different access rights.
By default there are two community strings with index 1 and 2, one for
read-only access and second for read-write access:
begemotSnmpdCommunityString.0.1 = $(read)
begemotSnmpdCommunityString.0.2 = $(write)
Now it is possible to define additional community strings using different
indexes:
begemotSnmpdCommunityString.0.3 = "SomeString1"
begemotSnmpdCommunityPermission.0.3 = 1
begemotSnmpdCommunityString.0.4 = "SomeString2"
begemotSnmpdCommunityPermission.0.4 = 2
begemotSnmpdCommunityString.0.5 = "SomeString3"
begemotSnmpdCommunityString.0.6 = "SomeString4"
New attribute begemotSnmpdCommunityPermission can be used to specify access
rights: 1 means "read-only" access, 2 means "read-write" access. If
attribute is not specified for some index this means "read-only" rights.
Community strings must be unique, i.e. must not be the same for different
indexes.
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13785
This is a painful change, but it is needed. On the one hand, we avoid
modifying them, and this slows down some ideas, on the other hand we still
eventually modify them and tools like netstat(1) never work on next version of
FreeBSD. We maintain a ton of spares in them, and we already got some ifdef
hell at the end of tcpcb.
Details:
- Hide struct inpcb, struct tcpcb under _KERNEL || _WANT_FOO.
- Make struct xinpcb, struct xtcpcb pure API structures, not including
kernel structures inpcb and tcpcb inside. Export into these structures
the fields from inpcb and tcpcb that are known to be used, and put there
a ton of spare space.
- Make kernel and userland utilities compilable after these changes.
- Bump __FreeBSD_version.
Reviewed by: rrs, gnn
Differential Revision: D10018
open_client_* returns -1 on failure; 0 on success. Ensure that the return value is
0 -- otherwise exit snmp_open(..).
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
out of order addresses
Move `port->transport` initialization before the TAILQ_FOREACH(..) loop
to ensure that the value is properly initialized before it's inserted
into the TAILQ.
MFC after: 1 week
PR: 217760
Submitted by: eugen
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
to a non-wildcard address. As documented in ip(4), doing sendmsg(2) with
IP_SENDSRCADDR on a socket that is bound to non-wildcard address is
completely different to using this control message on a wildcard one.
A fix is to add a bool to mark whether we did setsockopt(IP_RECVDSTADDR)
on the socket, and use IP_SENDSRCADDR control message only if we did.
While here, garbage collect absolutely useless udp_recv() function that
establishes some structures on stack to never use them later.
when dereferencing a NULL pointer later on.
Choose to just check for the NULL pointer in the next for-loop for now to fix
the issue with a minimal amount of code churn
sys/queue.h use here would make more sense than using a static table
MFC after: 5 days
This avoids a segfault with malformed or unanticipated files,
like IPV6-TC.txt (a file containing just TEXTUAL-CONVENTIONS).
MFC after: 5 days
Found with: gensnmpdef /usr/local/share/snmp/mibs/IPV6-TC.txt
Add an XXX comment to note that the conditional seems suspect given
how it's handled elsewhere in the SNMP_OP_SET case.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1008573
- Use strlcpy to ensure p->name doesn't overflow sa.sun_path [*].
- Use SUN_LEN(..) instead of spelling out calculation longhand (inspired
by comment by jmallett).
Tested with: dgram and stream support with both bsnmpwalk and snmpwalk
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1006825
- Ensure `section` doesn't overrun section by using strlcpy instead of
strcpy [*].
- Use strdup instead of malloc + strcpy (this wasn't flagged by Coverity,
but is an opportunistic change).
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1006826 [*]
This doesn't fix the issue noted in the PR, but at the very least it
cleans up the error so it looks a bit more sane, and in the event
that bsnmp did wander off into the weeds, the likelihood of it
crashing with more sensible output is greater, in my opinion
MFC counter set high so I have enough time to resolve the real
underlying bug in bsnmpwalk
MFC after: 1 month
PR: 215721
- Call snmp_pdu_free on req and resp when done with the objects
- Call snmp_pdu_free on req before calling snmp_pdu_create on it
again
MFC after: 1 week
avoid returning an uninitialized value
There are some really complicated, snakey if-statements combined with
switch statements that could result in an invalid value being returned
as `ret`
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1006551
This is of course to avoid buffer overruns
The remaining strcpy instance in the module needs to be audited for
correctness
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1006827, 1006828
snmp_pdu_free: set pdu->nbindings to 0 to limit the damage that
could happen if a pdu was reused after calling the function, and
as both stack and heap allocation types are used in contrib/bsnmp
and usr.sbin/bsnmpd.
snmp_value_free: NULL out value->v.octetstring.octets after calling
free on it to prevent a double-free from occurring.
MFC after: 2 weeks
as the listening address in snmpd_input(..)
Stash the IPv4 address of the receiver via the recv(..) callback and use it in
the send(..) callback for the transport by specifying IP_SENDSRCADDR for the
control message type.
Add sendmsg logic to the UDP transport's send(..) callback and use the
respective send(..) callback for the transport instead of calling sendto in
snmpd_input(..).
MFC after: 3 weeks
Obtained from: Isilon OneFS (^/onefs/branches/BR_8_0_0_DEV@r507595)
Submitted by: Thor Steingrimsson <thor.steingrimsson@isilon.com>
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Again, for reasons I don't yet understand, this is not being flagged by the
compiler. Unlike the issue addressed in r310587, this problem existed prior
to r310586
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC with: r310586, r310587