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#!perl
# Copyright (c) 2021-2022, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
use strict;
use warnings;
use Opcode qw(opset opset_to_ops opdesc);
my $plperl_opmask_h = shift
or die "Usage: $0 <output_filename.h>\n";
my $plperl_opmask_tmp = $plperl_opmask_h . "tmp";
END { unlink $plperl_opmask_tmp }
open my $fh, ">", "$plperl_opmask_tmp"
or die "Could not write to $plperl_opmask_tmp: $!";
printf $fh "#define PLPERL_SET_OPMASK(opmask) \\\n";
printf $fh " memset(opmask, 1, MAXO);\t/* disable all */ \\\n";
printf $fh " /* then allow some... */ \\\n";
my @allowed_ops = (
# basic set of opcodes
qw[:default :base_math !:base_io sort time],
# require is safe because we redirect the opcode
# entereval is safe as the opmask is now permanently set
# caller is safe because the entire interpreter is locked down
qw[require entereval caller],
# These are needed for utf8_heavy.pl:
# dofile is safe because we redirect the opcode like require above
# print is safe because the only writable filehandles are STDOUT & STDERR
# prtf (printf) is safe as it's the same as print + sprintf
qw[dofile print prtf],
# Disallow these opcodes that are in the :base_orig optag
# (included in :default) but aren't considered sufficiently safe
qw[!dbmopen !setpgrp !setpriority],
# custom is not deemed a likely security risk as it can't be generated from
# perl so would only be seen if the DBA had chosen to load a module that
# used it. Even then it's unlikely to be seen because it's typically
# generated by compiler plugins that operate after PL_op_mask checks.
# But we err on the side of caution and disable it
qw[!custom],);
printf $fh " /* ALLOWED: @allowed_ops */ \\\n";
foreach my $opname (opset_to_ops(opset(@allowed_ops)))
{
printf $fh qq{ opmask[OP_%-12s] = 0;\t/* %s */ \\\n},
uc($opname), opdesc($opname);
}
printf $fh " /* end */\n";
close $fh
or die "Error closing $plperl_opmask_tmp: $!";
rename $plperl_opmask_tmp, $plperl_opmask_h
or die "Error renaming $plperl_opmask_tmp to $plperl_opmask_h: $!";
exit 0;
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