view dbrandom.c @ 1930:299f4f19ba19

Add /usr/sbin and /sbin to default root PATH When dropbear is used in a very restricted environment (such as in a initrd), the default user shell is often also very restricted and doesn't take care of setting the PATH so the user ends up with the PATH set by dropbear. Unfortunately, dropbear always sets "/usr/bin:/bin" as default PATH even for the root user which should have /usr/sbin and /sbin too. For a concrete instance of this problem, see the "Remote Unlocking" section in this tutorial: https://paxswill.com/blog/2013/11/04/encrypted-raspberry-pi/ It speaks of a bug in the initramfs script because it's written "blkid" instead of "/sbin/blkid"... this is just because the scripts from the initramfs do not expect to have a PATH without the sbin directories and because dropbear is not setting the PATH appropriately for the root user. I'm thus suggesting to use the attached patch to fix this misbehaviour (I did not test it, but it's easy enough). It might seem anecdotic but multiple Kali users have been bitten by this. From https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=903403
author Raphael Hertzog <hertzog@debian.org>
date Mon, 09 Jul 2018 16:27:53 +0200
parents 3f4cdf839a1a
children
line wrap: on
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/*
 * Dropbear - a SSH2 server
 * 
 * Copyright (c) 2002,2003 Matt Johnston
 * All rights reserved.
 * 
 * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
 * of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
 * in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
 * to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
 * copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
 * furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
 * 
 * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
 * all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
 * 
 * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
 * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
 * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
 * AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
 * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
 * OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
 * SOFTWARE. */

#include "includes.h"
#include "buffer.h"
#include "dbutil.h"
#include "bignum.h"
#include "dbrandom.h"
#include "runopts.h"

/* this is used to generate unique output from the same hashpool */
static uint32_t counter = 0;
/* the max value for the counter, so it won't integer overflow */
#define MAX_COUNTER (1<<30)

static unsigned char hashpool[SHA256_HASH_SIZE] = {0};
static int donerandinit = 0;

#define INIT_SEED_SIZE 32 /* 256 bits */

/* The basic setup is we read some data from /dev/(u)random or prngd and hash it
 * into hashpool. To read data, we hash together current hashpool contents,
 * and a counter. We feed more data in by hashing the current pool and new
 * data into the pool.
 *
 * It is important to ensure that counter doesn't wrap around before we
 * feed in new entropy.
 *
 */

/* Pass wantlen=0 to hash an entire file */
static int
process_file(hash_state *hs, const char *filename,
		unsigned int wantlen, int prngd) {
	int readfd = -1;
	unsigned int readcount;
	int ret = DROPBEAR_FAILURE;

	if (prngd) {
#if DROPBEAR_USE_PRNGD
		readfd = connect_unix(filename);
#endif
	} else {
		readfd = open(filename, O_RDONLY);
	}

	if (readfd < 0) {
		goto out;
	}

	readcount = 0;
	while (wantlen == 0 || readcount < wantlen) {
		int readlen, wantread;
		unsigned char readbuf[4096];
		if (wantlen == 0) {
			wantread = sizeof(readbuf);
		} else {
			wantread = MIN(sizeof(readbuf), wantlen-readcount);
		}

#if DROPBEAR_USE_PRNGD
		if (prngd) {
			char egdcmd[2];
			egdcmd[0] = 0x02;	/* blocking read */
			egdcmd[1] = (unsigned char)wantread;
			if (write(readfd, egdcmd, 2) < 0) {
				dropbear_exit("Can't send command to egd");
			}
		}
#endif
		readlen = read(readfd, readbuf, wantread);
		if (readlen <= 0) {
			if (readlen < 0 && errno == EINTR) {
				continue;
			}
			if (readlen == 0 && wantlen == 0) {
				/* whole file was read as requested */
				break;
			}
			goto out;
		}
		sha256_process(hs, readbuf, readlen);
		readcount += readlen;
	}
	ret = DROPBEAR_SUCCESS;
out:
	close(readfd);
	return ret;
}

void addrandom(const unsigned char * buf, unsigned int len)
{
	hash_state hs;

#if DROPBEAR_FUZZ
	if (fuzz.fuzzing) {
		return;
	}
#endif

	/* hash in the new seed data */
	sha256_init(&hs);
	/* existing state (zeroes on startup) */
	sha256_process(&hs, (void*)hashpool, sizeof(hashpool));

