Commit Graph

227 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
peter
28fb9a318f Slight adjustment to previous fix for __ivaliduser(). It was checking for
the comment before checking for long lines, so there was a possibility
that the wrap-around might be used as an exploitable hostname.
Reviewed by:
Submitted by:
Obtained from:
1995-07-16 17:03:58 +00:00
joerg
694c427284 Make ruserok() accept the #-starting comment lines we used to have
in our default /etc/hosts.equiv.

Closes PR #conf/620: Default /etc/hosts.equiv...
1995-07-16 10:12:32 +00:00
bde
f74bb0f7b4 The declaration of sigaction was missing a `const'. 1995-07-16 09:44:58 +00:00
bde
8170813423 Fix the synopsis of signal() again. Now it is uglier but correct.
(Declarations of signal that don't use typedefs can't be formatted
in the standard man page form.)
1995-07-16 09:41:03 +00:00
joerg
873428202f Fix the prototypes for getservby{name,port}().
Closes PR #docs/568: minor manpage bug

Submitted by:	Michael Smith (email address no longer valid)
1995-07-09 08:17:01 +00:00
wpaul
590e5a6c7f The ypprot_err() function incorrectly maps YP_NODOM to YPERR_NODOM.
Strange as it sounds, it should map to YPERR_DOMAIN instead.

The YP_NODOM protocol error code is generally returned by ypserv when you
ask it for data from a domain that it doesn't support. By contrast,
the YPERR_NODOM error code means 'local domain name not set.'
Consequently, this incorrect mapping leads to yperr_string() generating
a very confusing error message. YPERR_DOMAIN says 'couldn't
bind to a server which serves this domain' which is much closer
to the truth.
1995-07-05 06:04:20 +00:00
wpaul
89e37d5aa0 Do the same sanity checking in _pw_breakout_yp() that we do in
_gr_breakout_yp(): if we encounter a NULL pointer generated as the
result of a badly formatted NIS passwd entry (e.g. missing fields),
we punt and return an error code, thereby silently skipping the
bad entry.
1995-06-26 16:04:57 +00:00
wpaul
74bdeb9992 Fix for a potential problem reported by a user I bumped into on IRC
last night:

_gr_breakout_yp() doesn't check for badly formatted NIS group entries.
For example, a bogus entry like this:

bootp::user1,user2,user3

will lead to a null pointer dereference and a SEGV (note that the GID
field is missing -- this results in one of the strsep(&result, ":")
returning NULL). The symtpom of this problem is programs dumping
core left and right the moment you add a + entry to /etc/group.
Note that while this is similar to an earlier bug, it's caused by a
different set of circumstances.

The fix is to check for the NULL pointers and have _gr_breakout_yp()
punt and return a failure code if it catches one. This is more or
less the behavior of SunOS: if a bad NIS group entry is encountered,
it's silently ignored. I don't think our standard (non-NIS) group
parsing code behaves the same way. It doesn't crash though, so I'm
citing the 'it ain't broken, don't fix it' rule and leaving it alone.

I'll probably have to add similar checks to _pw_breakout_yp() in
getpwent.c to ward off the same problems. It's rare that bad NIS
map entries like this occur, but we should handle them gracefully
when they do.
1995-06-26 14:59:46 +00:00
wpaul
c3bd02d791 Fixes for PR #508 and #509 ('botched 'Bad netgroup' error message' and
'cycle in netgroup check too greedy').

PR #508 is apparently due to an inconsistency in the way the 4.4BSD
netgroup code deals with bad netgroups. When 4.4BSD code encounters
a badly formed netgroup entry (e.g. (somehost,-somedomain), which,
because of the missing comma between the '-' and 'somedomain,' has
only 2 fields instead of 3), it generates an error message and
then bails out without doing any more processing on the netgroup
containing the bad entry. Conversely, every other *NIX in the world
that usees netgroups just tries to parse the entry as best it can
and then silently continues on its way.

The result is that two bad things happen: 1) we ignore other valid entries
within the netgroup containing the bogus entry, which prevents
us from interoperating with other systems that don't behave this way,
and 2) by printing an error to stderr from inside libc, we hose certain
programs, in this case rlogind. In the problem report, Bill Fenner
noted that the 'B' from 'Bad' was missing, and that rlogind exited
immediately after generating the error. The missing 'B' is apparently
not caused by any problem in getnetgrent.c; more likely it's getting
swallowed up by rlogind somehow, and the error message itself causes
rlogind to become confused. I was able to duplicate this problem and
discovered that running a simple test program on my FreeBSD system
resulted in a properly formatted (if confusing) error, whereas triggering
the error by trying to rlogin to the machine yielded the missing 'B'
problem.

