Strip '\r' characters when reading text files on Unix.

This patch ensures that we strip "\r" characters on both Windows as well
as Unix when we read text files. This should prevent the issue where
some Tor state files have been moved from a Windows machine, and thus
contains CRLF line ending, to a Unix machine where only \n is needed.

We add a test-case to ensure that we handle this properly on all our
platforms.

See: https://bugs.torproject.org/tpo/core/tor/33781
This commit is contained in:
Alexander Færøy 2020-07-09 02:16:11 +00:00
parent c9751e2611
commit abe7196c53
3 changed files with 58 additions and 3 deletions

7
changes/bug33781 Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
o Minor bugfixes (compatibility):
- Strip '\r' characters when reading text files on Unix platforms.
This should resolve an issue where a relay operator migrates a relay from
Windows to Unix, but does not change the line ending of Tor's various state
files to match the platform, the CRLF line endings from Windows ends up leaking
into other files such as the extra-info document. Fixes bug 33781; bugfix on
0.0.9pre5.

View File

@ -685,7 +685,6 @@ read_file_to_str, (const char *filename, int flags, struct stat *stat_out))
}
string[r] = '\0'; /* NUL-terminate the result. */
#if defined(_WIN32) || defined(__CYGWIN__)
if (!bin && strchr(string, '\r')) {
log_debug(LD_FS, "We didn't convert CRLF to LF as well as we hoped "
"when reading %s. Coping.",
@ -695,8 +694,7 @@ read_file_to_str, (const char *filename, int flags, struct stat *stat_out))
}
if (!bin) {
statbuf.st_size = (size_t) r;
} else
#endif /* defined(_WIN32) || defined(__CYGWIN__) */
} else {
if (r != statbuf.st_size) {
/* Unless we're using text mode on win32, we'd better have an exact
* match for size. */
@ -708,6 +706,7 @@ read_file_to_str, (const char *filename, int flags, struct stat *stat_out))
errno = save_errno;
return NULL;
}
}
close(fd);
if (stat_out) {
memcpy(stat_out, &statbuf, sizeof(struct stat));

View File

@ -173,6 +173,54 @@ test_util_read_file_eof_zero_bytes(void *arg)
test_util_read_until_eof_impl("tor_test_fifo_empty", 0, 10000);
}
static void
test_util_read_file_endlines(void *arg)
{
(void)arg;
char *fname = NULL;
char *read_content = NULL;
int r = -1;
/* Write a file that contains both \n and \r\n as line ending. */
const char *file_content = "foo bar\n"
"foo bar baz\r\n"
"foo bar\r\n";
const char *expected_file_content = "foo bar\n"
"foo bar baz\n"
"foo bar\n";
fname = tor_strdup(get_fname("file_with_crlf_ending"));
r = write_bytes_to_file(fname, file_content, strlen(file_content), 1);
tt_int_op(r, OP_EQ, 0);
/* Read the file in text mode: we strip \r's from the files on both Windows
* and UNIX. */
read_content = read_file_to_str(fname, 0, NULL);
tt_ptr_op(read_content, OP_NE, NULL);
tt_int_op(strlen(read_content), OP_EQ, strlen(expected_file_content));
tt_str_op(read_content, OP_EQ, expected_file_content);
tor_free(read_content);
/* Read the file in binary mode: we should preserve the \r here. */
read_content = read_file_to_str(fname, RFTS_BIN, NULL);
tt_ptr_op(read_content, OP_NE, NULL);
tt_int_op(strlen(read_content), OP_EQ, strlen(file_content));
tt_str_op(read_content, OP_EQ, file_content);
tor_free(read_content);
done:
unlink(fname);
tor_free(fname);
tor_free(read_content);
}
/* Test the basic expected behaviour for write_chunks_to_file.
* NOTE: This will need to be updated if we ever change the tempfile location
* or extension */
@ -6508,6 +6556,7 @@ struct testcase_t util_tests[] = {
UTIL_TEST(read_file_eof_two_loops, 0),
UTIL_TEST(read_file_eof_two_loops_b, 0),
UTIL_TEST(read_file_eof_zero_bytes, 0),
UTIL_TEST(read_file_endlines, 0),
UTIL_TEST(write_chunks_to_file, 0),
UTIL_TEST(mathlog, 0),
UTIL_TEST(fraction, 0),