NetBSD/usr.bin/mail/names.c

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/* $NetBSD: names.c,v 1.23 2006/10/31 20:07:32 christos Exp $ */
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/*
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* Copyright (c) 1980, 1993
* The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
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*
* 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
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* 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.
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
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#ifndef lint
#if 0
static char sccsid[] = "@(#)names.c 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/6/93";
#else
__RCSID("$NetBSD: names.c,v 1.23 2006/10/31 20:07:32 christos Exp $");
#endif
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#endif /* not lint */
/*
* Mail -- a mail program
*
* Handle name lists.
*/
#include "rcv.h"
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#include "extern.h"
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/*
* Allocate a single element of a name list,
* initialize its name field to the passed
* name and return it.
*/
struct name *
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nalloc(char str[], int ntype)
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{
struct name *np;
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np = salloc(sizeof *np);
np->n_flink = NULL;
np->n_blink = NULL;
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np->n_type = ntype;
np->n_name = savestr(str);
return(np);
}
/*
* Find the tail of a list and return it.
*/
struct name *
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tailof(struct name *name)
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{
struct name *np;
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np = name;
if (np == NULL)
return(NULL);
while (np->n_flink != NULL)
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np = np->n_flink;
return(np);
}
/*
* Extract a list of names from a line,
* and make a list of names from it.
* Return the list or NULL if none found.
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*/
struct name *
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extract(char line[], int ntype)
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{
char *cp;
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struct name *begin, *np, *t;
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char nbuf[BUFSIZ];
if (line == NULL || *line == '\0')
return NULL;
begin = NULL;
np = NULL;
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cp = line;
while ((cp = yankword(cp, nbuf)) != NULL) {
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t = nalloc(nbuf, ntype);
if (begin == NULL)
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begin = t;
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else
np->n_flink = t;
t->n_blink = np;
np = t;
}
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return begin;
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}
Jumbo mail patch from our anonymous user: 1) Use editline [optional]: Most of this code was borrowed from src/usr.bin/ftp. It does the appropriate editing, history, and completion for all mail commands (from cmdtab[]) and also does editing on header strings ('~h' inside the mail editor). 2) '-B' flag: This will suppress the "To:" line passed to sendmail. In most configurations it will lead to sendmail adding "To: undisclosed recipients;". Currently, AFAIK mail requires at least one exposed recipient address. 3) Comments in rcfile: Currently, comments in .mailrc are only supported if the first (non-white) character on a line is '#' followed by white space, i.e., '#' is a 'nop' command. This (trivial) patch allows the more normal/expected use of '#' as a comment character. It does not respect quoting, so that might be an objection which I should fix. 4) Sendmail option editing: This adds the sendmail option string to the strings editable by the '~h' command within the mail editor. Currently, you can only set this string from the command-line, which is particularly annoying when replying to mail. 5) Reply from: When replying to a message, grab the "To:" address from the message and, if there is only one such address and it does not match a list of allowed addresses (set in the "ReplyFrom" variable), pass it to sendmail as the "From:" address for the reply (with the '-f' option). I often make aliases for myself so that my primary address is not given out; if the alias gets out, I know who to blame. Unfortunately, a reply to such a message would normally use the primary address without this patch. A warning is displayed when this is going to happen so that it can be modified with '~h'. 6) CC and BCC lists: Allow '-c' and '-b' to accept white-space or ',' delimited lists. Currently, a white-space delimited list of addresses work, but a list of aliases will not get expanded. For example, currently: mail -c "foo bar" christos will fail to send mail to 'foo' and 'bar' if these are mail aliases (in ~/.mailrc); sendmail aliases (in /etc/aliases) do work. 7) pipe command: This pipes the current message into a shell command. I use this for quick decoding of uuencoded mail, but I can imagine it might be useful for decrypting encrypted mail, too. 8) show command: This command takes a list of variables and shows their values. It is probably stupid as the 'set' command without any argument displays all variable values. Of course, if there are a lot of variables you have to sift through the list for the one(s) you want.
