4

I am attempting to create a file with a unique name and write data to it in the background.

mktemp says Whenever it is possible, mkstemp() should be used instead, since it does not have the race condition.

Using mkstemp results in an open file descriptor, so dispatch_write seems to be obvious.

Now NSData must be wrapped in a dispatch_data_t using dispatch_data_create. Care must be taken to free memory that needs to be freed, and retain memory that must be retained. Under ARC, this is less than obvious.

+ (void) createUnique:(NSData*)content name:(NSString*)name
            extension:(NSString*)extension
           completion:(void (^)(NSURL* url, NSError* error))completion {
    dispatch_queue_t queue = dispatch_get_global_queue(
                                       DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_BACKGROUND, 0);
    dispatch_data_t data = dispatch_data_create(content.bytes, content.length,
                                                queue, ^{});
    // dispatch_data_create() copies the buffer if DISPATCH_DATA_DESTRUCTOR_DEFAULT
    // (= NULL) is specified, and attempts to free the buffer if
    // DISPATCH_DATA_DESTRUCTOR_FREE is specified, so an empty destructor is
    // specified.
    dispatch_fd_t descriptor;

    // Ignore details of creating the template C string
    strcpy(nameCString, templateCString);
    descriptor = mkstemps(nameCString, extensionLength);
    free(nameCString);

    if (descriptor != -1) {
        dispatch_write(descriptor, data, queue,
                       ^(dispatch_data_t data, int error) {
                           NSData* strongContent = content;
                           // Will this keep the NSData reference until the
                           // write is finished?

                           if (error) {
                               completion(nil, [NSError
                                                errorWithDomain:NSURLErrorDomain
                                                code:error userInfo:nil]);
                           } else {
                               // Ignore details of getting path from nameCString.
                               completion([NSURL URLWithString:path], nil);
                           }

                           // How does the file get closed?
                       });
    } else {
        completion(nil, [NSError errorWithDomain:NSURLErrorDomain code:errno
                                        userInfo:nil]);
    }
}

So the questions are:

  1. Is this necessary at all? Should mktemp be used with NSData's writeToFile:options:error: and not worry about security/race conditions?
  2. Is the call to dispatch_data_create OK with the empty destructor to avoid unnecessary copying (keep a pointer to the NSData buffer)?
  3. Can the descriptor opened by mkstemps be used with dispatch_write?
  4. Will keeping a reference to the NSData keep the dispatch_data_t valid? Is this necessary? What is ARC doing here?
  5. How is the file closed? dispatch_io_close?

1 Answer 1

5

This isn't really what dispatch_write (and dispatch_data in general) is for. As you've discovered, dispatch_data is focused on power and performance, not ease of use. And you have such a simple problem.

Also note that the race condition you're discussing has to do with an active attacker who is rapidly creating files in your temp directory. The attack goes like this:

  • You are running as some privileged user. Eve (the attacker) is running an unprivileged user.
  • You want to make a temporary file in /tmp, which both you and Eve can read and write.
  • You look in /tmp and see that some filename does not exist
  • Before you can create the file, Eve creates the file using exactly the name you just checked. She makes the file world writable (but it's owned by Eve).
  • You now open the file and start writing to it, but it's still owned by Eve.
  • Now Eve can read and modify your data. This may be translated into a privilege escalation.

This is a real attack on Unix systems. It should be obvious that it is not a real attack on iOS systems. That doesn't mean you shouldn't use mkstemp. You should. But it's important to understand what you're protecting against. This isn't a "oops; I collided with myself" race condition unless you're making hundreds of files a second (don't do that).

OK, so how do you do it? Matt Gallagher has a great example in Cocoa with Love: Temporary files and folders in Cocoa. Copying here for future searchers, but I highly recommend the article:

NSString *tempFileTemplate =
    [NSTemporaryDirectory() stringByAppendingPathComponent:@"myapptempfile.XXXXXX"];
const char *tempFileTemplateCString =
    [tempFileTemplate fileSystemRepresentation];
char *tempFileNameCString = (char *)malloc(strlen(tempFileTemplateCString) + 1);
strcpy(tempFileNameCString, tempFileTemplateCString);
int fileDescriptor = mkstemp(tempFileNameCString);

if (fileDescriptor == -1)
{
    // handle file creation failure
}

// This is the file name if you need to access the file by name, otherwise you can remove
// this line.
tempFileName =
    [[NSFileManager defaultManager]
        stringWithFileSystemRepresentation:tempFileNameCString
        length:strlen(tempFileNameCString)];

free(tempFileNameCString);
tempFileHandle =
    [[NSFileHandle alloc]
        initWithFileDescriptor:fileDescriptor
        closeOnDealloc:NO];

Now, at the end of this, you see that Matt has created both a filename and an NSFileHandle. Either is fine to use. You can use NSDatamethods to write to the filename, or you can use NSFileHandle write methods. There is no race condition at this point to use the file name, because the file already exists and is owned by you.

To write this in the background, just stick it in a dispatch_async block.

2
  • Your post cleared up most of my questions. However, I'm still unsure about the fileDescriptor. If I use writeToFile:options:error: with tempFileName, the file descriptor remains open. I need to use close(fileDescriptor). I'm hoping that calling mkstemps() on the main queue and close() on a background queue is OK.
    – Matt
    May 28, 2015 at 2:08
  • Yes. You can close a file handle on a different queue.
    – Rob Napier
    May 28, 2015 at 2:46

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.