Index: net/der/parse_values.cc |
diff --git a/net/der/parse_values.cc b/net/der/parse_values.cc |
index 445903250fb1c504b78eb83f5742d23c6217d816..365678947597e2d844a38d5a4c58c258fc93114e 100644 |
--- a/net/der/parse_values.cc |
+++ b/net/der/parse_values.cc |
@@ -111,6 +111,26 @@ bool ValidateGeneralizedTime(const GeneralizedTime& time) { |
return true; |
} |
+// Returns the number of bytes of numeric precision in a DER encoded INTEGER |
+// value. |in| must be a valid DER encoding of an INTEGER for this to work. |
+// |
+// Normally the precision of the number is exactly in.Length(). However when |
+// encoding positive numbers using DER it is possible to have a leading zero |
+// (to prevent number from being interpreted as negative). |
+// |
+// For instance a 160-bit positive number might take 21 bytes to encode. This |
+// function will return 20 in such a case. |
+size_t GetNumberOfBytesInInteger(const Input& in) { |
davidben
2015/08/18 19:44:15
I would maybe call this GetUnsignedIntegerLength o
eroman
2015/08/18 19:54:13
Done.
|
+ der::ByteReader reader(in); |
+ uint8_t first_byte; |
+ if (!reader.ReadByte(&first_byte)) |
+ return 0; // Not valid DER as |in| was empty. |
+ |
+ if (first_byte == 0 && in.Length() > 1) |
+ return in.Length() - 1; |
+ return in.Length(); |
+} |
+ |
} // namespace |
bool ParseBool(const Input& in, bool* out) { |
@@ -125,39 +145,47 @@ bool ParseBoolRelaxed(const Input& in, bool* out) { |
return ParseBoolInternal(in, out, true /* relaxed */); |
} |
+// ITU-T X.690 section 8.3.2 specifies that an integer value must be encoded |
+// in the smallest number of octets. If the encoding consists of more than |
+// one octet, then the bits of the first octet and the most significant bit |
+// of the second octet must not be all zeroes or all ones. |
+bool IsValidInteger(const Input& in, bool* out_negative) { |
davidben
2015/08/18 19:44:16
Nit: negative to match the header, now that you do
eroman
2015/08/18 19:54:13
Done.
|
+ der::ByteReader reader(in); |
+ uint8_t first_byte; |
+ |
+ if (!reader.ReadByte(&first_byte)) |
+ return false; // Empty inputs are not allowed. |
+ |
+ uint8_t second_byte; |
+ if (reader.ReadByte(&second_byte)) { |
+ if ((first_byte == 0x00 || first_byte == 0xFF) && |
+ (first_byte & 0x80) == (second_byte & 0x80)) { |
+ // Not a minimal encoding. |
+ return false; |
+ } |
+ } |
+ |
+ *out_negative = (first_byte & 0x80) == 0x80; |
+ return true; |
+} |
+ |
bool ParseUint64(const Input& in, uint64_t* out) { |
+ // Reject non-minimally encoded numbers and negative numbers. |
+ bool negative; |
+ if (!IsValidInteger(in, &negative) || negative) |
+ return false; |
+ |
+ // Reject (non-negative) integers whose value would overflow the output type. |
+ if (GetNumberOfBytesInInteger(in) > sizeof(*out)) |
+ return false; |
+ |
ByteReader reader(in); |
- size_t bytes_read = 0; |
uint8_t data; |
uint64_t value = 0; |
- // Note that for simplicity, this check only admits integers up to 2^63-1. |
- if (in.Length() > sizeof(uint64_t) || in.Length() == 0) |
- return false; |
+ |
while (reader.ReadByte(&data)) { |
- if (bytes_read == 0 && (data & 0x80)) { |
- return false; |
- } |
value <<= 8; |
value |= data; |
- bytes_read++; |
- } |
- // ITU-T X.690 section 8.3.2 specifies that an integer value must be encoded |
- // in the smallest number of octets. If the encoding consists of more than |
- // one octet, then the bits of the first octet and the most significant bit |
- // of the second octet must not be all zeroes or all ones. |
- // Because this function only parses unsigned integers, there's no need to |
- // check for the all ones case. |
- if (bytes_read > 1) { |
- ByteReader first_bytes_reader(in); |
- uint8_t first_byte; |
- uint8_t second_byte; |
- if (!first_bytes_reader.ReadByte(&first_byte) || |
- !first_bytes_reader.ReadByte(&second_byte)) { |
- return false; |
- } |
- if (first_byte == 0 && !(second_byte & 0x80)) { |
- return false; |
- } |
} |
*out = value; |
return true; |