freebsd-nq/contrib/tcp_wrappers/hosts_access.c
Sheldon Hearn 99abb2876d Add the ``blacklist'' feature, which allows a path to a filename to
be used as a valid pattern in the access control language.

Patch obtained from ftp://ftp.porcupine.org/pub/security/ .

Requested by:	markm
1999-09-21 09:09:57 +00:00

356 lines
9.9 KiB
C

/*
* This module implements a simple access control language that is based on
* host (or domain) names, NIS (host) netgroup names, IP addresses (or
* network numbers) and daemon process names. When a match is found the
* search is terminated, and depending on whether PROCESS_OPTIONS is defined,
* a list of options is executed or an optional shell command is executed.
*
* Host and user names are looked up on demand, provided that suitable endpoint
* information is available as sockaddr_in structures or TLI netbufs. As a
* side effect, the pattern matching process may change the contents of
* request structure fields.
*
* Diagnostics are reported through syslog(3).
*
* Compile with -DNETGROUP if your library provides support for netgroups.
*
* Author: Wietse Venema, Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands.
*
* $FreeBSD$
*/
#ifndef lint
static char sccsid[] = "@(#) hosts_access.c 1.21 97/02/12 02:13:22";
#endif
/* System libraries. */
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <syslog.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <setjmp.h>
#include <string.h>
extern char *fgets();
extern int errno;
#ifndef INADDR_NONE
#define INADDR_NONE (-1) /* XXX should be 0xffffffff */
#endif
/* Local stuff. */
#include "tcpd.h"
/* Error handling. */
extern jmp_buf tcpd_buf;
/* Delimiters for lists of daemons or clients. */
static char sep[] = ", \t\r\n";
/* Constants to be used in assignments only, not in comparisons... */
#define YES 1
#define NO 0
/*
* These variables are globally visible so that they can be redirected in
* verification mode.
*/
char *hosts_allow_table = HOSTS_ALLOW;
char *hosts_deny_table = HOSTS_DENY;
int hosts_access_verbose = 0;
/*
* In a long-running process, we are not at liberty to just go away.
*/
int resident = (-1); /* -1, 0: unknown; +1: yes */
/* Forward declarations. */
static int table_match();
static int list_match();
static int server_match();
static int client_match();
static int host_match();
static int string_match();
static int masked_match();
/* Size of logical line buffer. */
#define BUFLEN 2048
/* hosts_access - host access control facility */
int hosts_access(request)
struct request_info *request;
{
int verdict;
/*
* If the (daemon, client) pair is matched by an entry in the file
* /etc/hosts.allow, access is granted. Otherwise, if the (daemon,
* client) pair is matched by an entry in the file /etc/hosts.deny,
* access is denied. Otherwise, access is granted. A non-existent
* access-control file is treated as an empty file.
*
* After a rule has been matched, the optional language extensions may
* decide to grant or refuse service anyway. Or, while a rule is being
* processed, a serious error is found, and it seems better to play safe
* and deny service. All this is done by jumping back into the
* hosts_access() routine, bypassing the regular return from the
* table_match() function calls below.
*/
if (resident <= 0)
resident++;
verdict = setjmp(tcpd_buf);
if (verdict != 0)
return (verdict == AC_PERMIT);
if (table_match(hosts_allow_table, request))
return (YES);
if (table_match(hosts_deny_table, request))
return (NO);
return (YES);
}
/* table_match - match table entries with (daemon, client) pair */
static int table_match(table, request)
char *table;
struct request_info *request;
{
FILE *fp;
char sv_list[BUFLEN]; /* becomes list of daemons */
char *cl_list; /* becomes list of clients */
char *sh_cmd; /* becomes optional shell command */
int match = NO;
struct tcpd_context saved_context;
saved_context = tcpd_context; /* stupid compilers */
/*
* Between the fopen() and fclose() calls, avoid jumps that may cause
* file descriptor leaks.
*/
if ((fp = fopen(table, "r")) != 0) {
tcpd_context.file = table;
tcpd_context.line = 0;
while (match == NO && xgets(sv_list, sizeof(sv_list), fp) != 0) {
if (sv_list[strlen(sv_list) - 1] != '\n') {
tcpd_warn("missing newline or line too long");
continue;
}
if (sv_list[0] == '#' || sv_list[strspn(sv_list, " \t\r\n")] == 0)
continue;
if ((cl_list = split_at(sv_list, ':')) == 0) {
tcpd_warn("missing \":\" separator");
continue;
}
sh_cmd = split_at(cl_list, ':');
match = list_match(sv_list, request, server_match)
&& list_match(cl_list, request, client_match);
}
(void) fclose(fp);
} else if (errno != ENOENT) {
tcpd_warn("cannot open %s: %m", table);
}
if (match) {
if (hosts_access_verbose > 1)
syslog(LOG_DEBUG, "matched: %s line %d",
tcpd_context.file, tcpd_context.line);
if (sh_cmd) {
#ifdef PROCESS_OPTIONS
