this post was submitted on 08 Sep 2023
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[–] chrysn@chaos.social 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@snaggen I think the better lesson than "don't mix URI parses" here is "don't LBYL, rely on EAFP". Many "Look before you leap" (LBYL) schemes are subject to variations of time-of-check/time-of-use errors. It's preferable to not sanitize input, but tell the processor what the policy on processing is; when it comes to a violation, it's easier to ask forgiving (i.e. report the error) than permission (EAFP).

[–] BB_C@programming.dev 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

No. It's “don’t mix URI parses”.

Or if you want to be more specific, it's "make sure security-sensitive paths are maximally specified, safely constructed, and maximally typed all the way".

A combination of file:// URLs being under-specified, and a C library (and not any C library, but glib, a special level of shit) predictably offering crap interface and contract guarantees (and hidden bugs to boot, yay).

This reaching attempt for some shallow generic common wisdom explanation actually reminds me of my first ever Lemmy discussion, where URLs were also incidentally involved.

[–] chrysn@chaos.social 4 points 1 year ago

The very same type of mistakes happens in file systems even without URIs being involved. Directory traversal checks look simple but sooner or later need hard-to-understand symlink following rules. Enforcing processor policy has terrible portability there (it even only became practical on Linux with landlock), but nonetheless I think it's preferable.
Not mixing URI parsers is a good advice for when processor policies are unavailable – but let's try to make them available more often.