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623 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Simon Tatham
41f63b6e5d Log identifying information for the other end of connections.
When anyone connects to a PuTTY tool's listening socket - whether it's
a user of a local->remote port forwarding, a connection-sharing
downstream or a client of Pageant - we'd like to log as much
information as we can find out about where the connection came from.

To that end, I've implemented a function sk_peer_info() in the socket
abstraction, which returns a freeform text string as best it can (or
NULL, if it can't get anything at all) describing the thing at the
other end of the connection. For TCP connections, this is done using
getpeername() to get an IP address and port in the obvious way; for
Unix-domain sockets, we attempt SO_PEERCRED (conditionalised on some
moderately hairy autoconfery) to get the pid and owner of the peer. I
haven't implemented anything for Windows named pipes, but I will if I
hear of anything useful.

(cherry picked from commit c8f83979a3)

Conflicts:
	pageant.c

Cherry-picker's notes: the conflict was because the original commit
also added a use of the same feature in the centralised Pageant code,
which doesn't exist on this branch. Also I had to remove 'const' from
the type of the second parameter to wrap_send_port_open(), since this
branch hasn't had the same extensive const-fixing as master.
2015-06-20 12:47:02 +01:00
Simon Tatham
9bcb6639cc Fix a few memory leaks.
Patch due to Chris Staite.

(cherry picked from commit 78989c97c9)
2015-06-20 09:31:55 +01:00
Simon Tatham
318076a183 Support RFC 4419.
PuTTY now uses the updated version of Diffie-Hellman group exchange,
except for a few old OpenSSH versions which Darren Tucker reports only
support the old version.

FIXME: this needs further work because the Bugs config panel has now
overflowed.

(cherry picked from commit 62a1bce7cb)
2015-06-20 09:31:55 +01:00
Jacob Nevins
5ac299449e Old Dropbear servers have the ssh-close-vs-request bug.
Add automatic bug detection. (Versions verified by Matt Johnston.)

(cherry picked from commit 63dddfc00f)
2015-06-20 09:31:55 +01:00
Simon Tatham
174476813f Enforce acceptable range for Diffie-Hellman server value.
Florent Daigniere of Matta points out that RFC 4253 actually
_requires_ us to refuse to accept out-of-range values, though it isn't
completely clear to me why this should be a MUST on the receiving end.

Matta considers this to be a security vulnerability, on the grounds
that if a server should accidentally send an obviously useless value
such as 1 then we will fail to reject it and agree a key that an
eavesdropper could also figure out. Their id for this vulnerability is
MATTA-2015-002.
2015-02-28 07:57:35 +00:00
Simon Tatham
f454235444 Add some missing initialisations.
Spotted by valgrind, after I was testing all the Coverity bug fixes :-)
2014-11-22 15:26:16 +00:00
Simon Tatham
90dcef3d9e Fix assorted memory leaks.
All spotted by Coverity.
2014-11-22 15:26:13 +00:00
Simon Tatham
063c438fec Shut down connshare upstream along with the SSH connection.
This ought to happen in ssh_do_close alongside the code that shuts
down other local listening things like port forwardings, for the same
obvious reason. In particular, we should get through this _before_ we
put up a modal dialog box telling the user what just went wrong with
the SSH connection, so that further sessions started while that box is
active don't try futilely to connect to the not-really-listening
zombie upstream.
2014-11-10 18:31:34 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
f662ff790c Disable some mid-session configs for downstreams.
Compression, encryption, and key exchange settings are all meaningless
to reconfigure in connection-sharing downstreams.
2014-11-09 00:10:46 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
efb6aa4642 Tweak SSH protocol version refusal messages.
"required by user" will grate if the user did not configure the
behaviour (and I'm about to change the default to `2 only').
2014-11-08 18:38:33 +00:00
Simon Tatham
24cd95b6f9 Change the naming policy for connection-sharing Unix sockets.
I had initially assumed that, since all of a user's per-connection
subdirectories live inside a top-level putty-connshare.$USER directory
that's not accessible to anyone else, there would be no need to
obfuscate the names of the internal directories for privacy, because
nobody would be able to look at them anyway.

