Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Florian Bruhin 0718b25796 reuse: Initial copyright text update for myself
git ls-files | \
    xargs sed -Ei 's/Copyright [0-9]{4}(-[0-9]{4}) Florian Bruhin \(The Compiler\) <mail@qutebrowser\.org>/SPDX-FileCopyrightText: Florian Bruhin (The Compiler) <mail@qutebrowser.org>/'
2023-07-23 12:49:05 +02:00
Florian Bruhin b2aaba6043 reuse: Adjust most license headers
git ls-files | xargs grep -l "is free software"  | xargs reuse annotate --license="GPL-3.0-or-later" --skip-unrecognised
2023-07-23 12:11:07 +02:00
Philipp Albrecht d9e8b638bf Remove vim modelines
We're deprecating vim modelines in favor of `.editorconfig`.

Removing vim modelines could be done using two one-liners. Most of the vim modelines
were followed by an empty line, so this one-liner took care of these ones:

```sh
rg '^# vim: .+\n\n' -l | xargs sed -i '/^# vim: /,+1d'
```

Then some of the vim modelines were followed by a pylint configuration line, so running
this one-liner afterwards took care of that:

```sh
rg '^# vim:' -l | xargs sed -i '/^# vim: /d'
```
2023-06-30 11:03:06 +02:00
Florian Bruhin 8f46ba3f6d CVE-2021-41146: Add --untrusted-args to avoid argument injection
On Windows, if an application is registered as an URL handler like this:

    HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT
        https
            URL Protocol = ""
            [...]
            shell
                open
                    command
                    (Default) = ".../qutebrowser.exe" "%1"

one would think that Windows takes care of making sure URLs can't inject
arguments by containing a quote. However, this is not the case, as
stated by the Microsoft docs:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/windows/internet-explorer/ie-developer/platform-apis/aa767914(v=vs.85)

    Security Warning: Applications that handle URI schemes must consider how to
    respond to malicious data. Because handler applications can receive data
    from untrusted sources, the URI and other parameter values passed to the
    application may contain malicious data that attempts to exploit the handling
    application.

and

    As noted above, the string that is passed to a pluggable protocol handler
    might be broken across multiple parameters. Malicious parties could use
    additional quote or backslash characters to pass additional command line
    parameters. For this reason, pluggable protocol handlers should assume that
    any parameters on the command line could come from malicious parties, and
    carefully validate them. Applications that could initiate dangerous actions
    based on external data must first confirm those actions with the user. In
    addition, handling applications should be tested with URIs that are overly
    long or contain unexpected (or undesirable) character sequences.

Indeed it's trivial to pass a command to qutebrowser this way - given how
trivial the exploit is to recreate given the information above, here's a PoC:

    https:x" ":spawn calc

(or qutebrowserurl: instead of https: if qutebrowser isn't registered as a
default browser)

Some applications do escape the quote characters before calling
qutebrowser - but others, like Outlook Desktop or .url files, do not.

As a fix, we add an --untrusted-args flag and some early validation of the raw
sys.argv, before parsing any arguments or e.g. creating a QApplication (which
might already allow injecting Qt flags there).

We assume that there's no way for an attacker to inject flags *before* the %1
placeholder in the registry, and add --untrusted-args as the last argument of
the registry entry. This way, it'd still be possible for users to customize
their invocation flags without having to remove --untrusted-args.

After --untrusted-args, however, we have some rather strict checks:

- There should be zero or one arguments, but not two (or more)
- Any argument may not start with - (flag) or : (qutebrowser command)

We also add the --untrusted-args flag to the Linux .desktop file, though it
should not be needed there, as the specification there is sane:

https://specifications.freedesktop.org/desktop-entry-spec/desktop-entry-spec-latest.html#exec-variables

    Implementations must take care not to expand field codes into multiple
    arguments unless explicitly instructed by this specification. This means
    that name fields, filenames and other replacements that can contain spaces
    must be passed as a single argument to the executable program after
    expansion.

There is no comparable mechanism on macOS, which opens the application without
arguments and then sends an "open" event to it:
https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qfileopenevent.html

This issue was introduced in qutebrowser v1.7.0 which started registering it as
URL handler: baee288890 / #4086

This is by no means an issue isolated to qutebrowser. Many other projects have
had similar trouble with Windows' rather unexpected behavior:

Electron / Exodus Bitcoin wallet:
- http://web.archive.org/web/20190702112128/https://medium.com/0xcc/electrons-bug-shellexecute-to-blame-cacb433d0d62
- https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2018-1000006
- https://medium.com/hackernoon/exploiting-electron-rce-in-exodus-wallet-d9e6db13c374

IE/Firefox:

- https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=384384
- https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1572838

Others:
- http://web.archive.org/web/20210930203632/https://www.vdoo.com/blog/exploiting-custom-protocol-handlers-in-windows
- https://parsiya.net/blog/2021-03-17-attack-surface-analysis-part-2-custom-protocol-handlers/
- etc. etc.

See CVE-2021-41146 / GHSA-vw27-fwjf-5qxm:
https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2021-41146
https://github.com/qutebrowser/qutebrowser/security/advisories/GHSA-vw27-fwjf-5qxm

Thanks to Ping Fan (Zetta) Ke of Valkyrie-X Security Research Group
(VXRL/@vxresearch) for finding and responsibly disclosing this issue.
2021-10-21 16:01:04 +02:00
Florian Bruhin c5278fff29 Make pylint happy 2021-02-03 19:57:10 +01:00
Florian Bruhin 44042358f7 Allow providing a subset of args with --json-args
See #6091
2021-02-03 19:19:47 +01:00
Florian Bruhin 1a4fff1a42 doc: Switch URLs to https 2021-01-26 15:19:01 +01:00
Florian Bruhin 222f1f19a1 Bump copyright years
Closes #6015
2021-01-20 20:06:19 +01:00
Florian Bruhin 049d51d1d7 Fix lint 2020-06-11 17:23:59 +02:00
Florian Bruhin 58dc10ec66 Refactor log.LogFilter
This essentially does two things:

1) Use a set for LogFilter

This means we don't support filters like "eggs.bacon" anymore (but we *do*
support loggers like that) - however, those were already disallowed by the
--logfilter argument validation anyways!

In return, we get probably slightly better performance (checking set membership
rather than iterating all filters) and more straightforward code.

2) Move parsing from various locations around the code to the LogFilter class.
2020-06-11 16:57:54 +02:00