TensorFlow is an end-to-end open source platform for machine learning. An attacker can cause a runtime division by zero error and denial of service in tf.raw_ops.FractionalAvgPool
. This is because the implementation(https://github.com/tensorflow/tensorflow/blob/acc8ee69f5f46f92a3f1f11230f49c6ac266f10c/tensorflow/core/kernels/fractionalavgpoolop.cc#L85-L89) computes a divisor quantity by dividing two user controlled values. The user controls the values of input_size[i]
and pooling_ratio_[i]
(via the value.shape()
and pooling_ratio
arguments). If the value in input_size[i]
is smaller than the pooling_ratio_[i]
, then the floor operation results in output_size[i]
being 0. The DCHECK_GT
line is a no-op outside of debug mode, so in released versions of TF this does not trigger. Later, these computed values are used as arguments(https://github.com/tensorflow/tensorflow/blob/acc8ee69f5f46f92a3f1f11230f49c6ac266f10c/tensorflow/core/kernels/fractionalavgpoolop.cc#L96-L99) to GeneratePoolingSequence
(https://github.com/tensorflow/tensorflow/blob/acc8ee69f5f46f92a3f1f11230f49c6ac266f10c/tensorflow/core/kernels/fractionalpoolcommon.cc#L100-L108). There, the first computation is a division in a modulo operation. Since output_length
can be 0, this results in runtime crashing. The fix will be included in TensorFlow 2.5.0. We will also cherrypick this commit on TensorFlow 2.4.2, TensorFlow 2.3.3, TensorFlow 2.2.3 and TensorFlow 2.1.4, as these are also affected and still in supported range.