Utilities for decoding and encoding values in a safe and performance-oriented way.
This is an internal crate used by s2n-quic. The API is not currently stable and should not be used directly.
Consider the following code:
```rust fn decode_u8(buffer: &[u8]) -> (u8, &[u8]) { let value = buffer[0]; (value, buffer[1..]) }
decodeu8(&[1, 2, 3]); // => (1, &[2, 3]) decodeu8(&[4]); // => (4, &[]) ```
While this is safe as far as Rust is concerned, this method will panic on missing input:
rust
decode_u8(&[]) // thread 'main' panicked at 'index out of bounds: the len is 0 but the index is 0'
These kind of issues can be hard to detect and can have a large impact on environments like servers where untrusted data is being passed. An attacker could potentially craft a payload that will crash the server.
One possible way to mitigate these issues is to perform a check:
```rust fn decode_u8(buffer: &[u8]) -> Result<(u8, &[u8]), Error> { if buffer.len() < 1 { return Err(Error::OutOfBounds); }
let value = buffer[0];
Ok((value, buffer[1..]))
}
decodeu8(&[1, 2, 3]); // => Ok((1, &[2, 3])) decodeu8(&[4]); // => Ok((4, &[])) decode_u8(&[]); // => Err(Error::OutOfBounds) ```
This solution works for this particular case but is error-prone, as it requires each access to the slice to assert its set of preconditions. Special care especially needs to be taken when the length of a decoded value depends on a previously decoded, untrusted input:
```rust fn decode_slice(buffer: &[u8]) -> Result<(&[u8], &[u8]), Error> { if buffer.len() < 1 { return Err(Error::OutOfBounds); }
let len = buffer[0] as usize;
if buffer.len() < len {
return Err(Error::OutOfBounds);
}
let value = buffer[1..len];
Ok((value, buffer[len..]))
} ```
quic-codec
instead provides an interface to a slice that is guaranteed not to
panic. It accomplishes this by forcing checks to occur and precondition
violations to be handled.
rust
fn decode_u8(buffer: DecoderBuffer) -> DecoderResult<u8> {
let (value, buffer) = buffer.decode::<u8>()?;
Ok((value, buffer))
}
Another major advantage is gained through type-inferred decoding. The
DecoderBuffer::decode
function can be extended to support any type, given it
implements the DecoderValue
trait. Consider the following example where the
same decode
function call is used to parse u32
, u8
, and Date
itself:
```rust struct Date { year: u32, month: u8, day: u8, }
impl<'a> DecoderValue<'a> for Date { fn decode(buffer: DecoderBuffer<'a>) -> DecoderResult<'a, Self> { let (year, buffer) = buffer.decode()?; let (month, buffer) = buffer.decode()?; let (day, buffer) = buffer.decode()?; let date = Self { year, month, day }; Ok((date, buffer)) } }
fn decodetwodates(buffer: DecoderBuffer) -> DecoderResult<(Date, Date)> { let (first, buffer) = buffer.decode()?; let (second, buffer) = buffer.decode()?; Ok(((first, second), buffer)) } ```
The EncoderBuffer is the counterpart to DecoderBuffer. It writes any value that
implements the EncoderValue
to a pre-allocated mutable slice. Each type gives
hints for the final the encoding size to ensure a single allocation when
encoding a value.