Unfortunately, that's not true: 'netstat -ax' run by any user will
show up the full pathnames of Unix-domain sockets, including pathname
components that you wouldn't have had the access to go and look at
directly. So the Unix connection sharing socket names do need to be
obfuscated after all.

Since Unix doesn't have Windows's CryptProtectMemory, we have to do
this manually, by creating a file of random salt data inside the
top-level putty-connshare directory (if there isn't one there already)
and then hashing that salt with the "user@host" connection identifier
to get the socket directory name. What a pain.

[originally from svn r10222]
2014-09-09 12:47:39 +00:00
Simon Tatham
70ab076d83 New option to manually configure the expected host key(s).
This option is available from the command line as '-hostkey', and is
also configurable through the GUI. When enabled, it completely
replaces all of the automated host key management: the server's host
key will be checked against the manually configured list, and the
connection will be allowed or disconnected on that basis, and the host
key store in the registry will not be either consulted or updated.

The main aim is to provide a means of automatically running Plink,
PSCP or PSFTP deep inside Windows services where HKEY_CURRENT_USER
isn't available to have stored the right host key in. But it also
permits you to specify a list of multiple host keys, which means a
second use case for the same mechanism will probably be round-robin
DNS names that select one of several servers with different host keys.

Host keys can be specified as the standard MD5 fingerprint or as an
SSH-2 base64 blob, and are canonicalised on input. (The base64 blob is
more unwieldy, especially with Windows command-line length limits, but
provides a means of specifying the _whole_ public key in case you
don't trust MD5. I haven't bothered to provide an analogous mechanism
for SSH-1, on the basis that anyone worrying about MD5 should have
stopped using SSH-1 already!)

[originally from svn r10220]
2014-09-09 11:46:24 +00:00
Simon Tatham
4b2a2060bb Fix another crash at KEXINIT time, ahem.
This is the same code I previously fixed for failing to check NULL
pointers coming back from ssh_pkt_getstring if the server's KEXINIT
ended early, leading to an embarrassing segfault in place of a fatal
error message. But I've now also had it pointed out to me that the
fatal error message passes the string as %s, which is inappropriate
because (being read straight out of the middle of an SSH packet) it
isn't necessarily zero-terminated!

This is still just an embarrassing segfault in place of a fatal error
message, and not exploitable as far as I can see, because the string
is passed to a dupprintf, which will either read off the end of
allocated address space and segfault non-exploitably, or else it will
find a NUL after all and carefully allocate enough space to format an
error message containing all of the previous junk. But still, how
embarrassing to have messed up the same code _twice_.

[originally from svn r10211]
2014-07-28 17:47:36 +00:00
Simon Tatham
aaaf70a0fc Implement this year's consensus on CHANNEL_FAILURE vs CHANNEL_CLOSE.
We now expect that after the server has sent us CHANNEL_CLOSE, we
should not expect to see any replies to our outstanding channel
requests, and conversely after we have sent CHANNEL_CLOSE we avoid
sending any reply to channel requests from the server. This was the
consensus among implementors discussing the problem on ietf-ssh in
April 2014.

To cope with current OpenSSH's (and perhaps other servers we don't
know about yet) willingness to send request replies after
CHANNEL_CLOSE, I introduce a bug-compatibility flag which is detected
for every OpenSSH version up to and including the current 6.6 - but
not beyond, since https://bugzilla.mindrot.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1818
promises that 6.7 will also implement the new consensus behaviour.

[originally from svn r10200]
2014-07-06 14:05:39 +00:00
Simon Tatham
a44530bd98 Add auto-recognition of BUG_SSH2_RSA_PADDING for ProFTPD.
Martin Prikryl reports that it had the exact same bug as old OpenSSH
(insisting that RSA signature integers be padded with leading zero
bytes to the same length as the RSA modulus, where in fact RFC 4253
section 6.6 says it ought to have _no_ padding), but is recently
fixed. The first version string to not have the bug is reported to be
"mod_sftp/0.9.9", so here we recognise everything less than that as
requiring our existing workaround.

[originally from svn r10161]
2014-03-27 18:07:13 +00:00
Simon Tatham
ee83fb6fdb Fix a potential crash in ssh_setup_portfwd.
If we search for a colon by computing ptr + host_strcspn(ptr,":"),
then the resulting pointer is always non-NULL, and the 'not found'
condition is not !p but !*p.

This typo could have caused PuTTY to overrun a string, but not in a
security-bug sense because any such string would have to have been
loaded from the configuration rather than received from a hostile
source.

[originally from svn r10123]
2014-01-25 15:59:04 +00:00
Simon Tatham
2b70f39061 Avoid misidentifying unbracketed IPv6 literals as host:port.
Both GUI PuTTY front ends have a piece of logic whereby a string is
interpreted as host:port if there's _one_ colon in it, but if there's
more than one colon then it's assumed to be an IPv6 literal with no
trailing port number. This permits the PuTTY command line to take
strings such as 'host', 'host:22' or '[::1]:22', but also cope with a
bare v6 literal such as '::1'.

This logic is also required in the two Plink front ends and in the
processing of CONF_loghost for host key indexing in ssh.c, but was
missing in all those places. Add it.

[originally from svn r10121]
2014-01-25 15:58:57 +00:00
Simon Tatham
8da4fa5063 Use the new host_str* functions to improve IPv6 literal support.
I've gone through everywhere we handle host names / addresses (on
command lines, in PuTTY config, in port forwarding, in X display
names, in host key storage...) and tried to make them handle IPv6
literals sensibly, by using the host_str* functions I introduced in my
previous commit. Generally it's now OK to use a bracketed IPv6 literal
anywhere a hostname might have been valid; in a few cases where no
ambiguity exists (e.g. no :port suffix is permitted anyway)
unbracketed IPv6 literals are also acceptable.

[originally from svn r10120]
2014-01-25 15:58:54 +00:00
Simon Tatham
16e834a98a Fix breakage of SSH-2 packet decompression by r10070.
The line that resets st->pktin->length to cover only the semantic
payload of the SSH message was overwriting the modification to
st->pktin->length performed by the optional decompression step. I
didn't notice because I don't habitually enable compression.

[originally from svn r10103]
[r10070 == 9f5d51a4ac]
2013-12-02 19:26:36 +00:00
Simon Tatham
85d1e7608e Fix an assortment of dupprintf() format string bugs.
I've enabled gcc's format-string checking on dupprintf, by declaring
it in misc.h to have the appropriate GNU-specific attribute. This
pointed out a selection of warnings, which I've fixed.

[originally from svn r10084]
2013-11-17 14:05:44 +00:00
Simon Tatham
bb78583ad2 Implement connection sharing between instances of PuTTY.
The basic strategy is described at the top of the new source file
sshshare.c. In very brief: an 'upstream' PuTTY opens a Unix-domain
socket or Windows named pipe, and listens for connections from other
PuTTYs wanting to run sessions on the same server. The protocol spoken
down that socket/pipe is essentially the bare ssh-connection protocol,
using a trivial binary packet protocol with no encryption, and the
upstream has to do some fiddly transformations that I've been
referring to as 'channel-number NAT' to avoid resource clashes between
the sessions it's managing.

This is quite different from OpenSSH's approach of using the Unix-
domain socket as a means of passing file descriptors around; the main
reason for that is that fd-passing is Unix-specific but this system
has to work on Windows too. However, there are additional advantages,
such as making it easy for each downstream PuTTY to run its own
independent set of port and X11 forwardings (though the method for
making the latter work is quite painful).

Sharing is off by default, but configuration is intended to be very
easy in the normal case - just tick one box in the SSH config panel
and everything else happens automatically.

[originally from svn r10083]
2013-11-17 14:05:41 +00:00
Simon Tatham
e5a3e28eec Get rid of the error-return mechanism from x11_init.
Now that it doesn't actually make a network connection because that's
deferred until after the X authorisation exchange, there's no point in
having it return an error message and write the real output through a
pointer argument. Instead, we can just have it return xconn directly
and simplify the call sites.

