handlers to set flags only (with exception for sigquit(),
which still seems to call some non-reentrant functions on
its way to _exit(2).) That must eliminate the possibility
of catching SIGSEGV from following non-reentrant paths from
signal handlers.
PR: bin/32740 bin/33846
Submitted by: Maxim Konovalov <maxim@macomnet.ru>
Obtained from: OpenBSD
is implemented in pam_opie module
For non-PAM variant rewrite empty password checking code to do the right thing
and not disallow empty passwords in all cases.
Hiroyuki YAMAMORI gave a patch for the EPRT command in the
PR below. Problems with the rest of the patch are my fault.
PR: 33268
Reviewed by: iedowse, sheldonh
DoS bug that the select(2)/accept(2) pair is called on
a socket that is in the blocking I/O mode. The bug is
triggered if a selected connection dies before the accept(2)
leading to the accept(2) blocking virtually forever.
MFC after: 1 week
in the SYNOPSIS and DESCRIPTION.
Note that -l remains an ugly exception, to which no known rules apply,
since the specification of a single option multiple times isn't normal
standards-compliant CLI behaviour.
While here, mark AF_INET* and LOG_* defined values up with Dv.
-O, which limits the impact of the write-only restriction to guest
users.
*) The existing manual page's SYNOPSIS and option listing in the
DESCRIPTION are already horribly disordered. No attempt has been
made to fix this.
*) The existing source's getopt() optstring and option handling switch
are already horribly disordered. No attempt has been made to fix
this.
Discussed with: nik, -audit
long -> time_t
%ld -> %qd
fseek -> fseeko
NOTE: that fseek not works for >long offsets per POSIX:
[EOVERFLOW] For fseek( ), the resulting file offset would be a value which
cannot be represented correctly in an object of type long.
preventing anyone from downloading files. In conjunction with -A, and some
appropriate file permissions, this lets you create an anonymous FTP drop
box for people to upload files to.
The more obvious "-w" flag is already taken by NetBSD's ftpd. "-o" was
available as an option letter in all three BSDs.
with NetBSD and OpenBSD. glob(3) will now return GLOB_NOSPACE with
errno set to 0 instead of GLOB_LIMIT when we match more than `gl_matchc'
patterns. GLOB_MAXPATH has been left as an alias of GLOB_LIMIT to
maintain backwards compatibility.
Reviewed by: sheldonh, assar
Obtained from: NetBSD/OpenBSD
with the conversation function and challenges which needs to be
revisited, so in the interim a hack is introduced to provide
an OPIE challenge (which is random if OPIE does not apply)
at all non-anonymnous logins.
Limit the "pathname" glob to one item, as that is what all users of it
are expecting, except for LIST.
Always glob, instead of when the first character is a ~. For example,
if you had directories ~/x1, and ~/x2, then "cwd x[1]" would fail, but
"cwd ~/x[1]" would work since it was globbed due to the ~ character.
Also, "cwd ~/x[12]" used to arbitarily work as it used the first
expansion (ie: x1) without an error. Make it return '550 ambiguous'
instead of '550 not found' so that the user can see the difference.
For LIST, just use the user supplied string as the popen does the glob.
Problem noticed by: Ajay Mittal <amittal@iprg.nokia.com>
This allows you to determine if the file on the other side is the same
as the one you have without transferring the entire file to compare.
Needless to say, if the server end lies to you this check doesn't work,
but on the other hand, if it lies to you about the files checksum,
what can you trust from it ?
The PAM_FAIL_CHECK and PAM_END macros in su.c came from the util-linux
package's PAM patches to the BSD login.c
Submitted by: "David J. MacKenzie" <djm@web.us.uu.net>
files. Mostly -I${.CURDIR} was needed -- especially for YACC generated
files as the new cpp does not look in the ultimate source file
(ie, the .y file)'s directory as told by the "#line" directive. Some were
misspellings of "-I${.CURDIR}" as "-I.".
has set pwok to a non-zero value.
Previously, the fact that skey.access(5) allowed UNIX passwords for
this connection attempt was ignored, even in the NOPAM case.
This only addresses the NOPAM case; when libpam is used, the problem
will persist.
PR: 20333
interface, and statically link them to the programs using them.
These functions, upon reflection and discussion, are too generically
named for a library interface with such specific functionality.
Also the api that they use, whilst ok for private use, isn't good
enough for a libc function.
Additionally there were complications with the build/install-world
process. It depends heavily upon xinstall, which got broken by
the change in api, and caused bootstrap problems and general mayhem.
