tor/src/common/util.c

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/* Copyright 2003 Roger Dingledine */
/* See LICENSE for licensing information */
/* $Id$ */
/**
* \file util.c
*
* \brief Common functions for strings, IO, network, data structures,
* process control.
**/
/* This is required on rh7 to make strptime not complain.
*/
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include "orconfig.h"
2004-11-04 05:01:19 +01:00
#include "util.h"
#include "log.h"
#include "crypto.h"
#ifdef MS_WINDOWS
#include <io.h>
#include <direct.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_CTYPE_H
#include <ctype.h>
#endif
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <assert.h>
#ifdef HAVE_NETINET_IN_H
#include <netinet/in.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_ARPA_INET_H
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_ERRNO_H
#include <errno.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_LIMITS_H
#include <limits.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_LIMITS_H
#include <sys/limits.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_MACHINE_LIMITS_H
#ifndef __FreeBSD__
/* FreeBSD has a bug where it complains that this file is obsolete,
and I should migrate to using sys/limits. It complains even when
I include both. */
#include <machine/limits.h>
#endif
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H
#include <sys/types.h> /* Must be included before sys/stat.h for Ultrix */
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_SOCKET_H
#include <sys/socket.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_NETDB_H
#include <netdb.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_TIME_H
#include <sys/time.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
#include <unistd.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_STAT_H
#include <sys/stat.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_FCNTL_H
#include <sys/fcntl.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_FCNTL_H
#include <fcntl.h>
#endif
/* used by inet_addr, not defined on solaris anywhere!? */
#ifndef INADDR_NONE
#define INADDR_NONE ((unsigned long) -1)
#endif
#ifndef O_BINARY
#define O_BINARY 0
#endif
2004-11-09 20:30:50 +01:00
#ifndef O_TEXT
#define O_TEXT 0
#endif
/* =====
* Memory management
* ===== */
/** Allocate a chunk of <b>size</b> bytes of memory, and return a pointer to
* result. On error, log and terminate the process. (Same as malloc(size),
* but never returns NULL.)
*/
void *tor_malloc(size_t size) {
void *result;
/* Some libcs don't do the right thing on size==0. Override them. */
if (size==0) {
size=1;
}
result = malloc(size);
if(!result) {
log_fn(LOG_ERR, "Out of memory. Dying.");
exit(1);
}
// memset(result,'X',size); /* deadbeef to encourage bugs */
return result;
}
/* Allocate a chunk of <b>size</b> bytes of memory, fill the memory with
* zero bytes, and return a pointer to the result. Log and terminate
* the process on error. (Same as calloc(size,1), but never returns NULL.)
*/
void *tor_malloc_zero(size_t size) {
void *result = tor_malloc(size);
memset(result, 0, size);
return result;
}
/** Change the size of the memory block pointed to by <b>ptr</b> to <b>size</b>
* bytes long; return the new memory block. On error, log and
* terminate. (Like realloc(ptr,size), but never returns NULL.)
*/
void *tor_realloc(void *ptr, size_t size) {
void *result;
result = realloc(ptr, size);
if (!result) {
log_fn(LOG_ERR, "Out of memory. Dying.");
exit(1);
}
return result;
}
/** Return a newly allocated copy of the NUL-terminated string s. On
* error, log and terminate. (Like strdup(s), but never returns
* NULL.)
*/
char *tor_strdup(const char *s) {
char *dup;
tor_assert(s);
dup = strdup(s);
if(!dup) {
log_fn(LOG_ERR,"Out of memory. Dying.");
exit(1);
}
return dup;
}
/** Allocate and return a new string containing the first <b>n</b>
* characters of <b>s</b>. If <b>s</b> is longer than <b>n</b>
* characters, only the first <b>n</b> are copied. The result is
* always NUL-terminated. (Like strndup(s,n), but never returns
* NULL.)
*/
char *tor_strndup(const char *s, size_t n) {
char *dup;
tor_assert(s);
dup = tor_malloc(n+1);
/* Performance note: Ordinarly we prefer strlcpy to strncpy. But
* this function gets called a whole lot, and platform strncpy is
* much faster than strlcpy when strlen(s) is much longer than n.
*/
2004-11-12 22:14:51 +01:00
strncpy(dup, s, n);
dup[n]='\0';
return dup;
}
/* =====
* String manipulation
* ===== */
/** Remove from the string <b>s</b> every character which appears in
* <b>strip</b>. Return the number of characters removed. */
int tor_strstrip(char *s, const char *strip)
{
char *read = s;
while (*read) {
if (strchr(strip, *read)) {
++read;
} else {
*s++ = *read++;
}
}
*s = '\0';
return read-s;
}
/** Set the <b>dest_len</b>-byte buffer <b>buf</b> to contain the
* string <b>s</b>, with the string <b>insert</b> inserted after every
* <b>n</b> characters. Return 0 on success, -1 on failure.