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/* XXX - is this really sufficient? */
static int need_quotes(char *str)
{
return (strchr(str, ' ') || strchr(str, '\t'));
}
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/*
* Turn a list of names into a string of the same names.
*/
char *
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detract(struct name *np, int ntype)
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{
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size_t s;
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char *cp, *begin;
struct name *p;
int comma;
Jumbo mail patch from our anonymous user: 1) Use editline [optional]: Most of this code was borrowed from src/usr.bin/ftp. It does the appropriate editing, history, and completion for all mail commands (from cmdtab[]) and also does editing on header strings ('~h' inside the mail editor). 2) '-B' flag: This will suppress the "To:" line passed to sendmail. In most configurations it will lead to sendmail adding "To: undisclosed recipients;". Currently, AFAIK mail requires at least one exposed recipient address. 3) Comments in rcfile: Currently, comments in .mailrc are only supported if the first (non-white) character on a line is '#' followed by white space, i.e., '#' is a 'nop' command. This (trivial) patch allows the more normal/expected use of '#' as a comment character. It does not respect quoting, so that might be an objection which I should fix. 4) Sendmail option editing: This adds the sendmail option string to the strings editable by the '~h' command within the mail editor. Currently, you can only set this string from the command-line, which is particularly annoying when replying to mail. 5) Reply from: When replying to a message, grab the "To:" address from the message and, if there is only one such address and it does not match a list of allowed addresses (set in the "ReplyFrom" variable), pass it to sendmail as the "From:" address for the reply (with the '-f' option). I often make aliases for myself so that my primary address is not given out; if the alias gets out, I know who to blame. Unfortunately, a reply to such a message would normally use the primary address without this patch. A warning is displayed when this is going to happen so that it can be modified with '~h'. 6) CC and BCC lists: Allow '-c' and '-b' to accept white-space or ',' delimited lists. Currently, a white-space delimited list of addresses work, but a list of aliases will not get expanded. For example, currently: mail -c "foo bar" christos will fail to send mail to 'foo' and 'bar' if these are mail aliases (in ~/.mailrc); sendmail aliases (in /etc/aliases) do work. 7) pipe command: This pipes the current message into a shell command. I use this for quick decoding of uuencoded mail, but I can imagine it might be useful for decrypting encrypted mail, too. 8) show command: This command takes a list of variables and shows their values. It is probably stupid as the 'set' command without any argument displays all variable values. Of course, if there are a lot of variables you have to sift through the list for the one(s) you want.
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int quote;
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Jumbo mail patch from our anonymous user: 1) Use editline [optional]: Most of this code was borrowed from src/usr.bin/ftp. It does the appropriate editing, history, and completion for all mail commands (from cmdtab[]) and also does editing on header strings ('~h' inside the mail editor). 2) '-B' flag: This will suppress the "To:" line passed to sendmail. In most configurations it will lead to sendmail adding "To: undisclosed recipients;". Currently, AFAIK mail requires at least one exposed recipient address. 3) Comments in rcfile: Currently, comments in .mailrc are only supported if the first (non-white) character on a line is '#' followed by white space, i.e., '#' is a 'nop' command. This (trivial) patch allows the more normal/expected use of '#' as a comment character. It does not respect quoting, so that might be an objection which I should fix. 4) Sendmail option editing: This adds the sendmail option string to the strings editable by the '~h' command within the mail editor. Currently, you can only set this string from the command-line, which is particularly annoying when replying to mail. 5) Reply from: When replying to a message, grab the "To:" address from the message and, if there is only one such address and it does not match a list of allowed addresses (set in the "ReplyFrom" variable), pass it to sendmail as the "From:" address for the reply (with the '-f' option). I often make aliases for myself so that my primary address is not given out; if the alias gets out, I know who to blame. Unfortunately, a reply to such a message would normally use the primary address without this patch. A warning is displayed when this is going to happen so that it can be modified with '~h'. 6) CC and BCC lists: Allow '-c' and '-b' to accept white-space or ',' delimited lists. Currently, a white-space delimited list of addresses work, but a list of aliases will not get expanded. For example, currently: mail -c "foo bar" christos will fail to send mail to 'foo' and 'bar' if these are mail aliases (in ~/.mailrc); sendmail aliases (in /etc/aliases) do work. 7) pipe command: This pipes the current message into a shell command. I use this for quick decoding of uuencoded mail, but I can imagine it might be useful for decrypting encrypted mail, too. 8) show command: This command takes a list of variables and shows their values. It is probably stupid as the 'set' command without any argument displays all variable values. Of course, if there are a lot of variables you have to sift through the list for the one(s) you want.
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quote = ntype & GSMOPTS;
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comma = ntype & GCOMMA;
if (np == NULL)
return(NULL);
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ntype &= ~GCOMMA;
s = 0;
if (debug && comma)
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(void)fprintf(stderr, "detract asked to insert commas\n");
for (p = np; p != NULL; p = p->n_flink) {
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if (ntype && (p->n_type & GMASK) != ntype)
continue;
s += strlen(p->n_name) + 1;
if (comma)
s++;
Jumbo mail patch from our anonymous user: 1) Use editline [optional]: Most of this code was borrowed from src/usr.bin/ftp. It does the appropriate editing, history, and completion for all mail commands (from cmdtab[]) and also does editing on header strings ('~h' inside the mail editor). 2) '-B' flag: This will suppress the "To:" line passed to sendmail. In most configurations it will lead to sendmail adding "To: undisclosed recipients;". Currently, AFAIK mail requires at least one exposed recipient address. 3) Comments in rcfile: Currently, comments in .mailrc are only supported if the first (non-white) character on a line is '#' followed by white space, i.e., '#' is a 'nop' command. This (trivial) patch allows the more normal/expected use of '#' as a comment character. It does not respect quoting, so that might be an objection which I should fix. 4) Sendmail option editing: This adds the sendmail option string to the strings editable by the '~h' command within the mail editor. Currently, you can only set this string from the command-line, which is particularly annoying when replying to mail. 5) Reply from: When replying to a message, grab the "To:" address from the message and, if there is only one such address and it does not match a list of allowed addresses (set in the "ReplyFrom" variable), pass it to sendmail as the "From:" address for the reply (with the '-f' option). I often make aliases for myself so that my primary address is not given out; if the alias gets out, I know who to blame. Unfortunately, a reply to such a message would normally use the primary address without this patch. A warning is displayed when this is going to happen so that it can be modified with '~h'. 6) CC and BCC lists: Allow '-c' and '-b' to accept white-space or ',' delimited lists. Currently, a white-space delimited list of addresses work, but a list of aliases will not get expanded. For example, currently: mail -c "foo bar" christos will fail to send mail to 'foo' and 'bar' if these are mail aliases (in ~/.mailrc); sendmail aliases (in /etc/aliases) do work. 7) pipe command: This pipes the current message into a shell command. I use this for quick decoding of uuencoded mail, but I can imagine it might be useful for decrypting encrypted mail, too. 8) show command: This command takes a list of variables and shows their values. It is probably stupid as the 'set' command without any argument displays all variable values. Of course, if there are a lot of variables you have to sift through the list for the one(s) you want.
