Mercurial > hg
view hgext/automv.py @ 36755:ff4bc0ab6740 stable
wireproto: check permissions when executing "batch" command (BC) (SEC)
For as long as the "batch" command has existed (introduced by
bd88561afb4b and first released as part of Mercurial 1.9), that command
(like most wire commands introduced after 2008) lacked an entry in
the hgweb permissions table. And since we don't verify permissions if
an entry is missing from the permissions table, this meant that
executing a command via "batch" would bypass all permissions
checks.
The security implications are significant: a Mercurial HTTP server
would allow writes via "batch" wire protocol commands as long as
the HTTP request were processed by Mercurial and the process running
the Mercurial HTTP server had write access to the repository. The
Mercurial defaults of servers being read-only and the various web.*
config options to define access control were bypassed.
In addition, "batch" could be used to exfiltrate data from servers
that were configured to not allow read access.
Both forms of permissions bypass could be mitigated to some extent
by using HTTP authentication. This would prevent HTTP requests from
hitting Mercurial's server logic. However, any authenticated request
would still be able to bypass permissions checks via "batch" commands.
The easiest exploit was to send "pushkey" commands via "batch" and
modify the state of bookmarks, phases, and obsolescence markers.
However, I suspect a well-crafted HTTP request could trick the server
into running the "unbundle" wire protocol command, effectively
performing a full `hg push` to create new changesets on the remote.
This commit plugs this gaping security hole by having the "batch"
command perform permissions checking on each sub-command that is
being batched. We do this by threading a permissions checking
callable all the way to the protocol handler. The threading is a
bit hacky from a code perspective. But it preserves API compatibility,
which is the proper thing to do on the stable branch.
One of the subtle things we do is assume that a command with an
undefined permission is a "push" command. This is the safest thing to
do from a security perspective: we don't want to take chances that
a command could perform a write even though the server is configured
to not allow writes.
As the test changes demonstrate, it is no longer possible to bypass
permissions via the "batch" wire protocol command.
.. bc::
The "batch" wire protocol command now enforces permissions of
each invoked sub-command. Wire protocol commands must define
their operation type or the "batch" command will assume they
can write data and will prevent their execution on HTTP servers
unless the HTTP request method is POST, the server is configured
to allow pushes, and the (possibly authenticated) HTTP user is
authorized to perform a push.
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 20 Feb 2018 18:55:58 -0800 |
parents | 38637dd39cfd |
children | f89aad980025 |
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# automv.py # # Copyright 2013-2016 Facebook, Inc. # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. """check for unrecorded moves at commit time (EXPERIMENTAL) This extension checks at commit/amend time if any of the committed files comes from an unrecorded mv. The threshold at which a file is considered a move can be set with the ``automv.similarity`` config option. This option takes a percentage between 0 (disabled) and 100 (files must be identical), the default is 95. """ # Using 95 as a default similarity is based on an analysis of the mercurial # repositories of the cpython, mozilla-central & mercurial repositories, as # well as 2 very large facebook repositories. At 95 50% of all potential # missed moves would be caught, as well as correspond with 87% of all # explicitly marked moves. Together, 80% of moved files are 95% similar or # more. # # See http://markmail.org/thread/5pxnljesvufvom57 for context. from __future__ import absolute_import from mercurial.i18n import _ from mercurial import ( commands, copies, error, extensions, pycompat, registrar, scmutil, similar ) configtable = {} configitem = registrar.configitem(configtable) configitem('automv', 'similarity', default=95, ) def extsetup(ui): entry = extensions.wrapcommand( commands.table, 'commit', mvcheck) entry[1].append( ('', 'no-automv', None, _('disable automatic file move detection'))) def mvcheck(orig, ui, repo, *pats, **opts): """Hook to check for moves at commit time""" opts = pycompat.byteskwargs(opts) renames = None disabled = opts.pop('no_automv', False) if not disabled: threshold = ui.configint('automv', 'similarity') if not 0 <= threshold <= 100: raise error.Abort(_('automv.similarity must be between 0 and 100')) if threshold > 0: match = scmutil.match(repo[None], pats, opts) added, removed = _interestingfiles(repo, match) renames = _findrenames(repo, match, added, removed, threshold / 100.0) with repo.wlock(): if renames is not None: scmutil._markchanges(repo, (), (), renames) return orig(ui, repo, *pats, **pycompat.strkwargs(opts)) def _interestingfiles(repo, matcher): """Find what files were added or removed in this commit. Returns a tuple of two lists: (added, removed). Only files not *already* marked as moved are included in the added list. """ stat = repo.status(match=matcher) added = stat[1] removed = stat[2] copy = copies._forwardcopies(repo['.'], repo[None], matcher) # remove the copy files for which we already have copy info added = [f for f in added if f not in copy] return added, removed def _findrenames(repo, matcher, added, removed, similarity): """Find what files in added are really moved files. Any file named in removed that is at least similarity% similar to a file in added is seen as a rename. """ renames = {} if similarity > 0: for src, dst, score in similar.findrenames( repo, added, removed, similarity): if repo.ui.verbose: repo.ui.status( _('detected move of %s as %s (%d%% similar)\n') % ( matcher.rel(src), matcher.rel(dst), score * 100)) renames[dst] = src if renames: repo.ui.status(_('detected move of %d files\n') % len(renames)) return renames