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Re: Coverity false positives triggered by gnulib's implementation of bas


From: Kamil Dudka
Subject: Re: Coverity false positives triggered by gnulib's implementation of base64
Date: Fri, 10 May 2019 13:41:42 +0200

On Thursday, May 9, 2019 10:35:18 PM CEST Bruno Haible wrote:
> Hi Kamil,
> 
> > There are 3 important state-transitions in the data-flow analysis:
> > 
> > (1) obtaining data from untrusted source
> > (2) sanitizing the data (checking bounds etc.)
> > (3) unsafe use of untrusted data
> > 
> > gnulib's base64_encode() as seen by Coverity Analysis represents (3)
> > because its implementation uses byte swaps.  This is a heuristic that
> > is not always correct, so false positives may happen.  If you ask why
> > byte swaps are checked, I believe it was inspired by Heartbleed:
> > 
> > https://www.synopsys.com/blogs/software-security/detecting-heartbleed-with
> > -static-analysis/
> > 
> > The inline annotation that I proposed as a patch gives Coverity a hint
> > that gnulib's implementation of base64_encode() can safely process data
> > from untrusted sources.  The annotation is specific to the implementation
> > of the function, not to users of the function.
> 
> Ah, thanks for explaining. Now I agree: base64_encode produces the
> warning because of the (x << n) | (y >> m) expression patterns that
> resemble a byte swap. It would do so also for any other program that
> contains a base64_encode invocation with untrusted input as argument.
> 
> > > Does it need to be done in the source code at all?
> > 
> > Yes, in case of gnulib this is the only sensible option.
> > ...
> > Yes, various tools exist to waive false positives.  The problem is that
> > instances of these tools do not share data with each other in the
> > universe.
> > Consequently, developers have to repeatedly review these false positives
> > and waive them in each single instance of these tools.  And even worse
> > with
> > gnulib because these false positives are usually not matched across
> > different project that bundle gnulib, even if you have a single instance
> > of the waiving tool in your organisation.
> 
> So, I propose to bite the bullet, but at least put a reasonable comment.
> 
> 
> 2019-05-09  Kamil Dudka  <address@hidden>
>             Bruno Haible  <address@hidden>
> 
>       base64: Avoid false positive warning from Coverity.
>       * lib/base64.c (base64_encode): Add special comment for Coverity.
> 
> diff --git a/lib/base64.c b/lib/base64.c
> index f3f7298..80428bb 100644
> --- a/lib/base64.c
> +++ b/lib/base64.c
> @@ -84,6 +84,11 @@ base64_encode_fast (const char *restrict in, size_t
> inlen, char *restrict out) If OUTLEN is less than BASE64_LENGTH(INLEN),
> write as many bytes as possible.  If OUTLEN is larger than
> BASE64_LENGTH(INLEN), also zero terminate the output buffer. */
> +/* Tell Coverity that this function works fine when called with IN
> +   pointing to untrusted input.  By default, Coverity, seeing the value
> +   shift expressions below, thinks that it is dangerous to call this
> +   function with untrusted input.
> +   coverity[-tainted_data_sink: arg-0]  */
>  void
>  base64_encode (const char *restrict in, size_t inlen,
>                 char *restrict out, size_t outlen)

Perfect.  I like the idea.  Unfortunately, Coverity seems to be picky about 
the format, so it needs to be spelled like this:

diff --git a/lib/base64.c b/lib/base64.c
index bb4dce8..5cbef9c 100644
--- a/lib/base64.c
+++ b/lib/base64.c
@@ -84,6 +84,11 @@ base64_encode_fast (const char *restrict in, size_t inlen, 
char *restrict out)
    If OUTLEN is less than BASE64_LENGTH(INLEN), write as many bytes as
    possible.  If OUTLEN is larger than BASE64_LENGTH(INLEN), also zero
    terminate the output buffer. */
+/* Tell Coverity that this function works fine when called with IN
+   pointing to untrusted input.  By default, Coverity, seeing the value
+   shift expressions below, thinks that it is dangerous to call this
+   function with untrusted input. */
+/* coverity[-tainted_data_sink: arg-0] */
 void
 base64_encode (const char *restrict in, size_t inlen,
                char *restrict out, size_t outlen)






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