Anyway, the fixes for this are as follows:

- The error message has been reformatted so that it prints out more useful
  information (e.g. Bad entry (somehost,-somedomain) in netgroup "foo").
  We check for NULL entries so that we don't print '(null)' anymore too. :)

- Rearranged things in parse_netgrp()  so that we make a best guess at
  what bad entries are supposed to look like and then continue processing
  instead of bailing out.

- Even though the error message has been cleaned up, it's wrapped inside
  a #ifdef DEBUG. This way we match the behavior of other systems. Since we
  now handle the error condition better anyway, this error message becomes
  less important.

PR #507 is another case of inconsistency. The code that handles
duplicate/circular netgroup entries isn't really 'too greedy; -- it's
just too noisy. If you have a netgroup containing duplicate entries,
the code actually does the right thing, but it also generates an error
message. As with the 'Bad netgroup' message, spewing this out from
inside libc can also hose certain programs (like rlogind). Again, no
other system generates an error message in this case.

The only change here is to hide the error message inside an #ifdef DEBUG.
Like the other message, it's largely superfluous since the code handles
the condition correctly.

Note that PR #510 (+@netgroup host matching in /etc/hosts.equiv) is still
being investigated. I haven't been able to duplicate it myself, and I
strongly suspect it to be a configuration problem of some kind. However,
I'm leaving all three PRs open until I get 510 resolved just for the
sake of paranoia.
1995-06-23 14:47:54 +00:00
hsu
969b124869 Don't cast void functions to void.
Obtained from: NetBSD commit by jtc on June 16, 1995.
1995-06-20 18:31:16 +00:00
wpaul
3e0e2d1182 Make _havemaster() use yp_first() (again) instead of yp_order() to
ward off possible NIS+ evil. (I might be overly paranoid with this,
but it doesn't hurt, so...)
1995-06-17 04:00:02 +00:00
ache
4c49848733 Add /usr/local/share/nls to default search path 1995-06-17 03:02:21 +00:00
rgrimes
1b1ee55538 Merge RELENG_2_0_5 into HEAD 1995-06-11 19:33:05 +00:00
rgrimes
f05428e4cd Remove trailing whitespace. 1995-05-30 05:51:47 +00:00
rgrimes
4f960dd75f Remove trailing whitespace. 1995-05-30 03:57:47 +00:00
nate
0cd8cad49e Add a missing link from the setpgid manpage to the setpgrp manpage. 1995-05-27 04:17:04 +00:00
dg
ab5358efa7 Fixed typo. 1995-05-15 12:23:03 +00:00
ache
471b2e6d7b Parse ^? now, our termcap use it and some termcaps from other
systems use it too
1995-05-14 22:29:13 +00:00
wpaul
595e0167eb Cosmetic changes and paranoia checks:
ypbind.c:
Make fewer assumtions about the state of the dom_alive and dom_broadcasting
flags in roc_received().

If select() fails, use syslog() to report the error rather than perror().

Check that all our malloc()s succeed. Report malloc() failure in
ypbindproc_setdom_2() to callers.

yplib.c:

Use #defined constants in ypbinderr_string() rather than hard-coded values.
1995-05-03 18:33:10 +00:00
ache
1f6da08da4 Fix bracket error for LogMask
Submitted by: Ruslan Belkin <rus@home2.UA.net>
1995-05-02 17:46:30 +00:00
joerg
48dd93ce46 Added function and man page for ftok(3), used in conjunction with
the so-called "System V IPC".

Submitted by:	jbeukema@HK.Super.Net (John Beukema)
Obtained from:  Th. Lockert <tholo@sigmasoft.com>, via NetBSD
1995-05-01 08:53:21 +00:00
wpaul
bdad16fdda Small fix for the following problems:
- If you take the wheel entry out of /etc/group and turn on NIS,
the '+:*::' line is incorrectly flagged as the entry for wheel (the
empty gid section is translated to 0), hence getgrgid() returns '+'
as the name of the group instead of 'wheel.'

- Using just '+:' as the 'turn on NIS' switch in /etc/group makes
getgrgid() dump core because of a null pointer dereference. (Last
time I was in here, I foolishly assumed that fixing the core dump
problems with getgrnam() and getgrent() would fix getgrgid() too.
Silly me.)
1995-04-29 17:14:50 +00:00
wpaul
b72b2e3557 ypbind.c: Major overhaul.
- Moved to a more client-driven model. We aggressively attempt to keep
the default domain bound (as before) but we give up on non-default
domains if we lose contact with a server and fail to get a response
after one round of broadcasting. This helps drastically reduce the
amount of network bandwitdh that ypbind consumes: if a client references
the secondary domain at some later point, this will prod ypbind into
establishing a new binding anyway, so continuously broadcasting without
need is pointless.

