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9pfs: prevent opening special files (CVE-2023-2861)
The 9p protocol does not specifically define how server shall behave when client tries to open a special file, however from security POV it does make sense for 9p server to prohibit opening any special file on host side in general. A sane Linux 9p client for instance would never attempt to open a special file on host side, it would always handle those exclusively on its guest side. A malicious client however could potentially escape from the exported 9p tree by creating and opening a device file on host side. With QEMU this could only be exploited in the following unsafe setups: - Running QEMU binary as root AND 9p 'local' fs driver AND 'passthrough' security model. or - Using 9p 'proxy' fs driver (which is running its helper daemon as root). These setups were already discouraged for safety reasons before, however for obvious reasons we are now tightening behaviour on this. Fixes: CVE-2023-2861 Reported-by: Yanwu Shen <[email protected]> Reported-by: Jietao Xiao <[email protected]> Reported-by: Jinku Li <[email protected]> Reported-by: Wenbo Shen <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Christian Schoenebeck <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Greg Kurz <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Michael Tokarev <[email protected]> Message-Id: <[email protected]> (cherry picked from commit f6b0de53fb87ddefed348a39284c8e2f28dc4eda) Signed-off-by: Michael Tokarev <[email protected]> (Mjt: drop adding qemu_fstat wrapper for 7.2 where wrappers aren't used)
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