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Re: [-Wstringop-overflow=] strncat(3)


From: Martin Sebor
Subject: Re: [-Wstringop-overflow=] strncat(3)
Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2022 13:50:00 -0700
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:91.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/91.4.0

On 12/14/22 16:14, Alejandro Colomar via Libc-alpha wrote:
[CC += groff]

Hi Andrew,

On 12/14/22 23:57, Andrew Pinski wrote:
On Wed, Dec 14, 2022 at 2:46 PM Alejandro Colomar via Libc-alpha
<libc-alpha@sourceware.org> wrote:

Hi,

I was rewriting the strncat(3) manual page, and when I tried to compile the
example program, I got a surprise from the compiler.

Here goes the page:


    strncat(3)               Library Functions Manual strncat(3)

    NAME
           strncat  -  concatenate  a  null‐padded  character sequence into a
           string

    LIBRARY
           Standard C library (libc, -lc)

    SYNOPSIS
           #include <string.h>

           char *strncat(char *restrict dst, const char src[restrict .sz],
                          size_t sz);

    DESCRIPTION
           This function catenates the input character sequence contained  in            a  null‐padded  fixed‐width  buffer,  into  a string at the buffer            pointed to by dst.  The programmer is responsible for allocating a            buffer large enough, that is, strlen(dst) + strnlen(src, sz) + 1.

           An implementation of this function might be:

               char *
               strncat(char *restrict dst, const char *restrict src, size_t sz)
               {
                   int   len;
                   char  *end;

                   len = strnlen(src, sz);
                   end = dst + strlen(dst);
                   end = mempcpy(end, src, len);
                   *end = '\0';

                   return dst;
               }

    RETURN VALUE
           strncat() returns dest.

    ATTRIBUTES
           [...]

    STANDARDS
           POSIX.1‐2001, POSIX.1‐2008, C89, C99, SVr4, 4.3BSD.

    CAVEATS
           The  name of this function is confusing.  This function has no re‐
           lation with strncpy(3).

           If the destination buffer is not large enough, the behavior is un‐
           defined.  See _FORTIFY_SOURCE in feature_test_macros(7).

    BUGS
           This function  can  be  very  inefficient.   Read  about Shlemiel            the       painter https://www.joelonsoftware.com/2001/12/11/
           back-to-basics/⟩.

    EXAMPLES
           #include <stdio.h>
           #include <stdlib.h>
           #include <string.h>

           int
           main(void)
           {
               char    buf[BUFSIZ];
               size_t  len;

               buf[0] = '\0';  // There’s no ’cpy’ function to this ’cat’.
               strncat(buf, "Hello ", 6);

There's nothing wrong with this but the two lines above would be
more simply coded as one:

  strcpy(buf, "Hello ");

The original code suggests a misunderstanding of strncpy's purpose:
that it writes exactly 6 bytes into the destination.  That's what
the warning points out.

               strncat(buf, "world", 42);  // Padding null bytes ignored.
               strncat(buf, "!", 1);
               len = strlen(buf);
               printf("[len = %zu]: <%s>\n", len, buf);

               exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
           }

    SEE ALSO
           string(3), string_copy(3)

    Linux man‐pages (unreleased)      (date) strncat(3)


And when you compile that, you get:

$ cc -Wall -Wextra ./strncat.c
./strncat.c: In function ‘main’:
./strncat.c:12:12: warning: ‘strncat’ specified bound 6 equals source length
[-Wstringop-overflow=]
     12 |            strncat(buf, "Hello ", 6);
        |            ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
./strncat.c:14:12: warning: ‘strncat’ specified bound 1 equals source length
[-Wstringop-overflow=]
     14 |            strncat(buf, "!", 1);
        |            ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


So, what?  Where's the problem?  This function does exactly that: "take an unterminated character sequence and catenate it to an existing string".