Note that we still actively seek out a binding for our default domain
even if no client program has queried us yet. I'm not exactly sure if
this matches SunOS's behavior or not, but I decided to do it this way
since we can get into all sorts of trouble if our default domain comes
unbound. Even so, we're still much quieter than we used to be.

- Removed a bunch of no-longer pertinent comments and a couple of
chunks of #ifdef 0'ed code that no longer fit in to the new layout.

- Theo deRaadt must have become frustrated with the callback mechanism
in clnt_broadcast(), because he shamelessly stole the clnt_broadcast()
code right out of the RPC library and hacked it up to suit his needs.
(Comments and all! :)

I can understand why: clnt_broadcast() blocks while awaiting replies.
Changing this behavior requires surgery. However, you can work around
this: fork the broadcast into a child process and relay the results
back to the parent via a pipe. (Careful obervation has shown that the
SunOS ypbind forks children for broadcasting too, though I can only
guess what sort of interprocess communication it uses. pipe() seems to
do the job well enough.)

This may seem like the long way around, but it's not really that
hard to implement, and I'd prefer to use documented RPC library functions
wherever possible. We're careful to limit the number of simultaneous
broadcasters to avoid swamping the system (the current limit is 5).
Each clnt_broadcast() call only sends out a small number of packets
at increasing intervals. We're also careful not to spawn more than one
bradcaster for a given domain.

- Used clntudp_bufcreate() and clnt_call() to implement a ping()
function for directly querying a particular server so that we can
check if it's still alive. This lets me completely remove the old
bradcasting code and use actual RPC library calls instead, at the
cost of more than a few handfulls of torn-out hair. (Make no mistake
folks: I *HATE* RPC.) Currently, the ping interval is one minute.

- Fixed another potential 'nfds too big for select()' bug: use
_rpc_dtablesize() instead of getdtablesize().

- Quieted gcc -Wall a bit.

- Probably a bunch of other stuff that I've forgotten.

ypbind.8:

- Updated man page to reflect modifications.

ypwhich.c:

- Small mind-o fix from last time: decode error results from
ypbind correctly (*groan*)

yplib.c:

- same as above

- Change behavior of _yp_dobind() a little: if we get back a 'Domain
not bound' error for a given domain, retry a few times before giving
up and passing the error back to the caller. We have to sleep for a
few seconds between tries since the 'Domain not bound' error comes
back immediately (by repeatedly looping, we end up pounding on ypbind).
We retry at most 20 times at 5 second intervals. This gives us a full
minute to get a response. This seems to deviate a bit from SunOS
behavior -- it appears to wait forever -- but I don't like the idea
of perpetually hanging inside a library call.

Note that this should fix the problems some people have with bindings
not being established fast enough at boot time; sometimes amd is started
in /etc/rc after ypbind has run but before it gets a binding set up. The
automounter gets annoyed at this and tends to exit. By pausing ther YP
calls until a binding is ready, we avoid this situation.

- Another _yp_dobind() change: if we determine that our binding files
are unlocked or nonexistent, jump directly to code that pokes ypbind
into restablishing the binding. Again, if it fails, we'll time out
eventually and return.
1995-04-26 19:03:16 +00:00
bde
ff316d0a9c Remove setre*id*. 1995-04-25 10:00:04 +00:00
ache
e332c87682 Add setreuid/setregid to MAN section 1995-04-23 15:06:16 +00:00
ache
14625e5bf4 Add setreuid/setregid 1995-04-23 12:34:48 +00:00
ache
0e058b2a04 Fix history info 1995-04-23 12:31:13 +00:00
wpaul
3d4135682a in _freecaches(): strdup() allocates us memory -- remember to free it. 1995-04-22 17:28:04 +00:00
wpaul
be813a3b68 small NIS binding fixes:
ypbind.c: if a client program asks ypbind for the name of the server
for a particular domain, and there isn't a binding for that domain
available yet, ypbind needs to supply a status value along with its
failure message. Set yprespbody.ypbind_error before returning from
a ypbindproc_domain request.

yplib.c: properly handle the error status messages ypbind now has the
ability to send us. Add a ypbinderr_string() function to decode the
error values.

