Netgate Discussion Forum
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Search
    • Register
    • Login

    2.3.2_1 crash report

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Problems Installing or Upgrading pfSense Software
    29 Posts 6 Posters 4.0k Views
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • w0wW
      w0w
      last edited by

      https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=112543.0 is this related?

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • w0wW
        w0w
        last edited by

        The system was updated several times from 2.3 to 2.3.2-p1

        
        [2.3.2-RELEASE][root@pf.net]/root: pkg which /usr/local/lib/php/20131226/pfSense.so
        /usr/local/lib/php/20131226/pfSense.so was installed by package php56-pfSense-module-0.12
        [2.3.2-RELEASE][root@pf.net]/root: sha1 /usr/local/lib/php/20131226/pfSense.so
        SHA1 (/usr/local/lib/php/20131226/pfSense.so) = 90eecff835a534b878fecfb2086141632e640448
        [2.3.2-RELEASE][root@pf.net]/root: pkg which /usr/local/lib/php/20131226/suhosin.so
        /usr/local/lib/php/20131226/suhosin.so was installed by package php-suhosin-0.9.38
        [2.3.2-RELEASE][root@pf.net]/root: sha1 /usr/local/lib/php/20131226/suhosin.so
        SHA1 (/usr/local/lib/php/20131226/suhosin.so) = 3d2cdcbb696ee37d76885918ce805497f329eb17
        
        

        EDIT: 2.3.2-RELEASE-p1 (amd64)
        built on Tue Sep 27 12:13:07 CDT 2016
        FreeBSD 10.3-RELEASE-p9

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • dennypageD
          dennypage
          last edited by

          Using the 4860 formally known as goodsys, I did the following:

          1. Perform a fresh install from factory image for 2.3.2
          2. Collect checksums of all files on the system
          3. Perform an on-line upgrade to 2.3.2_1
          4. Collect checksums of all files on the system
          5. Perform a fresh install from factory image for 2.3.2_1
          6. Collect checksums of all files on the system

          Base on the results of steps 4 & 6, I find the following 85 files to be incorrect:

          usr/local/bin/delv
          usr/local/bin/dig
          usr/local/bin/host
          usr/local/bin/nslookup
          usr/local/bin/nsupdate
          usr/local/bin/rrdtool
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/libcharon.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/libradius.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/libsimaka.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/libstrongswan.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/libtls.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/libvici.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-addrblock.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-aes.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-attr.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-blowfish.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-cmac.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-constraints.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-curl.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-curl.so
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-des.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-dnskey.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-eap-dynamic.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-eap-identity.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-eap-md5.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-eap-mschapv2.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-eap-peap.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-eap-radius.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-eap-sim-file.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-eap-sim.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-eap-tls.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-eap-ttls.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-fips-prf.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-hmac.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-ipseckey.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-kernel-pfkey.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-kernel-pfroute.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-md4.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-md5.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-nonce.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-openssl.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-pem.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-pgp.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-pkcs1.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-pkcs12.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-pkcs7.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-pkcs8.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-pubkey.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-random.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-rc2.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-resolve.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-revocation.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-sha1.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-sha2.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-socket-default.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-sshkey.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-stroke.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-unbound.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-unity.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-updown.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-vici.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-whitelist.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-x509.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-xauth-eap.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-xauth-generic.a
          usr/local/lib/ipsec/plugins/libstrongswan-xcbc.a
          usr/local/lib/libgio-2.0.a
          usr/local/lib/libglib-2.0.a
          usr/local/lib/libgmodule-2.0.a
          usr/local/lib/libgobject-2.0.a
          usr/local/lib/libgthread-2.0.a
          usr/local/lib/librrd.a
          usr/local/lib/php/20131226/pfSense.so
          usr/local/lib/php/20131226/rrd.so
          usr/local/lib/php/20131226/suhosin.so
          usr/local/lib/php/20131226/xdebug.so
          usr/local/lib/php/20131226/zmq.so
          usr/local/sbin/dnssec-dsfromkey
          usr/local/sbin/dnssec-importkey
          usr/local/sbin/dnssec-keyfromlabel
          usr/local/sbin/dnssec-keygen
          usr/local/sbin/dnssec-revoke
          usr/local/sbin/dnssec-settime
          usr/local/sbin/dnssec-signzone
          usr/local/sbin/dnssec-verify
          
          

          Until this is addressed with a new release, I don't think one should trust anything short of a full install.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • dennypageD
            dennypage
            last edited by

            Bug report filed: https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/6858

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • J
              jwt Netgate
              last edited by

              Thanks for the bug report.  Assigned, bumped priority.

              Will get this looked at early tomorrow.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • dennypageD
                dennypage
                last edited by

                Thanks Jim. Much appreciated.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • rbgargaR
                  rbgarga Developer Netgate Administrator
                  last edited by

                  Actually it's not a bug, it's expected and it's how pkg is designed to work.