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if (quote && need_quotes(p->n_name))
s += 2;
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}
if (s == 0)
return(NULL);
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s += 2;
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begin = salloc(s);
cp = begin;
for (p = np; p != NULL; p = p->n_flink) {
Jumbo mail patch from our anonymous user: 1) Use editline [optional]: Most of this code was borrowed from src/usr.bin/ftp. It does the appropriate editing, history, and completion for all mail commands (from cmdtab[]) and also does editing on header strings ('~h' inside the mail editor). 2) '-B' flag: This will suppress the "To:" line passed to sendmail. In most configurations it will lead to sendmail adding "To: undisclosed recipients;". Currently, AFAIK mail requires at least one exposed recipient address. 3) Comments in rcfile: Currently, comments in .mailrc are only supported if the first (non-white) character on a line is '#' followed by white space, i.e., '#' is a 'nop' command. This (trivial) patch allows the more normal/expected use of '#' as a comment character. It does not respect quoting, so that might be an objection which I should fix. 4) Sendmail option editing: This adds the sendmail option string to the strings editable by the '~h' command within the mail editor. Currently, you can only set this string from the command-line, which is particularly annoying when replying to mail. 5) Reply from: When replying to a message, grab the "To:" address from the message and, if there is only one such address and it does not match a list of allowed addresses (set in the "ReplyFrom" variable), pass it to sendmail as the "From:" address for the reply (with the '-f' option). I often make aliases for myself so that my primary address is not given out; if the alias gets out, I know who to blame. Unfortunately, a reply to such a message would normally use the primary address without this patch. A warning is displayed when this is going to happen so that it can be modified with '~h'. 6) CC and BCC lists: Allow '-c' and '-b' to accept white-space or ',' delimited lists. Currently, a white-space delimited list of addresses work, but a list of aliases will not get expanded. For example, currently: mail -c "foo bar" christos will fail to send mail to 'foo' and 'bar' if these are mail aliases (in ~/.mailrc); sendmail aliases (in /etc/aliases) do work. 7) pipe command: This pipes the current message into a shell command. I use this for quick decoding of uuencoded mail, but I can imagine it might be useful for decrypting encrypted mail, too. 8) show command: This command takes a list of variables and shows their values. It is probably stupid as the 'set' command without any argument displays all variable values. Of course, if there are a lot of variables you have to sift through the list for the one(s) you want.
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int do_quotes;
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if (ntype && (p->n_type & GMASK) != ntype)
continue;
Jumbo mail patch from our anonymous user: 1) Use editline [optional]: Most of this code was borrowed from src/usr.bin/ftp. It does the appropriate editing, history, and completion for all mail commands (from cmdtab[]) and also does editing on header strings ('~h' inside the mail editor). 2) '-B' flag: This will suppress the "To:" line passed to sendmail. In most configurations it will lead to sendmail adding "To: undisclosed recipients;". Currently, AFAIK mail requires at least one exposed recipient address. 3) Comments in rcfile: Currently, comments in .mailrc are only supported if the first (non-white) character on a line is '#' followed by white space, i.e., '#' is a 'nop' command. This (trivial) patch allows the more normal/expected use of '#' as a comment character. It does not respect quoting, so that might be an objection which I should fix. 4) Sendmail option editing: This adds the sendmail option string to the strings editable by the '~h' command within the mail editor. Currently, you can only set this string from the command-line, which is particularly annoying when replying to mail. 5) Reply from: When replying to a message, grab the "To:" address from the message and, if there is only one such address and it does not match a list of allowed addresses (set in the "ReplyFrom" variable), pass it to sendmail as the "From:" address for the reply (with the '-f' option). I often make aliases for myself so that my primary address is not given out; if the alias gets out, I know who to blame. Unfortunately, a reply to such a message would normally use the primary address without this patch. A warning is displayed when this is going to happen so that it can be modified with '~h'. 6) CC and BCC lists: Allow '-c' and '-b' to accept white-space or ',' delimited lists. Currently, a white-space delimited list of addresses work, but a list of aliases will not get expanded. For example, currently: mail -c "foo bar" christos will fail to send mail to 'foo' and 'bar' if these are mail aliases (in ~/.mailrc); sendmail aliases (in /etc/aliases) do work. 7) pipe command: This pipes the current message into a shell command. I use this for quick decoding of uuencoded mail, but I can imagine it might be useful for decrypting encrypted mail, too. 8) show command: This command takes a list of variables and shows their values. It is probably stupid as the 'set' command without any argument displays all variable values. Of course, if there are a lot of variables you have to sift through the list for the one(s) you want.
