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authorTom Lane2010-03-06 00:46:13 +0000
committerTom Lane2010-03-06 00:46:13 +0000
commit0a32a06bc91894ea86c52dc971703e257d8988ec (patch)
tree84ab29b1aa54dd886bdcaf716db70bbb01cf976c /doc/FAQ_DEV
parent14669da788122b2d948ca7700bdb99877e4d2dc0 (diff)
When reading pg_hba.conf and similar files, do not treat @file as an inclusion
unless (1) the @ isn't quoted and (2) the filename isn't empty. This guards against unexpectedly treating usernames or other strings in "flat files" as inclusion requests, as seen in a recent trouble report from Ed L. The empty-filename case would be guaranteed to misbehave anyway, because our subsequent path-munging behavior results in trying to read the directory containing the current input file. I think this might finally explain the report at http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-bugs/2004-05/msg00132.php of a crash after printing "authentication file token too long, skipping", since I was able to duplicate that message (though not a crash) on a platform where stdio doesn't refuse to read directories. We never got far in investigating that problem, but now I'm suspicious that the trigger condition was an @ in the flat password file. Back-patch to all active branches since the problem can be demonstrated in all branches except HEAD. The test case, creating a user named "@", doesn't cause a problem in HEAD since we got rid of the flat password file. Nonetheless it seems like a good idea to not consider quoted @ as a file inclusion spec, so I changed HEAD too.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/FAQ_DEV')
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