[originally from svn r10081]
2013-11-17 14:05:23 +00:00
Simon Tatham
cc4fbe33bc Prepare to have multiple X11 auth cookies valid at once.
Rather than the top-level component of X forwarding being an
X11Display structure which owns some auth data, it's now a collection
of X11FakeAuth structures, each of which owns a display. The idea is
that when we receive an X connection, we wait to see which of our
available auth cookies it matches, and then connect to whatever X
display that auth cookie identifies. At present the tree will only
have one thing in it; this is all groundwork for later changes.

[originally from svn r10079]
2013-11-17 14:05:10 +00:00
Simon Tatham
01085358e4 Decouple X socket opening from x11_init().
Now we wait to open the socket to the X server until we've seen the
authorisation data. This prepares us to do something else with the
channel if we see different auth data, which will come up in
connection sharing.

[originally from svn r10078]
2013-11-17 14:05:04 +00:00
Simon Tatham
b71b443c7c Add a missing null pointer check in s_write.
I don't know that this can ever be triggered in the current state of
the code, but when I start mucking around with SSH session closing in
the near future, it may be handy to have it.

[originally from svn r10076]
2013-11-17 14:04:56 +00:00
Simon Tatham
9cbcd17651 Refactor ssh.c's APIs to x11fwd.c and portfwd.c.
The most important change is that, where previously ssh.c held the
Socket pointer for each X11 and port forwarding, and the support
modules would find their internal state structure by calling
sk_get_private_ptr on that Socket, it's now the other way round. ssh.c
now directly holds the internal state structure pointer for each
forwarding, and when the support module needs the Socket it looks it
up in a field of that. This will come in handy when I decouple socket
creation from logical forwarding setup, so that X forwardings can
delay actually opening a connection to an X server until they look at
the authentication data and see which server it has to be.

However, while I'm here, I've also taken the opportunity to clean up a
few other points, notably error message handling, and also the fact
that the same kind of state structure was used for both
connection-type and listening-type port forwardings. Now there are
separate PortForwarding and PortListener structure types, which seems
far more sensible.

[originally from svn r10074]
2013-11-17 14:04:41 +00:00
Simon Tatham
518facfeca Complete rewrite of the packet log censoring code.
Because the upcoming connection sharing changes are going to involve
us emitting outgoing SSH packets into our log file that we didn't
construct ourselves, we can no longer rely on metadata inserted at
packet construction time to tell us which parts of which packets have
to be blanked or omitted in the SSH packet log. Instead, we now have
functions that deal with constructing the blanks array just before
passing all kinds of packet (both SSH-1 and SSH-2, incoming and
outgoing) to logging.c; the blanks/nblanks fields in struct Packet are
therefore no longer needed.

[originally from svn r10071]
2013-11-17 14:04:25 +00:00
Simon Tatham
9f5d51a4ac Clean up the 'data' vs 'body' pointers in struct Packet.
There's always been some confusion over exactly what it all means. I
haven't cleaned it up to the point of complete sensibleness, but I've
got it to a point where I can at least understand and document the
remaining non-sensibleness.

[originally from svn r10070]
2013-11-17 14:04:18 +00:00
Simon Tatham
0bc76b8252 Move SSH protocol enumerations out into ssh.h.
This permits packet type codes and other magic numbers to be accessed
from modules other than ssh.c.

[originally from svn r10064]
2013-11-17 14:03:29 +00:00
Simon Tatham
5ecb7d7f1d Clean up the semantics of the ssh_rportfwd structure.
It's now indexed by source hostname as well as source port (so that
separate requests for the server to listen on addr1:1234 and
addr2:1234 can be disambiguated), and also its destination host name
is dynamically allocated rather than a fixed-size buffer.

