freebsd-skq/libexec/revnetgroup/parse_netgroup.c
Christian Brueffer 5efaea4cc6 Remove the 3rd clause ("advertising clause") of the BSD license as
permitted by the University of Berkeley on July 22, 1999.

Reviewed by:	imp
MFC after:	1 week
2014-02-17 22:27:32 +00:00

361 lines
9.1 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (c) 1992, 1993
* The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
*
* This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
* Rick Macklem at The University of Guelph.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
* may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
* without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#ifndef lint
static const char rcsid[] =
"$FreeBSD$";
#endif /* not lint */
/*
* This is a specially hacked-up version of getnetgrent.c used to parse
* data from the stored hash table of netgroup info rather than from a
* file. It's used mainly for the parse_netgroup() function. All the YP
* stuff and file support has been stripped out since it isn't needed.
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <strings.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include "hash.h"
/*
* Static Variables and functions used by setnetgrent(), getnetgrent() and
* __endnetgrent().
* There are two linked lists:
* - linelist is just used by setnetgrent() to parse the net group file via.
* parse_netgrp()
* - netgrp is the list of entries for the current netgroup
*/
struct linelist {
struct linelist *l_next; /* Chain ptr. */
int l_parsed; /* Flag for cycles */
char *l_groupname; /* Name of netgroup */
char *l_line; /* Netgroup entrie(s) to be parsed */
};
struct netgrp {
struct netgrp *ng_next; /* Chain ptr */
char *ng_str[3]; /* Field pointers, see below */
};
#define NG_HOST 0 /* Host name */
#define NG_USER 1 /* User name */
#define NG_DOM 2 /* and Domain name */
static struct linelist *linehead = (struct linelist *)0;
static struct netgrp *nextgrp = (struct netgrp *)0;
static struct {
struct netgrp *gr;
char *grname;
} grouphead = {
(struct netgrp *)0,
(char *)0,
};
static int parse_netgrp(char *group);
static struct linelist *read_for_group(char *group);
extern struct group_entry *gtable[];
/*
* setnetgrent()
* Parse the netgroup file looking for the netgroup and build the list
* of netgrp structures. Let parse_netgrp() and read_for_group() do
* most of the work.
*/
void
__setnetgrent(char *group)
{
/* Sanity check */
if (group == NULL || !strlen(group))
return;
if (grouphead.gr == (struct netgrp *)0 ||
strcmp(group, grouphead.grname)) {
__endnetgrent();
if (parse_netgrp(group))
__endnetgrent();
else {
grouphead.grname = (char *)
malloc(strlen(group) + 1);
strcpy(grouphead.grname, group);
}
}
nextgrp = grouphead.gr;
}
/*
* Get the next netgroup off the list.
*/
int
__getnetgrent(char **hostp, char **userp, char **domp)
{
if (nextgrp) {
*hostp = nextgrp->ng_str[NG_HOST];
*userp = nextgrp->ng_str[NG_USER];
*domp = nextgrp->ng_str[NG_DOM];
nextgrp = nextgrp->ng_next;
return (1);
}
return (0);
}
/*
* __endnetgrent() - cleanup
*/
void
__endnetgrent(void)
{
struct linelist *lp, *olp;
struct netgrp *gp, *ogp;
lp = linehead;
while (lp) {
olp = lp;
lp = lp->l_next;
free(olp->l_groupname);
free(olp->l_line);
free((char *)olp);
}
linehead = (struct linelist *)0;
if (grouphead.grname) {
free(grouphead.grname);
grouphead.grname = (char *)0;
}
gp = grouphead.gr;
while (gp) {
ogp = gp;
gp = gp->ng_next;
if (ogp->ng_str[NG_HOST])
free(ogp->ng_str[NG_HOST]);
if (ogp->ng_str[NG_USER])
free(ogp->ng_str[NG_USER]);
if (ogp->ng_str[NG_DOM])
free(ogp->ng_str[NG_DOM]);
free((char *)ogp);
}
grouphead.gr = (struct netgrp *)0;
}
/*
* Parse the netgroup file setting up the linked lists.
*/
static int
parse_netgrp(char *group)
{
char *spos, *epos;
int len, strpos;
#ifdef DEBUG
int fields;
#endif
char *pos, *gpos;
struct netgrp *grp;
struct linelist *lp = linehead;
/*
* First, see if the line has already been read in.
*/
while (lp) {
if (!strcmp(group, lp->l_groupname))
break;
lp = lp->l_next;
}
if (lp == (struct linelist *)0 &&
(lp = read_for_group(group)) == (struct linelist *)0)
return (1);
if (lp->l_parsed) {
#ifdef DEBUG
/*
* This error message is largely superfluous since the
* code handles the error condition successfully, and
* spewing it out from inside libc can actually hose
* certain programs.
