| # Porting to the Buffer.from/Buffer.alloc API |
| |
| <a id="overview"></a> |
| ## Overview |
| |
| - [Variant 1: Drop support for Node.js ≤ 4.4.x and 5.0.0 — 5.9.x.](#variant-1) (*recommended*) |
| - [Variant 2: Use a polyfill](#variant-2) |
| - [Variant 3: manual detection, with safeguards](#variant-3) |
| |
| ### Finding problematic bits of code using grep |
| |
| Just run `grep -nrE '[^a-zA-Z](Slow)?Buffer\s*\(' --exclude-dir node_modules`. |
| |
| It will find all the potentially unsafe places in your own code (with some considerably unlikely |
| exceptions). |
| |
| ### Finding problematic bits of code using Node.js 8 |
| |
| If you’re using Node.js ≥ 8.0.0 (which is recommended), Node.js exposes multiple options that help with finding the relevant pieces of code: |
| |
| - `--trace-warnings` will make Node.js show a stack trace for this warning and other warnings that are printed by Node.js. |
| - `--trace-deprecation` does the same thing, but only for deprecation warnings. |
| - `--pending-deprecation` will show more types of deprecation warnings. In particular, it will show the `Buffer()` deprecation warning, even on Node.js 8. |
| |
| You can set these flags using an environment variable: |
| |
| ```console |
| $ export NODE_OPTIONS='--trace-warnings --pending-deprecation' |
| $ cat example.js |
| 'use strict'; |
| const foo = new Buffer('foo'); |
| $ node example.js |
| (node:7147) [DEP0005] DeprecationWarning: The Buffer() and new Buffer() constructors are not recommended for use due to security and usability concerns. Please use the new Buffer.alloc(), Buffer.allocUnsafe(), or Buffer.from() construction methods instead. |
| at showFlaggedDeprecation (buffer.js:127:13) |
| at new Buffer (buffer.js:148:3) |
| at Object.<anonymous> (/path/to/example.js:2:13) |
| [... more stack trace lines ...] |
| ``` |
| |
| ### Finding problematic bits of code using linters |
| |
| Eslint rules [no-buffer-constructor](https://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-buffer-constructor) |
| or |
| [node/no-deprecated-api](https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-plugin-node/blob/master/docs/rules/no-deprecated-api.md) |
| also find calls to deprecated `Buffer()` API. Those rules are included in some pre-sets. |
| |
| There is a drawback, though, that it doesn't always |
| [work correctly](https://github.com/chalker/safer-buffer#why-not-safe-buffer) when `Buffer` is |
| overriden e.g. with a polyfill, so recommended is a combination of this and some other method |
| described above. |
| |
| <a id="variant-1"></a> |
| ## Variant 1: Drop support for Node.js ≤ 4.4.x and 5.0.0 — 5.9.x. |
| |
| This is the recommended solution nowadays that would imply only minimal overhead. |
| |
| The Node.js 5.x release line has been unsupported since July 2016, and the Node.js 4.x release line reaches its End of Life in April 2018 (→ [Schedule](https://github.com/nodejs/Release#release-schedule)). This means that these versions of Node.js will *not* receive any updates, even in case of security issues, so using these release lines should be avoided, if at all possible. |
| |
| What you would do in this case is to convert all `new Buffer()` or `Buffer()` calls to use `Buffer.alloc()` or `Buffer.from()`, in the following way: |
| |
| - For `new Buffer(number)`, replace it with `Buffer.alloc(number)`. |
| - For `new Buffer(string)` (or `new Buffer(string, encoding)`), replace it with `Buffer.from(string)` (or `Buffer.from(string, encoding)`). |
| - For all other combinations of arguments (these are much rarer), also replace `new Buffer(...arguments)` with `Buffer.from(...arguments)`. |
| |
| Note that `Buffer.alloc()` is also _faster_ on the current Node.js versions than |
| `new Buffer(size).fill(0)`, which is what you would otherwise need to ensure zero-filling. |
| |
| Enabling eslint rule [no-buffer-constructor](https://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-buffer-constructor) |
| or |
| [node/no-deprecated-api](https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-plugin-node/blob/master/docs/rules/no-deprecated-api.md) |
| is recommended to avoid accidential unsafe Buffer API usage. |
| |
| There is also a [JSCodeshift codemod](https://github.com/joyeecheung/node-dep-codemod#dep005) |
| for automatically migrating Buffer constructors to `Buffer.alloc()` or `Buffer.from()`. |
| Note that it currently only works with cases where the arguments are literals or where the |
| constructor is invoked with two arguments. |
| |
| _If you currently support those older Node.js versions and dropping them would be a semver-major change |
