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Security: sideeffects/OpenColorIO

Security

SECURITY.md

Security and OpenColorIO

The OpenColorIO Technical Steering Committee (TSC) takes security very seriously. We strive to design secure software, and utilize continuous integration and code analysis tools to help identify potential vulnerabilities.

Users should exercise caution when working with untrusted data (config files, LUTs, etc.). OCIO takes every precaution to read only valid data, but it would be naive to say our code is immune to every exploit.

Reporting Vulnerabilities

Quickly resolving security related issues is a priority. If you think you've found a potential vulnerability in OpenColorIO, please report it by emailing [email protected]. Only TSC members and ASWF project management have access to these messages.

Include detailed steps to reproduce the issue, and any other information that could aid an investigation. Someone will assess the report and make every effort to respond within 14 days.

Outstanding Security Issues

None

Addressed Security Issues

None

File Format Expectations

Attempting to read an OCIO config (YAML) file will:

  • Return success and produce a valid Config data structure in memory
  • Fail with an error

The vast majority of data used by OCIO comes from user-supplied transform files referenced in a config. These files are arbitrarily large, may live on any accessible volume, and are loaded lazily when requested by a Processor. Referenced file paths may contain environment variables for expansion at load time. Config authors should consider the implications of this when defining file and search paths, to avoid the possibility of a maliciously modified environment redirecting file reads to an insecure location.

It is a bug if some file causes the library to crash. It is a serious security issue if some file causes arbitrary code execution.

OpenColorIO will attempt to associate a file's data and layout with a registered file format, regardless of its extension. Only expected data structures will be read for each format. It is a bug if reading seriously invalid or malformed data from a file does not result in an error from the file format reader ultimately used with a file.

Runtime Library Expectations

We consider the library to run with the same privilege as the linked code. As such, we do not guarantee any safety against malformed arguments. Provided functions are called with well-formed parameters, we expect the same set of behaviors as with file loading.

It is a bug if calling a function with well-formed arguments causes the library to crash. It is a security issue if calling a function with well-formed arguments causes arbitrary code execution.

We do not consider this as severe as file format issues because in most deployments the parameter space is not exposed to potential attackers.

There aren’t any published security advisories