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do_quotes = (quote && need_quotes(p->n_name));
if (do_quotes)
*cp++ = '"';
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cp = copy(p->n_name, cp);
if (comma && p->n_flink != NULL)
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*cp++ = ',';
Jumbo mail patch from our anonymous user: 1) Use editline [optional]: Most of this code was borrowed from src/usr.bin/ftp. It does the appropriate editing, history, and completion for all mail commands (from cmdtab[]) and also does editing on header strings ('~h' inside the mail editor). 2) '-B' flag: This will suppress the "To:" line passed to sendmail. In most configurations it will lead to sendmail adding "To: undisclosed recipients;". Currently, AFAIK mail requires at least one exposed recipient address. 3) Comments in rcfile: Currently, comments in .mailrc are only supported if the first (non-white) character on a line is '#' followed by white space, i.e., '#' is a 'nop' command. This (trivial) patch allows the more normal/expected use of '#' as a comment character. It does not respect quoting, so that might be an objection which I should fix. 4) Sendmail option editing: This adds the sendmail option string to the strings editable by the '~h' command within the mail editor. Currently, you can only set this string from the command-line, which is particularly annoying when replying to mail. 5) Reply from: When replying to a message, grab the "To:" address from the message and, if there is only one such address and it does not match a list of allowed addresses (set in the "ReplyFrom" variable), pass it to sendmail as the "From:" address for the reply (with the '-f' option). I often make aliases for myself so that my primary address is not given out; if the alias gets out, I know who to blame. Unfortunately, a reply to such a message would normally use the primary address without this patch. A warning is displayed when this is going to happen so that it can be modified with '~h'. 6) CC and BCC lists: Allow '-c' and '-b' to accept white-space or ',' delimited lists. Currently, a white-space delimited list of addresses work, but a list of aliases will not get expanded. For example, currently: mail -c "foo bar" christos will fail to send mail to 'foo' and 'bar' if these are mail aliases (in ~/.mailrc); sendmail aliases (in /etc/aliases) do work. 7) pipe command: This pipes the current message into a shell command. I use this for quick decoding of uuencoded mail, but I can imagine it might be useful for decrypting encrypted mail, too. 8) show command: This command takes a list of variables and shows their values. It is probably stupid as the 'set' command without any argument displays all variable values. Of course, if there are a lot of variables you have to sift through the list for the one(s) you want.
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if (do_quotes)
*cp++ = '"';
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*cp++ = ' ';
}
*--cp = 0;
if (comma && *--cp == ',')
*cp = 0;
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return(begin);
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}
/*
* Grab a single word (liberal word)
* Throw away things between ()'s, and take anything between <>.
*/
char *
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yankword(char *ap, char wbuf[])
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{
char *cp, *cp2;
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cp = ap;
for (;;) {
if (*cp == '\0')
return NULL;
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if (*cp == '(') {
int nesting = 0;
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while (*cp != '\0') {
switch (*cp++) {
case '(':
nesting++;
break;
case ')':
--nesting;
break;
}
if (nesting <= 0)
break;
}
} else if (*cp == ' ' || *cp == '\t' || *cp == ',')
cp++;
else
break;
}
if (*cp == '<')
for (cp2 = wbuf; *cp && (*cp2++ = *cp++) != '>';)
;
else
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for (cp2 = wbuf; *cp && !strchr(" \t,(", *cp); *cp2++ = *cp++)
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;
*cp2 = '\0';
return cp;
}
/*
* For each recipient in the passed name list with a /
* in the name, append the message to the end of the named file
* and remove him from the recipient list.
*
* Recipients whose name begins with | are piped through the given
* program and removed.
*/
struct name *
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outof(struct name *names, FILE *fo, struct header *hp)
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{
int c, fd;
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struct name *np, *begin;
time_t now;
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char *date;
const char *fname;
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FILE *fout, *fin;
int ispipe;
char tempname[PATHSIZE];
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begin = names;
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np = names;
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(void)time(&now);
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date = ctime(&now);
while (np != NULL) {
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if (!isfileaddr(np->n_name) && np->n_name[0] != '|') {
np = np->n_flink;
continue;
}
ispipe = np->n_name[0] == '|';
if (ispipe)
fname = np->n_name+1;
else
fname = expand(np->n_name);
/*
* See if we have copied the complete message out yet.
* If not, do so.
