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From 02d55f8f5bfd38ed2958c7e55707cadb058071be Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Lennart Poettering <lennart@poettering.net>
Date: Thu, 17 Jan 2019 18:18:54 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] bus-message: introduce two kinds of references to bus
 messages

Before this commit bus messages had a single reference count: when it
reached zero the message would be freed. This simple approach meant a
cyclic dependency was typically seen: a message that was enqueued in a
bus connection object would reference the bus connection object but also
itself be referenced by the bus connection object. So far out strategy
to avoid cases like this was: make sure to process the bus connection
regularly so that messages don#t stay queued, and at exit flush/close
the connection so that the message queued would be emptied, and thus the
cyclic dependencies resolved. Im many cases this isn't done properly
however.

With this change, let's address the issue more systematically: let's
break the reference cycle. Specifically, there are now two types of
references to a bus message:

1. A regular one, which keeps both the message and the bus object it is
   associated with pinned.

2. A "queue" reference, which is weaker: it pins the message, but not
   the bus object it is associated with.

The idea is then that regular user handling uses regular references, but
when a message is enqueued on its connection, then this takes a "queue"
reference instead. This then means that a queued message doesn't imply
the connection itself remains pinned, only regular references to the
connection or a message associated with it do. Thus, if we end up in the
situation where a user allocates a bus and a message and enqueues the
latter in the former and drops all refs to both, then this will detect
this case and free both.

Note that this scheme isn't perfect, it only covers references between
messages and the busses they are associated with. If OTOH a bus message
is enqueued on a different bus than it is associated with cyclic deps
cannot be recognized with this simple algorithm, and thus if you enqueue
a message associated with a bus A on a bus B, and another message
associated with bus B on a bus A, a cyclic ref will be in effect and not
be discovered. However, given that this is an exotic case (though one
that happens, consider systemd-bus-stdio-bridge), it should be OK not to
cover with this, and people have to explicit flush all queues on exit in
that case.

Note that this commit only establishes the separate reference counters
per message. A follow-up commit will start making use of this from the
bus connection object.

(cherry picked from commit 1b3f9dd759ca0ea215e7b89f8ce66d1b724497b9)
Related: CVE-2020-1712
---
 src/libsystemd/sd-bus/bus-message.c | 60 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++---
 src/libsystemd/sd-bus/bus-message.h | 14 ++++++-
 2 files changed, 68 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)

diff --git a/src/libsystemd/sd-bus/bus-message.c b/src/libsystemd/sd-bus/bus-message.c
index ac19cc04bf..ce7e67ecf2 100644
--- a/src/libsystemd/sd-bus/bus-message.c
+++ b/src/libsystemd/sd-bus/bus-message.c
@@ -120,7 +120,8 @@ static sd_bus_message* message_free(sd_bus_message *m) {
 
         message_reset_parts(m);
 
-        sd_bus_unref(m->bus);
+        /* Note that we don't unref m->bus here. That's already done by sd_bus_message_unref() as each user
+         * reference to the bus message also is considered a reference to the bus connection itself. */
 
         if (m->free_fds) {
                 close_many(m->fds, m->n_fds);
@@ -893,27 +894,76 @@ int bus_message_new_synthetic_error(
 }
 
 _public_ sd_bus_message* sd_bus_message_ref(sd_bus_message *m) {
-
         if (!m)
                 return NULL;
 
-        assert(m->n_ref > 0);
+        /* We are fine if this message so far was either explicitly reffed or not reffed but queued into at
+         * least one bus connection object. */
+        assert(m->n_ref > 0 || m->n_queued > 0);
+
         m->n_ref++;
 
+        /* Each user reference to a bus message shall also be considered a ref on the bus */
+        sd_bus_ref(m->bus);
         return m;
 }
 
 _public_ sd_bus_message* sd_bus_message_unref(sd_bus_message *m) {
-
         if (!m)
                 return NULL;
 
         assert(m->n_ref > 0);
+
+        sd_bus_unref(m->bus); /* Each regular ref is also a ref on the bus connection. Let's hence drop it
+                               * here. Note we have to do this before decrementing our own n_ref here, since
+                               * otherwise, if this message is currently queued sd_bus_unref() might call
+                               * bus_message_unref_queued() for this which might then destroy the message
+                               * while we are still processing it. */
         m->n_ref--;
 
-        if (m->n_ref > 0)
+        if (m->n_ref > 0 || m->n_queued > 0)
                 return NULL;
 
+        /* Unset the bus field if neither the user has a reference nor this message is queued. We are careful
+         * to reset the field only after the last reference to the bus is dropped, after all we might keep
+         * multiple references to the bus, once for each reference kept on outselves. */
+        m->bus = NULL;
+
+        return message_free(m);
+}
+
+sd_bus_message* bus_message_ref_queued(sd_bus_message *m, sd_bus *bus) {
+        if (!m)
+                return NULL;
+
+        /* If this is a different bus than the message is associated with, then implicitly turn this into a
+         * regular reference. This means that you can create a memory leak by enqueuing a message generated
+         * on one bus onto another at the same time as enqueueing a message from the second one on the first,
+         * as we'll not detect the cyclic references there. */
+        if (bus != m->bus)
+                return sd_bus_message_ref(m);
+
+        assert(m->n_ref > 0 || m->n_queued > 0);
+        m->n_queued++;
+
+        return m;
+}
+
+sd_bus_message* bus_message_unref_queued(sd_bus_message *m, sd_bus *bus) {
+        if (!m)
+                return NULL;
+
+        if (bus != m->bus)
+                return sd_bus_message_unref(m);
+
+        assert(m->n_queued > 0);
+        m->n_queued--;
+
+        if (m->n_ref > 0 || m->n_queued > 0)
+                return NULL;
+
+        m->bus = NULL;
+
         return message_free(m);
 }
 
diff --git a/src/libsystemd/sd-bus/bus-message.h b/src/libsystemd/sd-bus/bus-message.h
index 97f6060e30..ded88005e2 100644
--- a/src/libsystemd/sd-bus/bus-message.h
+++ b/src/libsystemd/sd-bus/bus-message.h
@@ -51,7 +51,16 @@ struct bus_body_part {
 };
 
 struct sd_bus_message {
-        unsigned n_ref;
+        /* Caveat: a message can be referenced in two different ways: the main (user-facing) way will also
+         * pin the bus connection object the message is associated with. The secondary way ("queued") is used
+         * when a message is in the read or write queues of the bus connection object, which will not pin the
+         * bus connection object. This is necessary so that we don't have to have a pair of cyclic references
+         * between a message that is queued and its connection: as soon as a message is only referenced by
+         * the connection (by means of being queued) and the connection itself has no other references it
+         * will be freed. */
+
+        unsigned n_ref;     /* Counter of references that pin the connection */
+        unsigned n_queued;  /* Counter of references that do not pin the connection */
 
         sd_bus *bus;
 
@@ -216,3 +225,6 @@ int bus_message_append_sender(sd_bus_message *m, const char *sender);
 
 void bus_message_set_sender_driver(sd_bus *bus, sd_bus_message *m);
 void bus_message_set_sender_local(sd_bus *bus, sd_bus_message *m);
+
+sd_bus_message* bus_message_ref_queued(sd_bus_message *m, sd_bus *bus);
+sd_bus_message* bus_message_unref_queued(sd_bus_message *m, sd_bus *bus);