X-Git-Url: http://git.vanrenterghem.biz/git.ikiwiki.info.git/blobdiff_plain/e2cc76971b01a2e62e517805d89e6b76bc89658b..389ad222ec2e0457106339fb71713dad7b95f80e:/doc/patchqueue/various_fixes.mdwn diff --git a/doc/patchqueue/various_fixes.mdwn b/doc/patchqueue/various_fixes.mdwn index 9ffd17b30..318e7e941 100644 --- a/doc/patchqueue/various_fixes.mdwn +++ b/doc/patchqueue/various_fixes.mdwn @@ -31,6 +31,26 @@ are trying to do, and it still works here as I use a similar LANG anyway. For reference svn version 1.3.1 (r19032), my $LANG=en_GB.utf8, but I'm not sure what the CGI was running under. +> That's strange. Is the problem to do with setting LANG=C or to do +> with the way it's set and exported on the same line as the svn info call? +> Can you reproduce the problem running svn info outside of ikiwiki? +> --[[Joey]] + +>> I've now managed to reproduce the problem. I'll try and give some more information. +>> When going to the Recent Changes link I get + + [Sat Sep 16 15:16:08 2006] [error] [client xxxx] svn: Can't check path '/home/jw2328/.subversion': Permission denied, referer: http://xxxxx/test/sandbox.html + [Sat Sep 16 15:16:08 2006] [error] [client xxxx] Use of uninitialized value in concatenation (.) or string at /usr/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.8.3/IkiWiki/Rcs/svn.pm line 145., referer: http://xxxx/test/sandbox.html + [Sat Sep 16 15:16:08 2006] [error] [client xxxxx] svn: Can't check path '/home/jw2328/.subversion': Permission denied, referer: http://xxxx/test/sandbox.html + [Sat Sep 16 15:16:09 2006] [error] [client xxxx] File does not exist: at /usr/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.8.3/IkiWiki/Rcs/svn.pm line 145, referer: http://xxxx/test/sandbox.html + [Sat Sep 16 15:16:09 2006] [error] [client xxxx] Premature end of script headers: ikitest, referer: http://xxxx/test/sandbox.html + +>> which the $svn_url is causing the uninitialised value, due to the +>> LANG=C it seems, as if I remove it it goes away. +>> The file does not exist is due to the unreadable .subversion. +>> echoing the LANG before it is set shows that the variable is normally +>> empty for the user that is running it. + The second removes problems with cannot access /home/$user/.svnsomething in the logs. I think this problem was also fatal (I should have reported these sooner). @@ -39,21 +59,35 @@ I can try and debug these problems if you could suggest some way to do so, but I am probably losing the server in a couple of days, so I can't be of too much help I'm afraid. - --- IkiWiki/Plugin/search.pm - +++ IkiWiki/Plugin/search.pm - @@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ - close TEMPLATE; - $cgi="$estdir/".IkiWiki::basename($config{cgiurl}); - unlink($cgi); - - symlink("/usr/lib/estraier/estseek.cgi", $cgi) || - + symlink("/usr/local/libexec/estseek.cgi", $cgi) || - error("symlink $cgi: $!"); - } # }}} - -obviously I'm not asking you to include this patch, but it would -be good if this sort of thing was configurable (at build time?). I can -have a go if you like, but I'm not sure what would be acceptable to -you. +> I imagine that passing --config-dir /tmp would be either insecure or +> would limit ikiwiki use to one user per machine. +> `--config-dir /etc/subversion` might be better, though still a hack, +> since a user's real ~/.subversion might be needed to access some repos. +> +> Maybe I didn't notice this problem since I have a ~/.subversion +> everywhere that I've used ikiwiki. Hmm, no, I don't reproduce it, svn +> happily recreated the directory during an ikiwiki run after I moved it +> out of the way here. Maybe an issue with old versions of svn? Although +> AFIACR, svn has auto-created ~/.subversion for years. +> +> What's the error message? --[[Joey]] + +>> `svn: Can't check path '/home/jw2328/.subversion': Permission denied,` +>> where jw2328 is my usual user. +>> I have restrictive permissions of 0700 on home dirs on the server, +>> and the CGI is running as uid apache, euid root. (Not my setup anymore). +>> The way I had it set up, was jw2328 owning thesource dir, and the svn repo, +>> with g+sw on them both. I ran sudo ikiwiki --setup though, as I was reluctant +>> to adjust permissions on my cgi-dir. This