*
* If <b>rule</b> is ALWAYS_TERMINATE, then always end the string with
* <b>insert</b>, even if its length is not a multiple of <b>n</b>. If
* <b>rule</b> is NEVER_TERMINATE, then never end the string with
* <b>insert</b>, even if its length <i>is</i> a multiple of <b>n</b>.
* If <b>rule</b> is TERMINATE_IF_EVEN, then end the string with <b>insert</b>
* exactly when its length <i>is</i> a multiple of <b>n</b>.
*/
int tor_strpartition(char *dest, size_t dest_len,
const char *s, const char *insert, size_t n,
part_finish_rule_t rule)
{
char *destp;
size_t len_in, len_out, len_ins;
int is_even, remaining;
tor_assert(s);
tor_assert(insert);
tor_assert(n > 0);
len_in = strlen(s);
len_ins = strlen(insert);
len_out = len_in + (len_in/n)*len_ins;
is_even = (len_in%n) == 0;
switch(rule)
{
case ALWAYS_TERMINATE:
if (!is_even) len_out += len_ins;
break;
case NEVER_TERMINATE:
if (is_even && len_in) len_out -= len_ins;
break;
case TERMINATE_IF_EVEN:
break;
}
if (dest_len < len_out+1)
return -1;
destp = dest;
remaining = len_in;
while(remaining) {
strncpy(destp, s, n);
remaining -= n;
if (remaining < 0) {
if (rule == ALWAYS_TERMINATE)
strcpy(destp+n+remaining,insert);
break;
} else if (remaining == 0 && rule == NEVER_TERMINATE) {
*(destp+n) = '\0';
break;
}
strcpy(destp+n, insert);
s += n;
destp += n+len_ins;
}
tor_assert(len_out == strlen(dest));
return 0;
}
/** Return a pointer to a NUL-terminated hexidecimal string encoding
* the first <b>fromlen</b> bytes of <b>from</b>. (fromlen must be \<= 32.) The
* result does not need to be deallocated, but repeated calls to
* hex_str will trash old results.
*/
const char *hex_str(const char *from, size_t fromlen)
{
static char buf[65];
if (fromlen>(sizeof(buf)-1)/2)
fromlen = (sizeof(buf)-1)/2;
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base16_encode(buf,sizeof(buf),from,fromlen);
return buf;
}
/** Convert all alphabetic characters in the nul-terminated string <b>s</b> to
* lowercase. */
void tor_strlower(char *s)
{
while (*s) {
*s = tolower(*s);
++s;
}
}
/* Compares the first strlen(s2) characters of s1 with s2. Returns as for
* strcmp.
*/
int strcmpstart(const char *s1, const char *s2)
{
size_t n = strlen(s2);
return strncmp(s1, s2, n);
}
/* Compares the last strlen(s2) characters of s1 with s2. Returns as for
* strcmp.
*/
int strcmpend(const char *s1, const char *s2)
{
size_t n1 = strlen(s1), n2 = strlen(s2);
if (n2>n1)
return strcmp(s1,s2);
else
return strncmp(s1+(n1-n2), s2, n2);
}
/** Return a pointer to the first char of s that is not whitespace and
* not a comment, or to the terminating NUL if no such character exists.
*/
const char *eat_whitespace(const char *s) {
tor_assert(s);
while(isspace((int)*s) || *s == '#') {
while(isspace((int)*s))
s++;
if(*s == '#') { /* read to a \n or \0 */
while(*s && *s != '\n')
s++;
if(!*s)
return s;
}
}
return s;
}
/** Return a pointer to the first char of s that is not a space or a tab,
* or to the terminating NUL if no such character exists. */
const char *eat_whitespace_no_nl(const char *s) {
while(*s == ' ' || *s == '\t')
++s;
return s;
}
/** Return a pointer to the first char of s that is whitespace or <b>#</b>,
* or to the terminating NUL if no such character exists.
*/
const char *find_whitespace(const char *s) {
tor_assert(s);
while(*s && !isspace((int)*s) && *s != '#')
s++;
return s;
}
#define CHECK_STRTOX_RESULT() \
/* Was at least one character converted? */ \
if (endptr == s) \
goto err; \
/* Were there unexpected unconverted characters? */ \
if (!next && *endptr) \
goto err; \
/* Is r within limits? */ \
if (r < min || r > max) \
goto err; \
if (ok) *ok = 1; \
if (next) *next = endptr; \
return r; \
err: \
if (ok) *ok = 0; \
if (next) *next = endptr; \
return 0;
/** Extract a long from the start of s, in the given numeric base. If
* there is unconverted data and next is provided, set *next to the
* first unconverted character. An error has occurred if no characters
* are converted; or if there are unconverted characters and next is NULL; or
* if the parsed value is not between min and max. When no error occurs,
* return the parsed value and set *ok (if provided) to 1. When an error
* ocurs, return 0 and set *ok (if provided) to 0.
