JSObject * WrapperFactory::WrapForSameCompartment(JSContext *cx, HandleObject objArg) { RootedObject obj(cx, objArg); MOZ_ASSERT(js::IsObjectInContextCompartment(obj, cx)); // NB: The contract of WrapForSameCompartment says that |obj| may or may not // be a security wrapper. These checks implicitly handle the security // wrapper case. // Outerize if necessary. This, in combination with the check in // PrepareForUnwrapping, means that calling JS_Wrap* always outerizes. obj = JS_ObjectToOuterObject(cx, obj); NS_ENSURE_TRUE(obj, nullptr); if (dom::GetSameCompartmentWrapperForDOMBinding(*obj.address())) { return obj; } MOZ_ASSERT(!dom::IsDOMObject(obj)); if (!IS_WN_WRAPPER(obj)) return obj; // Extract the WN. It should exist. XPCWrappedNative *wn = static_cast<XPCWrappedNative *>(xpc_GetJSPrivate(obj)); MOZ_ASSERT(wn, "Trying to wrap a dead WN!"); // The WN knows what to do. RootedObject wrapper(cx, wn->GetSameCompartmentSecurityWrapper(cx)); MOZ_ASSERT_IF(wrapper != obj && IsComponentsObject(js::UncheckedUnwrap(obj)), !Wrapper::wrapperHandler(wrapper)->isSafeToUnwrap()); return wrapper; }
static JSObject * GetCurrentOuter(JSContext *cx, JSObject *obj) { obj = JS_ObjectToOuterObject(cx, obj); if (IsWrapper(obj) && !js::GetObjectClass(obj)->ext.innerObject) { obj = UnwrapObject(obj); NS_ASSERTION(js::GetObjectClass(obj)->ext.innerObject, "weird object, expecting an outer window proxy"); } return obj; }
JSObject * WrapperFactory::WrapForSameCompartment(JSContext *cx, HandleObject objArg) { RootedObject obj(cx, objArg); MOZ_ASSERT(js::IsObjectInContextCompartment(obj, cx)); // NB: The contract of WrapForSameCompartment says that |obj| may or may not // be a security wrapper. These checks implicitly handle the security // wrapper case. // Outerize if necessary. This, in combination with the check in // PrepareForUnwrapping, means that calling JS_Wrap* always outerizes. obj = JS_ObjectToOuterObject(cx, obj); NS_ENSURE_TRUE(obj, nullptr); // The method below is a no-op for non-DOM objects. dom::GetSameCompartmentWrapperForDOMBinding(*obj.address()); return obj; }
jsval jsd_GetValueWrappedJSVal(JSDContext* jsdc, JSDValue* jsdval) { JSObject* obj; JSContext* cx; jsval val = jsdval->val; if (!JSVAL_IS_PRIMITIVE(val)) { cx = JSD_GetDefaultJSContext(jsdc); obj = JS_ObjectToOuterObject(cx, JSVAL_TO_OBJECT(val)); if (!obj) { JS_ClearPendingException(cx); val = JSVAL_NULL; } else val = OBJECT_TO_JSVAL(obj); } return val; }
JSObject * WrapperFactory::PrepareForWrapping(JSContext *cx, HandleObject scope, HandleObject objArg, unsigned flags) { RootedObject obj(cx, objArg); // Outerize any raw inner objects at the entry point here, so that we don't // have to worry about them for the rest of the wrapping code. if (js::IsInnerObject(obj)) { JSAutoCompartment ac(cx, obj); obj = JS_ObjectToOuterObject(cx, obj); NS_ENSURE_TRUE(obj, nullptr); // The outerization hook wraps, which means that we can end up with a // CCW here if |obj| was a navigated-away-from inner. Strip any CCWs. obj = js::UncheckedUnwrap(obj); MOZ_ASSERT(js::IsOuterObject(obj)); } // If we've got an outer window, there's nothing special that needs to be // done here, and we can move on to the next phase of wrapping. We handle // this case first to allow us to assert against wrappers below. if (js::IsOuterObject(obj)) return DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags); // Here are the rules for wrapping: // We should never get a proxy here (the JS engine unwraps those for us). MOZ_ASSERT(!IsWrapper(obj)); // If the object being wrapped is a prototype for a standard class and the // wrapper does not subsumes the wrappee, use the one from the content // compartment. This is generally safer all-around, and in the COW case this // lets us safely take advantage of things like .forEach() via the // ChromeObjectWrapper machinery. // // If the prototype chain of chrome object |obj| looks like this: // // obj => foo => bar => chromeWin.StandardClass.prototype // // The prototype chain of COW(obj) looks lke this: // // COW(obj) => COW(foo) => COW(bar) => contentWin.StandardClass.prototype // // NB: We now remap all non-subsuming