[originally from svn r10062]
2013-11-17 14:03:21 +00:00
Simon Tatham
043a762b5f Handle socket errors on half-open channels.
Anthony Ho reports that this can occur naturally in some situation
involving Windows 8 + IE 11 and dynamic port forwarding: apparently we
get through the SOCKS negotiation, send our CHANNEL_OPEN, and then
*immediately* suffer a local WSAECONNABORTED error before the server
has sent back its OPEN_CONFIRMATION or OPEN_FAILURE. In this situation
ssh2_channel_check_close was failing to notice that the channel didn't
yet have a valid server id, and sending out a CHANNEL_CLOSE anyway
containing 32 bits of uninitialised nonsense.

We now handle this by turning our half-open CHAN_SOCKDATA_DORMANT into
a half-open CHAN_ZOMBIE, which means in turn that our handler
functions for OPEN_CONFIRMATION and OPEN_FAILURE have to recognise and
handle that case, the former by immediately initiating channel closure
once we _do_ have the channel's server id to do it with.

[originally from svn r10039]
2013-09-08 13:20:49 +00:00
Simon Tatham
8e7b0d0e4b Pass an error message through to sshfwd_unclean_close.
We have access to one at every call site, so there's really no reason
not to send it through to ssh.c to be logged.

[originally from svn r10038]
2013-09-08 07:14:56 +00:00
Simon Tatham
7e515c4111 Fix free of an uninitialised pointer.
CHAN_AGENT channels need c->u.a.message to be either NULL or valid
dynamically allocated memory, because it'll be freed by
ssh_channel_destroy. This bug triggers if an agent forwarding channel
is opened and closed without having sent any queries.

[originally from svn r10032]
2013-08-26 11:55:56 +00:00
Simon Tatham
b8e668cd9b Sensibly enforce non-interactive rekeying.
We now only present the full set of host key algorithms we can handle
in the first key exchange. In subsequent rekeys, we present only the
host key algorithm that we agreed on the previous time, and then we
verify the host key by simply enforcing that it's exactly the same as
the one we saw at first and disconnecting rudely if it isn't.

[originally from svn r10027]
2013-08-18 06:48:20 +00:00
Simon Tatham
808df44e54 Add an assortment of missing consts I've just noticed.
[originally from svn r9972]
2013-07-27 18:35:48 +00:00
Simon Tatham
eaea69ef53 If the SSH server sends us CHANNEL_CLOSE for a channel on which we're
sitting on a pile of buffered data waiting for WINDOW_ADJUSTs, we
should throw away that buffered data, because the CHANNEL_CLOSE tells
us that we won't be receiving those WINDOW_ADJUSTs, and if we hang on
to the data and keep trying then it'll prevent ssh_channel_try_eof
from sending the CHANNEL_EOF which is a prerequisite of sending our
own CHANNEL_CLOSE.

[originally from svn r9953]
2013-07-21 10:12:58 +00:00
Simon Tatham
0d7f2fdabc In the various channel request mini-coroutines, replace
crWaitUntilV(pktin) with plain crReturnV, because those coroutines can
be called back either with a response packet from the channel request
_or_ with NULL by ssh_free meaning 'please just clean yourself up'.

[originally from svn r9927]
2013-07-14 17:08:35 +00:00
Simon Tatham
2f6d6a839d Move the calculation of the exchange hash to above the various
warnings about insecure crypto components. The latter may crReturn
(though not in any current implementation, I believe), which
invalidates pktin, which is used by the former.

[originally from svn r9921]
2013-07-14 10:46:27 +00:00
Simon Tatham
ea301bdd9b Fix another giant batch of resource leaks. (Mostly memory, but there's
one missing fclose too.)

[originally from svn r9919]
2013-07-14 10:46:07 +00:00
Simon Tatham
896bb7c74d Tighten up a lot of casts from unsigned to int which are read by one
of the GET_32BIT macros and then used as length fields. Missing bounds
checks against zero have been added, and also I've introduced a helper
function toint() which casts from unsigned to int in such a way as to
avoid C undefined behaviour, since I'm not sure I trust compilers any
more to do the obviously sensible thing.