*/
long
tor_parse_long(const char *s, int base, long min, long max,
int *ok, char **next)
{
char *endptr;
long r;
r = strtol(s, &endptr, base);
CHECK_STRTOX_RESULT();
}
unsigned long
tor_parse_ulong(const char *s, int base, unsigned long min,
unsigned long max, int *ok, char **next)
{
char *endptr;
unsigned long r;
r = strtoul(s, &endptr, base);
CHECK_STRTOX_RESULT();
}
/** Only base 10 is guaranteed to work for now. */
uint64_t
tor_parse_uint64(const char *s, int base, uint64_t min,
uint64_t max, int *ok, char **next)
{
char *endptr;
uint64_t r;
#ifdef HAVE_STRTOULL
r = (uint64_t)strtoull(s, &endptr, base);
#elif defined(MS_WINDOWS)
#if _MSC_VER < 1300
tor_assert(base <= 10);
r = (uint64_t)_atoi64(s);
endptr = (char*)s;
while(isspace(*endptr)) endptr++;
while(isdigit(*endptr)) endptr++;
#else
r = (uint64_t)_strtoui64(s, &endptr, base);
#endif
#elif SIZEOF_LONG == 8
r = (uint64_t)strtoul(s, &endptr, base);
#else
#error "I don't know how to parse 64-bit numbers."
#endif
CHECK_STRTOX_RESULT();
}
void base16_encode(char *dest, size_t destlen, const char *src, size_t srclen)
{
const char *end;
char *cp;
tor_assert(destlen >= srclen*2+1);
cp = dest;
end = src+srclen;
while (src<end) {
sprintf(cp,"%02X",*(const uint8_t*)src);
++src;
cp += 2;
}
*cp = '\0';
}
static const char HEX_DIGITS[] = "0123456789ABCDEFabcdef";
static INLINE int hex_decode_digit(char c)
{
const char *cp;
int n;
cp = strchr(HEX_DIGITS, c);
if (!cp)
return -1;
n = cp-HEX_DIGITS;
if (n<=15)
return n; /* digit or uppercase */
else
return n-6; /* lowercase */
}
int base16_decode(char *dest, size_t destlen, const char *src, size_t srclen)
{
const char *end;
int v1,v2;
if ((srclen % 2) != 0)
return -1;
if (destlen < srclen/2)
return -1;
end = src+srclen;
while (src<end) {
v1 = hex_decode_digit(*src);
v2 = hex_decode_digit(*(src+1));
if(v1<0||v2<0)
return -1;
*(uint8_t*)dest = (v1<<4)|v2;
++dest;
src+=2;
}
return 0;
}
/* =====
* Time
* ===== */
/** Return the number of microseconds elapsed between *start and *end.
* If start is after end, return 0.
*/
long
tv_udiff(struct timeval *start, struct timeval *end)
{
long udiff;
long secdiff = end->tv_sec - start->tv_sec;
if (secdiff+1 > LONG_MAX/1000000) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "comparing times too far apart.");
return LONG_MAX;
}
udiff = secdiff*1000000L + (end->tv_usec - start->tv_usec);
if(udiff < 0) {
log_fn(LOG_INFO, "start (%ld.%ld) is after end (%ld.%ld). Returning 0.",
(long)start->tv_sec, (long)start->tv_usec, (long)end->tv_sec, (long)end->tv_usec);
return 0;
2003-04-17 01:22:05 +02:00
}
return udiff;
}
/** Return -1 if *a \< *b, 0 if *a==*b, and 1 if *a \> *b.
*/
int tv_cmp(struct timeval *a, struct timeval *b) {
if (a->tv_sec > b->tv_sec)
return 1;
if (a->tv_sec < b->tv_sec)
return -1;
if (a->tv_usec > b->tv_usec)
return 1;
if (a->tv_usec < b->tv_usec)
return -1;
return 0;
}
/** Increment *a by the number of seconds and microseconds in *b.
*/
void tv_add(struct timeval *a, struct timeval *b) {
a->tv_usec += b->tv_usec;
a->tv_sec += b->tv_sec + (a->tv_usec / 1000000);
a->tv_usec %= 1000000;
}
/** Increment *a by <b>ms</b> milliseconds.
*/
void tv_addms(struct timeval *a, long ms) {
a->tv_usec += (ms * 1000) % 1000000;
a->tv_sec += ((ms * 1000) / 1000000) + (a->tv_usec / 1000000);
a->tv_usec %= 1000000;
}
#define IS_LEAPYEAR(y) (!(y % 4) && ((y % 100) || !(y % 400)))
static int n_leapdays(int y1, int y2) {
--y1;
--y2;
return (y2/4 - y1/4) - (y2/100 - y1/100) + (y2/400 - y1/400);
}
/** Number of days per month in non-leap year; used by tor_timegm. */
static const int days_per_month[] =
{ 31, 28, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31};
/** Return a time_t given a struct tm. The result is given in GMT, and
* does not account for leap seconds.
*/
time_t tor_timegm (struct tm *tm) {
/* This is a pretty ironclad timegm implementation, snarfed from Python2.2.
