X-Git-Url: http://git.vanrenterghem.biz/git.ikiwiki.info.git/blobdiff_plain/7b1ad043023d55db18826e72bc75a091c4a6c584..687f7f7b77d72e6e6ad6aa5f2323894cc87c1366:/doc/plugins/contrib/compile.mdwn?ds=sidebyside diff --git a/doc/plugins/contrib/compile.mdwn b/doc/plugins/contrib/compile.mdwn index 564f7f68c..d3139e900 100644 --- a/doc/plugins/contrib/compile.mdwn +++ b/doc/plugins/contrib/compile.mdwn @@ -21,7 +21,9 @@ Some important security notice. - This plugins allows user to execute arbitrary commands when compiling the wiki. Use at your own risk. If you use Ikiwiki as a static web site compiler (and not a wiki), and you are the only one to compile the wiki, there is no - risk. + risk. If you *do* allow untrusted users to edit or comment on the wiki, they + can use the `compile` directives to execute completely arbitrary code, regardless + of configuration safeguards you may put. - Source files are published, wheter option `source` is true or not. If `source` is false, source may not be *advertised*, but it is still available @@ -30,6 +32,19 @@ Some important security notice. do not use this plugin if you do not want to publish your source files (sorry: I designed this plugin to publish free stuff). +The plugin could be modified to only allow commands to be modified from the +configuration and it would be safer to use. However, it would still be vulnerable +to command injection attacks because it uses `qx()` command expansion, which +runs commands through `/bin/sh -c`. A thorough security review would be in order +before this should be considered secure running on untrusted input. + +A simpler implementation, that only runs a predefined set of commands, may be +simpler to implement than auditing this whole plugin. For example, the +[[bibtex2html]] module performs a similar task than the compile module, but +hardcodes the command used and doesn't call it with `/bin/sh -c`. It could be +expanded to cover more commands. See this +[[plugins/contrib/bibtex2html/discussion/]] for a followup on this idea. + ## Rationale I want to publish some latex files, both source (`.tex`) and compiled (`.pdf`) @@ -91,6 +106,7 @@ using python-like string formatting, and described in the setup options section. advertised). - `template`: Name of the template to use (if set, the `source` option is irrelevant). +- `var_*`: Any argument with a name starting with ``var_`` is transmitted to the command and template. For instance, if directive has argument ``var_foo=bar``, then string ``%{foo}s`` in the command will be replaced by ``bar``, and the template will have a variable named ``foo``, and ```` will be replaced by ``bar``. ### Extensions