1package Opcode; 2 3use 5.006_001; 4 5use strict; 6 7our($VERSION, @ISA, @EXPORT_OK); 8 9$VERSION = "1.43"; 10 11use Carp; 12use Exporter (); 13use XSLoader; 14 15BEGIN { 16 @ISA = qw(Exporter); 17 @EXPORT_OK = qw( 18 opset ops_to_opset 19 opset_to_ops opset_to_hex invert_opset 20 empty_opset full_opset 21 opdesc opcodes opmask define_optag 22 opmask_add verify_opset opdump 23 ); 24} 25 26sub opset (;@); 27sub opset_to_hex ($); 28sub opdump (;$); 29use subs @EXPORT_OK; 30 31XSLoader::load(); 32 33_init_optags(); 34 35sub ops_to_opset { opset @_ } # alias for old name 36 37sub opset_to_hex ($) { 38 return "(invalid opset)" unless verify_opset($_[0]); 39 unpack("h*",$_[0]); 40} 41 42sub opdump (;$) { 43 my $pat = shift; 44 # handy utility: perl -MOpcode=opdump -e 'opdump File' 45 foreach(opset_to_ops(full_opset)) { 46 my $op = sprintf " %12s %s\n", $_, opdesc($_); 47 next if defined $pat and $op !~ m/$pat/i; 48 print $op; 49 } 50} 51 52 53 54sub _init_optags { 55 my(%all, %seen); 56 @all{opset_to_ops(full_opset)} = (); # keys only 57 58 local($_); 59 local($/) = "\n=cut"; # skip to optags definition section 60 <DATA>; 61 $/ = "\n="; # now read in 'pod section' chunks 62 while(<DATA>) { 63 next unless m/^item\s+(:\w+)/; 64 my $tag = $1; 65 66 # Split into lines, keep only indented lines 67 my @lines = grep { m/^\s/ } split(/\n/); 68 foreach (@lines) { s/(?:\t|--).*// } # delete comments 69 my @ops = map { split ' ' } @lines; # get op words 70 71 foreach(@ops) { 72 warn "$tag - $_ already tagged in $seen{$_}\n" if $seen{$_}; 73 $seen{$_} = $tag; 74 delete $all{$_}; 75 } 76 # opset will croak on invalid names 77 define_optag($tag, opset(@ops)); 78 } 79 close(DATA); 80 warn "Untagged opnames: ".join(' ',keys %all)."\n" if %all; 81} 82 83 841; 85 86__DATA__ 87 88=head1 NAME 89 90Opcode - Disable named opcodes when compiling perl code 91 92=head1 SYNOPSIS 93 94 use Opcode; 95 96 97=head1 DESCRIPTION 98 99Perl code is always compiled into an internal format before execution. 100 101Evaluating perl code (e.g. via "eval" or "do 'file'") causes 102the code to be compiled into an internal format and then, 103provided there was no error in the compilation, executed. 104The internal format is based on many distinct I<opcodes>. 105 106By default no opmask is in effect and any code can be compiled. 107 108The Opcode module allow you to define an I<operator mask> to be in 109effect when perl I<next> compiles any code. Attempting to compile code 110which contains a masked opcode will cause the compilation to fail 111with an error. The code will not be executed. 112 113=head1 NOTE 114 115The Opcode module is not usually used directly. See the ops pragma and 116Safe modules for more typical uses. 117 118=head1 WARNING 119 120The authors make B<no warranty>, implied or otherwise, about the 121suitability of this software for safety or security purposes. 122 123The authors shall not in any case be liable for special, incidental, 124consequential, indirect or other similar damages arising from the use 125of this software. 126 127Your mileage will vary. If in any doubt B<do not use it>. 128 129 130=head1 Operator Names and Operator Lists 131 132The canonical list of operator names is the contents of the array 133PL_op_name defined and initialised in file F<opcode.h> of the Perl 134source distribution (and installed into the perl library). 135 136Each operator has both a terse name (its opname) and a more verbose or 137recognisable descriptive name. The opdesc function can be used to 138return a list of descriptions for a list of operators. 139 140Many of the functions and methods listed below take a list of 141operators as parameters. Most operator lists can be made up of several 142types of element. Each element can be one of 143 144=over 8 145 146=item an operator name (opname) 147 148Operator names are typically small lowercase words like enterloop, 149leaveloop, last, next, redo etc. Sometimes they are rather cryptic 150like gv2cv, i_ncmp and ftsvtx. 151 152=item an operator tag name (optag) 153 154Operator tags can be used to refer to groups (or sets) of operators. 155Tag names always begin with a colon. The Opcode module defines several 156optags and the user can define others using the define_optag function. 