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Current File : //usr/src/contrib/cvs/src/root.c |
/* * Copyright (C) 1986-2008 The Free Software Foundation, Inc. * * Portions Copyright (C) 1998-2005 Derek Price, Ximbiot <http://ximbiot.com>, * and others. * * Poritons Copyright (c) 1992, Mark D. Baushke * * You may distribute under the terms of the GNU General Public License as * specified in the README file that comes with the CVS source distribution. * * Name of Root * * Determine the path to the CVSROOT and set "Root" accordingly. */ #include "cvs.h" #include <assert.h> #include "getline.h" /* Printable names for things in the current_parsed_root->method enum variable. Watch out if the enum is changed in cvs.h! */ const char method_names[][16] = { "undefined", "local", "server (rsh)", "pserver", "kserver", "gserver", "ext", "extssh", "fork" }; #ifndef DEBUG cvsroot_t * Name_Root (dir, update_dir) const char *dir; const char *update_dir; { FILE *fpin; cvsroot_t *ret; const char *xupdate_dir; char *root = NULL; size_t root_allocated = 0; char *tmp; char *cvsadm; char *cp; int len; if (update_dir && *update_dir) xupdate_dir = update_dir; else xupdate_dir = "."; if (dir != NULL) { cvsadm = xmalloc (strlen (dir) + sizeof (CVSADM) + 10); (void) sprintf (cvsadm, "%s/%s", dir, CVSADM); tmp = xmalloc (strlen (dir) + sizeof (CVSADM_ROOT) + 10); (void) sprintf (tmp, "%s/%s", dir, CVSADM_ROOT); } else { cvsadm = xstrdup (CVSADM); tmp = xstrdup (CVSADM_ROOT); } /* * Do not bother looking for a readable file if there is no cvsadm * directory present. * * It is possible that not all repositories will have a CVS/Root * file. This is ok, but the user will need to specify -d * /path/name or have the environment variable CVSROOT set in * order to continue. */ if ((!isdir (cvsadm)) || (!isreadable (tmp))) { ret = NULL; goto out; } /* * The assumption here is that the CVS Root is always contained in the * first line of the "Root" file. */ fpin = open_file (tmp, "r"); if ((len = getline (&root, &root_allocated, fpin)) < 0) { int saved_errno = errno; /* FIXME: should be checking for end of file separately; errno is not set in that case. */ error (0, 0, "in directory %s:", xupdate_dir); error (0, saved_errno, "cannot read %s", CVSADM_ROOT); error (0, 0, "please correct this problem"); ret = NULL; goto out; } fclose (fpin); cp = root + len - 1; if (*cp == '\n') *cp = '\0'; /* strip the newline */ /* * root now contains a candidate for CVSroot. It must be an * absolute pathname or specify a remote server. */ ret = parse_cvsroot (root); if (ret == NULL) { error (0, 0, "in directory %s:", xupdate_dir); error (0, 0, "ignoring %s because it does not contain a valid root.", CVSADM_ROOT); goto out; } if (!ret->isremote && !isdir (ret->directory)) { error (0, 0, "in directory %s:", xupdate_dir); error (0, 0, "ignoring %s because it specifies a non-existent repository %s", CVSADM_ROOT, root); free_cvsroot_t (ret); ret = NULL; goto out; } out: free (cvsadm); free (tmp); if (root != NULL) free (root); return ret; } /* * Write the CVS/Root file so that the environment variable CVSROOT * and/or the -d option to cvs will be validated or not necessary for * future work. */ void Create_Root (dir, rootdir) const char *dir; const char *rootdir; { FILE *fout; char *tmp; if (noexec) return; /* record the current cvs root */ if (rootdir != NULL) { if (dir != NULL) { tmp = xmalloc (strlen (dir) + sizeof (CVSADM_ROOT) + 10); (void) sprintf (tmp, "%s/%s", dir, CVSADM_ROOT); } else tmp = xstrdup (CVSADM_ROOT); fout = open_file (tmp, "w+"); if (fprintf (fout, "%s\n", rootdir) < 0) error (1, errno, "write to %s failed", tmp); if (fclose (fout) == EOF) error (1, errno, "cannot close %s", tmp); free (tmp); } } #endif /* ! DEBUG */ /* The root_allow_* stuff maintains a list of legal CVSROOT directories. Then we can check against them when a remote user hands us a CVSROOT directory. */ static int root_allow_count; static char **root_allow_vector; static int root_allow_size; int root_allow_used () { return root_allow_count; } void root_allow_add (arg) char *arg; { char *p; if (root_allow_size <= root_allow_count) { if (root_allow_size == 0) { root_allow_size = 1; root_allow_vector = (char **) xmalloc (root_allow_size * sizeof (char *)); } else { root_allow_size *= 2; root_allow_vector = (char **) xrealloc (root_allow_vector, root_allow_size * sizeof (char *)); } if (root_allow_vector == NULL) { no_memory: /* Strictly speaking, we're not supposed to output anything now. But we're about to exit(), give it a try. */ printf ("E Fatal server error, aborting.