o Add missing $Id$s
o Move extern decls from .c -> .h files
o Staticize
o Remove #includes from .h files
o style(9)ify includes
o bcopy -> memcpy
bzero -> memset
bcmp -> memcmp
index -> strchr
rindex -> strrchr
o Move timeout.h -> timer.h (making it consistent w/ timer.c)
o Add -Wmissing-prototypes
Without this, in -auto mode, we stay in ST_STOPPING
and never check our dial filters to see if it's time
to bring the line up again.
This may make "set stopped" redundant.
Support VJ slot id compression.
Previously, ppp would negotiate a max slot between 2 & 15
(if asked), and would agree to slot id compression (if asked).
It would then proceed to use 16 slots and no compression
anyway. The result was a rather unusable connection.
o LcpLayerDown() no longer does a NewPhase(PHASE_TERMINATE).
Instead, it's done in LcpLayerFinish(). LayerFinish() gets
called by the FSM after the LCP FSM goes through the Stopping
and Stopped states.
o -direct and -background mode exit at PHASE_TERMINATE, not
PHASE_DEAD.
The result is that LCP, CCP & IPCP are brought down cleanly on both
sides of the link (not just our side). Killing ppp rather than just
closing it still makes it get out after the LCP SendTerminateReq().
I'll have a look at that soon. We're probably not actually sending
the REQ :-(
than /usr/include/des.h before building with MSChap.
support. Also allow -DNOCRYPT (as well as -DNOSECURE)
as an override
sbin/init example pointed out by: bde
negotiation. Instead, incrementally pause after
receiving LCPs with the same magic. We can now
suffer a server that waits more than 1 second before
responding. Pauses greater than a second get
hopelessly confusing as when the server eventually
starts, it sees a flood of Config Requests followed
by config NAKs and changes of magic. This causes the
server to change its magic over and over.....
file get created. We don't create lock files over non-tty
connections, but we *do* create lock files in -direct mode.
This leaves us capable of adding utmp/wtmp support for
successful pap & chap logins (coming soon).
config request. This stops us from squirting stuff
down a line that still has ECHO turned on because the
peer hasn't had a chance to start yet.
Lead to the cause by: Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
close(1);
close(2);
x = open(ctermid(NULL), O_RDWR|O_NONBLOCK);
close(0)
on a tty causes select() to return an exception for descriptor x !
This is the case in RELENG_2_2, but not in 2.2.2. I'm not sure why.
Instead of doing the x=open() and close(0), we just do x=0 now.
Problem pointed out by: Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
Tomi Vainio <tomppa@fidata.fi>
isatty(1) ! Keep 0 open for this till the modem's
been set up by either dup()ing 0 or by opening
ctermid(NULL) (if isatty(0)).
Discussed problem with: Tomi Vainio <tomppa@fidata.fi>
Made it finally dawn on me: Angelo Turetta <ATuretta@stylo.it>
o Output the correct device for "show modem"
while in -direct mode.
o Cosmetic: Moan a bit more when we can't open
the [modem] device.
o Call OpenModem() in a more "natural" way.
o Add some LogDEBUG in OpenModem().
receive the ResetAck, NOT when we send the
ResetReq (as per the rfc).
o SILENTLY ignore CCPs that arrive *before*
the network phase (as per the rfc).
o Check that we've actually negotiated PRED1
before sending PRED1 output.
This bug has been around for a *VERY* long
time ! We shouldn't need to explicitly disable
PRED1 now :-)
mode. We don't want to be forced to type a password
here :-(
Pointed out by: mouth@ibm.net (John Kelly)
While I'm there, don't allow a "set server" in
interactive mode.
Insist that uid == 0 for client ppp
Disallow client sockets if no password is specified
Don't exit on failure to open client socket for listening
Allow specification of null local password
Use reasonable size (smaller) ``vector''s in auth.c
Fix "passwd ..." usage message
Insist on "all" as arg to "quit" (if any)
Drop client socket connection before Cleanup() when "quit all"
This tells ppp to loopback packets addressed to
the ppp interface IP coming *from* the tun
device.
This means that you can ping the tun interface IP
from inside :-)
idependently time out any of the FSMs.
Split LCP logging into LCP, IPCP and CCP logging,
and make room in "struct fsm" for the log level
that the state machine should use.
"set stopped" directive. If the timeout occurs
it will cause a "Down" event, hanging up the line
if it's still up. This *isn't* part of the FSM
diagram, but I consider it ok as a "higher level
implementation specific timeout" as specified in
the rfc ;-}
Discussed briefly with: joerg
INT cause a hangup - not exiting for -ddial & -auto.
HUP must exit because init sends this at system shutdown
time (why, I don't know), and we don't want to end up
redialing after the HUP (due to another dfilter packet).
Pointed out by and discussed with: ache
Catch SIGUSR1 to re-init listening socket.
Document signal behaviour.