* It's way more brute-force than fiddling with tzset().
*/
time_t ret;
unsigned long year, days, hours, minutes;
int i;
year = tm->tm_year + 1900;
tor_assert(year >= 1970);
tor_assert(tm->tm_mon >= 0);
tor_assert(tm->tm_mon <= 11);
days = 365 * (year-1970) + n_leapdays(1970,year);
for (i = 0; i < tm->tm_mon; ++i)
days += days_per_month[i];
if (tm->tm_mon > 1 && IS_LEAPYEAR(year))
++days;
days += tm->tm_mday - 1;
hours = days*24 + tm->tm_hour;
minutes = hours*60 + tm->tm_min;
ret = minutes*60 + tm->tm_sec;
return ret;
}
/* strftime is locale-specific, so we need to replace those parts */
static const char *WEEKDAY_NAMES[] =
{ "Sun", "Mon", "Tue", "Wed", "Thu", "Fri", "Sat" };
static const char *MONTH_NAMES[] =
{ "Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr", "May", "Jun",
"Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec" };
void format_rfc1123_time(char *buf, time_t t) {
struct tm *tm = gmtime(&t);
strftime(buf, RFC1123_TIME_LEN+1, "___, %d ___ %Y %H:%M:%S GMT", tm);
tor_assert(tm->tm_wday >= 0);
tor_assert(tm->tm_wday <= 6);
memcpy(buf, WEEKDAY_NAMES[tm->tm_wday], 3);
tor_assert(tm->tm_wday >= 0);
tor_assert(tm->tm_mon <= 11);
memcpy(buf+8, MONTH_NAMES[tm->tm_mon], 3);
}
int parse_rfc1123_time(const char *buf, time_t *t) {
struct tm tm;
char month[4];
char weekday[4];
int i, m;
if (strlen(buf) != RFC1123_TIME_LEN)
return -1;
memset(&tm, 0, sizeof(tm));
if (sscanf(buf, "%3s, %d %3s %d %d:%d:%d GMT", weekday,
&tm.tm_mday, month, &tm.tm_year, &tm.tm_hour,
&tm.tm_min, &tm.tm_sec) < 7) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Got invalid RFC1123 time \"%s\"", buf);
return -1;
}
m = -1;
for (i = 0; i < 12; ++i) {
if (!strcmp(month, MONTH_NAMES[i])) {
m = i;
break;
}
}
if (m<0) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Got invalid RFC1123 time \"%s\"", buf);
return -1;
}
tm.tm_mon = m;
tm.tm_year -= 1900;
*t = tor_timegm(&tm);
return 0;
}
void format_local_iso_time(char *buf, time_t t) {
strftime(buf, ISO_TIME_LEN+1, "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", localtime(&t));
}
void format_iso_time(char *buf, time_t t) {
strftime(buf, ISO_TIME_LEN+1, "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", gmtime(&t));
}
int parse_iso_time(const char *cp, time_t *t) {
struct tm st_tm;
#ifdef HAVE_STRPTIME
if (!strptime(cp, "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", &st_tm)) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Published time was unparseable"); return -1;
}
#else
unsigned int year=0, month=0, day=0, hour=100, minute=100, second=100;
if (sscanf(cp, "%u-%u-%u %u:%u:%u", &year, &month,
&day, &hour, &minute, &second) < 6) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Published time was unparseable"); return -1;
}
if (year < 1970 || month < 1 || month > 12 || day < 1 || day > 31 ||
hour > 23 || minute > 59 || second > 61) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Published time was nonsensical"); return -1;
}
st_tm.tm_year = year;
st_tm.tm_mon = month-1;
st_tm.tm_mday = day;
st_tm.tm_hour = hour;
st_tm.tm_min = minute;
st_tm.tm_sec = second;
#endif
*t = tor_timegm(&st_tm);
return 0;
}
/* =====
* File helpers
* ===== */
/** Write <b>count</b> bytes from <b>buf</b> to <b>fd</b>. <b>isSocket</b>
* must be 1 if fd was returned by socket() or accept(), and 0 if fd
* was returned by open(). Return the number of bytes written, or -1
* on error. Only use if fd is a blocking fd. */
int write_all(int fd, const char *buf, size_t count, int isSocket) {
size_t written = 0;
int result;
while(written != count) {
if (isSocket)
result = send(fd, buf+written, count-written, 0);
else
result = write(fd, buf+written, count-written);
if(result<0)
return -1;
written += result;
}
return count;
}
/** Read from <b>fd</b> to <b>buf</b>, until we get <b>count</b> bytes
* or reach the end of the file.
* isSocket must be 1 if fd
* was returned by socket() or accept(), and 0 if fd was returned by
* open(). Return the number of bytes read, or -1 on error. Only use
* if fd is a blocking fd. */
int read_all(int fd, char *buf, size_t count, int isSocket) {
size_t numread = 0;
int result;
while(numread != count) {
if (isSocket)
result = recv(fd, buf+numread, count-numread, 0);
else
result = read(fd, buf+numread, count-numread);
if(result<0)
return -1;
else if (result == 0)
break;
numread += result;
}
return numread;
}
/*
* Filesystem operations.
