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author | Kerin Millar <kfm@plushkava.net> | 2021-01-25 02:40:29 +0000 |
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committer | Lars Wendler <polynomial-c@gentoo.org> | 2021-01-27 15:05:54 +0100 |
commit | 31a05f1b3fb90a3b4e9c0e587bdd5a39e8236f6b (patch) | |
tree | 8adede04fedbf3cd6ec4de1c4b3f887a466595cc /net | |
parent | Use sysfs to obtain the MAC address in net/iproute2.sh (diff) | |
download | netifrc-31a05f1b3fb90a3b4e9c0e587bdd5a39e8236f6b.tar.gz netifrc-31a05f1b3fb90a3b4e9c0e587bdd5a39e8236f6b.tar.bz2 netifrc-31a05f1b3fb90a3b4e9c0e587bdd5a39e8236f6b.zip |
net/apipa.sh: fix broken implementation by way of a rewrite
Sadly, the present implementation has never functioned correctly. The
original author employed incorrect syntax for what was intended to be a
command substitution. As a result, the _random() function is never called.
What actually happens is that arping is needlessly executed exactly 64516
times, with no address ever being considered as a valid candidate.
Furthermore, this module has other bugs and is poorly designed. Here are the
reasons as to why:-
• the 169.254.0.0/16 block offers 65534 addresses, not 64516
• the main loop is horrendously slow at enumerating the address block
• it counts to 64516 but doesn't ensure that each address is unique!
• it prefers bash for generating entropy (fine, but non-standard)
• it falls back to a non-standard utility for generating entropy
Therefore, I decided to re-write most of it. The fundamental difference is
that all 65534 octet pairs are generated up front before being processed by
the main loop. At most, every possible address will now be tested exactly
once.
In fact, this approach turns out to be faster by an order of magnitude. The
following synthetic tests - which calculate the time taken to enumerate the
entire address space - demonstrate the tremendous difference between the
existing code and mine. Of course, to ensure that the comparison was
meaningful, I rectified the command substitution bug in the existing code.
# time bash apipa-old-test.sh
real 2m34.367s
user 1m9.959s
sys 1m37.502s
# time bash apipa-new-test.sh
real 0m1.119s
user 0m0.965s
sys 0m0.182s
Note that the new _random_apipa_octets() function is responsible for
generating all 65534 combinations of octet pairs in a random order. It
mainly relies on awk(1) and sort(1). Where possible, a seed is obtained from
/dev/urandom for the benefit of awk's RNG, but this is not required.
I have isolated and tested the new functions on GNU/Linux, macOS, FreeBSD,
NetBSD, OpenBSD and MirBSD. I have individually tested gawk, mawk, nawk,
busybox awk and the awk implementations provided by the previously mentioned
operating systems in the case that they are distinct. The only
incompatiblity that I was personally able to find was with the awk
implementation of MirBSD, which affects the final invocation of awk in the
_random_apipa_octets function. However, MirBSD was forked from an old
version of OpenBSD and seems sufficiently obscure so as not to be worth
worrying about. If someone should try to integrate netifrc into MirBSD one
day then the matter can be dealt with then.
Finally, I want to thank Steve Arnold for bringing the original bug to my
attention. Congratulations, Steve. You may be the only known user of
net/apipa.sh on the planet.
Signed-off-by: Kerin Millar <kfm@plushkava.net>
Reported-by: Steve Arnold <nerdboy@gentoo.org>
Closes: https://bugs.gentoo.org/766890
Signed-off-by: Lars Wendler <polynomial-c@gentoo.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'net')
-rw-r--r-- | net/apipa.sh | 94 |
1 files changed, 67 insertions, 27 deletions
diff --git a/net/apipa.sh b/net/apipa.sh index 849728b..f3ec534 100644 --- a/net/apipa.sh +++ b/net/apipa.sh @@ -1,49 +1,89 @@ # Copyright (c) 2007-2008 Roy Marples <roy@marples.name> # Released under the 2-clause BSD license. -# shellcheck shell=sh disable=SC1008 apipa_depend() { program /sbin/arping /bin/arping } -_random() +_random_bytes_as_int() { - local r=${RANDOM} # checkbashisms: false positive, we handle it AFTERWARDS - if [ -n "${r}" ]; then - echo "${r}" - else - uuidgen | sed -n -e 's/[^[:digit:]]//g' -e 's/\(^.\{1,7\}\).*/\1/p' - fi + local hex num_bytes="$1" + + # While POSIX does not require that /dev/urandom exist, it is a + # de-facto standard. Therefore, the following approach should be + # highly portable in practice. In the case of Linux, and unlike BSD + # this interface does not block in the event that the CSRNG has not + # yet been seeded. Still, this is acceptable because we do not + # require a guarantee that the entropy be cryptographically secure. + # It's also worth noting that Linux >=5.4 is faster at seeding in + # the absence of RDRAND/RDSEED than previous versions were. + test -e /dev/urandom && + hex=$( + LC_ALL=C tr -dc '[:xdigit:]' < /dev/urandom | + dd bs="$(( num_bytes * 2 ))" count=1 2>/dev/null) && + test "${#hex}" = "$(( num_bytes * 2 ))" && + printf '%d\n' "0x${hex}" +} + +_random_apipa_octets() +{ + local seed + + # Obtain a highly random 16-bit seed for use by awk's RNG. In the + # unlikely event that the seed ends up being empty, awk will seed + # based on the time of day, with a granularity of one second. + seed=$(_random_bytes_as_int 2) + + # For APIPA (RFC 3927), the 169.254.0.0/16 address block is + # reserved. This provides 65534 addresses, having accounted for the + # network and broadcast address. Note that we must count from 1. + awk "BEGIN { + srand($seed) + for (i=1; i<65535; i++) print rand() \" \" i + }" | + sort -k 1,1 -n | + POSIXLY_CORRECT=1 awk '{ + hex = sprintf("%04x",$2) + printf("%d %d\n", "0x" substr(hex,1,2), "0x" substr(hex,3,2)) + }' } apipa_start() { - local iface="$1" i1= i2= addr= i=0 + local addr rc - _exists true || return 1 + _exists || return einfo "Searching for free addresses in 169.254.0.0/16" eindent - while [ ${i} -lt 64516 ]; do - : $(( i1 = (_random % 255) + 1 )) - : $(( i2 = (_random % 255) + 1 )) - - addr="169.254.${i1}.${i2}" - vebegin "${addr}/16" - if ! arping_address "${addr}"; then - eval config_${config_index}="\"${addr}/16 broadcast 169.254.255.255\"" - : $(( config_index -= 1 )) - veend 0 - eoutdent - return 0 - fi + exec 3>&1 + addr=$( + _random_apipa_octets | + { + while read -r i1 i2; do + addr="169.254.${i1}.${i2}" + vebegin "${addr}/16" >&3 + if ! arping_address "${addr}" >&3; then + printf '%s\n' "${addr}" + exit 0 + fi + done + exit 1 + } + ) + rc=$? + exec 3>&- - : $(( i += 1 )) - done + if [ "$rc" = 0 ]; then + eval "config_${config_index}=\"\${addr}/16 broadcast 169.254.255.255\"" + : $(( config_index -= 1 )) + veend 0 + else + eerror "No free address found!" + fi - eerror "No free address found!" eoutdent - return 1 + return "$rc" } |