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authorTom Lane2015-10-02 17:30:43 +0000
committerTom Lane2015-10-02 17:30:43 +0000
commit3fe8a6c2d05affadce029af293e5e386cb055c22 (patch)
tree569da53fb3f72ce913a7172cf5a6b07ec40c2663
parenta1c4afaafbc8fac540357e6c193ab1a971d2129a (diff)
Docs: add disclaimer about hazards of using regexps from untrusted sources.
It's not terribly hard to devise regular expressions that take large amounts of time and/or memory to process. Recent testing by Greg Stark has also shown that machines with small stack limits can be driven to stack overflow by suitably crafted regexps. While we intend to fix these things as much as possible, it's probably impossible to eliminate slow-execution cases altogether. In any case we don't want to treat such things as security issues. The history of that code should already discourage prudent DBAs from allowing execution of regexp patterns coming from possibly-hostile sources, but it seems like a good idea to warn about the hazard explicitly. Currently, similar_escape() allows access to enough of the underlying regexp behavior that the warning has to apply to SIMILAR TO as well. We might be able to make it safer if we tightened things up to allow only SQL-mandated capabilities in SIMILAR TO; but that would be a subtly non-backwards-compatible change, so it requires discussion and probably could not be back-patched. Per discussion among pgsql-security list.
-rw-r--r--doc/src/sgml/func.sgml22
1 files changed, 22 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/func.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/func.sgml
index 6a7586faae1..8fc91cdcc35 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/func.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/func.sgml
@@ -3074,6 +3074,28 @@ cast(-44 as bit(12)) <lineannotation>111111010100</lineannotation>
</para>
</tip>
+ <caution>
+ <para>
+ While most regular-expression searches can be executed very quickly,
+ regular expressions can be contrived that take arbitrary amounts of
+ time and memory to process. Be wary of accepting regular-expression
+ search patterns from hostile sources. If you must do so, it is
+ advisable to impose a statement timeout.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Searches using <function>SIMILAR TO</function> patterns have the same
+ security hazards, since <function>SIMILAR TO</function> provides many
+ of the same capabilities as <acronym>POSIX</acronym>-style regular
+ expressions.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <function>LIKE</function> searches, being much simpler than the other
+ two options, are safer to use with possibly-hostile pattern sources.
+ </para>
+ </caution>
+
<sect2 id="functions-like">
<title><function>LIKE</function></title>