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[6a3a178]1# Porting to the Buffer.from/Buffer.alloc API
2
3<a id="overview"></a>
4## Overview
5
6- [Variant 1: Drop support for Node.js ≤ 4.4.x and 5.0.0 — 5.9.x.](#variant-1) (*recommended*)
7- [Variant 2: Use a polyfill](#variant-2)
8- [Variant 3: manual detection, with safeguards](#variant-3)
9
10### Finding problematic bits of code using grep
11
12Just run `grep -nrE '[^a-zA-Z](Slow)?Buffer\s*\(' --exclude-dir node_modules`.
13
14It will find all the potentially unsafe places in your own code (with some considerably unlikely
15exceptions).
16
17### Finding problematic bits of code using Node.js 8
18
19If you’re using Node.js ≥ 8.0.0 (which is recommended), Node.js exposes multiple options that help with finding the relevant pieces of code:
20
21- `--trace-warnings` will make Node.js show a stack trace for this warning and other warnings that are printed by Node.js.
22- `--trace-deprecation` does the same thing, but only for deprecation warnings.
23- `--pending-deprecation` will show more types of deprecation warnings. In particular, it will show the `Buffer()` deprecation warning, even on Node.js 8.
24
25You can set these flags using an environment variable:
26
27```console
28$ export NODE_OPTIONS='--trace-warnings --pending-deprecation'
29$ cat example.js
30'use strict';
31const foo = new Buffer('foo');
32$ node example.js
33(node:7147) [DEP0005] DeprecationWarning: The Buffer() and new Buffer() constructors are not recommended for use due to security and usability concerns. Please use the new Buffer.alloc(), Buffer.allocUnsafe(), or Buffer.from() construction methods instead.
34 at showFlaggedDeprecation (buffer.js:127:13)
35 at new Buffer (buffer.js:148:3)
36 at Object.<anonymous> (/path/to/example.js:2:13)
37 [... more stack trace lines ...]
38```
39
40### Finding problematic bits of code using linters
41
42Eslint rules [no-buffer-constructor](https://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-buffer-constructor)
43or
44[node/no-deprecated-api](https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-plugin-node/blob/master/docs/rules/no-deprecated-api.md)
45also find calls to deprecated `Buffer()` API. Those rules are included in some pre-sets.
46
47There is a drawback, though, that it doesn't always
48[work correctly](https://github.com/chalker/safer-buffer#why-not-safe-buffer) when `Buffer` is
49overriden e.g. with a polyfill, so recommended is a combination of this and some other method
50described above.
51
52<a id="variant-1"></a>
53## Variant 1: Drop support for Node.js ≤ 4.4.x and 5.0.0 — 5.9.x.
54
55This is the recommended solution nowadays that would imply only minimal overhead.
56
57The Node.js 5.x release line has been unsupported since July 2016, and the Node.js 4.x release line reaches its End of Life in April 2018 (→ [Schedule](https://github.com/nodejs/Release#release-schedule)). This means that these versions of Node.js will *not* receive any updates, even in case of security issues, so using these release lines should be avoided, if at all possible.
58
59What you would do in this case is to convert all `new Buffer()` or `Buffer()` calls to use `Buffer.alloc()` or `Buffer.from()`, in the following way:
60
61- For `new Buffer(number)`, replace it with `Buffer.alloc(number)`.
62- For `new Buffer(string)` (or `new Buffer(string, encoding)`), replace it with `Buffer.from(string)` (or `Buffer.from(string, encoding)`).
63- For all other combinations of arguments (these are much rarer), also replace `new Buffer(...arguments)` with `Buffer.from(...arguments)`.
64
65Note that `Buffer.alloc()` is also _faster_ on the current Node.js versions than
66`new Buffer(size).fill(0)`, which is what you would otherwise need to ensure zero-filling.
67
68Enabling eslint rule [no-buffer-constructor](https://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-buffer-constructor)
69or
70[node/no-deprecated-api](https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-plugin-node/blob/master/docs/rules/no-deprecated-api.md)
71is recommended to avoid accidential unsafe Buffer API usage.
72
73There is also a [JSCodeshift codemod](https://github.com/joyeecheung/node-dep-codemod#dep005)
74for automatically migrating Buffer constructors to `Buffer.alloc()` or `Buffer.from()`.