Strncat has historically had two distinct use cases.  One of them
-- to constrain the amount of data to copy to the space remaining
in the destination -- gained popularity with the push to reduce
buffer overflow weaknesses in code.  Mistakes in these uses gave
rise to a whole other class of security bugs, to the extent that
CERT felt it necessary to publish the strncpy and strncat best
practice.  The GCC warning in turn was added to support the CERT
guideline.  I touch on some of this in a blog post I wrote a few
years ago:

https://developers.redhat.com/blog/2018/05/24/detecting-string-truncation-with-gcc-8

The specific uses of the function above are contrived (there's
no point in calling strncat to append the full string -- strcat
will do that more clearly and efficiently) but the general use
case -- limiting the amount of copied data to an initial
substring of the source sequence -- although valid and originally
intended (it's one of the two uses of the function in UNIX v7),
is not one that either the guideline or the warning consider.
They can only consider one use cases, and they chose the one
that was observed behind security bugs.  That choice unavoidably
leads to some false positives.  The expected way to deal with
them is to suppress the warning by one of the usual mechanisms
(command line option or #pragma GCC diagnostic).

Martin

  Clang
seems to be fine with the code.

See https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=83404 and the
background of why the warning was added here:

https://www.us-cert.gov/bsi/articles/knowledge/coding-practices/strncpy-and-strncat.

This document is bogus, since it's puting strncpy(3) and strncat(3) in the same sack, when they're in reality two completely different beasts. I'll quote below some paragraphs of some new page I'm writing, which will show why.

The rationale behind GCC's warning is also fundamentally wrong.  Martin was wrong when he claimed that the right call for strncat(3) is the remaining space in the destination.

I admit that I didn't know what strncat(3) was useful for, and believed that it was simply a broken-by-design function until very recently (this week, more or less).  And to be honest, I still believe it's broken by design; it's just that it can be repurposed for a reasonable new purpose (which I found while digging in groff's source code; that's why the CC).


First I'll show an example program that I added to the strncat(3) manual page last week, which is based on the groff code that used it:


        #include <stdio.h>
        #include <stdlib.h>
        #include <string.h>

        #define nitems(arr)  (sizeof((arr)) / sizeof((arr)[0]))

        int
        main(void)
        {
            char pre[4] = "pre.";
            char *post = ".post";
            char *src = "some_long_body.post";
            char dest[100];

            dest[0] = '\0';
            strncat(dest, pre, nitems(pre));
            strncat(dest, src, strlen(src) - strlen(post));

            puts(dest);  // "pre.some_long_body"
            exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
        }


And now I'll quote some text that I'm writing currently for the function:


    Null‐padded character sequences
       For historic reasons, some standard APIs, such as utmpx(5), use  null‐        padded  character  sequences in fixed‐width buffers.  To interface with
        them, specialized functions need to be used.

        To copy strings into them, use stpncpy(3).

       To copy from an unterminated string within a fixed‐width buffer into  a        string,  ignoring  any  trailing  null  bytes in the source fixed‐width
        buffer, you should use strncat(3).

        [...]

        stpncpy(3)
               This function copies the input string  into  a  destination
               null‐padded character sequence in a fixed‐width buffer.  If
               the  destination  buffer,  limited by its size, isn’t large
               enough to hold the copy, the resulting  character  sequence
               is  truncated.   Since  it creates a character sequence, it
               doesn’t need to write a terminating null byte.  It’s impos‐
               sible to distinguish truncation  after  the  call,  from  a
               character  sequence  that just fits the destination buffer;
               truncation should be detected from the length of the origi‐
               nal string.

        strncpy(3)
               This function is identical to  stpncpy(3)  except  for  the
               useless return value.

               stpncpy(3) is a simpler alternative to this function.

        [...]

        strncat(3)
               Do not confuse this function with strncpy(3); they are  not
               related at all.

               This  function  catenates the input character sequence con‐
               tained in a null‐padded wixed‐width buffer, into a destina‐
               tion string.  The programmer is responsible for  allocating
               a buffer large enough.  The return value is useless.

               zustr2stp(3) is a faster alternative to this function.

               An implementation of this function might be:

                   char *
                   strncat(char *restrict dst, const char *restrict src,
                           size_t sz)
                   {
                       int   len;
                       char  *end;

                       len = strnlen(src, sz);
                       end = dst + strlen(dst);
                       end = mempcpy(end, src, len);
                       *end = '\0';

                       return dst;
                   }


Cheers,

Alex




Thanks,
Andrew Pinski


Cheers,

Alex


--
<http://www.alejandro-colomar.es/>





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