temps is enabled. It's not quite as simple as removing the extra
subdirectories, however. Certain parsers, like autoit, don't create very
unique filenames and would result in file name collisions when
--leave-temps is not enabled.
The best thing to do would be to make sure each parser uses unique
filenames and doesn't rely on cli_magic_scan_dir() to scan extracted
content before removing the extra subdirectory. In the meantime, this
commit gives the extra subdirectories meaningful names to improve
readability.
This commit also:
- Provides the 'bmp' prefix for extracted PE icons.
- Removes empty tmp subdirs when extracting rtf files, to eliminate
clutter.
- The PDF parser sometimes creates tmp files when decompressing streams
before it knows if there is actually any content to decompress. This
resulted in a large number of empty files. While it would be best to
avoid creating empty files in the first place, that's not quite as
as it sounds. This commit does the next best thing and deletes the
tmp files if nothing was actually extracted, even if --leave-temps is
enabled.
- Removes the "scantemp" prefix for unnamed fmaps scanned with
cli_magic_scan(). The 5-character hashes given to tmp files with
prefixes resulted in occasional file name collisions when extracting
certain file types with thousands of embedded files.
- The VBA and TAR parsers mistakenly used NAME_MAX instead of PATH_MAX,
resulting in truncated file paths and failed extraction when
--leave-temps is enabled and a lot of recursion is in play. This commit
switches them from NAME_MAX to PATH_MAX.
Many of the core scanning functions' names no longer represent their
specific purpose or arguments. This commit aims to make the names more
intuitive. Names are now prefixed with "magic" if they involve
file-typing and file-type parsing. In addition, each function now
includes the type of input being scanned whether its "desc", "fmap", or
"buff". Some of the APIs also now specify "type" to indicate that a type
other than "ANY" may be passed in to select the type rather than use
file type magic for type recognition.
| current name | new name |
| ------------------------- | --------------------------------- |
| magic_scandesc() | cli_magic_scan() |
| cli_magic_scandesc_type() | <delete> |
| cli_magic_scandesc() | cli_magic_scan_desc() |
| cli_base_scandesc() | cli_magic_scan_desc_type() |
| cli_partition_scandesc() | <delete> |
| cli_map_scandesc() | magic_scan_nested_fmap_type() |
| cli_map_scan() | cli_magic_scan_nested_fmap_type() |
| cli_mem_scandesc() | cli_magic_scan_buff() |
| cli_scanbuff() | cli_scan_buff() |
| cli_scandesc() | cli_scan_desc() |
| cli_fmap_scandesc() | cli_scan_fmap() |
| cli_scanfile() | cli_magic_scan_file() |
| cli_scandir() | cli_magic_scan_dir() |
| cli_filetype2() | cli_determine_fmap_type() |
| cli_filetype() | cli_compare_ftm_file() |
| cli_partitiontype() | cli_compare_ftm_partition() |
| cli_scanraw() | scanraw() |
A way is needed to record scanned file names for two purposes:
1. File names (and extensions) must be stored in the json metadata
properties recorded when using the --gen-json clamscan option. Future
work may use this to compare file extensions with detected file types.
2. File names are useful when interpretting tmp directory output when
using the --leave-temps option.
This commit enables file name retention for later use by storing file
names in the fmap header structure, if a file name exists.
To store the names in fmaps, an optional name argument has been added to
any internal scan API's that create fmaps and every call to these APIs
has been modified to pass a file name or NULL if a file name is not
required. The zip and gpt parsers required some modification to record
file names. The NSIS and XAR parsers fail to collect file names at all
and will require future work to support file name extraction.
Also:
- Added recursive extraction to the tmp directory when the
--leave-temps option is enabled. When not enabled, the tmp directory
structure remains flat so as to prevent the likelihood of exceeding
MAX_PATH. The current tmp directory is stored in the scan context.
- Made the cli_scanfile() internal API non-static and added it to
scanners.h so it would be accessible outside of scanners.c in order to
remove code duplication within libmspack.c.
- Added function comments to scanners.h and matcher.h
- Converted a TDB-type macros and LSIG-type macros to enums for improved
type safey.
- Converted more return status variables from `int` to `cl_error_t` for
improved type safety, and corrected ooxml file typing functions so
they use `cli_file_t` exclusively rather than mixing types with
`cl_error_t`.
- Restructured the magic_scandesc() function to use goto's for error
handling and removed the early_ret_from_magicscan() macro and
magic_scandesc_cleanup() function. This makes the code easier to
read and made it easier to add the recursive tmp directory cleanup to
magic_scandesc().
- Corrected zip, egg, rar filename extraction issues.
- Removed use of extra sub-directory layer for zip, egg, and rar file
extraction. For Zip, this also involved changing the extracted
filenames to be randomly generated rather than using the "zip.###"
file name scheme.
Add missing size checks to validate size data parsed from a VBA file.
This fixes a possible buffer overflow read that was caught by oss-fuzz
before it made it into any release.
- Existing VBA extraction code uses undocumented cache structures.
This code uses the documented way of accessing VBA projects.
- Adds additional detail to the dumped information:
Project name, Project doc string, ...
All VBA projects are dumped into a single file.
- Malware authors are currently evading detection by spreading
malicious code over several projects. It is hard to write
signatures if only part of the malicious code is visible.