75Note that it currently only works with cases where the arguments are literals or where the
76constructor is invoked with two arguments.
77
78_If you currently support those older Node.js versions and dropping them would be a semver-major change
79for you, or if you support older branches of your packages, consider using [Variant 2](#variant-2)
80or [Variant 3](#variant-3) on older branches, so people using those older branches will also receive
81the fix. That way, you will eradicate potential issues caused by unguarded Buffer API usage and
82your users will not observe a runtime deprecation warning when running your code on Node.js 10._
83
84<a id="variant-2"></a>
85## Variant 2: Use a polyfill
86
87Utilize [safer-buffer](https://www.npmjs.com/package/safer-buffer) as a polyfill to support older
88Node.js versions.
89
90You would take exacly the same steps as in [Variant 1](#variant-1), but with a polyfill
91`const Buffer = require('safer-buffer').Buffer` in all files where you use the new `Buffer` api.
92
93Make sure that you do not use old `new Buffer` API — in any files where the line above is added,
94using old `new Buffer()` API will _throw_. It will be easy to notice that in CI, though.
95
96Alternatively, you could use [buffer-from](https://www.npmjs.com/package/buffer-from) and/or
97[buffer-alloc](https://www.npmjs.com/package/buffer-alloc) [ponyfills](https://ponyfill.com/) —
98those are great, the only downsides being 4 deps in the tree and slightly more code changes to
99migrate off them (as you would be using e.g. `Buffer.from` under a different name). If you need only
100`Buffer.from` polyfilled — `buffer-from` alone which comes with no extra dependencies.
101
102_Alternatively, you could use [safe-buffer](https://www.npmjs.com/package/safe-buffer) — it also
103provides a polyfill, but takes a different approach which has
104[it's drawbacks](https://github.com/chalker/safer-buffer#why-not-safe-buffer). It will allow you
105to also use the older `new Buffer()` API in your code, though — but that's arguably a benefit, as
106it is problematic, can cause issues in your code, and will start emitting runtime deprecation
107warnings starting with Node.js 10._
108
109Note that in either case, it is important that you also remove all calls to the old Buffer
110API manually — just throwing in `safe-buffer` doesn't fix the problem by itself, it just provides
111a polyfill for the new API. I have seen people doing that mistake.
112
113Enabling eslint rule [no-buffer-constructor](https://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-buffer-constructor)
114or
115[node/no-deprecated-api](https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-plugin-node/blob/master/docs/rules/no-deprecated-api.md)
116is recommended.
117
118_Don't forget to drop the polyfill usage once you drop support for Node.js < 4.5.0._
119
120<a id="variant-3"></a>
121## Variant 3 — manual detection, with safeguards
122
123This is useful if you create Buffer instances in only a few places (e.g. one), or you have your own
124wrapper around them.
125
126### Buffer(0)
127
128This special case for creating empty buffers can be safely replaced with `Buffer.concat([])`, which
129returns the same result all the way down to Node.js 0.8.x.
130
131### Buffer(notNumber)
132
133Before:
134
135```js
136var buf = new Buffer(notNumber, encoding);
137```
138
139After:
140
141```js
142var buf;
143if (Buffer.from && Buffer.from !== Uint8Array.from) {
144 buf = Buffer.from(notNumber, encoding);
145} else {
146 if (typeof notNumber === 'number')
147 throw new Error('The "size" argument must be of type number.');
148 buf = new Buffer(notNumber, encoding);
149}
150```
151
152`encoding` is optional.
153
154Note that the `typeof notNumber` before `new Buffer` is required (for cases when `notNumber` argument is not
155hard-coded) and _is not caused by the deprecation of Buffer constructor_ — it's exactly _why_ the
156Buffer constructor is deprecated. Ecosystem packages lacking this type-check caused numereous
157security issues — situations when unsanitized user input could end up in the `Buffer(arg)` create
158problems ranging from DoS to leaking sensitive information to the attacker from the process memory.
159
160When `notNumber` argument is hardcoded (e.g. literal `"abc"` or `[0,1,2]`), the `typeof` check can
161be omitted.
162
163Also note that using TypeScript does not fix this problem for you — when libs written in
164`TypeScript` are used from JS, or when user input ends up there — it behaves exactly as pure JS, as
165all type checks are translation-time only and are not present in the actual JS code which TS
166compiles to.
