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Doubly freeing memory

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Revision as of 22:44, 13 April 2006 by Jeff Williams (talk | contribs)

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Overview

Freeing or deleting the same memory chunk twice may - when combined with other flaws - result in a write-what-where condition.

Consequences

  • Access control: Doubly freeing memory may result in a write-what-where condition, allowing an attacker to execute arbitrary code.

Exposure period

  • Requirements specification: A language which handles memory allocation and garbage collection automatically might be chosen.
  • Implementation: Double frees are caused most often by lower-level logical errors.

Platform

  • Language: C, C++, Assembly
  • Operating system: All

Required resources

Any

Severity

High

Likelihood of exploit

Low to Medium

Avoidance and mitigation

  • Implementation: Ensure that each allocation is freed only once. After freeing a chunk, set the pointer to NULL to ensure the pointer cannot be freed again. In complicated error conditions, be sure that clean-up routines respect the state of allocation properly. If the language is object oriented, ensure that object destructors delete each chunk of memory only once.

Discussion

Doubly freeing memory can result in roughly the same write-what-where condition that the use of previously freed memory will.

Examples

While contrived, this code should be exploitable on Linux distributions which do not ship with heap-chunk check summing turned on.

  1. include <stdio.h>
  2. include <unistd.h>
  1. define BUFSIZE1 512
  2. define BUFSIZE2 ((BUFSIZE1/2) - 8)

int main(int argc, char **argv) {

 char *buf1R1;    
 char *buf2R1;    
 char *buf1R2;    
 buf1R1 = (char *) malloc(BUFSIZE2);    
 buf2R1 = (char *) malloc(BUFSIZE2);    
 
 free(buf1R1);    
 free(buf2R1);    
 buf1R2 = (char *) malloc(BUFSIZE1);    
 strncpy(buf1R2, argv[1], BUFSIZE1-1);    
 
 free(buf2R1);    
 free(buf1R2);

}

Related problems

  • Using freed memory
  • Write-what-where

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