process_options(sh_cmd, request);
#else
char cmd[BUFSIZ];
shell_cmd(percent_x(cmd, sizeof(cmd), sh_cmd, request));
#endif
}
}
tcpd_context = saved_context;
return (match);
}
/* list_match - match a request against a list of patterns with exceptions */
static int list_match(list, request, match_fn)
char *list;
struct request_info *request;
int (*match_fn) ();
{
char *tok;
/*
* Process tokens one at a time. We have exhausted all possible matches
* when we reach an "EXCEPT" token or the end of the list. If we do find
* a match, look for an "EXCEPT" list and recurse to determine whether
* the match is affected by any exceptions.
*/
for (tok = strtok(list, sep); tok != 0; tok = strtok((char *) 0, sep)) {
if (STR_EQ(tok, "EXCEPT")) /* EXCEPT: give up */
return (NO);
if (match_fn(tok, request)) { /* YES: look for exceptions */
while ((tok = strtok((char *) 0, sep)) && STR_NE(tok, "EXCEPT"))
/* VOID */ ;
return (tok == 0 || list_match((char *) 0, request, match_fn) == 0);
}
}
return (NO);
}
/* server_match - match server information */
static int server_match(tok, request)
char *tok;
struct request_info *request;
{
char *host;
if ((host = split_at(tok + 1, '@')) == 0) { /* plain daemon */
return (string_match(tok, eval_daemon(request)));
} else { /* daemon@host */
return (string_match(tok, eval_daemon(request))
&& host_match(host, request->server));
}
}
/* client_match - match client information */
static int client_match(tok, request)
char *tok;
struct request_info *request;
{
char *host;
if ((host = split_at(tok + 1, '@')) == 0) { /* plain host */
return (host_match(tok, request->client));
} else { /* user@host */
return (host_match(host, request->client)
&& string_match(tok, eval_user(request)));
}
}
/* hostfile_match - look up host patterns from file */
static int hostfile_match(path, host)
char *path;
struct hosts_info *host;
{
char tok[BUFSIZ];
int match = NO;
FILE *fp;
if ((fp = fopen(path, "r")) != 0) {
while (fscanf(fp, "%s", tok) == 1 && !(match = host_match(tok, host)))
/* void */ ;
fclose(fp);
} else if (errno != ENOENT) {
tcpd_warn("open %s: %m", path);
}
return (match);
}
/* host_match - match host name and/or address against pattern */
static int host_match(tok, host)
char *tok;
struct host_info *host;
{
char *mask;
/*
* This code looks a little hairy because we want to avoid unnecessary
* hostname lookups.
*
* The KNOWN pattern requires that both address AND name be known; some
* patterns are specific to host names or to host addresses; all other
* patterns are satisfied when either the address OR the name match.
*/
if (tok[0] == '@') { /* netgroup: look it up */
#ifdef NETGROUP
static char *mydomain = 0;
if (mydomain == 0)
yp_get_default_domain(&mydomain);
return (innetgr(tok + 1, eval_hostname(host), (char *) 0, mydomain));
#else
tcpd_warn("netgroup support is disabled"); /* not tcpd_jump() */
return (NO);
#endif
} else if (tok[0] == '/') { /* /file hack */
return (hostfile_match(tok, host));
} else if (STR_EQ(tok, "KNOWN")) { /* check address and name */
char *name = eval_hostname(host);
return (STR_NE(eval_hostaddr(host), unknown) && HOSTNAME_KNOWN(name));
} else if (STR_EQ(tok, "LOCAL")) { /* local: no dots in name */
char *name = eval_hostname(host);
return (strchr(name, '.') == 0 && HOSTNAME_KNOWN(name));
} else if ((mask = split_at(tok, '/')) != 0) { /* net/mask */
return (masked_match(tok, mask, eval_hostaddr(host)));
} else { /* anything else */
return (string_match(tok, eval_hostaddr(host))
|| (NOT_INADDR(tok) && string_match(tok, eval_hostname(host))));
}
}
/* string_match - match string against pattern */
static int string_match(tok, string)
char *tok;
char *string;
{
int n;
if (tok[0] == '.') { /* suffix */
n = strlen(string) - strlen(tok);
return (n > 0 && STR_EQ(tok, string + n));
} else if (STR_EQ(tok, "ALL")) { /* all: match any */
return (YES);
} else if (STR_EQ(tok, "KNOWN")) { /* not unknown */
return (STR_NE(string, unknown));
} else if (tok[(n = strlen(tok)) - 1] == '.') { /* prefix */
return (STRN_EQ(tok, string, n));
} else { /* exact match */
return (STR_EQ(tok, string));
}
}
/* masked_match - match address against netnumber/netmask */
static int masked_match(net_tok, mask_tok, string)
char *net_tok;
char *mask_tok;
char *string;
{
unsigned long net;
unsigned long mask;
unsigned long addr;
/*
* Disallow forms other than dotted quad: the treatment that inet_addr()
* gives to forms with less than four components is inconsistent with the
* access control language. John P. Rouillard <rouilj@cs.umb.edu>.
*/
if ((addr = dot_quad_addr(string)) == INADDR_NONE)
return (NO);
if ((net = dot_quad_addr(net_tok)) == INADDR_NONE
|| (mask = dot_quad_addr(mask_tok)) == INADDR_NONE) {
tcpd_warn("bad net/mask expression: %s/%s", net_tok, mask_tok);
return (NO); /* not tcpd_jump() */
}
return ((addr & mask) == net);
}