ypwhich.c: handle ypbind errors correctly: yperr_string() can't handle
ypbind_status messages -- use ypbinderr_string instead.
1995-04-21 18:04:36 +00:00
bde
135036b624 Fix bugs in opendir():
- it succeeded on non-directories (see POSIX 5.1.2.4).
- it hung on (non-open) named pipes.
- it leaked memory if the second malloc() failed.
- it didn't preserve errno across errors in close().
1995-04-21 15:23:27 +00:00
ache
b07c35fa47 If locale not available, fallback to strcasecmp, not to strcmp 1995-04-16 22:43:45 +00:00
wpaul
faeb716870 Head off potential core dump in _havemaster() (we don't need to free any
memory here: the underlying YP routines handle this one for us).
1995-04-15 03:11:55 +00:00
wpaul
3ce6850856 Better conformance to SunOS behavior: if we can't match a user to one
of the plus or minus lists at all, reject him. This lets you create
a +@netgroup list of users that you want to admit and reject everybody
else. If you end your +@netgroup list with the wildcard line
(+:::::::::) then you'll have a +@netgroup list that remaps the
specified people but leaves people not in any netgroup unaffected.
1995-04-14 14:56:28 +00:00
wollman
ddebc4599e Add err_set_file() and err_set_exit() functions to make it possible for
programs which use err(3) to work nicely in a wider range of environments
(e.g., dialog).
1995-04-13 18:04:11 +00:00
wpaul
a20de0747b Add an ethers(3) man page. 1995-04-12 22:28:49 +00:00
wpaul
e98b1385b8 More of the same: we also need to handle multiple domains properly
even if /var/yp/binding/DOMAIN.VERS doesn't exist yet.
1995-04-09 21:52:31 +00:00
wpaul
568d625957 Fix behavior of YP library routines in environments with multiple domains,
where one or more of the non-default domains are not yet bound.

If we make a YP request for a domain other than the default domain,
and there is no binding for the new domain yet, _yp_dobind() sees
that the /var/yp/binding/DOMAIN.VERS file for the unbound domain is
not locked (by ypbind) and from this it concludes that the NIS system
is dead, so it gives up.

This behavior has been changed: before giving up in this case, we now
make a second check to see if the binding file for the *default* domain
is also not locked. Only if the default domain binding file is also
unlocked to we now assume that ypbind has bought the farm and bail out.
(Note: this assumes that the user hasn't changed the default domain
while ypbind is running.)

With this change, _do_ypbind() is allowed to proceed into the next
section of code wherein it prods ypbind into establishing a binding
for the new domain. This first call times out after ten seconds,
after which it should retry and succeed. From then on, the binding
for the second domain should be handled normally.
1995-04-09 19:26:23 +00:00
ache
8566f5db7b Add missing header reference 1995-04-09 04:59:40 +00:00
bde
76e6f5422f Reviewed by: ache and wollman (long ago)
isctype.c:
o The tolower() and toupper() functions duplicated too much code
  and were out of date (surprise).  This didn't matter because
  it was difficult to call them.
o Change formatting to be more like that in <ctype.h> (with
  extra parentheses as in the macros).  Perhaps this file should
  be machine generated or everything should be handled like
  __tolower() so that no code is repeated.

nomacros.c:
o Instead of looking at _USE_CTYPE_INLINE_ to see what <ctype.h>
  has done, set _EXTERNALIZE_CTYPE_INLINES_ to tell <ctype.h>
  what to do, so that we don't have anything left to do.  Note
  that code is now generated even if inlines are used by default.
  This allows users to switch to non-inline versions.
1995-04-07 11:52:17 +00:00
bde
e7d4f4404c Obtained from: 1.1.5 (originally by jtc)
Fix printf("%g", 0.0) - print "0", not "0.".  The previous fixes in this
area had one non-cosmetic (non-)change that caused this bug.

Bruce
1995-04-06 16:28:15 +00:00
joerg
dc1920c854 The man page setmode(3) declares `void setmode' when it should be
declared `void *setmode'.