*/
/** Return FN_ERROR if filename can't be read, FN_NOENT if it doesn't
* exist, FN_FILE if it is a regular file, or FN_DIR if it's a
* directory. */
file_status_t file_status(const char *fname)
{
struct stat st;
if (stat(fname, &st)) {
if (errno == ENOENT) {
return FN_NOENT;
}
return FN_ERROR;
}
if (st.st_mode & S_IFDIR)
return FN_DIR;
else if (st.st_mode & S_IFREG)
return FN_FILE;
else
return FN_ERROR;
}
/** Check whether dirname exists and is private. If yes return 0. If
* it does not exist, and check==CPD_CREATE is set, try to create it
* and return 0 on success. If it does not exist, and
* check==CPD_CHECK, and we think we can create it, return 0. Else
* return -1. */
int check_private_dir(const char *dirname, cpd_check_t check)
{
int r;
struct stat st;
tor_assert(dirname);
if (stat(dirname, &st)) {
if (errno != ENOENT) {
log(LOG_WARN, "Directory %s cannot be read: %s", dirname,
strerror(errno));
return -1;
}
if (check == CPD_NONE) {
2003-10-10 03:48:03 +02:00
log(LOG_WARN, "Directory %s does not exist.", dirname);
return -1;
} else if (check == CPD_CREATE) {
log(LOG_INFO, "Creating directory %s", dirname);
#ifdef MS_WINDOWS
r = mkdir(dirname);
#else
r = mkdir(dirname, 0700);
#endif
if (r) {
log(LOG_WARN, "Error creating directory %s: %s", dirname,
strerror(errno));
return -1;
}
}
/* XXXX In the case where check==CPD_CHECK, we should look at the
* parent directory a little harder. */
return 0;
}
if (!(st.st_mode & S_IFDIR)) {
2003-10-10 03:48:03 +02:00
log(LOG_WARN, "%s is not a directory", dirname);
return -1;
}
#ifndef MS_WINDOWS
if (st.st_uid != getuid()) {
log(LOG_WARN, "%s is not owned by this UID (%d). You must fix this to proceed.", dirname, (int)getuid());
return -1;
}
if (st.st_mode & 0077) {
2003-10-10 03:48:03 +02:00
log(LOG_WARN, "Fixing permissions on directory %s", dirname);
if (chmod(dirname, 0700)) {
log(LOG_WARN, "Could not chmod directory %s: %s", dirname,
strerror(errno));
return -1;
} else {
return 0;
}
}
#endif
return 0;
}
/** Create a file named <b>fname</b> with the contents <b>str</b>. Overwrite the
* previous <b>fname</b> if possible. Return 0 on success, -1 on failure.
*
* This function replaces the old file atomically, if possible.
*/
int
write_str_to_file(const char *fname, const char *str, int bin)
{
#ifdef MS_WINDOWS
if (!bin && strchr(str, '\r')) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN,
"How odd. Writing a string that does contain CR already.");
}
#endif
return write_bytes_to_file(fname, str, strlen(str), bin);
}
/** As write_str_to_file, but does not assume a NUL-terminated *
* string. Instead, we write <b>len</b> bytes, starting at <b>str</b>. */
int write_bytes_to_file(const char *fname, const char *str, size_t len,
int bin)
{
char tempname[1024];
int fd;
int result;
if ((strlcpy(tempname,fname,1024) >= 1024) ||
(strlcat(tempname,".tmp",1024) >= 1024)) {
log(LOG_WARN, "Filename %s.tmp too long (>1024 chars)", fname);
return -1;
}
2004-11-09 20:30:50 +01:00
if ((fd = open(tempname, O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_TRUNC|(bin?O_BINARY:O_TEXT), 0600))
< 0) {
log(LOG_WARN, "Couldn't open %s for writing: %s", tempname,
strerror(errno));
return -1;
}
result = write_all(fd, str, len, 0);
if(result < 0 || (size_t)result != len) {
2003-10-10 03:48:03 +02:00
log(LOG_WARN, "Error writing to %s: %s", tempname, strerror(errno));
close(fd);
2004-04-29 04:52:49 +02:00
return -1;
}
if (close(fd)) {
log(LOG_WARN,"Error flushing to %s: %s", tempname, strerror(errno));
return -1;
}
if (replace_file(tempname, fname)) {
2003-10-10 03:48:03 +02:00
log(LOG_WARN, "Error replacing %s: %s", fname, strerror(errno));
return -1;
}
return 0;
}
/** Read the contents of <b>filename</b> into a newly allocated string; return the
* string on success or NULL on failure.
