CWE-364
Signal Handler Race Condition
Description
The product uses a signal handler that introduces a race condition.
{"xhtml:p":["Race conditions frequently occur in signal handlers, since signal handlers support asynchronous actions. These race conditions have a variety of root causes and symptoms. Attackers may be able to exploit a signal handler race condition to cause the product state to be corrupted, possibly leading to a denial of service or even code execution.","These issues occur when non-reentrant functions, or state-sensitive actions occur in the signal handler, where they may be called at any time. These behaviors can violate assumptions being made by the \"regular\" code that is interrupted, or by other signal handlers that may also be invoked. If these functions are called at an inopportune moment - such as while a non-reentrant function is already running - memory corruption could occur that may be exploitable for code execution. Another signal race condition commonly found occurs when free is called within a signal handler, resulting in a double free and therefore a write-what-where condition. Even if a given pointer is set to NULL after it has been freed, a race condition still exists between the time the memory was freed and the pointer was set to NULL. This is especially problematic if the same signal handler has been set for more than one signal -- since it means that the signal handler itself may be reentered.","There are several known behaviors related to signal handlers that have received the label of \"signal handler race condition\":","Signal handler vulnerabilities are often classified based on the absence of a specific protection mechanism, although this style of classification is discouraged in CWE because programmers often have a choice of several different mechanisms for addressing the weakness. Such protection mechanisms may preserve exclusivity of access to the shared resource, and behavioral atomicity for the relevant code:"],"xhtml:ul":[{"xhtml:li":["Shared state (e.g. global data or static variables) that are accessible to both a signal handler and \"regular\" code","Shared state between a signal handler and other signal handlers","Use of non-reentrant functionality within a signal handler - which generally implies that shared state is being used. For example, malloc() and free() are non-reentrant because they may use global or static data structures for managing memory, and they are indirectly used by innocent-seeming functions such as syslog(); these functions could be exploited for memory corruption and, possibly, code execution.","Association of the same signal handler function with multiple signals - which might imply shared state, since the same code and resources are accessed. For example, this can be a source of double-free and use-after-free weaknesses.","Use of setjmp and longjmp, or other mechanisms that prevent a signal handler from returning control back to the original functionality","While not technically a race condition, some signal handlers are designed to be called at most once, and being called more than once can introduce security problems, even when there are not any concurrent calls to the signal handler. This can be a source of double-free and use-after-free weaknesses."]},{"xhtml:li":["Avoiding shared state","Using synchronization in the signal handler","Using synchronization in the regular code","Disabling or masking other signals, which provides atomicity (which effectively ensures exclusivity)"]}]}
Parent Weaknesses (ChildOf)
Related Weaknesses
Common Consequences
Scope
Impact
Modify Application Data, Modify Memory, DoS: Crash, Exit, or Restart, Execute Unauthorized Code or Commands
Scope
Impact
Gain Privileges or Assume Identity
Potential Mitigations
Use a language that does not allow this weakness to occur or provides constructs that make this weakness easier to avoid.
Design signal handlers to only set flags, rather than perform complex functionality. These flags can then be checked and acted upon within the main program loop.
Only use reentrant functions within signal handlers. Also, use validation to ensure that state is consistent while performing asynchronous actions that affect the state of execution.
CVE-1999-0035Signal handler does not disable other signal handlers, allowing it to be interrupted, causing other functionality to access files/etc. with raised privileges
CVE-2001-0905Attacker can send a signal while another signal handler is already running, leading to crash or execution with root privileges
CVE-2001-1349unsafe calls to library functions from signal handler
CVE-2004-0794SIGURG can be used to remotely interrupt signal handler; other variants exist
CVE-2004-2259SIGCHLD signal to FTP server can cause crash under heavy load while executing non-reentrant functions like malloc/free.
Applicable Platforms
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