Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jordan K. Hubbard
1130b656e5 Make the long-awaited change from $Id$ to $FreeBSD$
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.
1997-01-14 07:20:47 +00:00
Bill Paul
1f552b61b8 Ack. When I moved the getsockopt() calls, I forgot to move the lines
that initialize the getsockopt() args (type and len) too.
1997-01-12 08:18:17 +00:00
Bill Paul
9c171de035 yp_server.c:
- Fail YPPROC_ALL requests when we hit the child process limit. This
  is a little harsh, but it helps prevent the parent from blocking
  and causing other requests to time out.

yp_dnslookup.c:
- Check for duplicate RPC transaction IDs that indicate duplicate
  requests sent due to RPC retransmissions. We don't want to send
  a second DNS request for the same data while an existing request
  is in progress.

- Fix small formatting bogon in snprintf() in yp_async_lookup_addr().
1997-01-07 06:07:21 +00:00
Bill Paul
adc4fa336b More async resolver refinements:
- yp_main.c: Always add the resolver socket to the set of fds
  monitored by select(). It can happen that pending == 0 but we
  still have some data in the socket buffer from an old query.
  This way, the data will be flushed in a timely manner.

- yp_extern.h: remove proto for yp_dns_pending() since we don't need
  it anynmore.

- yp_server.c: call yp_async_lookup_name()/yp_async_lookup_addr()
  functions with the svc_req pointer as an arg instead of the xprt.
  (The svc_req struct includes a pointer to the transport handle,
  and it also has the service version number which the async DNS
  code will need. (see below))

- yp_dnslookup.c:

   o Nuke yp_dns_pending() since we don't need it anymore.
   o In yp_run_dnsq(), swallow up and ignore replies if no requests
     are pending or the ID doesn't match any of the IDs in the queue.
   o In yp_send_dns_reply(), we assume that we will always be
     replying to an NIS v2 client. While this will probably always
     be the case, we do support the v1 'match' procedure, and it
     has a different result struct than v2. For completeness,
     support replying to both NIS v1 and v2 clients.
   o Update the queue entry structure to include a member to
     keep track of the NIS version number.
   o Have yp_async_lookup_name/addr() extract the version number
     from the svc_req structure and save it with the queue entry
     for yp_send_dns_reply() to inspect later.
   o Add some comments.
1996-12-25 18:10:35 +00:00
Bill Paul
926f037af9 Fix some bugs:
- Don't dereference a NULL hostent pointer (if T_PTR lookup fails).

- Today I asked myself: "Self, you wrote this nifty async resolver
  that does a great job handling delayed replies to clients using
  the UDP transport, and the yplib code in libc always uses UDP
  (except for yp_all()). But what if some dork makes a DNS lookup using
  TCP?" Being the only dork on hand at the time, I tried it and was
  enlightened. As I suspected, my transaction ID frobbing hacks cause
  fireworks if called on a TCP transport handle (duh: the structures
  are different). Fix: check the type of socket in xprt->xp_sock using
  getsockopt() and don't use svcudp_get_xid() and svcudp_set_xid() for
  anything except SOCK_DGRAM sockets. (Since accept() gives you a
  new socket for each connection, the transaction ID munging isn't
  needed for TCP anyway.)
1996-12-24 02:44:52 +00:00
Bill Paul
180807d214 Big round o changes:
- yp_dblookup.c: Create non-DB specific database access functions.
  Using these allows access to the underlying database functions without
  needing explicit knowledge of Berkeley DB. (These are used only
  when DB_CACHE is #defined. Other programs that use the non-caching
  functions (yp_mkdb, ypxfr, yppush, rpc.yppasswdd) shouldn't notice
  the difference.)

- yp_dnslookup: Implement async DNS lookups. We send our own DNS
  requests using UDP and put the request in a queue. When the response
  arrives, we use the ID in the header to find the corresponsing queue
  entry and then send the response to the client. We can go about our
  business and handle other YP requests in the meantime. This way, we
  can deal with time consuming DNS requests without blocking and without
  forking.

- yp_server.c: Convert to using new non-DB-specific database access
  functions. This simplifies the code a bit and removes the need for
  this module to know anything about Berkeley DB. Also convert the
  ypproc_match_2_svc() function to use the async DNS lookup routines.

- yp_main.c: tweak yp_svc_run() to add the resolver socket to the
  set of descriptors monitored in the select() loop. Also add a
  timeout to select(); we may get stale DNS requests stuck in the
  queue which we want to invalidate after a while. If the timeout
  hits, we decrement the ttl on all pending DNS requests and nuke
  those requests that aren't handled before ttl hits zero.

- yp_extern.h: Add prototypes for new stuff.

- yp_svc_udp.c (new file): The async resolver code needs to be able
  to rummage around inside the RPC UDP transport handle in order to
  work correcty. There's basically one transport handle, and each time
  a request comes in, the transaction ID in the handle is changed.
  This means that if we queue a DNS request, then we handle some other
  unrelated requests, we will be unable to send the DNS response because
  the transaction ID and remote address of the client that made the DNS
  request will have been lost. What we need to do is save the client
  address and transaction ID in the queue entry for the DNS request,
  then put the transaction ID and address back in the transport handle
  when we're ready to reply. (And then we have to undo the change so
  as not to confuse any other part of the server.) The trouble is that
  the transaction ID is hidden in an opaque part of the transport handle,
  and only the code in the svc_udp module in the RPC library knows how
  to handle it. This file contains a couple of functions that let us
  read and set the transaction ID in spite of this. This is really a
  dirty trick and I should be taken out and shot for even thinking about
  it, but there's no other way to get this stuff to work.

- Makefile: add yp_svc_udp.c to SRCS.
1996-12-22 22:30:58 +00:00
Peter Wemm
f1c72c4c70 Hmm, well, whaddya know? ypserv was making calls to the undocumented
private internal _gethostbydnsname() resolver functions..
1996-08-30 01:17:47 +00:00
Bill Paul
1fbdac93d9 Small touch-ups -- no functional changes.
Fix some comments to reflect reality (in some cases I made changes
to code but not to the comments).

Change some instances of 'inline' to '__inline' to pacify
gcc -ansi -pedantic.

Use rcsid strings more consistently.

Make 'oldaddr' static in yp_access().

Use strcpy()/strcat() in yp_open_db_cache() instead of snprintf().
(Seems to be a little faster this way.)
1996-05-31 16:01:51 +00:00
Bill Paul
778c7b1c1c Import the new, non-GPL ypserv, written by yours truly. Functionally
equivalent to the old ypserv, except that it doesn't support the
-p [port] option to force the server to use a particular port.

The server stubs and yp.h header file are auto-generated from the yp.x
protocol definition file. The auto-generated XDR routines in libc/yp
are also used. The database access code has been broken out into a
seperate module so that other NIS utilities (ypxfr in particular)
can use it.

Note that the old mknetid script is being temporarily moved here; it
will be replaced by an mknetid program which will eventually have
a home under /usr/src/libexec. (The existing script is actually
somewhat broken -- it doesn't handle hosts -- but this isn't a big
deal at this point since the netid.byname map is really only useful
fopr Secure RPC, which we don't have yet.)
1995-12-16 20:54:17 +00:00