*/
char *read_file_to_str(const char *filename, int bin) {
int fd; /* router file */
struct stat statbuf;
char *string;
int r;
tor_assert(filename);
if(stat(filename, &statbuf) < 0) {
log_fn(LOG_INFO,"Could not stat %s.",filename);
return NULL;
}
2004-11-09 20:30:50 +01:00
fd = open(filename,O_RDONLY|(bin?O_BINARY:O_TEXT),0);
if (fd<0) {
2003-10-10 03:48:03 +02:00
log_fn(LOG_WARN,"Could not open %s.",filename);
return NULL;
}
string = tor_malloc(statbuf.st_size+1);
r = read_all(fd,string,statbuf.st_size,0);
if (r<0) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN,"Error reading from file '%s': %s", filename,
strerror(errno));
tor_free(string);
close(fd);
return NULL;
}
string[r] = '\0'; /* NUL-terminate the result. */
if (bin && r != statbuf.st_size) {
/* If we're in binary mode, then we'd better have an exact match for
* size. Otherwise, win32 encoding may throw us off, and that's okay. */
log_fn(LOG_WARN,"Could read only %d of %ld bytes of file '%s'.",
r, (long)statbuf.st_size,filename);
tor_free(string);
close(fd);
return NULL;
}
#ifdef MS_WINDOWS
if (!bin && strchr(string, '\r')) {
2004-11-09 20:30:50 +01:00
log_fn(LOG_DEBUG, "We didn't convert CRLF to LF as well as we hoped when reading %s. Coping.",
filename);
2004-11-09 20:30:50 +01:00
tor_strstrip(string, "\r");
}
#endif
close(fd);
return string;
}
/** Given a string containing part of a configuration file or similar format,
* advance past comments and whitespace and try to parse a single line. If we
* parse a line successfully, set *<b>key_out</b> to the key portion and
* *<b>value_out</b> to the value portion of the line, and return a pointer to
* the start of the next line. If we run out of data, return a pointer to the
* end of the string. If we encounter an error, return NULL.
*
* NOTE: We modify <b>line</b> as we parse it, by inserting NULs to terminate
* the key and value.
*/
char *
parse_line_from_str(char *line, char **key_out, char **value_out)
{
char *key, *val, *cp;
tor_assert(key_out);
tor_assert(value_out);
*key_out = *value_out = key = val = NULL;
/* Skip until the first keyword. */
while (1) {
while (isspace(*line))
++line;
if (*line == '#') {
while (*line && *line != '\n')
++line;
} else {
break;
}
}
if (!*line) { /* End of string? */
*key_out = *value_out = NULL;
return line;
}
/* Skip until the next space. */
key = line;
while (*line && !isspace(*line) && *line != '#')
++line;
/* Skip until the value */
while (*line == ' ' || *line == '\t')
*line++ = '\0';
val = line;
/* Find the end of the line. */
while (*line && *line != '\n' && *line != '#')
++line;
if (*line == '\n')
cp = line++;
else {
cp = line-1;
}
while (cp>=val && isspace(*cp))
*cp-- = '\0';
if (*line == '#') {
do {
*line++ = '\0';
} while (*line && *line != '\n');
if (*line == '\n')
++line;
}
*key_out = key;
*value_out = val;
return line;
}
/** Expand any homedir prefix on 'filename'; return a newly allocated
* string. */
char *expand_filename(const char *filename)
{
tor_assert(filename);
if (*filename == '~') {
size_t len;
char *home, *result;
const char *rest;
if (filename[1] == '/' || filename[1] == '\0') {
home = getenv("HOME");
if (!home) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Couldn't find $HOME environment variable while expanding %s", filename);
return NULL;
}
home = tor_strdup(home);
rest = strlen(filename)>=2?(filename+2):NULL;
} else {
#ifdef HAVE_PWD_H
char *username, *slash;
slash = strchr(filename, '/');
if (slash)
username = tor_strndup(filename+1,slash-filename-1);
else
username = tor_strdup(filename+1);
if (!(home = get_user_homedir(username))) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN,"Couldn't get homedir for %s",username);
tor_free(username);
return NULL;
}
tor_free(username);
rest = slash ? (slash+1) : NULL;
#else
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Couldn't expend homedir on system without pwd.h");
return tor_strdup(filename);
#endif
}
tor_assert(home);
/* Remove trailing slash. */
if (strlen(home)>1 && !strcmpend(home,"/")) {
home[strlen(home)-1] = '\0';
}
/* Plus one for /, plus one for NUL.
2004-10-27 08:03:28 +02:00
* Round up to 16 in case we can't do math. */
len = strlen(home)+strlen(rest)+16;
result = tor_malloc(len);
tor_snprintf(result,len,"%s/%s",home,rest?rest:"");
tor_free(home);
return result;
} else {
return tor_strdup(filename);
}
}
/* =====
* Net helpers
* ===== */
/** Return true iff <b>ip</b> (in host order) is an IP reserved to localhost,
* or reserved for local networks by RFC 1918.
