@@ -157,6 +157,7 @@ Members of the LLVM Security Response Group are expected to:
157157* Help write and review patches to address security issues.
158158* Participate in the member nomination and removal processes.
159159
160+ .. _security-group-discussion-medium :
160161
161162Discussion Medium
162163=================
@@ -204,6 +205,10 @@ The LLVM Security Policy may be changed by majority vote of the LLVM Security Re
204205What is considered a security issue?
205206====================================
206207
208+ We define "security-sensitive" to mean that a discovered bug or vulnerability
209+ may require coordinated disclosure, and therefore should be reported to the LLVM
210+ Security Response group rather than publishing in the public bug tracker.
211+
207212The LLVM Project has a significant amount of code, and not all of it is
208213considered security-sensitive. This is particularly true because LLVM is used in
209214a wide variety of circumstances: there are different threat models, untrusted
@@ -217,31 +222,52 @@ security-sensitive). This requires a rationale, and buy-in from the LLVM
217222community as for any RFC. In some cases, parts of the codebase could be handled
218223as security-sensitive but need significant work to get to the stage where that's
219224manageable. The LLVM community will need to decide whether it wants to invest in
220- making these parts of the code securable, and maintain these security
221- properties over time. In all cases the LLVM Security Response Group should be consulted,
222- since they'll be responding to security issues filed against these parts of the
223- codebase.
224-
225- If you're not sure whether an issue is in-scope for this security process or
226- not, err towards assuming that it is. The Security Response Group might agree or disagree
227- and will explain its rationale in the report, as well as update this document
228- through the above process.
229-
230- The security-sensitive parts of the LLVM Project currently are the following.
231- Note that this list can change over time.
232-
233- * None are currently defined. Please don't let this stop you from reporting
234- issues to the LLVM Security Response Group that you believe are security-sensitive.
235-
236- The parts of the LLVM Project which are currently treated as non-security
237- sensitive are the following. Note that this list can change over time.
238-
239- * Language front-ends, such as clang, for which a malicious input file can cause
240- undesirable behavior. For example, a maliciously crafted C or Rust source file
241- can cause arbitrary code to execute in LLVM. These parts of LLVM haven't been
242- hardened, and compiling untrusted code usually also includes running utilities
243- such as `make ` which can more readily perform malicious things.
244-
225+ making these parts of the code securable, and maintain these security properties
226+ over time. In all cases the LLVM Security Response Group
227+ `should be consulted <security-group-discussion-medium _>`__, since they'll be
228+ responding to security issues filed against these parts of the codebase.
229+
230+ The security-sensitive parts of the LLVM Project currently are the following:
231+
232+ * Code generation: most miscompilations are not security sensitive. However, a
233+ miscompilation where there are clear indications that it can result in the
234+ produced binary becoming significantly easier to exploit could be considered
235+ security sensitive, and should be reported to the security response group.
236+ * Run-time libraries: only parts of the run-time libraries are considered
237+ security-sensitive. The parts that are not considered security-sensitive are
238+ documented below.
239+
240+ The following parts of the LLVM Project are currently treated as non-security
241+ sensitive:
242+
243+ * LLVM's language frontends, analyzers, optimizers, and code generators for
244+ which a malicious input can cause undesirable behavior. For example, a
245+ maliciously crafted C, Rust or bitcode input file can cause arbitrary code to
246+ execute in LLVM. These parts of LLVM haven't been hardened, and handling
247+ untrusted code usually also includes running utilities such as make which can
248+ more readily perform malicious things. For example, vulnerabilities in clang,
249+ clangd, or the LLVM optimizer in a JIT caused by untrusted inputs are not
250+ security-sensitive.
251+ * The following parts of the run-time libraries are explicitly not considered
252+ security-sensitive:
253+
254+ * parts of the run-time libraries that are not meant to be included in
255+ production binaries. For example, most sanitizers are not considered
256+ security-sensitive as they are meant to be used during development only, not
257+ in production.
258+ * for libc and libc++: if a user calls library functionality in an undefined
259+ or otherwise incorrect way, this will most likely not be considered a
260+ security issue, unless the libc/libc++ documentation explicitly promises to
261+ harden or catch that specific undefined behaviour or incorrect usage.
262+ * unwinding and exception handling: the implementations are not hardened
263+ against malformed or malicious unwind or exception handling data. This is
264+ not considered security sensitive.
265+
266+ Note that both the explicit security-sensitive and explicit non-security
267+ sensitive lists can change over time. If you're not sure whether an issue is
268+ in-scope for this security process or not, err towards assuming that it is. The
269+ Security Response Group might agree or disagree and will explain its rationale
270+ in the report, as well as update this document through the above process.
245271
246272.. _CVE process : https://cve.mitre.org
247273.. _report a vulnerability : https://github.com/llvm/llvm-security-repo/security/advisories/new
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