access of standard prototypes. // // NB: We need to ignore domain here so that the security relationship we // compute here can't change over time. See the comment above the other // subsumes call below. bool subsumes = AccessCheck::subsumes(js::GetContextCompartment(cx), js::GetObjectCompartment(obj)); XrayType xrayType = GetXrayType(obj); if (!subsumes && xrayType == NotXray) { JSProtoKey key = JSProto_Null; { JSAutoCompartment ac(cx, obj); key = IdentifyStandardPrototype(obj); } if (key != JSProto_Null) { RootedObject homeProto(cx); if (!JS_GetClassPrototype(cx, key, &homeProto)) return nullptr; MOZ_ASSERT(homeProto); // No need to double-wrap here. We should never have waivers to // COWs. return homeProto; } } // Now, our object is ready to be wrapped, but several objects (notably // nsJSIIDs) have a wrapper per scope. If we are about to wrap one of // those objects in a security wrapper, then we need to hand back the // wrapper for the new scope instead. Also, global objects don't move // between scopes so for those we also want to return the wrapper. So... if (!IS_WN_REFLECTOR(obj) || !js::GetObjectParent(obj)) return DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags); XPCWrappedNative *wn = XPCWrappedNative::Get(obj); JSAutoCompartment ac(cx, obj); XPCCallContext ccx(JS_CALLER, cx, obj); RootedObject wrapScope(cx, scope); { if (NATIVE_HAS_FLAG(&ccx, WantPreCreate)) { // We have a precreate hook. This object might enforce that we only // ever create JS object for it. // Note: this penalizes objects that only have one wrapper, but are // being accessed across compartments. We would really prefer to // replace the above code with a test that says "do you only have one // wrapper?" nsresult rv = wn->GetScriptableInfo()->GetCallback()-> PreCreate(wn->Native(), cx, scope, wrapScope.address()); NS_ENSURE_SUCCESS(rv, DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags)); // If the handed back scope differs from the passed-in scope and is in // a separate compartment, then this object is explicitly requesting // that we don't create a second JS object for it: create a security // wrapper. if (js::GetObjectCompartment(scope) != js::GetObjectCompartment(wrapScope)) return DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags); RootedObject currentScope(cx, JS_GetGlobalForObject(cx, obj)); if (MOZ_UNLIKELY(wrapScope != currentScope)) { // The wrapper claims it wants to be in the new scope, but // currently has a reflection that lives in the old scope. This // can mean one of two things, both of which are rare: // // 1 - The object has a PreCreate hook (we checked for it above), // but is deciding to request one-wrapper-per-scope (rather than // one-wrapper-per-native) for some reason. Usually, a PreCreate // hook indicates one-wrapper-per-native. In this case we want to // make a new wrapper in the new scope. // // 2 - We're midway through wrapper reparenting. The document has // moved to a new scope, but |wn| hasn't been moved yet, and // we ended up calling JS_WrapObject() on its JS object. In this // case, we want to return the existing wrapper. // // So we do a trick: call PreCreate _again_, but say that we're // wrapping for the old scope, rather than the new one. If (1) is // the case, then PreCreate will return the scope we pass to it // (the old scope). If (2) is the case, PreCreate will return the // scope of the document (the new scope). RootedObject probe(cx); rv = wn->GetScriptableInfo()->GetCallback()-> PreCreate(wn->Native(), cx, currentScope, probe.address()); // Check for case (2). if (probe != currentScope) { MOZ_ASSERT(probe == wrapScope); return DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags); } // Ok, must be case (1). Fall through and create a new wrapper. } // Nasty hack for late-breaking bug 781476. This will confuse identity checks, // but it's probably better than any of our alternatives. // // Note: We have to ignore domain here. The JS engine assumes that, given a // compartment c, if c->wrap(x) returns a cross-compartment wrapper at time t0, // it will also return a cross-compartment wrapper for any time t1 > t0 unless // an