seems to be the root of the +>> problem. + +>>> Ah, I think it's better to keep the permissions of the repository +>>> and source directory sane (755) and make the cgi suid to your user, +>>> which is how it's designed to work. + +>>>> I realise that now, and I now have a much more sane setup that works. + +---- --- IkiWiki.pm +++ IkiWiki.pm @@ -84,21 +118,55 @@ values become tainted from nowhere, or they don't get untainted possibly. This also affects backports to sarge. `"oh"` is not going to be very informative if that code path is ever taken, but I hope that it never is. -As for backports there is a problem with the sarge version of libcgi-session-perl -and my sslcookie patch (complaints about a missing include file auto/CGI/Session/cookie.al IIRC). -This file does not and has not ever existed, but it appears to be fixed in -the backport of libcgi-session-perl that I did. That puts the dependency -required at somewhere between 3.95-2 and 4.14-1. This could then be added -to debian/control. It would mean one more package to backport, but stops the -bug if anyone actually uses my sslcookie option except me. +> You're not the first person to report a problem here with older versions +> of perl and pagespec tainting. I suspect that this would work around it: + return eval possibly_foolish_untaint(pagespec_translate($spec)); +> I'm _very_ uncomfortable putting that in the shipping version of ikiwiki, +> because pagespecs are potentially _insanely_ dangerous, given how they're +> evaled and all. The tainting is the only sanity check there is that +> `pagespec_translate` manages to clean up any possibly harmful perl code +> in a pagespec. It's good to have belt and suspenders here. +> +> For all I know, older versions of perl are keeping it tainted because +> `pagespec_translate` is somehow broken under old versions of perl and is +> in fact not fully untainting the pagespec. Ok, probably not, it's more +> likely that some of the regexps in there don't manage to clear the taint +> flag with old versions of perl, while still doing a perfectly ok job of +> sanitising the pagespec. +> +> I suppose that the version of perl ($^V) could be checked and the untaint +> only be called for the old version. Though it seems it would be better +> to try to debug this some first. Maybe instrumenting `pagespec_translate` +> with calls to Scalar::Utils's tainted() function and seeing which parts +> of pagespecs arn't getting untainted would be a good start. +> +> --[[Joey]] + +>> It seems like it is always the (with instrumentation) + + elsif ($word =~ /^(link|backlink|created_before|created_after|creation_month|creation_year|creation_day)\((.+)\)$/) { + warn("\$1 tainted=".tainted($1).", \$2 tainted=".tainted($2)." \$code tainted=".tainted($code)); + $code.=" match_$1(\$page, ".safequote($2).")"; + warn("\$1 tainted=".tainted($1).", \$2 tainted=".tainted($2)." \$code tainted=".tainted($code)); + warn("safequote tainted=".tainted(safequote($2))); + } + +>> bit that causes it. With the following trace: -As for backports I managed with + $1 tainted=0, $2 tainted=0 $code tainted=0 at IkiWiki.pm line 718. + $1 tainted=0, $2 tainted=0 $code tainted=1 at IkiWiki.pm line 720. + safequote tainted=0 at IkiWiki.pm line 721. - * ikiwiki_1.26 - * libcgi-formbuilder-perl_3.03.01-1 - * libcgi-session-perl_4.14-1 +>> which shows that `$code` appears to become tainted from nowhere. +>> +>> is what pointed me to find the problem/workaround. -backported to sarge, with bpo in sources.list. This only covers Depends: though, -for instance hyperestraier needs to be backported, which I haven't got -round to yet as there is a chain to do. +>>> Given that verification, an untaint contingent on the value of $^V +>>> sounds reasonable and I'd accept such a patch. I'm not quite sure which +>>> version(s) of perl it should check for. +>>>> I'm not going to write one though. I don't know what versions either, +>>>> but I think the evil of the special case is too much in this case. If +>>>> you are happy to insist on a newer version of perl then I will leave +>>>> it at that and sort something out locally. If you want the patch I will +>>>> code it though, as I realise you may want to support sarge installs.