There is work in progress to address future problems that may be
caused by changes in install-chain tools, and better names for
{g|s}etflags can be derived when some future program requires them.
For now the code has been left in src/lib/libc/gen (it started off
in src/bin/ls).
It's important to provide library functions for manipulating file
flag strings if we ever want this interface to be adopted outside
of the source tree, but now isn't necessarily the right moment
with 4.0-release just around the corner.
Approved: jkh
When hostname is not set, ftpd core dumps, because there is no
NULL check for freeing name resolving information for its own
hostname.
So the check is added.
Approved by: jkh
o main returns int not void
o use return 0 at end of main when needed
o use braces to avoid potentially ambiguous else
o don't default to type int (and also remove a useless register
modifier).
Reviewed by: obrien and chuckr
friends are terminated and allow for a maximum
host name length of MAXHOSTNAMELEN - 1.
Put parenthesis around sizeof args.
Make some variables static.
Fix telnetd -u (broken by my last commit)
Prompted by: bde
output for local users. FTP protocol RFC also says that 'ls' output is
not machine-readable. "always UTC" still possible with TZ= in ftpd
environment by price of having UTC in log files too.
Fix INTERNAL_LS to sense new /etc/localtime after chroot
any case.
It makes no difference for anon account (since chroot already makes it GMT),
but if you do mirror with special non-anon login, in old variant
your mirror will be wholy retransmitted twice in the year due to
time zone changes (/etc/localtime plays bad role here)
plain 0 should be used. This happens to work because we #define
NULL to 0, but is stylistically wrong and can cause problems
for people trying to port bits of code to other environments.
PR: 2752
Submitted by: Arne Henrik Juul <arnej@imf.unit.no>
modules from src/bin/ls, and handling exec(_PATH_LS,..) as a
special case, very useful in an environment where many users
are given chroot access. "~/etc/{s}pwd.db" files are still
needed if uid/gid->user/group translation is desired.
To enable this it must be compiled with the make variable
FTP_INTERNAL_LS defined, either in /etc/make.conf or the
environment.
- Use MAP_FAILED instead of the constant -1 to indicate
failure (required by POSIX).
- Removed flag arguments of '0' (required by POSIX).
- Fixed code which expected an error return of 0.
- Fixed code which thought any address with the high bit set
was an error.
- Check for failure where no checks were present.
Discussed with: bde
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.
password: ask for it, but don't tell that S/key password required.
It looks like non-s/key system from outside.
Additionally tell that s/key required when it is so for normal case
It happens if 1) regular passwords not allowed, 2) skey database
not activated for given user.
Under some rare circumstanes skey_challenge can return empty
diagnostic or even previous buffer, fix it.
Document the new -R (relax paranoia) option.
From NetBSD/Lite2: code and man page cleanups, Kerberos IV hooks
(relax, we're still exportable), and /etc/ftpchroot feature for
semi-anonymous accounts
or addresses other than the requestor's address. This violates the FTP
protocol (hmm...as I write this, I'm going to change this to a run-time var.)
Require login before PASV and RNTO commands.
Close unused PASV ports so they don't hang around forever.
Do not allow file overwrites via rename or STOR when anonymous
(suspenders).
Clean up buffer utilization.
My code, but heavily inspired by Hobbit's changes to wu-ftpd as pointed out
by Mike Prettejohn and Kit Knox.
accepting connections on the FTP port and forking children processes to
handling them. This is lower overhead than spawning ftpd from inetd and
can be a significant win on busy FTP servers. Be sure to disable ftpd in
inetd.conf if you decide to use this option.
These changes are based on similar changes I made to wu-ftpd and have
been in use on wcarchive for several months.
- set TCP_NOPUSH to keep from sending short packets at each write(2) boundary
- set SO_SNDBUF to 64k so we have a reasonable amount of buffer space
- for a regular file in binary mode which is not being restarted and is
. smaller than 16 Meg, use mmap(2) and write(2) the whole file in one big
gulp
In the most common circumstances, this should dramatically reduce the
system-call load from ftpd, since the call to write() will not return until
the entire file has been written, rather than writing just a few K at a time
in a loop.
libskey contains references to _crypt and can't resolve it unless
-lcrypt occurs after it in the link command. This only occurs when
linking statically.
(as is printing out a version number at the telnet login banner).
Don't print out /etc/motd when people login, instead if present,
print out /etc/ftpmotd. It looks like 4.4lite2 has done something similar
(perhaps for different reasons) because /etc/motd no longer shows up
on vangogh.
Folks who like the old behavior can create a symbolic link to motd.