167
168### Buffer(number)
169
170For Node.js 0.10.x (and below) support:
171
172```js
173var buf;
174if (Buffer.alloc) {
175 buf = Buffer.alloc(number);
176} else {
177 buf = new Buffer(number);
178 buf.fill(0);
179}
180```
181
182Otherwise (Node.js ≥ 0.12.x):
183
184```js
185const buf = Buffer.alloc ? Buffer.alloc(number) : new Buffer(number).fill(0);
186```
187
188## Regarding Buffer.allocUnsafe
189
190Be extra cautious when using `Buffer.allocUnsafe`:
191 * Don't use it if you don't have a good reason to
192 * e.g. you probably won't ever see a performance difference for small buffers, in fact, those
193 might be even faster with `Buffer.alloc()`,
194 * if your code is not in the hot code path — you also probably won't notice a difference,
195 * keep in mind that zero-filling minimizes the potential risks.
196 * If you use it, make sure that you never return the buffer in a partially-filled state,
197 * if you are writing to it sequentially — always truncate it to the actuall written length
198
199Errors in handling buffers allocated with `Buffer.allocUnsafe` could result in various issues,
200ranged from undefined behaviour of your code to sensitive data (user input, passwords, certs)
201leaking to the remote attacker.
202
203_Note that the same applies to `new Buffer` usage without zero-filling, depending on the Node.js
204version (and lacking type checks also adds DoS to the list of potential problems)._
205
206<a id="faq"></a>
207## FAQ
208
209<a id="design-flaws"></a>
210### What is wrong with the `Buffer` constructor?
211
212The `Buffer` constructor could be used to create a buffer in many different ways:
213
214- `new Buffer(42)` creates a `Buffer` of 42 bytes. Before Node.js 8, this buffer contained
215 *arbitrary memory* for performance reasons, which could include anything ranging from
216 program source code to passwords and encryption keys.
217- `new Buffer('abc')` creates a `Buffer` that contains the UTF-8-encoded version of
218 the string `'abc'`. A second argument could specify another encoding: For example,
219 `new Buffer(string, 'base64')` could be used to convert a Base64 string into the original
220 sequence of bytes that it represents.
221- There are several other combinations of arguments.
222
223This meant that, in code like `var buffer = new Buffer(foo);`, *it is not possible to tell
224what exactly the contents of the generated buffer are* without knowing the type of `foo`.
225
226Sometimes, the value of `foo` comes from an external source. For example, this function
227could be exposed as a service on a web server, converting a UTF-8 string into its Base64 form:
228
229```
230function stringToBase64(req, res) {
231 // The request body should have the format of `{ string: 'foobar' }`
232 const rawBytes = new Buffer(req.body.string)
233 const encoded = rawBytes.toString('base64')
234 res.end({ encoded: encoded })
235}
236```
237
238Note that this code does *not* validate the type of `req.body.string`:
239
240- `req.body.string` is expected to be a string. If this is the case, all goes well.
241- `req.body.string` is controlled by the client that sends the request.
242- If `req.body.string` is the *number* `50`, the `rawBytes` would be 50 bytes:
243 - Before Node.js 8, the content would be uninitialized
244 - After Node.js 8, the content would be `50` bytes with the value `0`
245
246Because of the missing type check, an attacker could intentionally send a number
247as part of the request. Using this, they can either:
248
249- Read uninitialized memory. This **will** leak passwords, encryption keys and other
250 kinds of sensitive information. (Information leak)
251- Force the program to allocate a large amount of memory. For example, when specifying
252 `500000000` as the input value, each request will allocate 500MB of memory.
253 This can be used to either exhaust the memory available of a program completely
254 and make it crash, or slow it down significantly. (Denial of Service)
255
256Both of these scenarios are considered serious security issues in a real-world
257web server context.
258
259when using `Buffer.from(req.body.string)` instead, passing a number will always
260throw an exception instead, giving a controlled behaviour that can always be
261handled by the program.
262
263<a id="ecosystem-usage"></a>
264### The `Buffer()` constructor has been deprecated for a while. Is this really an issue?
265
266Surveys of code in the `npm` ecosystem have shown that the `Buffer()` constructor is still
267widely used. This includes new code, and overall usage of such code has actually been
268*increasing*.
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