*/
int is_internal_IP(uint32_t ip) {
2004-03-15 05:00:11 +01:00
if (((ip & 0xff000000) == 0x0a000000) || /* 10/8 */
((ip & 0xff000000) == 0x00000000) || /* 0/8 */
((ip & 0xff000000) == 0x7f000000) || /* 127/8 */
((ip & 0xffff0000) == 0xa9fe0000) || /* 169.254/16 */
((ip & 0xfff00000) == 0xac100000) || /* 172.16/12 */
((ip & 0xffff0000) == 0xc0a80000)) /* 192.168/16 */
return 1;
return 0;
}
/** Return true iff <b>ip</b> (in host order) is judged to be on the
* same network as us. For now, check if it's an internal IP.
*
* XXX Also check if it's on the same class C network as our public IP.
*/
int is_local_IP(uint32_t ip) {
return is_internal_IP(ip);
}
/** Similar behavior to Unix gethostbyname: resolve <b>name</b>, and set
* *addr to the proper IP address, in network byte order. Returns 0
* on success, -1 on failure; 1 on transient failure.
*
* (This function exists because standard windows gethostbyname
* doesn't treat raw IP addresses properly.)
*/
int tor_lookup_hostname(const char *name, uint32_t *addr)
{
/* Perhaps eventually this should be replaced by a tor_getaddrinfo or
* something.
*/
struct in_addr iaddr;
struct hostent *ent;
tor_assert(addr);
if (!*name) {
/* Empty address is an error. */
return -1;
2004-07-07 01:29:34 +02:00
} else if (tor_inet_aton(name, &iaddr)) {
/* It's an IP. */
memcpy(addr, &iaddr.s_addr, 4);
return 0;
} else {
ent = gethostbyname(name);
if (ent) {
/* break to remind us if we move away from IPv4 */
tor_assert(ent->h_length == 4);
memcpy(addr, ent->h_addr, 4);
return 0;
}
memset(addr, 0, 4);
#ifdef MS_WINDOWS
return (WSAGetLastError() == WSATRY_AGAIN) ? 1 : -1;
#else
return (h_errno == TRY_AGAIN) ? 1 : -1;
#endif
}
}
/** Parse a string of the form "host[:port]" from <b>addrport</b>. If
* <b>address</b> is provided, set *<b>address</b> to a copy of the
* host portion of the string. If <b>addr</b> is provided, try to
* resolve the host portion of the string and store it into
* *<b>addr</b> (in host byte order). If <b>port</b> is provided,
* store the port number into *<b>port</b>, or 0 if no port is given.
* Return 0 on success, -1 on failure.
*/
int
parse_addr_port(const char *addrport, char **address, uint32_t *addr,
uint16_t *port)
{
const char *colon;
char *_address = NULL;
int _port;
int ok = 1;
tor_assert(addrport);
tor_assert(port);
colon = strchr(addrport, ':');
if (colon) {
_address = tor_strndup(addrport, colon-addrport);
_port = (int) tor_parse_long(colon+1,10,1,65535,NULL,NULL);
if (!_port) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Port '%s' out of range", colon+1);
ok = 0;
}
} else {
_address = tor_strdup(addrport);
_port = 0;
}
if (addr) {
/* There's an addr pointer, so we need to resolve the hostname. */
if (tor_lookup_hostname(_address,addr)) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Couldn't look up '%s'", _address);
ok = 0;
*addr = 0;
}
*addr = ntohl(*addr);
}
if (address && ok) {
*address = _address;
} else {
if (address)
*address = NULL;
tor_free(_address);
}
if (port)
*port = ok ? ((uint16_t) _port) : 0;
return ok ? 0 : -1;
}
/** Parse a string <b>s</b> in the format of
* (IP(/mask|/mask-bits)?|*):(*|port(-maxport)?), setting the various
* *out pointers as appropriate. Return 0 on success, -1 on failure.
*/
int
parse_addr_and_port_range(const char *s, uint32_t *addr_out,
uint32_t *mask_out, uint16_t *port_min_out,
uint16_t *port_max_out)
{
char *address;
char *mask, *port, *endptr;
struct in_addr in;
int bits;
tor_assert(s);
tor_assert(addr_out);
tor_assert(mask_out);
tor_assert(port_min_out);
tor_assert(port_max_out);
address = tor_strdup(s);
/* Break 'address' into separate strings.
*/
mask = strchr(address,'/');
port = strchr(mask?mask:address,':');
if (mask)
*mask++ = '\0';
if (port)
*port++ = '\0';
/* Now "address" is the IP|'*' part...
* "mask" is the Mask|Maskbits part...
* and "port" is the *|port|min-max part.
