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author | Tom Lane | 2021-11-08 16:14:56 +0000 |
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committer | Tom Lane | 2021-11-08 16:14:56 +0000 |
commit | 30547d7913098502cdc93c06f77c3629af51b24c (patch) | |
tree | 309f6779e2ed2ae4f93d5a363873b33d75295e66 /configure.ac | |
parent | 9d5a76b8d18d6584341f754090c3007a54215f45 (diff) |
libpq: reject extraneous data after SSL or GSS encryption handshake.
libpq collects up to a bufferload of data whenever it reads data from
the socket. When SSL or GSS encryption is requested during startup,
any additional data received with the server's yes-or-no reply
remained in the buffer, and would be treated as already-decrypted data
once the encryption handshake completed. Thus, a man-in-the-middle
with the ability to inject data into the TCP connection could stuff
some cleartext data into the start of a supposedly encryption-protected
database session.
This could probably be abused to inject faked responses to the
client's first few queries, although other details of libpq's behavior
make that harder than it sounds. A different line of attack is to
exfiltrate the client's password, or other sensitive data that might
be sent early in the session. That has been shown to be possible with
a server vulnerable to CVE-2021-23214.
To fix, throw a protocol-violation error if the internal buffer
is not empty after the encryption handshake.
Our thanks to Jacob Champion for reporting this problem.
Security: CVE-2021-23222
Diffstat (limited to 'configure.ac')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions