Impact
There exists a bug in the pooling instance allocator in Wasmtime's runtime where a failure to instantiate an instance for a module that defines an externref
global will result in an invalid drop of a VMExternRef
via an uninitialized pointer.
As instance slots may be reused between consecutive instantiations, the value of the uninitialized pointer may be from a previous instantiation and therefore under the control of an attacker via a module's initial values for its globals. If the attacker can somehow determine an address under their control inside the mapped memory representing the instance pool, it is possible to trick the runtime to call drop_in_place
on a trait object under the attacker's control and therefore cause remote code execution.
Exploiting the bug to cause remote code execution would be very difficult as attackers cannot determine the addresses of globals from code executing within the WebAssembly VM and the memory space for the instance pool cannot be statically determined. Operating system mitigations, such as address space layout randomization, would additionally increase the difficulty for attackers to determine useful executable code to target with an exploit. It is also very unlikely that attackers will be able to directly influence the conditions that trigger the bug as described below.
When the conditions to trigger the bug are met, however, it is much easier to exploit this bug to cause a denial of service by crashing the host with an invalid memory read.
The following engine configuration (via Config) is required to be impacted by this bug:
- support for the reference types proposal must be enabled (this is the default for
Config
).
- a pooling allocation strategy must be configured via Config::allocation_strategy, which is not the default allocation strategy.
A module must be instantiated with all the following characteristics:
- The module defines at least one table or memory.
- The module defines at least one
externref
global.
During instantiation, one of the following must occur to cause the instantiation to fail:
- a call to
mprotect
or VirtualAlloc
fails (e.g. out-of-memory conditions).
- a resource limiter was configured in the associated
Store
(via Store::limiter or Store::limiter_async) and the limiter returns false
from the initial call to memory_growing
or table_growing
. Stores do not have a resource limiter set by default.
This results in a partially-initialized instance being dropped and that attempts to drop the uninitialized VMExternRef
representing the defined externref
global.
We have reason to believe that the effective impact of this bug is relatively small because the usage of externref
is still uncommon and without a resource limiter configured on the Store
, which is not the default configuration, it is only possible to trigger the bug from an error returned by mprotect
or VirtualAlloc
.
Note that on Linux with the uffd
feature enabled, it is only possible to trigger the bug from a resource limiter as the call to mprotect
is skipped; if no resource limiter is used, then this configuration is not vulnerable.
Patches
The bug has been fixed in 0.34.1 and 0.33.1; users are encouraged to upgrade as soon as possible.
Workarounds
If it is not possible to upgrade to 0.34.1 or 0.33.1 of the wasmtime
crate, it is recommend that support for the reference types proposal be disabled by passing false
to Config::wasm_reference_types.
Doing so will prevent modules that use externref
from being loaded entirely.
For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
References
Impact
There exists a bug in the pooling instance allocator in Wasmtime's runtime where a failure to instantiate an instance for a module that defines an
externref
global will result in an invalid drop of aVMExternRef
via an uninitialized pointer.As instance slots may be reused between consecutive instantiations, the value of the uninitialized pointer may be from a previous instantiation and therefore under the control of an attacker via a module's initial values for its globals. If the attacker can somehow determine an address under their control inside the mapped memory representing the instance pool, it is possible to trick the runtime to call
drop_in_place
on a trait object under the attacker's control and therefore cause remote code execution.Exploiting the bug to cause remote code execution would be very difficult as attackers cannot determine the addresses of globals from code executing within the WebAssembly VM and the memory space for the instance pool cannot be statically determined. Operating system mitigations, such as address space layout randomization, would additionally increase the difficulty for attackers to determine useful executable code to target with an exploit. It is also very unlikely that attackers will be able to directly influence the conditions that trigger the bug as described below.
When the conditions to trigger the bug are met, however, it is much easier to exploit this bug to cause a denial of service by crashing the host with an invalid memory read.
The following engine configuration (via Config) is required to be impacted by this bug:
Config
).A module must be instantiated with all the following characteristics:
externref
global.During instantiation, one of the following must occur to cause the instantiation to fail:
mprotect
orVirtualAlloc
fails (e.g. out-of-memory conditions).Store
(via Store::limiter or Store::limiter_async) and the limiter returnsfalse
from the initial call tomemory_growing
ortable_growing
. Stores do not have a resource limiter set by default.This results in a partially-initialized instance being dropped and that attempts to drop the uninitialized
VMExternRef
representing the definedexternref
global.We have reason to believe that the effective impact of this bug is relatively small because the usage of
externref
is still uncommon and without a resource limiter configured on theStore
, which is not the default configuration, it is only possible to trigger the bug from an error returned bymprotect
orVirtualAlloc
.Note that on Linux with the
uffd
feature enabled, it is only possible to trigger the bug from a resource limiter as the call tomprotect
is skipped; if no resource limiter is used, then this configuration is not vulnerable.Patches
The bug has been fixed in 0.34.1 and 0.33.1; users are encouraged to upgrade as soon as possible.
Workarounds
If it is not possible to upgrade to 0.34.1 or 0.33.1 of the
wasmtime
crate, it is recommend that support for the reference types proposal be disabled by passingfalse
to Config::wasm_reference_types.Doing so will prevent modules that use
externref
from being loaded entirely.For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
References