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Hello 🦀,
we (Rust group @sslab-gatech) found a memory-safety/soundness issue in this crate while scanning Rust code on crates.io for potential vulnerabilities.
let slice = from_raw_parts_mut(&mut x as*mutUas*mutu8,size_of::<U>());
self.read_exact(slice).map(|_| x)
}
}
Provided implementation of MemRead::get() method for T: Read creates an uninitialized buffer and passes it to user-provided Read implementation. This is unsound, because it allows safe Rust code to exhibit an undefined behavior (read from uninitialized memory).
This part from the Read trait documentation explains the issue:
It is your responsibility to make sure that buf is initialized before calling read. Calling read with an uninitialized buf (of the kind one obtains via MaybeUninit<T>) is not safe, and can lead to undefined behavior.
How to fix the issue?
The Naive & safe way to fix the issue is to always zero-initialize a buffer before lending it to a user-provided Read implementation. Note that this approach will add runtime performance overhead of zero-initializing the buffer.
As of Jan 2021, there is not yet an ideal fix that works in stable Rust with no performance overhead. Below are links to relevant discussions & suggestions for the fix.
Hello 🦀,
we (Rust group @sslab-gatech) found a memory-safety/soundness issue in this crate while scanning Rust code on crates.io for potential vulnerabilities.
Issue Description
otbmview/ot/src/mem_read.rs
Lines 24 to 31 in ce279e9
Provided implementation of
MemRead::get()
method forT: Read
creates an uninitialized buffer and passes it to user-providedRead
implementation. This is unsound, because it allows safe Rust code to exhibit an undefined behavior (read from uninitialized memory).This part from the
Read
trait documentation explains the issue:How to fix the issue?
The Naive & safe way to fix the issue is to always zero-initialize a buffer before lending it to a user-provided
Read
implementation. Note that this approach will add runtime performance overhead of zero-initializing the buffer.As of Jan 2021, there is not yet an ideal fix that works in stable Rust with no performance overhead. Below are links to relevant discussions & suggestions for the fix.
std::io::Initializer
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