HardenedBSD/sys/kern/stack_protector.c
Ruslan Ermilov e64585bdc2 Random number generator initialization cleanup:
- Introduce new SI_SUB_RANDOM point in boot sequence to make it
clear from where one may start using random(9).  It should be as
early as possible, so place it just after SI_SUB_CPU where we
have some randomness on most platforms via get_cyclecount().

- Move stack protector initialization to be after SI_SUB_RANDOM
as before this point we have no randomness at all.  This fixes
stack protector to actually protect stack with some random guard
value instead of a well-known one.

Note that this patch doesn't try to address arc4random(9) issues.
With current code, it will be implicitly seeded by stack protector
and hence will get the same entropy as random(9).  It will be
securely reseeded once /dev/random is feeded by some entropy from
userland.

Submitted by:	Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru>
MFC after:	3 days
2009-10-20 16:36:51 +00:00

32 lines
682 B
C

#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/libkern.h>
long __stack_chk_guard[8] = {};
void __stack_chk_fail(void);
void
__stack_chk_fail(void)
{
panic("stack overflow detected; backtrace may be corrupted");
}
#define __arraycount(__x) (sizeof(__x) / sizeof(__x[0]))
static void
__stack_chk_init(void *dummy __unused)
{
size_t i;
long guard[__arraycount(__stack_chk_guard)];
arc4rand(guard, sizeof(guard), 0);
for (i = 0; i < __arraycount(guard); i++)
__stack_chk_guard[i] = guard[i];
}
SYSINIT(stack_chk, SI_SUB_RANDOM, SI_ORDER_ANY, __stack_chk_init, NULL);