*/
if (image < 0) {
(void)snprintf(tempname, sizeof(tempname),
"%s/mail.ReXXXXXXXXXXXX", tmpdir);
if ((fd = mkstemp(tempname)) == -1 ||
(fout = Fdopen(fd, "a")) == NULL) {
if (fd != -1)
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(void)close(fd);
warn("%s", tempname);
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senderr++;
goto cant;
}
image = open(tempname, 2);
(void)unlink(tempname);
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if (image < 0) {
warn("%s", tempname);
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senderr++;
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(void)Fclose(fout);
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goto cant;
}
(void)fcntl(image, F_SETFD, FD_CLOEXEC);
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(void)fprintf(fout, "From %s %s", myname, date);
#ifdef MIME_SUPPORT
(void)puthead(hp, fout, GTO|GSUBJECT|GCC|GMIME|GNL);
#else
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(void)puthead(hp, fout, GTO|GSUBJECT|GCC|GNL);
#endif
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while ((c = getc(fo)) != EOF)
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(void)putc(c, fout);
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rewind(fo);
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(void)putc('\n', fout);
(void)fflush(fout);
if (ferror(fout)) {
warn("%s", tempname);
senderr++;
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(void)Fclose(fout);
goto cant;
}
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(void)Fclose(fout);
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}
/*
* Now either copy "image" to the desired file
* or give it as the standard input to the desired
* program as appropriate.
*/
if (ispipe) {
int pid;
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const char *shellcmd;
sigset_t nset;
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/*
* XXX
* We can't really reuse the same image file,
* because multiple piped recipients will
* share the same lseek location and trample
* on one another.
*/
if ((shellcmd = value("SHELL")) == NULL)
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shellcmd = _PATH_CSHELL;
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(void)sigemptyset(&nset);
(void)sigaddset(&nset, SIGHUP);
(void)sigaddset(&nset, SIGINT);
(void)sigaddset(&nset, SIGQUIT);
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pid = start_command(shellcmd, &nset,
image, -1, "-c", fname, NULL);
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if (pid < 0) {
senderr++;
goto cant;
}
free_child(pid);
} else {
int f;
if ((fout = Fopen(fname, "a")) == NULL) {
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warn("%s", fname);
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senderr++;
goto cant;
}
if ((f = dup(image)) < 0) {
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warn("dup");
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fin = NULL;
} else
fin = Fdopen(f, "r");
if (fin == NULL) {
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(void)fprintf(stderr, "Can't reopen image\n");
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(void)Fclose(fout);
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senderr++;
goto cant;
}
rewind(fin);
while ((c = getc(fin)) != EOF)
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(void)putc(c, fout);
if (ferror(fout)) {
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warn("%s", fname);
senderr++;
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(void)Fclose(fout);
(void)Fclose(fin);
goto cant;
}
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(void)Fclose(fout);
(void)Fclose(fin);
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}
cant:
/*
* In days of old we removed the entry from the
* the list; now for sake of header expansion
* we leave it in and mark it as deleted.
*/
np->n_type |= GDEL;
np = np->n_flink;
}
if (image >= 0) {
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(void)close(image);
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image = -1;
}
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return(begin);
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}
/*
* Determine if the passed address is a local "send to file" address.
* If any of the network metacharacters precedes any slashes, it can't
* be a filename. We cheat with .'s to allow path names like ./...
*/
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int
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isfileaddr(char *name)
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{
char *cp;
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if (*name == '+')
return 1;
for (cp = name; *cp; cp++) {
if (*cp == '!' || *cp == '%' || *cp == '@')
return 0;
if (*cp == '/')
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
/*
* Map all of the aliased users in the invoker's mailrc
* file and insert them into the list.
* Changed after all these months of service to recursively
* expand names (2/14/80).