157 158=item a negated opname or optag 159 160An opname or optag can be prefixed with an exclamation mark, e.g., !mkdir. 161Negating an opname or optag means remove the corresponding ops from the 162accumulated set of ops at that point. 163 164=item an operator set (opset) 165 166An I<opset> as a binary string of approximately 44 bytes which holds a 167set or zero or more operators. 168 169The opset and opset_to_ops functions can be used to convert from 170a list of operators to an opset and I<vice versa>. 171 172Wherever a list of operators can be given you can use one or more opsets. 173See also Manipulating Opsets below. 174 175=back 176 177 178=head1 Opcode Functions 179 180The Opcode package contains functions for manipulating operator names 181tags and sets. All are available for export by the package. 182 183=over 8 184 185=item opcodes 186 187In a scalar context opcodes returns the number of opcodes in this 188version of perl (around 350 for perl-5.7.0). 189 190In a list context it returns a list of all the operator names. 191(Not yet implemented, use @names = opset_to_ops(full_opset).) 192 193=item opset (OP, ...) 194 195Returns an opset containing the listed operators. 196 197=item opset_to_ops (OPSET) 198 199Returns a list of operator names corresponding to those operators in 200the set. 201 202=item opset_to_hex (OPSET) 203 204Returns a string representation of an opset. Can be handy for debugging. 205 206=item full_opset 207 208Returns an opset which includes all operators. 209 210=item empty_opset 211 212Returns an opset which contains no operators. 213 214=item invert_opset (OPSET) 215 216Returns an opset which is the inverse set of the one supplied. 217 218=item verify_opset (OPSET, ...) 219 220Returns true if the supplied opset looks like a valid opset (is the 221right length etc) otherwise it returns false. If an optional second 222parameter is true then verify_opset will croak on an invalid opset 223instead of returning false. 224 225Most of the other Opcode functions call verify_opset automatically 226and will croak if given an invalid opset. 227 228=item define_optag (OPTAG, OPSET) 229 230Define OPTAG as a symbolic name for OPSET. Optag names always start 231with a colon C<:>. 232 233The optag name used must not be defined already (define_optag will 234croak if it is already defined). Optag names are global to the perl 235process and optag definitions cannot be altered or deleted once 236defined. 237 238It is strongly recommended that applications using Opcode should use a 239leading capital letter on their tag names since lowercase names are 240reserved for use by the Opcode module. If using Opcode within a module 241you should prefix your tags names with the name of your module to 242ensure uniqueness and thus avoid clashes with other modules. 243 244=item opmask_add (OPSET) 245 246Adds the supplied opset to the current opmask. Note that there is 247currently I<no> mechanism for unmasking ops once they have been masked. 248This is intentional. 249 250=item opmask 251 252Returns an opset corresponding to the current opmask. 253 254=item opdesc (OP, ...) 255 256This takes a list of operator names and returns the corresponding list 257of operator descriptions. 258 259=item opdump (PAT) 260 261Dumps to STDOUT a two column list of op names and op descriptions. 262If an optional pattern is given then only lines which match the 263(case insensitive) pattern will be output. 264 265It's designed to be used as a handy command line utility: 266 267 perl -MOpcode=opdump -e opdump 268 perl -MOpcode=opdump -e 'opdump Eval' 269 270=back 271 272=head1 Manipulating Opsets 273 274Opsets may be manipulated using the perl bit vector operators & (and), | (or), 275^ (xor) and ~ (negate/invert). 276 277However you should never rely on the numerical position of any opcode 278within the opset. In other words both sides of a bit vector operator 279should be opsets returned from Opcode functions. 280 281Also, since the number of opcodes in your current version of perl might 282not be an exact multiple of eight, there may be unused bits in the last 283byte of an upset. This should not cause any problems (Opcode functions 284ignore those extra bits) but it does mean that using the ~ operator 285will typically not produce the same 'physical' opset 'string' as the 286invert_opset function. 