On Feb 20, 2013, at 6:22 PM, Antoine Pitrou
On Wed, 20 Feb 2013 18:21:22 -0500 Donald Stufft
wrote: On Wednesday, February 20, 2013 at 6:08 PM, Antoine Pitrou wrote:
It's not a distributed DoS issue, it's a severe DoS vulnerabilities. A single 1 kB XML document can kill virtually any machine, even servers with more than hundred GB RAM.
Assuming an attacker can inject arbitrary XML. Not every XML document is loaded from the Internet.
Even documents not loaded from the internet can be at risk. Often times security breaches are the result of a chain of actions. You can say "I'm not loading this XML from the internet, so therefore I am safe" but then you have another flaw (for example) where you unpack a zip file without verifying there are not absolute paths and suddenly your xml file has been replaces with a malicious one.
Assuming your ZIP file is coming from the untrusted Internet, indeed. Again, this is the same assumption that you are grabbing some important data from someone you can't trust.
Just because you are living in a Web-centric world doesn't mean everyone does. There are a lot of use cases which are not impacted by your security rules. Bugfix releases shouldn't break those use cases, which means the security features should be mostly opt-in for 2.7 and 3.3.
Regards
Antoine.
Any type of input is a potential attack vector; this isn't web centric, it's a systemic flaw in the spec that allows any application that's loading XML to be bombed into oblivion. People need to trust that the standard library is reliable and sane-by-default. What we have right now isn't
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