| for you, or if you support older branches of your packages, consider using [Variant 2](#variant-2) |
| or [Variant 3](#variant-3) on older branches, so people using those older branches will also receive |
| the fix. That way, you will eradicate potential issues caused by unguarded Buffer API usage and |
| your users will not observe a runtime deprecation warning when running your code on Node.js 10._ |
| |
| <a id="variant-2"></a> |
| ## Variant 2: Use a polyfill |
| |
| Utilize [safer-buffer](https://www.npmjs.com/package/safer-buffer) as a polyfill to support older |
| Node.js versions. |
| |
| You would take exacly the same steps as in [Variant 1](#variant-1), but with a polyfill |
| `const Buffer = require('safer-buffer').Buffer` in all files where you use the new `Buffer` api. |
| |
| Make sure that you do not use old `new Buffer` API — in any files where the line above is added, |
| using old `new Buffer()` API will _throw_. It will be easy to notice that in CI, though. |
| |
| Alternatively, you could use [buffer-from](https://www.npmjs.com/package/buffer-from) and/or |
| [buffer-alloc](https://www.npmjs.com/package/buffer-alloc) [ponyfills](https://ponyfill.com/) — |
| those are great, the only downsides being 4 deps in the tree and slightly more code changes to |
| migrate off them (as you would be using e.g. `Buffer.from` under a different name). If you need only |
| `Buffer.from` polyfilled — `buffer-from` alone which comes with no extra dependencies. |
| |
| _Alternatively, you could use [safe-buffer](https://www.npmjs.com/package/safe-buffer) — it also |
| provides a polyfill, but takes a different approach which has |
| [it's drawbacks](https://github.com/chalker/safer-buffer#why-not-safe-buffer). It will allow you |
| to also use the older `new Buffer()` API in your code, though — but that's arguably a benefit, as |
| it is problematic, can cause issues in your code, and will start emitting runtime deprecation |
| warnings starting with Node.js 10._ |
| |
| Note that in either case, it is important that you also remove all calls to the old Buffer |
| API manually — just throwing in `safe-buffer` doesn't fix the problem by itself, it just provides |
| a polyfill for the new API. I have seen people doing that mistake. |
| |
| Enabling eslint rule [no-buffer-constructor](https://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-buffer-constructor) |
| or |
| [node/no-deprecated-api](https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-plugin-node/blob/master/docs/rules/no-deprecated-api.md) |
| is recommended. |
| |
| _Don't forget to drop the polyfill usage once you drop support for Node.js < 4.5.0._ |
| |
| <a id="variant-3"></a> |
| ## Variant 3 — manual detection, with safeguards |
| |
| This is useful if you create Buffer instances in only a few places (e.g. one), or you have your own |
| wrapper around them. |
| |
| ### Buffer(0) |
| |
| This special case for creating empty buffers can be safely replaced with `Buffer.concat([])`, which |
| returns the same result all the way down to Node.js 0.8.x. |
| |
| ### Buffer(notNumber) |
| |
| Before: |
| |
| ```js |
| var buf = new Buffer(notNumber, encoding); |
| ``` |
| |
| After: |
| |
| ```js |
| var buf; |
| if (Buffer.from && Buffer.from !== Uint8Array.from) { |
| buf = Buffer.from(notNumber, encoding); |
| } else { |
| if (typeof notNumber === 'number') |
| throw new Error('The "size" argument must be of type number.'); |
| buf = new Buffer(notNumber, encoding); |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| `encoding` is optional. |
| |
| Note that the `typeof notNumber` before `new Buffer` is required (for cases when `notNumber` argument is not |
| hard-coded) and _is not caused by the deprecation of Buffer constructor_ — it's exactly _why_ the |
| Buffer constructor is deprecated. Ecosystem packages lacking this type-check caused numereous |
| security issues — situations when unsanitized user input could end up in the `Buffer(arg)` create |
| problems ranging from DoS to leaking sensitive information to the attacker from the process memory. |
| |
| When `notNumber` argument is hardcoded (e.g. literal `"abc"` or `[0,1,2]`), the `typeof` check can |
| be omitted. |
| |
| Also note that using TypeScript does not fix this problem for you — when libs written in |
| `TypeScript` are used from JS, or when user input ends up there — it behaves exactly as pure JS, as |
| all type checks are translation-time only and are not present in the actual JS code which TS |
| compiles to. |
| |
| ### Buffer(number) |
| |
| For Node.js 0.10.x (and below) support: |
| |
| ```js |
| var buf; |
| if (Buffer.alloc) { |