\n\ error ENOMEM Virtual memory exhausted.\n"); error_exit (); } } p = xmalloc (strlen (arg) + 1); if (p == NULL) goto no_memory; strcpy (p, arg); root_allow_vector[root_allow_count++] = p; } void root_allow_free () { if (root_allow_vector != NULL) free_names (&root_allow_count, root_allow_vector); root_allow_size = 0; } int root_allow_ok (arg) char *arg; { int i; if (root_allow_count == 0) { /* Probably someone upgraded from CVS before 1.9.10 to 1.9.10 or later without reading the documentation about --allow-root. Printing an error here doesn't disclose any particularly useful information to an attacker because a CVS server configured in this way won't let *anyone* in. */ /* Note that we are called from a context where we can spit back "error" rather than waiting for the next request which expects responses. */ printf ("\ error 0 Server configuration missing --allow-root in inetd.conf\n"); error_exit (); } for (i = 0; i < root_allow_count; ++i) if (strcmp (root_allow_vector[i], arg) == 0) return 1; return 0; } /* This global variable holds the global -d option. It is NULL if -d was not used, which means that we must get the CVSroot information from the CVSROOT environment variable or from a CVS/Root file. */ char *CVSroot_cmdline; /* FIXME - Deglobalize this. */ cvsroot_t *current_parsed_root = NULL; /* allocate and initialize a cvsroot_t * * We must initialize the strings to NULL so we know later what we should * free * * Some of the other zeroes remain meaningful as, "never set, use default", * or the like */ static cvsroot_t * new_cvsroot_t () { cvsroot_t *newroot; /* gotta store it somewhere */ newroot = xmalloc(sizeof(cvsroot_t)); newroot->original = NULL; newroot->method = null_method; newroot->isremote = 0; #ifdef CLIENT_SUPPORT newroot->username = NULL; newroot->password = NULL; newroot->hostname = NULL; newroot->port = 0; newroot->directory = NULL; newroot->proxy_hostname = NULL; newroot->proxy_port = 0; #endif /* CLIENT_SUPPORT */ return newroot; } /* Dispose of a cvsroot_t and its component parts */ void free_cvsroot_t (root) cvsroot_t *root; { if (root->original != NULL) free (root->original); if (root->directory != NULL) free (root->directory); #ifdef CLIENT_SUPPORT if (root->username != NULL) free (root->username); if (root->password != NULL) { /* I like to be paranoid */ memset (root->password, 0, strlen (root->password)); free (root->password); } if (root->hostname != NULL) free (root->hostname); if (root->proxy_hostname != NULL) free (root->proxy_hostname); #endif /* CLIENT_SUPPORT */ free (root); } /* * Parse a CVSROOT string to allocate and return a new cvsroot_t structure. * Valid specifications are: * * :(gserver|kserver|pserver):[[user][:password]@]host[:[port]]/path * [:(ext|server):][[user]@]host[:]/path * [:local:[e:]]/path * :fork:/path * * INPUTS * root_in C String containing the CVSROOT to be parsed. * * RETURNS * A pointer to a newly allocated cvsroot_t structure upon success and * NULL upon failure. The caller is responsible for disposing of * new structures with a call to free_cvsroot_t(). * * NOTES * This would have been a lot easier to write in Perl. * * SEE ALSO * free_cvsroot_t() */ cvsroot_t * parse_cvsroot (root_in) const char *root_in; { cvsroot_t *newroot; /* the new root to be returned */ char *cvsroot_save; /* what we allocated so we can dispose * it when finished */ char *firstslash; /* save where the path spec starts * while we parse * [[user][:password]@]host[:[port]] */ char *cvsroot_copy, *p, *q; /* temporary pointers for parsing */ #ifdef CLIENT_SUPPORT int check_hostname, no_port, no_password; #endif /* CLIENT_SUPPORT */ assert (root_in); /* allocate some space */ newroot = new_cvsroot_t(); /* save the original string */ newroot->original = xstrdup (root_in); /* and another copy we can munge while parsing */ cvsroot_save = cvsroot_copy = xstrdup (root_in); if (*cvsroot_copy == ':') { char *method = ++cvsroot_copy; /* Access method specified, as in * "cvs -d :(gserver|kserver|pserver):[[user][:password]@]host[:[port]]/path", * "cvs -d [:(ext|server):][[user]@]host[:]/path", * "cvs -d :local:e:\path", * "cvs -d :fork:/path". * We need to get past that part of CVSroot before parsing the * rest of it. */ if (! (p = strchr (method, ':'))) { error (0, 0, "No closing `:' on method in CVSROOT."); goto error_exit; } *p = '\0'; cvsroot_copy = ++p; #ifdef CLIENT_SUPPORT /* Look for method options, for instance, proxy, proxyport. * We don't handle these, but we like to try and warn the user that * they are being ignored. */ if ((p = strchr (method, ';')) != NULL) { *p++ = '\0'; if (!really_quiet) { error (0, 0, "WARNING: Ignoring method options found in CVSROOT: `%s'.", p); error (0, 0, "Use CVS version 1.12.7 or later to handle method options."); } } #endif /* CLIENT_SUPPORT */ /* Now we have an access method -- see if it's valid. */ if (strcmp (method, "local") == 0) newroot->method = local_method; else if (strcmp (method, "pserver") == 0) newroot->method = pserver_method; else if (strcmp (method, "kserver") == 0) newroot->method = kserver_method; else if (strcmp (method, "gserver") == 0) newroot->method = gserver_method; else if (strcmp (method, "server") == 0) newroot->method = server_method; else if (strcmp (method, "ext") == 0) newroot->method = ext_method; else if (strcmp (method, "extssh") == 0) newroot->method = extssh_method; else if (strcmp (method, "fork") == 0) newroot->method = fork_method; else { error (0, 0, "Unknown method (`%s') in CVSROOT.", method); goto error_exit; } } else { /* If the method isn't specified, assume EXT_METHOD if the string looks like a relative path and LOCAL_METHOD otherwise. */ newroot->method = ((*cvsroot_copy != '/' && strchr (cvsroot_copy, '/')) ? ext_method : local_method); } newroot->isremote = (newroot->method != local_method); if ((newroot->method != local_method) && (newroot->method != fork_method)) { /* split the string into [[user][:password]@]host[:[port]] & /path * * this will allow some characters such as '@' & ':' to remain unquoted * in the path portion of the spec */ if ((p = strchr (cvsroot_copy, '/')) == NULL) { error (0, 0, "CVSROOT requires a path spec:"); error (0, 0, ":(gserver|kserver|pserver):[[user][:password]@]host[:[port]]/path"); error (0, 0, "[:(ext|server):][[user]@]host[:]/path"); goto error_exit; } firstslash = p; /* == NULL if '/' not in string */ *p = '\0'; /* Don't parse username, password, hostname, or port without client * support. */ #ifdef CLIENT_SUPPORT /* Check to see if there is a username[:password] in the string. */ if ((p = strchr (cvsroot_copy, '@')) != NULL) { *p = '\0'; /* check for a password */ if ((q = strchr (cvsroot_copy, ':')) != NULL) { *q = '\0'; newroot->password = xstrdup (++q); /* Don't check for *newroot->password == '\0' since * a user could conceivably wish to specify a blank password * * (newroot->password == NULL means to use the * password from .cvspass) */ } /* copy the username */ if (*cvsroot_copy != '\0') /* a blank username is impossible, so leave it NULL in that * case so we know to use the default username */ newroot->username = xstrdup (cvsroot_copy); cvsroot_copy = ++p; } /* now deal with host[:[port]] */ /* the port */ if ((p = strchr (cvsroot_copy, ':')) != NULL) { *p++ = '\0'; if (strlen(p)) { q = p; if (*q == '-') q++; while (*q) { if (!isdigit(*q++)) { error (0, 0, "CVSROOT may only specify a positive, non-zero, integer port (not `%s').", p); error (0, 0, "Perhaps you entered a relative