                  When we moved to 2.3.2_1 we cherry-picked some package upgrades from FreeBSD ports tree since these upgrades fixes some vulnerabilities listed by 'pkg audit'. Following ports were updated:

                  php56
                  perl5
                  libxml2
                  libidn
                  curl

                  Due to these updates, when poudriere starts to build our ports set, it deletes all packages that depends of above listed packages and rebuild them. At this time, strongswan was rebuilt as many other ports, and a new package with same version was created.

                  This new package was included in 2.3.2-p1, so when you install it directly you will see the new package, and checksum differs.

                  During upgrade, since any shared library version has bumped, pkg understands packages like strongswan don't need to be reinstalled, because libraries it depends didn't have any ABI changes. Then you end up with the version built for 2.3.2.

                  If you compare the built date for strongswan package on both systems you will see this:

                  • 2.3.2
                  
                  [2.3.2-RELEASE][admin@pf232.home]/root: pkg info strongswan
                  strongswan-5.5.0
                  Name           : strongswan
                  Version        : 5.5.0
                  Installed on   : Wed Jul 20 15:39:17 2016 UTC
                  Origin         : security/strongswan
                  Architecture   : freebsd:10:x86:64
                  Prefix         : /usr/local
                  Categories     : security
                  Licenses       : GPLv2
                  Maintainer     : strongswan@nanoteq.com
                  WWW            : http://www.strongswan.org
                  Comment        : Open Source IKEv2 IPsec-based VPN solution
                  
                  
                  • 2.3.2-p1
                  
                  [2.3.2-RELEASE][admin@pfs232-1.home]/root: pkg info strongswan
                  strongswan-5.5.0
                  Name           : strongswan
                  Version        : 5.5.0
                  Installed on   : Mon Oct 17 23:14:33 2016 UTC
                  Origin         : security/strongswan
                  Architecture   : freebsd:10:x86:64
                  Prefix         : /usr/local
                  Categories     : security
                  Licenses       : GPLv2
                  Maintainer     : strongswan@nanoteq.com
                  WWW            : http://www.strongswan.org
                  Comment        : Open Source IKEv2 IPsec-based VPN solution
                  
                  

                  Renato Botelho

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • dennypageD
                    dennypage
                    last edited by

                    Renato, thank you for the write up.

                    Does this cover file /usr/local/lib/php/20131226/suhosin.so? This shared object is the one that triggered the original crash report. It is different in 2.3.2_1 install vs upgrade. Was package php-suhosin-0.9.38 also part of the cherry picking?

                    Is there another explanation for the crash report?

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • rbgargaR
                      rbgarga Developer Netgate Administrator
                      last edited by

                      @dennypage:

                      Renato, thank you for the write up.

                      Does this cover file /usr/local/lib/php/20131226/suhosin.so? This shared object is the one that triggered the original crash report. It is different in 2.3.2_1 install vs upgrade. Was package php-suhosin-0.9.38 also part of the cherry picking?

                      Is there another explanation for the crash report?

                      php-suhosin was rebuilt because lang/php56 was updated. But the original issue is a problem we faced sometimes on pfSense 2.3. In some hard-to-reproduce circumstances extensions.ini ended up out of order and suhosin was loaded before session, that is a dependency.

                      The real fix for this was done in FreeBSD ports and is already on 2.4 and 2.3.3 snapshots. It was reworked the way PHP extensions create their config files to make sure they are loaded in correct order.

                      Renato Botelho

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • dennypageD
                        dennypage
                        last edited by

                        Thank you Renato, I really appreciate you checking this out and providing such a thorough explanation.

                        I am looking forward to the new version of FreeBSD ports.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • jimpJ
                          jimp Rebel Alliance Developer Netgate
                          last edited by

                          Back today and getting caught up. Looks like this was what I suspected to start with, but with the added twist that the same version of the package could have different files. A red herring, but an interesting red herring.

                          I, more than most, am happy to see FreeBSD finally have a way to deal with the extension ordering in PHP. I've been ranting about it being broken (and advocating to get a fix in) for over 10 years now (as of yesterday).

                          Remember: Upvote with the 👍 button for any user/post you find to be helpful, informative, or deserving of recognition!

                          Need help fast? Netgate Global Support!

                          Do not Chat/PM for help!

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • dennypageD
                            dennypage
                            last edited by

                            @jimp:

                            I, more than most, am happy to see FreeBSD finally have a way to deal with the extension ordering in PHP. I've been ranting about it being broken (and advocating to get a fix in) for over 10 years now (as of yesterday).

                            Happy Anniversary

                            :)

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • First post
                              Last post
                            Copyright 2025 Rubicon Communications LLC (Netgate). All rights reserved.