*/
warnx("cycle in netgroup %s", lp->l_groupname);
#endif
return (1);
} else
lp->l_parsed = 1;
pos = lp->l_line;
/* Watch for null pointer dereferences, dammit! */
while (pos != NULL && *pos != '\0') {
if (*pos == '(') {
grp = (struct netgrp *)malloc(sizeof (struct netgrp));
bzero((char *)grp, sizeof (struct netgrp));
grp->ng_next = grouphead.gr;
grouphead.gr = grp;
pos++;
gpos = strsep(&pos, ")");
#ifdef DEBUG
fields = 0;
#endif
for (strpos = 0; strpos < 3; strpos++) {
if ((spos = strsep(&gpos, ","))) {
#ifdef DEBUG
fields++;
#endif
while (*spos == ' ' || *spos == '\t')
spos++;
if ((epos = strpbrk(spos, " \t"))) {
*epos = '\0';
len = epos - spos;
} else
len = strlen(spos);
if (len > 0) {
grp->ng_str[strpos] = (char *)
malloc(len + 1);
bcopy(spos, grp->ng_str[strpos],
len + 1);
}
} else {
/*
* All other systems I've tested
* return NULL for empty netgroup
* fields. It's up to user programs
* to handle the NULLs appropriately.
*/
grp->ng_str[strpos] = NULL;
}
}
#ifdef DEBUG
/*
* Note: on other platforms, malformed netgroup
* entries are not normally flagged. While we
* can catch bad entries and report them, we should
* stay silent by default for compatibility's sake.
*/
if (fields < 3)
warnx("bad entry (%s%s%s%s%s) in netgroup \"%s\"",
grp->ng_str[NG_HOST] == NULL ? "" : grp->ng_str[NG_HOST],
grp->ng_str[NG_USER] == NULL ? "" : ",",
grp->ng_str[NG_USER] == NULL ? "" : grp->ng_str[NG_USER],
grp->ng_str[NG_DOM] == NULL ? "" : ",",
grp->ng_str[NG_DOM] == NULL ? "" : grp->ng_str[NG_DOM],
lp->l_groupname);
#endif
} else {
spos = strsep(&pos, ", \t");
if (parse_netgrp(spos))
continue;
}
/* Watch for null pointer dereferences, dammit! */
if (pos != NULL)
while (*pos == ' ' || *pos == ',' || *pos == '\t')
pos++;
}
return (0);
}
/*
* Read the netgroup file and save lines until the line for the netgroup
* is found. Return 1 if eof is encountered.
*/
static struct linelist *
read_for_group(char *group)
{
char *pos, *spos, *linep = NULL, *olinep = NULL;
int len, olen;
int cont;
struct linelist *lp;
char line[LINSIZ + 1];
char *data = NULL;
data = lookup (gtable, group);
sprintf(line, "%s %s", group, data);
pos = (char *)&line;
#ifdef CANT_HAPPEN
if (*pos == '#')
continue;
#endif
while (*pos == ' ' || *pos == '\t')
pos++;
spos = pos;
while (*pos != ' ' && *pos != '\t' && *pos != '\n' &&
*pos != '\0')
pos++;
len = pos - spos;
while (*pos == ' ' || *pos == '\t')
pos++;
if (*pos != '\n' && *pos != '\0') {
lp = (struct linelist *)malloc(sizeof (*lp));
lp->l_parsed = 0;
lp->l_groupname = (char *)malloc(len + 1);
bcopy(spos, lp->l_groupname, len);
*(lp->l_groupname + len) = '\0';
len = strlen(pos);
olen = 0;
/*
* Loop around handling line continuations.
*/
do {
if (*(pos + len - 1) == '\n')
len--;
if (*(pos + len - 1) == '\\') {
len--;
cont = 1;
} else
cont = 0;
if (len > 0) {
linep = (char *)malloc(olen + len + 1);
if (olen > 0) {
bcopy(olinep, linep, olen);
free(olinep);
}
bcopy(pos, linep + olen, len);
olen += len;
*(linep + olen) = '\0';
olinep = linep;
}
#ifdef CANT_HAPPEN
if (cont) {
if (fgets(line, LINSIZ, netf)) {
pos = line;
len = strlen(pos);
} else
cont = 0;
}
#endif
} while (cont);
lp->l_line = linep;
lp->l_next = linehead;
linehead = lp;
#ifdef CANT_HAPPEN
/*
* If this is the one we wanted, we are done.
*/
if (!strcmp(lp->l_groupname, group))
#endif
return (lp);
}
return ((struct linelist *)0);
}