pathname?"); goto error_exit; } } if ((newroot->port = atoi (p)) <= 0) { error (0, 0, "CVSROOT may only specify a positive, non-zero, integer port (not `%s').", p); error (0, 0, "Perhaps you entered a relative pathname?"); goto error_exit; } } } /* copy host */ if (*cvsroot_copy != '\0') /* blank hostnames are invalid, but for now leave the field NULL * and catch the error during the sanity checks later */ newroot->hostname = xstrdup (cvsroot_copy); /* restore the '/' */ cvsroot_copy = firstslash; *cvsroot_copy = '/'; #endif /* CLIENT_SUPPORT */ } /* * Parse the path for all methods. */ /* Here & local_cvsroot() should be the only places this needs to be * called on a CVSROOT now. cvsroot->original is saved for error messages * and, otherwise, we want no trailing slashes. */ Sanitize_Repository_Name( cvsroot_copy ); newroot->directory = xstrdup(cvsroot_copy); /* * Do various sanity checks. */ #if ! defined (CLIENT_SUPPORT) && ! defined (DEBUG) if (newroot->method != local_method) { error (0, 0, "CVSROOT is set for a remote access method but your"); error (0, 0, "CVS executable doesn't support it."); goto error_exit; } #endif #if ! defined (SERVER_SUPPORT) && ! defined (DEBUG) if (newroot->method == fork_method) { error (0, 0, "CVSROOT is set to use the :fork: access method but your"); error (0, 0, "CVS executable doesn't support it."); goto error_exit; } #endif #ifdef CLIENT_SUPPORT if (newroot->username && ! newroot->hostname) { error (0, 0, "Missing hostname in CVSROOT."); goto error_exit; } check_hostname = 0; no_password = 1; no_port = 0; #endif /* CLIENT_SUPPORT */ switch (newroot->method) { case local_method: #ifdef CLIENT_SUPPORT if (newroot->username || newroot->hostname) { error (0, 0, "Can't specify hostname and username in CVSROOT"); error (0, 0, "when using local access method."); goto error_exit; } no_port = 1; /* no_password already set */ #endif /* CLIENT_SUPPORT */ /* cvs.texinfo has always told people that CVSROOT must be an absolute pathname. Furthermore, attempts to use a relative pathname produced various errors (I couldn't get it to work), so there would seem to be little risk in making this a fatal error. */ if (!isabsolute (newroot->directory)) { error (0, 0, "CVSROOT must be an absolute pathname (not `%s')", newroot->directory); error (0, 0, "when using local access method."); goto error_exit; } break; #ifdef CLIENT_SUPPORT case fork_method: /* We want :fork: to behave the same as other remote access methods. Therefore, don't check to see that the repository name is absolute -- let the server do it. */ if (newroot->username || newroot->hostname) { error (0, 0, "Can't specify hostname and username in CVSROOT"); error (0, 0, "when using fork access method."); goto error_exit; } newroot->hostname = xstrdup("server"); /* for error messages */ if (!isabsolute (newroot->directory)) { error (0, 0, "CVSROOT must be an absolute pathname (not `%s')", newroot->directory); error (0, 0, "when using fork access method."); goto error_exit; } no_port = 1; /* no_password already set */ break; case kserver_method: # ifndef HAVE_KERBEROS error (0, 0, "CVSROOT is set for a kerberos access method but your"); error (0, 0, "CVS executable doesn't support it."); goto error_exit; # else check_hostname = 1; /* no_password already set */ break; # endif case gserver_method: # ifndef HAVE_GSSAPI error (0, 0, "CVSROOT is set for a GSSAPI access method but your"); error (0, 0, "CVS executable doesn't support it."); goto error_exit; # else check_hostname = 1; /* no_password already set */ break; # endif case server_method: case ext_method: case extssh_method: no_port = 1; /* no_password already set */ check_hostname = 1; break; case pserver_method: no_password = 0; check_hostname = 1; break; #endif /* CLIENT_SUPPORT */ default: error (1, 0, "Invalid method found in parse_cvsroot"); } #ifdef CLIENT_SUPPORT if (no_password && newroot->password) { error (0, 0, "CVSROOT password specification is only valid for"); error (0, 0, "pserver connection method."); goto