[originally from svn r9918]
2013-07-14 10:45:54 +00:00
Simon Tatham
ac8baf4cac Move the SSH-1 servkey and hostkey variables into the coroutine state,
since there is a theoretical code path (via the crReturn loop after
asking an interactive question about a host key or crypto algorithm)
on which we can leave and return to do_ssh1_login between allocating
and freeing those keys.

(In practice it shouldn't come up anyway with any of the current
implementations of the interactive question functions, not to mention
the unlikelihood of anyone non-specialist still using SSH-1, but
better safe than sorry.)

[originally from svn r9895]
2013-07-07 14:34:37 +00:00
Simon Tatham
bbc9709b48 A collection of small bug fixes from Chris West, apparently spotted by
Coverity: assorted language-use goofs like freeing the wrong thing or
forgetting to initialise a string on all code paths.

[originally from svn r9889]
2013-07-01 17:56:33 +00:00
Ben Harris
8f3cc4a9bf Add support for HMAC-SHA-256 as an SSH-2 MAC algorithm ("hmac-sha2-256")
as specified in RFC 6668.  This is not so much because I think it's 
necessary, but because scrypt uses HMAC-SHA-256 and once we've got it we 
may as well use it.

Code very closely derived from the HMAC-SHA-1 code.

Tested against OpenSSH 5.9p1 Debian-5ubuntu1.

[originally from svn r9759]
2013-02-20 23:30:55 +00:00
Ben Harris
bc8f2193f6 Allow remote-to-local forwardings to use IPv6.
RFC 4245 section 7.1 specifies the meaning of the "address to bind"
parameter in a "tcpip-forward" request.  "0.0.0.0" and "127.0.0.1" are
specified to be all interfaces and the loopback interface respectively
in IPv4, while "" and "localhost" are the address-family-agnostic
equivalents.  Switch PuTTY to using the latter, since it doesn't seem
right to force IPv4.

There's an argument that PuTTY should provide a means of configuring the
address family used for remote forwardings like it does for local ones.

[originally from svn r9668]
2012-09-18 21:50:47 +00:00
Ben Harris
d5836982e2 Two related changes to timing code:
First, make absolute times unsigned.  This means that it's safe to 
depend on their overflow behaviour (which is undefined for signed 
integers).  This requires a little extra care in handling comparisons, 
but I think I've correctly adjusted them all.

Second, functions registered with schedule_timer() are guaranteed to be 
called with precisely the time that was returned by schedule_timer().  
Thus, it's only necessary to check these values for equality rather than 
doing risky range checks, so do that.

The timing code still does lots that's undefined, unnecessary, or just
wrong, but this is a good start.

[originally from svn r9667]
2012-09-18 21:42:48 +00:00
Ben Harris
8c1d1be956 Most of the code for "nc" mode duplicated that for opening a session or
a fowarded port.  Arrange that this code is shared instead.  The main
visible change is a slight change of log messages.

[originally from svn r9655]
2012-09-08 19:46:07 +00:00
Simon Tatham
14539a7719 Hiroshi Oota points out that PuTTY's agent forwarding sockets can get
confused if they receive a request followed by immediate EOF, since we
currently send outgoing EOF as soon as we see the incoming one - and
then, when the response comes back from the real SSH agent, we send it
along anyway as channel data in spite of having sent EOF.

To fix this, I introduce a new field for each agent channel which
counts the number of calls to ssh_agentf_callback that are currently
expected, and we don't send EOF on an agent channel until we've both
received EOF and that value drops to zero.

[originally from svn r9651]
2012-09-08 10:40:36 +00:00
Ben Harris
33c58dd91b Factor out some common code for constructing SSH2_CHANNEL_OPEN.
[originally from svn r9649]
2012-09-01 12:28:38 +00:00
Ben Harris
de6d59b500 struct winadj is unused now. G/c it.
[originally from svn r9648]
2012-09-01 12:10:27 +00:00
Ben Harris
98e562b7f6 All of the initial CHANNEL_REQUESTs are conditional on (ssh->mainchan &&
!ssh->ncmode), so bundle them up in a big block conditional on this rather
than checking it five times.

[originally from svn r9647]
2012-09-01 12:03:12 +00:00