Add missing '\n's to LogPrintf(LogWARN,...)
Main() returns int not void.
AF_LOCAL ideal suggested a long time ago by: joerg
unless defined out - including while a telnet
session with a -auto ppp is in effect. If you
don't create ppp.secrets, you deserve what you
get.
telnet connection capabilities will be configurable
per system soon.
Suggested by: Terry Dwyer <tdwyer@omen.net.au>
o Style police
o Make hangup abort the current connection, not
necessarily exiting (-auto/-ddial).
o Trap HUP and INT during DoChat and abort the
connection attempt. This means you can now
type "dial" and change your mind with ^C, or
HUP the process to stop it dialing.
Slapped into doing it by: Chuck Robey <chuckr@glue.umd.edu>
Submitted by: Forgotten
Passed on by: Terry Dwyer 61 8 9491 5161 <tdwyer@io.telstra.com.au>
Also remove extraneous setuid(0) - it's only undone by
the subsequent call to SelectSystem().
o Allow "set var" with no args to blank var (don't req "").
o Zero VarTerm ASAP if not in interactive mode.
o Never print anything to stdout in -direct mode.
o Count redial when failing to open modem.
o Increase device size to 40 characters (for host:port).
o Remove missed "if (fd == 0) fd = 1;".
o Don't give up on incoming non-terminal connections.
o Use syslog
o Remove references to stdout/stderr (incl perror())
o Introduce VarTerm - the interactive terminal or zero
o Allow "set timeout" to affect current session
o Change "set debug" to "set log"
o Allow "set log [+|-]flag"
o Make MSEXT and PASSWDAUTH stuff the default
o Move all #ifdef DEBUG stuff into the code - this
shouldn't be too much overhead. It's now controlled
with "set log +debug"
o Add "set log command, debug, tun, warn, error, alert"
o Remove cdefs.h, and assume an ansi compiler.
o Improve all diagnostic output
o Don't trap SIGSEGV
o SIGHUP now terminates again (log files are controlled
by syslog)
o Call CloseModem() when changing devices
o Fix parsing of third arg of "delete"
I think this fixes the "magic is same" problems that some
people have been experiencing.
The man page is being rewritten. It'll follow soon.
received and after the TerminateAck is sent (as
per rfc1661) rather than to ST_STOPPING. Going
to ST_STOPPING will leave us in a state where
we're waiting for the other side to do something -
not a good idea, especially as the client side sends
a TerminateReq then exits on idle timeout.
alias commands simply won't work. Only root may specify the
location of the alias lib (otherwise, it's hard-coded).
Make logprintf silently fail if LogOpen hasn't been called.
Suggested by: eivind
of reconnect & -background.
o Fix reconnect anomolies.
o Make reconnect apply to failed LQR hangups (& mention in man page).
o Make reconnect effective in -background mode.
o Listen on socket in -background mode.
o Try all phone numbers in -background mode.
o Insist on system arg in -background mode.
o Make a control-connection close command exit in -background mode.
o Output status message to stdout on exit of parent in -background mode.
o Don't notify parent of success too soon.
o Describe termination EX_* code.
o Miscelaneous diagnostic corrections.
o Remove redundant connect_time from modem.c.
o Don't repeatedly DownConnection().
the connection after an unexpected loss of carrier:
set reconnect timer ntries
The man page warns against using this command when your
timeout value is slightly more than the other sides :{}
Suggested by: burton@bsampley.vip.best.com (Burton Sampley)
list has been dialed. Alternate number dialing has no "pause".
Suggested by: joerg
Document this behaviour. Document that the number of dial attempts
applies to the number of phone calls rather than the number of times
each number is dialed. Add a missing .El. Give a decent description
of how to connect to an ISP.
and quitting telnet immediately (while phone number dialed)
Log client connection/disconnection with PHASE_BIT now.
Add more error recovery on client disconnection
in uu_lock(). Add uu_lockerr() for turning the results of
uu_lock into something printable. Remove bogus section in man page
about race conditions allowing both processes to get the lock.
Include libutil.h and use uu_lock() correctly where it should.
Suggested by: ache@freebsd.org
Accept SIGHUP as a "re-open logfile" signal. As ppp
doesn't set it's serial line to it's controlling terminal,
we can use HUP :)
This is a candidate for 2.2. The log.[ch] changes won't
conflict, but the main.c changes will. We just want to change the
kill(...,SIGHUP) to a SIGTERM and change the signal(SIGHUP,Hangup)
to a pending_signal(SIGHUP,LogReOpen).
These changes should fix the signal "problems" in ppp.
The signal changes should really be put into 2.2 too !
The following patches should do it. There were some other
changes made by Andrey recently that havn't been brought
into 2.2, it may be worth doing them now.
we need now.