error_exit; } if (check_hostname && !newroot->hostname) { error (0, 0, "Didn't specify hostname in CVSROOT."); goto error_exit; } if (no_port && newroot->port) { error (0, 0, "CVSROOT port specification is only valid for gserver, kserver,"); error (0, 0, "and pserver connection methods."); goto error_exit; } #endif /* CLIENT_SUPPORT */ if (*newroot->directory == '\0') { error (0, 0, "Missing directory in CVSROOT."); goto error_exit; } /* Hooray! We finally parsed it! */ free (cvsroot_save); return newroot; error_exit: free (cvsroot_save); free_cvsroot_t (newroot); return NULL; } #ifdef AUTH_CLIENT_SUPPORT /* Use root->username, root->hostname, root->port, and root->directory * to create a normalized CVSROOT fit for the .cvspass file * * username defaults to the result of getcaller() * port defaults to the result of get_cvs_port_number() * * FIXME - we could cache the canonicalized version of a root inside the * cvsroot_t, but we'd have to un'const the input here and stop expecting the * caller to be responsible for our return value */ char * normalize_cvsroot (root) const cvsroot_t *root; { char *cvsroot_canonical; char *p, *hostname, *username; char port_s[64]; assert (root && root->hostname && root->directory); /* get the appropriate port string */ sprintf (port_s, "%d", get_cvs_port_number (root)); /* use a lower case hostname since we know hostnames are case insensitive */ /* Some logic says we should be tacking our domain name on too if it isn't * there already, but for now this works. Reverse->Forward lookups are * almost certainly too much since that would make CVS immune to some of * the DNS trickery that makes life easier for sysadmins when they want to * move a repository or the like */ p = hostname = xstrdup(root->hostname); while (*p) { *p = tolower(*p); p++; } /* get the username string */ username = root->username ? root->username : getcaller(); cvsroot_canonical = xmalloc ( strlen(username) + strlen(hostname) + strlen(port_s) + strlen(root->directory) + 12); sprintf (cvsroot_canonical, ":pserver:%s@%s:%s%s", username, hostname, port_s, root->directory); free (hostname); return cvsroot_canonical; } #endif /* AUTH_CLIENT_SUPPORT */ /* allocate and return a cvsroot_t structure set up as if we're using the local * repository DIR. */ cvsroot_t * local_cvsroot (dir) const char *dir; { cvsroot_t *newroot = new_cvsroot_t(); newroot->original = xstrdup(dir); newroot->method = local_method; newroot->directory = xstrdup(dir); /* Here and parse_cvsroot() should be the only places this needs to be * called on a CVSROOT now. cvsroot->original is saved for error messages * and, otherwise, we want no trailing slashes. */ Sanitize_Repository_Name( newroot->directory ); return newroot; } #ifdef DEBUG /* This is for testing the parsing function. Use gcc -I. -I.. -I../lib -DDEBUG root.c -o root to compile. */ #include <stdio.h> char *program_name = "testing"; char *cvs_cmd_name = "parse_cvsroot"; /* XXX is this used??? */ /* Toy versions of various functions when debugging under unix. Yes, these make various bad assumptions, but they're pretty easy to debug when something goes wrong. */ void error_exit PROTO ((void)) { exit (1); } int isabsolute (dir) const char *dir; { return (dir && (*dir == '/')); } void main (argc, argv) int argc; char *argv[]; { program_name = argv[0]; if (argc != 2) { fprintf (stderr, "Usage: %s <CVSROOT>\n", program_name); exit (2); } if ((current_parsed_root = parse_cvsroot (argv[1])) == NULL) { fprintf (stderr, "%s: Parsing failed.\n", program_name); exit (1); } printf ("CVSroot: %s\n", argv[1]); printf ("current_parsed_root->method: %s\n", method_names[current_parsed_root->method]); printf ("current_parsed_root->username: %s\n", current_parsed_root->username ? current_parsed_root->username : "NULL"); printf ("current_parsed_root->hostname: %s\n", current_parsed_root->hostname ? current_parsed_root->hostname : "NULL"); printf ("current_parsed_root->directory: %s\n", current_parsed_root->directory); exit (0); /* NOTREACHED */ } #endif