xref: /freebsd/contrib/bc/MEMORY_BUGS.md (revision 7fdf597e96a02165cfe22ff357b857d5fa15ed8a)
1# Memory Bugs
2
3This is a list of all of the memory bugs that were found in *released* versions
4of `bc`, `dc`, or `bcl`. (Non-released commits with memory bugs do not count.)
5
6I made this list for two reasons: first, so users can know what versions of
7`bc`, `dc`, and `bcl` have vulnerabilities, and two, I once had a perfect record
8and then found a couple, but forgot and claimed I still had a perfect record
9right after, which was embarrassing.
10
11This list is sorted by the first version a bug exists in, not the last it
12existed in.
13
14* In versions `1.1.0` until `6.2.0` (inclusive) of `bc` and `dc`, there is a
15  out of bounds read and write in history when pressing ctrl+r (or any other
16  unused letter) then inserting two characters.
17
18  The first version without this bug is `6.2.1`.
19
20* In versions `3.0.0` until `6.0.1` (inclusive) of `bc` and `dc`, there is a
21  double-free on `SIGINT` when using command-line expressions with `-e` and
22  `-f`. This was caused by not properly ending a jump series.
23
24  The first version without this bug is `6.0.2`.
25
26* In versions `3.0.0` until `6.7.5` (inclusive) of `bc` and `dc`, there is a
27  possible out-of-bounds read when there is an error flushing `stdout` on exit
28  because such an error would cause `bc` and `dc` to attempt to use a `jmp_buf`
29  when none exists.
30
31  The first version without this bug is `6.7.6`.
32
33* In versions `5.0.0` until `6.0.4` (inclusive) of `bc`, there is an
34  out-of-bounds access if a non-local (non-`auto`) variable is set to a string
35  with `asciify()`, then the function is redefined with a use of the same
36  non-local variable.
37
38  This happened because strings were stored per-function, and the non-local
39  variable now had a reference to the string in the old function, which could be
40  at a higher index than exists in the new function. Strings are stored globally
41  now, and they are *not* freed once not used.
42
43  The first version without this bug is `6.1.0`.
44
45* In versions `5.0.0` until `6.0.4` (inclusive) of `bc`, there is another
46  out-of-bounds access if an array is passed to the `asciify()` built-in
47  function as the only argument. This happened because arrays are allowed as
48  function arguments, which allowed them to be used as arguments to `asciify()`,
49  but they should not have been allowed. However, since they were, the
50  `asciify()` code tried to access an argument that was not there.
51
52  The first version without this bug is `6.1.0`.
53
54* In version `6.0.0` of `bcl`, there are several uses of initialized data that
55  have the same root cause: I forgot to call `memset()` on the per-thread global
56  data. This is because the data used to be *actually* global, which meant that
57  it was initialized to zero by the system. This happened because I thought I
58  had properly hooked Valgrind into my `bcl` tests, but I had not.
59
60  The first version without this bug is `6.0.1`.
61
62* In version `6.0.0` until `6.2.4` (inclusive) of `bcl`, there is a possible
63  use-after-free if `bcl_init()` fails.
64
65  The first version without this bug is `6.2.5`.
66