explicit transplant is performed. In particular, wrapper recomputation // assumes that recomputing a wrapper will always result in a wrapper. // // This doesn't actually pose a security issue, because we'll still compute // the correct (opaque) wrapper for the object below given the security // characteristics of the two compartments. if (!AccessCheck::isChrome(js::GetObjectCompartment(wrapScope)) && AccessCheck::subsumes(js::GetObjectCompartment(wrapScope), js::GetObjectCompartment(obj))) { return DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags); } } } // This public WrapNativeToJSVal API enters the compartment of 'wrapScope' // so we don't have to. RootedValue v(cx); nsresult rv = nsXPConnect::XPConnect()->WrapNativeToJSVal(cx, wrapScope, wn->Native(), nullptr, &NS_GET_IID(nsISupports), false, &v); NS_ENSURE_SUCCESS(rv, nullptr); obj.set(&v.toObject()); MOZ_ASSERT(IS_WN_REFLECTOR(obj), "bad object"); // Because the underlying native didn't have a PreCreate hook, we had // to a new (or possibly pre-existing) XPCWN in our compartment. // This could be a problem for chrome code that passes XPCOM objects // across compartments, because the effects of QI would disappear across // compartments. // // So whenever we pull an XPCWN across compartments in this manner, we // give the destination object the union of the two native sets. We try // to do this cleverly in the common case to avoid too much overhead. XPCWrappedNative *newwn = XPCWrappedNative::Get(obj); XPCNativeSet *unionSet = XPCNativeSet::GetNewOrUsed(newwn->GetSet(), wn->GetSet(), false); if (!unionSet) return nullptr; newwn->SetSet(unionSet); return DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags); }
JSObject * WrapperFactory::PrepareForWrapping(JSContext *cx, HandleObject scope, HandleObject objArg, unsigned flags) { RootedObject obj(cx, objArg); // Outerize any raw inner objects at the entry point here, so that we don't // have to worry about them for the rest of the wrapping code. if (js::IsInnerObject(obj)) { JSAutoCompartment ac(cx, obj); obj = JS_ObjectToOuterObject(cx, obj); NS_ENSURE_TRUE(obj, nullptr); // The outerization hook wraps, which means that we can end up with a // CCW here if |obj| was a navigated-away-from inner. Strip any CCWs. obj = js::UncheckedUnwrap(obj); MOZ_ASSERT(js::IsOuterObject(obj)); } // If we've got an outer window, there's nothing special that needs to be // done here, and we can move on to the next phase of wrapping. We handle // this case first to allow us to assert against wrappers below. if (js::IsOuterObject(obj)) return DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags); // Here are the rules for wrapping: // We should never get a proxy here (the JS engine unwraps those for us). MOZ_ASSERT(!IsWrapper(obj)); // As soon as an object is wrapped in a security wrapper, it morphs to be // a fat wrapper. (see also: bug XXX). if (IS_SLIM_WRAPPER(obj) && !MorphSlimWrapper(cx, obj)) return nullptr; // Now, our object is ready to be wrapped, but several objects (notably // nsJSIIDs) have a wrapper per scope. If we are about to wrap one of // those objects in a security wrapper, then we need to hand back the // wrapper for the new scope instead. Also, global objects don't move // between scopes so for those we also want to return the wrapper. So... if (!IS_WN_WRAPPER(obj) || !js::GetObjectParent(obj)) return DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags); XPCWrappedNative *wn = static_cast<XPCWrappedNative *>(xpc_GetJSPrivate(obj)); JSAutoCompartment ac(cx, obj); XPCCallContext ccx(JS_CALLER, cx, obj); RootedObject wrapScope(cx, scope); { if (NATIVE_HAS_FLAG(&ccx, WantPreCreate)) { // We have a precreate hook. This object might enforce that we only // ever create JS object for it. // Note: this penalizes objects that only have one wrapper, but are // being accessed across compartments. We would really prefer to // replace the above code with a test that says "do you only have one // wrapper?" nsresult rv = wn->GetScriptableInfo()->GetCallback()-> PreCreate(wn->Native(), cx, scope, wrapScope.address()); NS_ENSURE_SUCCESS(rv, DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags)); // If