287 288 289=head1 TO DO (maybe) 290 291 $bool = opset_eq($opset1, $opset2) true if opsets are logically 292 equivalent 293 $yes = opset_can($opset, @ops) true if $opset has all @ops set 294 295 @diff = opset_diff($opset1, $opset2) => ('foo', '!bar', ...) 296 297=cut 298 299# the =cut above is used by _init_optags() to get here quickly 300 301=head1 Predefined Opcode Tags 302 303=over 5 304 305=item :base_core 306 307 null stub scalar pushmark wantarray const defined undef 308 309 rv2sv sassign 310 311 rv2av aassign aelem aelemfast aelemfast_lex aslice kvaslice 312 av2arylen 313 314 rv2hv helem hslice kvhslice each values keys exists delete 315 aeach akeys avalues multideref argelem argdefelem argcheck 316 317 preinc i_preinc predec i_predec postinc i_postinc 318 postdec i_postdec int hex oct abs pow multiply i_multiply 319 divide i_divide modulo i_modulo add i_add subtract i_subtract 320 321 left_shift right_shift bit_and bit_xor bit_or nbit_and 322 nbit_xor nbit_or sbit_and sbit_xor sbit_or negate i_negate not 323 complement ncomplement scomplement 324 325 lt i_lt gt i_gt le i_le ge i_ge eq i_eq ne i_ne ncmp i_ncmp 326 slt sgt sle sge seq sne scmp 327 328 substr vec stringify study pos length index rindex ord chr 329 330 ucfirst lcfirst uc lc fc quotemeta trans transr chop schop 331 chomp schomp 332 333 match split qr 334 335 list lslice splice push pop shift unshift reverse 336 337 cond_expr flip flop andassign orassign dorassign and or dor xor 338 339 warn die lineseq nextstate scope enter leave 340 341 rv2cv anoncode prototype coreargs avhvswitch anonconst 342 343 entersub leavesub leavesublv return method method_named 344 method_super method_redir method_redir_super 345 -- XXX loops via recursion? 346 347 leaveeval -- needed for Safe to operate, is safe 348 without entereval 349 350=item :base_mem 351 352These memory related ops are not included in :base_core because they 353can easily be used to implement a resource attack (e.g., consume all 354available memory). 355 356 concat multiconcat repeat join range 357 358 anonlist anonhash 359 360Note that despite the existence of this optag a memory resource attack 361may still be possible using only :base_core ops. 362 363Disabling these ops is a I<very> heavy handed way to attempt to prevent 364a memory resource attack. It's probable that a specific memory limit 365mechanism will be added to perl in the near future. 366 367=item :base_loop 368 369These loop ops are not included in :base_core because they can easily be 370used to implement a resource attack (e.g., consume all available CPU time). 371 372 grepstart grepwhile 373 mapstart mapwhile 374 enteriter iter 375 enterloop leaveloop unstack 376 last next redo 377 goto 378 379=item :base_io 380 381These ops enable I<filehandle> (rather than filename) based input and 382output. These are safe on the assumption that only pre-existing 383filehandles are available for use. Usually, to create new filehandles 384other ops such as open would need to be enabled, if you don't take into 385account the magical open of ARGV. 386 387 readline rcatline getc read 388 389 formline enterwrite leavewrite 390 391 print say sysread syswrite send recv 392 393 eof tell seek sysseek 394 395 readdir telldir seekdir rewinddir 396 397=item :base_orig 398 399These are a hotchpotch of opcodes still waiting to be considered 400 401 gvsv gv gelem 402 403 padsv padav padhv padcv padany padrange introcv clonecv 404 405 once 406 407 rv2gv refgen srefgen ref refassign lvref lvrefslice lvavref 408 409 bless -- could be used to change ownership of objects 410 (reblessing) 411 412 regcmaybe regcreset regcomp subst substcont 413 414 sprintf prtf -- can core dump 415 416 crypt 417 418 tie untie 419 420 dbmopen dbmclose 421 sselect select 422 pipe_op sockpair 423 424 getppid getpgrp setpgrp getpriority setpriority 425 localtime gmtime 426 427 entertry leavetry -- can be used to 'hide' fatal errors 428 429 entergiven leavegiven 430 enterwhen leavewhen 431 break continue 432 smartmatch 433 434 custom -- where should this go 435 436=item :base_math 437 438These ops are not included in :base_core because of the risk of them being 439used to generate floating point exceptions (which would have to be caught 440using a $SIG{FPE} handler). 