Don't assume that file descriptor can't be 0 (many places)
Protect FD_* macros from being used with negative descriptors
Shorten MS EXT show help to fit 80 cols
dangerous! Signal handlers themself must be fixed to not call malloc,
but no pended handlers, it will be correct fix. In finite case each signal
handler can set some variable which will be analized later, but calling
handler functions manually is too dangerous (f.e. signals not blocked while
the handler or handlers switch executed in this case). Of course this
code can be fixed instead of removing, but it not worth fixing in any case.
Should go into 2.2
In addition sig.c code shows following dangerous fragments (there can be more,
but I stop after two):
This fragment
if (fn == SIG_DFL || fn == SIG_IGN) {
handler[sig-1] = (sig_type)0;
<------------- here
signal(sig,fn);
} else {
cause NULL pointer reference when signal comes
"here", but more worse fragment is below:
void handle_signals() {
int sig;
if (caused)
for (sig=0; sig<__MAXSIG; sig++, caused>>=1)
if (caused&1)
(*handler[sig])(sig+1);
}
caused is bitmask which set corresponding bit on each signal coming.
And now imagine, what happens when some signal comes (bit sets) while loop
is executed (see caused>>=1 !!!)
In this light carrier drop situation was (as gdb shows)
1. SIGSEGV in handle_signals because some junk called as *handler reference.
2. Since SIGSEGV was pended too (== never happens),
it can cause various range of disasters.
1) When carrier dropped, old variant often forget to detect it cause
unkillable loop forever (because SIGTERM pended too, but it will be
separate commit)
2) Time intervals accuracy reasons
Should go into 2.2
Remove #include's from sig.h and get dependant modules to include them
themselves. Make inclusion of if_var.h depend on __FreeBSD_version so
that the -current version of ppp can be used with 2.1.*
2.2 Candidate ?
All signal() calls have been changed to pending_signal() calls.
pending_signal() is defined in the new sig.c file. It remembers
the handler and traps the signal with a function that will remember
the signal.
main.c now calls handle_signals() to actually call the required
handlers (if the above handler was called).
If this doesn't close PR2662 (was PR2347), I'll cry.
Joerg, I think this should go into 2.2, but I havn't done anything
about it because I'm bound to botch it with the new sig.[ch] files.
I've just "cvs add"'d sig.[ch] so far.... can you update to 2.2 and
tell me what you did ? Thanks.
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
This has the effect of making every link a "passthrough" which means the
TCP or UDP port won't be freed after link deletion -- so there could be
eventual port exhaustion if the program were allowed to operate long
enough.
Submitted by: Charles Mott <cmott@srv.net>
to be used to expand things beyond the size of the buffer passed in. Also
do a general cleanup of sprintf -> snprintf as well as strcpy and strncat
safety. Also expand some buffers to allow for the largest possible data
that might be used.
This is a 2.2 candidate. However, it needs to be vetted on -current
since little testing has been done on this due to my lack of PPP on
this machine.
Reviewed by: Jordan Hubbard, Peter Wemm, Guido van Rooij
connecting to a host immediately in the foreground.
I would like to be able to run ppp from a script so that my script can be
sure that it is connected to the 'net before it continues running:
# Dial up the internet.
ppp -background myprovider || exit 1
do-some-net-command
# Hang up the modem.
kill -HUP `cat /var/run/ppp.tun0.pid`
Another problem is that the current ppp calls its process id file
`/var/run/PPP.server', which may conflict if you have more than one IP
tunnel interface available.
Closes PR#1469
Submitted by: Gord Matzigkeit <gord@enci.ucalgary.ca>
new 'aliased' packets. Note, if the original packet has a bogus cksum,
we will *NOT* re-compute the cksum, therefore the new packet will also
be wrong (but passed on).
Found by: MartinRenters@awfulhak.demon.co.uk
Reviewed by: Brian Somers <brian@awfulhak.demon.co.uk>
Submitted by: Charles Mott <cmott@srv.net>
(otherwise ppp's behavior remains unchanged) and documented by myself,
Steve Sims, Nate Williams, Martin Renters and god-only-knows who else. :-)
Submitted by: nate
Obtained from: Charles Mott <cmott@srv.net>
do it themselves. (Some of these programs actually depended on this
beyond compiling the definition of struct ifinfo!) Also fix up some
other #include messes while we're at it.
to keep the link up, so it re-dials whenever it detects the link go
down. This is useful for 'dedicated' links who use PPP.
It's been used for over a year w/out problems at different sites.
required. a core is not dumped at first connecting time and
dumped at second or third time. (patch I)
2. A routine for "show route" refers out of allocated space.
Values pointed by "lp" should be read as CHAR, I think.
there is also no free() for disallocation. (patch II)
Here is also a patch for an improvement: In current imprementation,
even if PPP connection is disconnected by time out, prompt of
interactive mode does not change from "PPP>" to "ppp>" to
indicate the disconnection on a terminal.
So I modified the code to do that. (patch III)
Submitted-By: NAKAMURA Motonori <motonori@econ.kyoto-u.ac.jp>