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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/AVRO-4299?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Ismaël Mejía updated AVRO-4299:
-------------------------------
Description:
A bytes or string value is encoded as a length prefix followed by that many
bytes of data, and an array or map block is encoded as an element count
followed by that many items. A malicious or truncated input can declare a very
large length or count while carrying little or no actual data, causing a large
allocation before the shortfall is noticed. When the source can report how many
bytes remain, reject a declared length (or a collection block count) that
exceeds the bytes actually available before allocating for it. Companion to
AVRO-4241 (Java).
_bytes_remaining backs the check (readers that cannot seek to the end yield
undef and are skipped); decode_bytes and decode_array/decode_map consult it via
_min_bytes_per_element. _ensure_collection_available enforces the per-block
limits and skip_block is element-aware. Rejections raise the dedicated
Avro::BinaryDecoder::Error::CollectionSize.
Zero-byte elements (null, a zero-length fixed, or a record with only zero-byte
fields) consume no input, so the available-bytes check cannot bound their
count: a tiny payload such as {"type":"array","items":"null"} declaring a block
count of 200,000,000 would otherwise drive an unbounded allocation. In addition
to the available-bytes check this therefore caps the cumulative count of
zero-byte elements (default 10,000,000), applies a structural cap to every
collection (Integer.MAX_VALUE - 8) for readers that cannot report bytes
remaining, and bounds the array/map skip paths. When set, the
AVRO_MAX_COLLECTION_ITEMS environment variable caps both limits. This
supersedes the separate collection-limit sub-task.
was:A bytes or string value is encoded as a length prefix followed by that
many bytes of data. A malicious or truncated input can declare a very large
length while carrying little or no actual data, causing a large buffer to be
allocated before the shortfall is noticed. When the source can report how many
bytes remain, reject a declared length that exceeds the bytes actually
available before allocating for it. Companion to AVRO-4241 (Java).
Summary: [perl] Bound allocation when decoding length-prefixed values
and collections (was: [perl] Validate available bytes before allocating for
length-prefixed values)
> [perl] Bound allocation when decoding length-prefixed values and collections
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: AVRO-4299
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/AVRO-4299
> Project: Apache Avro
> Issue Type: Sub-task
> Components: perl
> Affects Versions: 1.11.5, 1.12.1
> Reporter: Ismaël Mejía
> Assignee: Ismaël Mejía
> Priority: Major
> Labels: pull-request-available
> Fix For: 1.13.0, 1.11.6, 1.12.2
>
> Time Spent: 2h 40m
> Remaining Estimate: 0h
>
> A bytes or string value is encoded as a length prefix followed by that many
> bytes of data, and an array or map block is encoded as an element count
> followed by that many items. A malicious or truncated input can declare a
> very large length or count while carrying little or no actual data, causing a
> large allocation before the shortfall is noticed. When the source can report
> how many bytes remain, reject a declared length (or a collection block count)
> that exceeds the bytes actually available before allocating for it. Companion
> to AVRO-4241 (Java).
> _bytes_remaining backs the check (readers that cannot seek to the end yield
> undef and are skipped); decode_bytes and decode_array/decode_map consult it
> via _min_bytes_per_element. _ensure_collection_available enforces the
> per-block limits and skip_block is element-aware. Rejections raise the
> dedicated Avro::BinaryDecoder::Error::CollectionSize.
> Zero-byte elements (null, a zero-length fixed, or a record with only
> zero-byte fields) consume no input, so the available-bytes check cannot bound
> their count: a tiny payload such as {"type":"array","items":"null"} declaring
> a block count of 200,000,000 would otherwise drive an unbounded allocation.
> In addition to the available-bytes check this therefore caps the cumulative
> count of zero-byte elements (default 10,000,000), applies a structural cap to
> every collection (Integer.MAX_VALUE - 8) for readers that cannot report bytes
> remaining, and bounds the array/map skip paths. When set, the
> AVRO_MAX_COLLECTION_ITEMS environment variable caps both limits. This
> supersedes the separate collection-limit sub-task.
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