441 442 atan2 sin cos exp log sqrt 443 444These ops are not included in :base_core because they have an effect 445beyond the scope of the compartment. 446 447 rand srand 448 449=item :base_thread 450 451These ops are related to multi-threading. 452 453 lock 454 455=item :default 456 457A handy tag name for a I<reasonable> default set of ops. (The current ops 458allowed are unstable while development continues. It will change.) 459 460 :base_core :base_mem :base_loop :base_orig :base_thread 461 462This list used to contain :base_io prior to Opcode 1.07. 463 464If safety matters to you (and why else would you be using the Opcode module?) 465then you should not rely on the definition of this, or indeed any other, optag! 466 467=item :filesys_read 468 469 stat lstat readlink 470 471 ftatime ftblk ftchr ftctime ftdir fteexec fteowned 472 fteread ftewrite ftfile ftis ftlink ftmtime ftpipe 473 ftrexec ftrowned ftrread ftsgid ftsize ftsock ftsuid 474 fttty ftzero ftrwrite ftsvtx 475 476 fttext ftbinary 477 478 fileno 479 480=item :sys_db 481 482 ghbyname ghbyaddr ghostent shostent ehostent -- hosts 483 gnbyname gnbyaddr gnetent snetent enetent -- networks 484 gpbyname gpbynumber gprotoent sprotoent eprotoent -- protocols 485 gsbyname gsbyport gservent sservent eservent -- services 486 487 gpwnam gpwuid gpwent spwent epwent getlogin -- users 488 ggrnam ggrgid ggrent sgrent egrent -- groups 489 490=item :browse 491 492A handy tag name for a I<reasonable> default set of ops beyond the 493:default optag. Like :default (and indeed all the other optags) its 494current definition is unstable while development continues. It will change. 495 496The :browse tag represents the next step beyond :default. It it a 497superset of the :default ops and adds :filesys_read the :sys_db. 498The intent being that scripts can access more (possibly sensitive) 499information about your system but not be able to change it. 500 501 :default :filesys_read :sys_db 502 503=item :filesys_open 504 505 sysopen open close 506 umask binmode 507 508 open_dir closedir -- other dir ops are in :base_io 509 510=item :filesys_write 511 512 link unlink rename symlink truncate 513 514 mkdir rmdir 515 516 utime chmod chown 517 518 fcntl -- not strictly filesys related, but possibly as 519 dangerous? 520 521=item :subprocess 522 523 backtick system 524 525 fork 526 527 wait waitpid 528 529 glob -- access to Cshell via <`rm *`> 530 531=item :ownprocess 532 533 exec exit kill 534 535 time tms -- could be used for timing attacks (paranoid?) 536 537=item :others 538 539This tag holds groups of assorted specialist opcodes that don't warrant 540having optags defined for them. 541 542SystemV Interprocess Communications: 543 544 msgctl msgget msgrcv msgsnd 545 546 semctl semget semop 547 548 shmctl shmget shmread shmwrite 549 550=item :load 551 552This tag holds opcodes related to loading modules and getting information 553about calling environment and args. 554 555 require dofile 556 caller runcv 557 558=item :still_to_be_decided 559 560 chdir 561 flock ioctl 562 563 socket getpeername ssockopt 564 bind connect listen accept shutdown gsockopt getsockname 565 566 sleep alarm -- changes global timer state and signal handling 567 sort -- assorted problems including core dumps 568 tied -- can be used to access object implementing a tie 569 pack unpack -- can be used to create/use memory pointers 570 571 hintseval -- constant op holding eval hints 572 573 entereval -- can be used to hide code from initial compile 574 575 reset 576 577 dbstate -- perl -d version of nextstate(ment) opcode 578 579=item :dangerous 580 581This tag is simply a bucket for opcodes that are unlikely to be used via 582a tag name but need to be tagged for completeness and documentation. 583 584 syscall dump chroot 585 586=back 587 588=head1 SEE ALSO 589 590L<ops> -- perl pragma interface to Opcode module. 591 592L<Safe> -- Opcode and namespace limited execution compartments 593 594=head1 AUTHORS 595 596Originally designed and implemented by Malcolm Beattie, 597mbeattie@sable.ox.ac.uk as part of Safe version 1. 598 599Split out from Safe module version 1, named opcode tags and other 600changes added by Tim Bunce. 601 602=cut 603 604