	/* new */
	sha256_process(&hs, buf, len);
	sha256_done(&hs, hashpool);
}

static void write_urandom()
{
#if DROPBEAR_FUZZ
	if (fuzz.fuzzing) {
		return;
	}
#endif
#if !DROPBEAR_USE_PRNGD
	/* This is opportunistic, don't worry about failure */
	unsigned char buf[INIT_SEED_SIZE];
	FILE *f = fopen(DROPBEAR_URANDOM_DEV, "w");
	if (!f) {
		return;
	}
	genrandom(buf, sizeof(buf));
	fwrite(buf, sizeof(buf), 1, f);
	fclose(f);
#endif
}

#if DROPBEAR_FUZZ
void fuzz_seed(const unsigned char* dat, unsigned int len) {
	hash_state hs;
	sha256_init(&hs);
	sha256_process(&hs, "fuzzfuzzfuzz", strlen("fuzzfuzzfuzz"));
	sha256_process(&hs, dat, len);
	sha256_done(&hs, hashpool);
	counter = 0;
	donerandinit = 1;
}
#endif


#ifdef HAVE_GETRANDOM
/* Reads entropy seed with getrandom(). 
 * May block if the kernel isn't ready.
 * Return DROPBEAR_SUCCESS or DROPBEAR_FAILURE */
static int process_getrandom(hash_state *hs) {
	char buf[INIT_SEED_SIZE];
	ssize_t ret;

	/* First try non-blocking so that we can warn about waiting */
	ret = getrandom(buf, sizeof(buf), GRND_NONBLOCK);
	if (ret == -1) {
		if (errno == ENOSYS) {
			/* Old kernel */
			return DROPBEAR_FAILURE;
		}
		/* Other errors fall through to blocking getrandom() */
		TRACE(("first getrandom() failed: %d %s", errno, strerror(errno)))
		if (errno == EAGAIN) {
			dropbear_log(LOG_WARNING, "Waiting for kernel randomness to be initialised...");
		}
	}

	/* Wait blocking if needed. Loop in case we get EINTR */
	while (ret != sizeof(buf)) {
		ret = getrandom(buf, sizeof(buf), 0);

		if (ret == sizeof(buf)) {
			/* Success */
			break;
		}
		if (ret == -1 && errno == EINTR) {
			/* Try again. */
			continue;
		}
		if (ret >= 0) {
			TRACE(("Short read %zd from getrandom() shouldn't happen", ret))
			/* Try again? */
			continue;
		}

		/* Unexpected problem, fall back to /dev/urandom */
		TRACE(("2nd getrandom() failed: %d %s", errno, strerror(errno)))
		break;
	}

	if (ret == sizeof(buf)) {
		/* Success, stir in the entropy */
		sha256_process(hs, (void*)buf, sizeof(buf));
		return DROPBEAR_SUCCESS;
	}

	return DROPBEAR_FAILURE;

}
#endif /* HAVE_GETRANDOM */

/* Initialise the prng from /dev/urandom or prngd. This function can
 * be called multiple times */
void seedrandom() {
	hash_state hs;

	pid_t pid;
	struct timeval tv;
	clock_t clockval;
	int urandom_seeded = 0;

#if DROPBEAR_FUZZ
	if (fuzz.fuzzing) {
		return;
	}
#endif

	/* hash in the new seed data */
	sha256_init(&hs);

	/* existing state */
	sha256_process(&hs, (void*)hashpool, sizeof(hashpool));

#ifdef HAVE_GETRANDOM
	if (process_getrandom(&hs) == DROPBEAR_SUCCESS) {
		urandom_seeded = 1;
	}
#endif

	if (!urandom_seeded) {
#if DROPBEAR_USE_PRNGD
		if (process_file(&hs, DROPBEAR_PRNGD_SOCKET, INIT_SEED_SIZE, 1) 
				!= DROPBEAR_SUCCESS) {
			dropbear_exit("Failure reading random device %s", 
					DROPBEAR_PRNGD_SOCKET);
			urandom_seeded = 1;
		}
#else
		/* non-blocking random source (probably /dev/urandom) */
		if (process_file(&hs, DROPBEAR_URANDOM_DEV, INIT_SEED_SIZE, 0) 
				!= DROPBEAR_SUCCESS) {
			dropbear_exit("Failure reading random device %s", 
					DROPBEAR_URANDOM_DEV);
			urandom_seeded = 1;
		}
#endif
	} /* urandom_seeded */