Submitted by:	kargl@troutmask.apl.washington.edu
1995-04-05 22:56:45 +00:00
ache
7c173188be Add "before inclusion of any header which ... "
Suggested by: bde
1995-04-04 11:29:51 +00:00
wpaul
12dab28cef 'Fix' for esoteric misfeature discovered while searching for another bug:
select() returns EINVAL if you try to feed it a value of FD_SETSIZE greater
that 256. You can apparently adjust this by specifying a larger value of
FD_SETSIZE when configuring your kernel. However, if you set the maximum
number of open file descriptors per process to some value greater than
the FD_SETSIZE value that select() expects, many selects() within the RPC
library code will be botched because _rpc_dtablesize() will return
invalid numbers. This is to say that it will return the upper descriptor
table size limit which can be much higher than 256. Unless select() is
prepared to expect this 'unusually' high value, it will fail. (A good
example of this can be seen with NIS enabled: if you type 'unlimit' at
the shell prompt and then run any command that does NIS calls, you'll
be bombarded with errors from clnttcp_create().)

A temporary fix for this is to clamp the value returned by _rpc_dtablesize()
at FD_SETSIZE (as defined in <sys/types.h> (256)). I suppose the Right
Thing would be to provide some mechanism for select() to dynamically
adjust itself to handle FD_SETSIZE values larger than 256, but it's a
bit late in the game for that. Hopefully 256 file descriptors will be enough
to keep RPC happy for now.
1995-04-04 05:53:22 +00:00
wpaul
fd72f57342 getpwent.c: fix problem with emacs dumping core when NIS is enabled. Also
add #includes for YP headers when compiling with -DYP to avoid some implicit
declarations.

getgrent.c & getnetgrent.c: add some #includes to avoid implicit declarations
of YP functions.
1995-04-04 05:36:16 +00:00
ache
905b232bc7 Properly describe how to expand default limit of handled descriptors 1995-04-04 01:27:54 +00:00
wpaul
9b1ee02f17 Submitted by: Sebastian Strollow
Obtained from: Casper H. Dik (by vay of Usenet)

Small patch to help improve NIS rebinding times (among other things):


>From: casper@fwi.uva.nl (Casper H.S. Dik)
>Newsgroups: comp.sys.sun.misc,comp.sys.sun.admin
>Subject: FIX for slow rebinding of NIS.
>Summary: a small change in libc makes life with NIS a lot easier.
>Message-ID: <1992Jan17.173905.11727@fwi.uva.nl>
>Date: 17 Jan 92 17:39:05 GMT
>Sender: news@fwi.uva.nl
>Organization: FWI, University of Amsterdam
>Lines: 138
>Nntp-Posting-Host: halo.fwi.uva.nl

Have you been plagued by long waits when your NIS server is rebooted?
READ ON!

Sun has a patch, but the README says:

********************* WARNING ******************************

  This is a new version of ypbind that never uses the NIS
  binding file to cache the servers binding. This will have
  the effect of fixing the current symptom. However, it might
  degrade the overall performance of the system when the
  server is available. This is most likely to happen on an
  overloaded server, which will cause the network to produce
  a broadcast storm.

*************************************************************

Therefor, I have produced another fix.

o What goes wrong.

When the NIS server is rebooted, ypserv will obtain different ports
to listen for RPC requests. All clients will continue to use the old
binding they obtained earlier. The NIS server will send ICMP dst unreachable
messages for the RPC requests that arrive at the old port. These ICMPs
are dropped on the floor and the client code will continue sending the
requests until the timer has expired. The small fix at the end of this
message will pick up these ICMP messages and deliver them to the RPC layer.

o Before and after.

I've tested this on some machines and this is the result:

	(kill and restart ypserv on the server)

original% time ypmatch user passwd
user:....
0.040u 0.090s 2:35.64 0.0% 0+126k 0+0io 0pf+0w (155 seconds elapsed time)

fixedhost% time ypmatch user passwd
user:....
0.050u 0.050s 0:10.20 0.9% 0+136k 0+0io 0pf+0w (10 seconds elapsed time)

Rebinding is almost instantaneous.

o Other benefits.
	RPC calls that use UDP as transport will no longer time out but
	will abort much sooner. (E.g., the remote host is unreachable or
	111/udp is filtered by an intermediate router)
1995-04-02 20:05:20 +00:00
wpaul
3c90ffcb6f Fix xdr_ypmap_parms() so that it agrees with xdr_domainname(), xdr_peername()
and friends.
1995-04-02 19:58:29 +00:00
ache
46d6abb62c Fix manpage rule 1995-04-02 19:35:40 +00:00
wpaul
3db0e33b68 Add ether_addr functions to libc. This seems to be the logical place
to put them. A man page is in the works.
1995-04-02 01:31:17 +00:00
wpaul
d1bfae9353 Add some missing xdr functions needed for server-side implementations.
(This is to help me reduce yppush a bit: it has its own copy of yp_xdr.c
right now, but I can get rid of it now that this stuff is here.)
1995-04-02 01:02:17 +00:00