| buf = Buffer.alloc(number); |
| } else { |
| buf = new Buffer(number); |
| buf.fill(0); |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| Otherwise (Node.js ≥ 0.12.x): |
| |
| ```js |
| const buf = Buffer.alloc ? Buffer.alloc(number) : new Buffer(number).fill(0); |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Regarding Buffer.allocUnsafe |
| |
| Be extra cautious when using `Buffer.allocUnsafe`: |
| * Don't use it if you don't have a good reason to |
| * e.g. you probably won't ever see a performance difference for small buffers, in fact, those |
| might be even faster with `Buffer.alloc()`, |
| * if your code is not in the hot code path — you also probably won't notice a difference, |
| * keep in mind that zero-filling minimizes the potential risks. |
| * If you use it, make sure that you never return the buffer in a partially-filled state, |
| * if you are writing to it sequentially — always truncate it to the actuall written length |
| |
| Errors in handling buffers allocated with `Buffer.allocUnsafe` could result in various issues, |
| ranged from undefined behaviour of your code to sensitive data (user input, passwords, certs) |
| leaking to the remote attacker. |
| |
| _Note that the same applies to `new Buffer` usage without zero-filling, depending on the Node.js |
| version (and lacking type checks also adds DoS to the list of potential problems)._ |
| |
| <a id="faq"></a> |
| ## FAQ |
| |
| <a id="design-flaws"></a> |
| ### What is wrong with the `Buffer` constructor? |
| |
| The `Buffer` constructor could be used to create a buffer in many different ways: |
| |
| - `new Buffer(42)` creates a `Buffer` of 42 bytes. Before Node.js 8, this buffer contained |
| *arbitrary memory* for performance reasons, which could include anything ranging from |
| program source code to passwords and encryption keys. |
| - `new Buffer('abc')` creates a `Buffer` that contains the UTF-8-encoded version of |
| the string `'abc'`. A second argument could specify another encoding: For example, |
| `new Buffer(string, 'base64')` could be used to convert a Base64 string into the original |
| sequence of bytes that it represents. |
| - There are several other combinations of arguments. |
| |
| This meant that, in code like `var buffer = new Buffer(foo);`, *it is not possible to tell |
| what exactly the contents of the generated buffer are* without knowing the type of `foo`. |
| |
| Sometimes, the value of `foo` comes from an external source. For example, this function |
| could be exposed as a service on a web server, converting a UTF-8 string into its Base64 form: |
| |
| ``` |
| function stringToBase64(req, res) { |
| // The request body should have the format of `{ string: 'foobar' }` |
| const rawBytes = new Buffer(req.body.string) |
| const encoded = rawBytes.toString('base64') |
| res.end({ encoded: encoded }) |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| Note that this code does *not* validate the type of `req.body.string`: |
| |
| - `req.body.string` is expected to be a string. If this is the case, all goes well. |
| - `req.body.string` is controlled by the client that sends the request. |
| - If `req.body.string` is the *number* `50`, the `rawBytes` would be 50 bytes: |
| - Before Node.js 8, the content would be uninitialized |
| - After Node.js 8, the content would be `50` bytes with the value `0` |
| |
| Because of the missing type check, an attacker could intentionally send a number |
| as part of the request. Using this, they can either: |
| |
| - Read uninitialized memory. This **will** leak passwords, encryption keys and other |
| kinds of sensitive information. (Information leak) |
| - Force the program to allocate a large amount of memory. For example, when specifying |
| `500000000` as the input value, each request will allocate 500MB of memory. |
| This can be used to either exhaust the memory available of a program completely |
| and make it crash, or slow it down significantly. (Denial of Service) |
| |
| Both of these scenarios are considered serious security issues in a real-world |
| web server context. |
| |
| when using `Buffer.from(req.body.string)` instead, passing a number will always |
| throw an exception instead, giving a controlled behaviour that can always be |
| handled by the program. |
| |
| <a id="ecosystem-usage"></a> |
| ### The `Buffer()` constructor has been deprecated for a while. Is this really an issue? |
| |
| Surveys of code in the `npm` ecosystem have shown that the `Buffer()` constructor is still |
| widely used. This includes new code, and overall usage of such code has actually been |
| *increasing*. |