Uncontrolled Memory Allocation The advisory has been revoked - it doesn't affect any version of package grpc  (opens in a new tab)


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  • Snyk IDSNYK-RHEL8-GRPC-5839022
  • published11 Aug 2023
  • disclosed9 Aug 2023

Introduced: 9 Aug 2023

CVE-2023-33953  (opens in a new tab)
CWE-789  (opens in a new tab)
CWE-834  (opens in a new tab)

Amendment

The Red Hat security team deemed this advisory irrelevant for RHEL:8.

NVD Description

Note: Versions mentioned in the description apply only to the upstream grpc package and not the grpc package as distributed by RHEL.

gRPC contains a vulnerability that allows hpack table accounting errors could lead to unwanted disconnects between clients and servers in exceptional cases/ Three vectors were found that allow the following DOS attacks:

  • Unbounded memory buffering in the HPACK parser
  • Unbounded CPU consumption in the HPACK parser

The unbounded CPU consumption is down to a copy that occurred per-input-block in the parser, and because that could be unbounded due to the memory copy bug we end up with an O(n^2) parsing loop, with n selected by the client.

The unbounded memory buffering bugs:

  • The header size limit check was behind the string reading code, so we needed to first buffer up to a 4 gigabyte string before rejecting it as longer than 8 or 16kb.
  • HPACK varints have an encoding quirk whereby an infinite number of 0’s can be added at the start of an integer. gRPC’s hpack parser needed to read all of them before concluding a parse.
  • gRPC’s metadata overflow check was performed per frame, so that the following sequence of frames could cause infinite buffering: HEADERS: containing a: 1 CONTINUATION: containing a: 2 CONTINUATION: containing a: 3 etc…