the handed back scope differs from the passed-in scope and is in // a separate compartment, then this object is explicitly requesting // that we don't create a second JS object for it: create a security // wrapper. if (js::GetObjectCompartment(scope) != js::GetObjectCompartment(wrapScope)) return DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags); RootedObject currentScope(cx, JS_GetGlobalForObject(cx, obj)); if (MOZ_UNLIKELY(wrapScope != currentScope)) { // The wrapper claims it wants to be in the new scope, but // currently has a reflection that lives in the old scope. This // can mean one of two things, both of which are rare: // // 1 - The object has a PreCreate hook (we checked for it above), // but is deciding to request one-wrapper-per-scope (rather than // one-wrapper-per-native) for some reason. Usually, a PreCreate // hook indicates one-wrapper-per-native. In this case we want to // make a new wrapper in the new scope. // // 2 - We're midway through wrapper reparenting. The document has // moved to a new scope, but |wn| hasn't been moved yet, and // we ended up calling JS_WrapObject() on its JS object. In this // case, we want to return the existing wrapper. // // So we do a trick: call PreCreate _again_, but say that we're // wrapping for the old scope, rather than the new one. If (1) is // the case, then PreCreate will return the scope we pass to it // (the old scope). If (2) is the case, PreCreate will return the // scope of the document (the new scope). RootedObject probe(cx); rv = wn->GetScriptableInfo()->GetCallback()-> PreCreate(wn->Native(), cx, currentScope, probe.address()); // Check for case (2). if (probe != currentScope) { MOZ_ASSERT(probe == wrapScope); return DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags); } // Ok, must be case (1). Fall through and create a new wrapper. } // Nasty hack for late-breaking bug 781476. This will confuse identity checks, // but it's probably better than any of our alternatives. // // Note: We have to ignore domain here. The JS engine assumes that, given a // compartment c, if c->wrap(x) returns a cross-compartment wrapper at time t0, // it will also return a cross-compartment wrapper for any time t1 > t0 unless // an explicit transplant is performed. In particular, wrapper recomputation // assumes that recomputing a wrapper will always result in a wrapper. // // This doesn't actually pose a security issue, because we'll still compute // the correct (opaque) wrapper for the object below given the security // characteristics of the two compartments. if (!AccessCheck::isChrome(js::GetObjectCompartment(wrapScope)) && AccessCheck::subsumesIgnoringDomain(js::GetObjectCompartment(wrapScope), js::GetObjectCompartment(obj))) { return DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags); } } } // NB: Passing a holder here inhibits slim wrappers under // WrapNativeToJSVal. nsCOMPtr<nsIXPConnectJSObjectHolder> holder; // This public WrapNativeToJSVal API enters the compartment of 'wrapScope' // so we don't have to. RootedValue v(cx); nsresult rv = nsXPConnect::FastGetXPConnect()->WrapNativeToJSVal(cx, wrapScope, wn->Native(), nullptr, &NS_GET_IID(nsISupports), false, v.address(), getter_AddRefs(holder)); if (NS_SUCCEEDED(rv)) { obj = JSVAL_TO_OBJECT(v); NS_ASSERTION(IS_WN_WRAPPER(obj), "bad object"); // Because the underlying native didn't have a PreCreate hook, we had // to a new (or possibly pre-existing) XPCWN in our compartment. // This could be a problem for chrome code that passes XPCOM objects // across compartments, because the effects of QI would disappear across // compartments. // // So whenever we pull an XPCWN across compartments in this manner, we // give the destination object the union of the two native sets. We try // to do this cleverly in the common case to avoid too much overhead. XPCWrappedNative *newwn = static_cast<XPCWrappedNative *>(xpc_GetJSPrivate(obj)); XPCNativeSet *unionSet = XPCNativeSet::GetNewOrUsed(ccx, newwn->GetSet(), wn->GetSet(), false); if (!unionSet) return nullptr; newwn->SetSet(unionSet); } return DoubleWrap(cx, obj, flags); }