	/* A few other sources to fall back on. 
	 * Add more here for other platforms */
#ifdef __linux__
	/* Seems to be a reasonable source of entropy from timers. Possibly hard
	 * for even local attackers to reproduce */
	process_file(&hs, "/proc/timer_list", 0, 0);
	/* Might help on systems with wireless */
	process_file(&hs, "/proc/interrupts", 0, 0);

	process_file(&hs, "/proc/loadavg", 0, 0);
	process_file(&hs, "/proc/sys/kernel/random/entropy_avail", 0, 0);

	/* Mostly network visible but useful in some situations.
	 * Limit size to avoid slowdowns on systems with lots of routes */
	process_file(&hs, "/proc/net/netstat", 4096, 0);
	process_file(&hs, "/proc/net/dev", 4096, 0);
	process_file(&hs, "/proc/net/tcp", 4096, 0);
	/* Also includes interface lo */
	process_file(&hs, "/proc/net/rt_cache", 4096, 0);
	process_file(&hs, "/proc/vmstat", 0, 0);
#endif

	pid = getpid();
	sha256_process(&hs, (void*)&pid, sizeof(pid));

	/* gettimeofday() doesn't completely fill out struct timeval on 
	   OS X (10.8.3), avoid valgrind warnings by clearing it first */
	memset(&tv, 0x0, sizeof(tv));
	gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);
	sha256_process(&hs, (void*)&tv, sizeof(tv));

	clockval = clock();
	sha256_process(&hs, (void*)&clockval, sizeof(clockval));

	/* When a private key is read by the client or server it will
	 * be added to the hashpool - see runopts.c */

	sha256_done(&hs, hashpool);

	counter = 0;
	donerandinit = 1;

	/* Feed it all back into /dev/urandom - this might help if Dropbear
	 * is running from inetd and gets new state each time */
	write_urandom();
}

/* return len bytes of pseudo-random data */
void genrandom(unsigned char* buf, unsigned int len) {

	hash_state hs;
	unsigned char hash[SHA256_HASH_SIZE];
	unsigned int copylen;

	if (!donerandinit) {
		dropbear_exit("seedrandom not done");
	}

	while (len > 0) {
		sha256_init(&hs);
		sha256_process(&hs, (void*)hashpool, sizeof(hashpool));
		sha256_process(&hs, (void*)&counter, sizeof(counter));
		sha256_done(&hs, hash);

		counter++;
		if (counter > MAX_COUNTER) {
			seedrandom();
		}

		copylen = MIN(len, SHA256_HASH_SIZE);
		memcpy(buf, hash, copylen);
		len -= copylen;
		buf += copylen;
	}
	m_burn(hash, sizeof(hash));
}

/* Generates a random mp_int. 
 * max is a *mp_int specifying an upper bound.
 * rand must be an initialised *mp_int for the result.
 * the result rand satisfies:  0 < rand < max 
 * */
void gen_random_mpint(mp_int *max, mp_int *rand) {

	unsigned char *randbuf = NULL;
	unsigned int len = 0;
	const unsigned char masks[] = {0xff, 0x01, 0x03, 0x07, 0x0f, 0x1f, 0x3f, 0x7f};

	const int size_bits = mp_count_bits(max);

	len = size_bits / 8;
	if ((size_bits % 8) != 0) {
		len += 1;
	}

	randbuf = (unsigned char*)m_malloc(len);
	do {
		genrandom(randbuf, len);
		/* Mask out the unrequired bits - mp_read_unsigned_bin expects
		 * MSB first.*/
		randbuf[0] &= masks[size_bits % 8];

		bytes_to_mp(rand, randbuf, len);

		/* keep regenerating until we get one satisfying
		 * 0 < rand < max    */
	} while (!(mp_cmp(rand, max) == MP_LT && mp_cmp_d(rand, 0) == MP_GT));
	m_burn(randbuf, len);
	m_free(randbuf);
}