Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Warner Losh
923dd9a7a7 When you have multiple addresses on the same network on different
interfaces (such as when you are part of a carp pool), and you run
rpcbind -h to restrict which interfaces have rpc services, rpcbind can
none-the-less return addresses that aren't in the -h list.  This patch
enforces the rule that when you specify -h on the command line, then
services returned from rpcbind must be to one of the addresses listed
in -h, or be a loopback address (since localhost is implicit when
running -h).

The root cause of this is the assumption in addrmerge that there can
be only one interface that matches a given network IP address.  This
turns out not to be the case.  To retain historical behavior, I didn't
try to fix the routine to prefer the address that the request came
into, since I didn't know the side effects that might cause in the
normal case.  My quick analysis suggests that it wouldn't be a
problem, but since this code is tricky I opted for the more
conservative patch of only restricting the reply when -h is in effect.

Hence, this change will have no effect when you are running rpcbind
without -h.

Reviewed by:	alfred@
Sponsored by:	iX Systems
MFC after:	2 weeks
2010-02-09 18:10:56 +00:00
Kevin Lo
784bddbc5b Cleanup of userland __P use 2007-11-07 10:53:41 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
4180788ff0 WARNS=3 safety (mostly), use __unused for unused params and unsigned where
needed to avoid warnings about comparing signed and unsigned values.
2002-10-07 02:56:59 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
8360efbd6c Bring in a hybrid of SunSoft's transport-independent RPC (TI-RPC) and
associated changes that had to happen to make this possible as well as
bugs fixed along the way.

  Bring in required TLI library routines to support this.

  Since we don't support TLI we've essentially copied what NetBSD
  has done, adding a thin layer to emulate direct the TLI calls
  into BSD socket calls.

  This is mostly from Sun's tirpc release that was made in 1994,
  however some fixes were backported from the 1999 release (supposedly
  only made available after this porting effort was underway).

  The submitter has agreed to continue on and bring us up to the
  1999 release.

  Several key features are introduced with this update:
    Client calls are thread safe. (1999 code has server side thread
    safe)
    Updated, a more modern interface.

  Many userland updates were done to bring the code up to par with
  the recent RPC API.

  There is an update to the pthreads library, a function
  pthread_main_np() was added to emulate a function of Sun's threads
  library.

  While we're at it, bring in NetBSD's lockd, it's been far too
  long of a wait.

  New rpcbind(8) replaces portmap(8) (supporting communication over
  an authenticated Unix-domain socket, and by default only allowing
  set and unset requests over that channel). It's much more secure
  than the old portmapper.

  Umount(8), mountd(8), mount_nfs(8), nfsd(8) have also been upgraded
  to support TI-RPC and to support IPV6.

  Umount(8) is also fixed to unmount pathnames longer than 80 chars,
  which are currently truncated by the Kernel statfs structure.

Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
Manpage review: ru
Secure RPC implemented by: wpaul
2001-03-19 12:50:13 +00:00