*/
if (strcmp(address,"*")==0) {
*addr_out = 0;
} else if (tor_inet_aton(address, &in) != 0) {
*addr_out = ntohl(in.s_addr);
} else {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Malformed IP %s in address pattern; rejecting.",address);
goto err;
}
if (!mask) {
if (strcmp(address,"*")==0)
*mask_out = 0;
else
*mask_out = 0xFFFFFFFFu;
} else {
endptr = NULL;
bits = (int) strtol(mask, &endptr, 10);
if (!*endptr) {
/* strtol handled the whole mask. */
if (bits < 0 || bits > 32) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Bad number of mask bits on address range; rejecting.");
goto err;
}
*mask_out = ~((1<<(32-bits))-1);
} else if (tor_inet_aton(mask, &in) != 0) {
*mask_out = ntohl(in.s_addr);
} else {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Malformed mask %s on address range; rejecting.",
mask);
goto err;
}
}
if (!port || strcmp(port, "*") == 0) {
*port_min_out = 1;
*port_max_out = 65535;
} else {
endptr = NULL;
*port_min_out = (uint16_t) tor_parse_long(port, 10, 1, 65535,
NULL, &endptr);
if (*endptr == '-') {
port = endptr+1;
endptr = NULL;
*port_max_out = (uint16_t) tor_parse_long(port, 10, 1, 65535, NULL,
&endptr);
if (*endptr || !*port_max_out) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Malformed port %s on address range rejecting.",
port);
}
} else if (*endptr || !*port_min_out) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Malformed port %s on address range; rejecting.",
port);
goto err;
} else {
*port_max_out = *port_min_out;
}
if (*port_min_out > *port_max_out) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN,"Insane port range on address policy; rejecting.");
goto err;
}
}
tor_free(address);
return 0;
err:
tor_free(address);
return -1;
}
/* =====
* Process helpers
* ===== */
#ifndef MS_WINDOWS
/* Based on code contributed by christian grothoff */
static int start_daemon_called = 0;
static int finish_daemon_called = 0;
static int daemon_filedes[2];
/** Start putting the process into daemon mode: fork and drop all resources
* except standard fds. The parent process never returns, but stays around
* until finish_daemon is called. (Note: it's safe to call this more
* than once: calls after the first are ignored.)
*/
void start_daemon(const char *desired_cwd)
{
pid_t pid;
if (start_daemon_called)
return;
start_daemon_called = 1;
if(!desired_cwd)
desired_cwd = "/";
/* Don't hold the wrong FS mounted */
if (chdir(desired_cwd) < 0) {
log_fn(LOG_ERR,"chdir to %s failed. Exiting.",desired_cwd);
exit(1);
}
pipe(daemon_filedes);
pid = fork();
if (pid < 0) {
log_fn(LOG_ERR,"fork failed. Exiting.");
exit(1);
}
if (pid) { /* Parent */
int ok;
char c;
close(daemon_filedes[1]); /* we only read */
ok = -1;
while (0 < read(daemon_filedes[0], &c, sizeof(char))) {
if (c == '.')
ok = 1;
}
fflush(stdout);
if (ok == 1)
exit(0);
else
exit(1); /* child reported error */
} else { /* Child */
close(daemon_filedes[0]); /* we only write */
pid = setsid(); /* Detach from controlling terminal */
/*
* Fork one more time, so the parent (the session group leader) can exit.
* This means that we, as a non-session group leader, can never regain a
* controlling terminal. This part is recommended by Stevens's
* _Advanced Programming in the Unix Environment_.
*/
if (fork() != 0) {
exit(0);
}
return;
}
}
/** Finish putting the process into daemon mode: drop standard fds, and tell
* the parent process to exit. (Note: it's safe to call this more than once:
* calls after the first are ignored. Calls start_daemon first if it hasn't
* been called already.)
*/
void finish_daemon(void)
{
int nullfd;
char c = '.';
if (finish_daemon_called)
return;
if (!start_daemon_called)
start_daemon(NULL);
finish_daemon_called = 1;
nullfd = open("/dev/null",
O_CREAT | O_RDWR | O_APPEND);
if (nullfd < 0) {
log_fn(LOG_ERR,"/dev/null can't be opened. Exiting.");
exit(1);
}
/* close fds linking to invoking terminal, but
* close usual incoming fds, but redirect them somewhere
* useful so the fds don't get reallocated elsewhere.
*/
if (dup2(nullfd,0) < 0 ||
dup2(nullfd,1) < 0 ||
dup2(nullfd,2) < 0) {
log_fn(LOG_ERR,"dup2 failed. Exiting.");
exit(1);
}
write(daemon_filedes[1], &c, sizeof(char)); /* signal success */
close(daemon_filedes[1]);
}
#else
/* defined(MS_WINDOWS) */
void start_daemon(const char *cp) {}
void finish_daemon(void) {}
#endif
/** Write the current process ID, followed by NL, into <b>filename</b>.
*/
void write_pidfile(char *filename) {
#ifndef MS_WINDOWS
FILE *pidfile;
if ((pidfile = fopen(filename, "w")) == NULL) {
log_fn(LOG_WARN, "Unable to open %s for writing: %s", filename,
strerror(errno));
} else {
fprintf(pidfile, "%d\n", (int)getpid());
fclose(pidfile);
}
#endif
}
/*
Local Variables:
mode:c
indent-tabs-mode:nil
c-basic-offset:2
End:
*/