*/
struct name *
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usermap(struct name *names)
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{
struct name *new, *np, *cp;
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struct grouphead *gh;
int metoo;
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new = NULL;
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np = names;
metoo = (value("metoo") != NULL);
while (np != NULL) {
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if (np->n_name[0] == '\\') {
cp = np->n_flink;
new = put(new, np);
np = cp;
continue;
}
gh = findgroup(np->n_name);
cp = np->n_flink;
if (gh != NULL)
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new = gexpand(new, gh, metoo, np->n_type);
else
new = put(new, np);
np = cp;
}
return(new);
}
/*
* Recursively expand a group name. We limit the expansion to some
* fixed level to keep things from going haywire.
* Direct recursion is not expanded for convenience.
*/
struct name *
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gexpand(struct name *nlist, struct grouphead *gh, int metoo, int ntype)
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{
struct group *gp;
struct grouphead *ngh;
struct name *np;
static int depth;
char *cp;
if (depth > MAXEXP) {
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(void)printf("Expanding alias to depth larger than %d\n", MAXEXP);
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return(nlist);
}
depth++;
for (gp = gh->g_list; gp != NULL; gp = gp->ge_link) {
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cp = gp->ge_name;
if (*cp == '\\')
goto quote;
if (strcmp(cp, gh->g_name) == 0)
goto quote;
if ((ngh = findgroup(cp)) != NULL) {
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nlist = gexpand(nlist, ngh, metoo, ntype);
continue;
}
quote:
np = nalloc(cp, ntype);
/*
* At this point should allow to expand
* to self if only person in group
*/
if (gp == gh->g_list && gp->ge_link == NULL)
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goto skip;
if (!metoo && strcmp(cp, myname) == 0)
np->n_type |= GDEL;
skip:
nlist = put(nlist, np);
}
depth--;
return(nlist);
}
/*
* Concatenate the two passed name lists, return the result.
*/
struct name *
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cat(struct name *n1, struct name *n2)
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{
struct name *tail;
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if (n1 == NULL)
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return(n2);
if (n2 == NULL)
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return(n1);
tail = tailof(n1);
tail->n_flink = n2;
n2->n_blink = tail;
return(n1);
}
/*
* Unpack the name list onto a vector of strings.
* Return an error if the name list won't fit.
*/
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const char **
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unpack(struct name *np)
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{
2005-07-19 05:38:38 +04:00
const char **ap, **begin;
struct name *n;
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int t, extra, metoo, verbose;
n = np;
if ((t = count(n)) == 0)
errx(1, "No names to unpack");
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/*
* Compute the number of extra arguments we will need.
* We need at least two extra -- one for "mail" and one for
* the terminating 0 pointer. Additional spots may be needed
* to pass along -f to the host mailer.
*/
extra = 2;
extra++;
metoo = value("metoo") != NULL;
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if (metoo)
extra++;
verbose = value("verbose") != NULL;
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if (verbose)
extra++;
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begin = salloc((t + extra) * sizeof *begin);
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ap = begin;
*ap++ = "sendmail";
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*ap++ = "-i";
if (metoo)
*ap++ = "-m";
if (verbose)
*ap++ = "-v";
for (; n != NULL; n = n->n_flink)
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
if ((n->n_type & GDEL) == 0)
*ap++ = n->n_name;
*ap = NULL;
2002-03-02 18:27:51 +03:00
return(begin);
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
}
/*
* Remove all of the duplicates from the passed name list by
* insertion sorting them, then checking for dups.
* Return the head of the new list.
*/
struct name *
2002-03-02 17:59:35 +03:00
elide(struct name *names)
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{
struct name *np, *t, *new;
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
struct name *x;
if (names == NULL)
return(NULL);
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
new = names;
np = names;
np = np->n_flink;
if (np != NULL)
np->n_blink = NULL;
new->n_flink = NULL;
while (np != NULL) {
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
t = new;
while (strcasecmp(t->n_name, np->n_name) < 0) {
if (t->n_flink == NULL)
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
break;
t = t->n_flink;
}
/*
* If we ran out of t's, put the new entry after
* the current value of t.
*/
if (strcasecmp(t->n_name, np->n_name) < 0) {
t->n_flink = np;
np->n_blink = t;
t = np;
np = np->n_flink;
t->n_flink = NULL;
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
continue;
}
/*
* Otherwise, put the new entry in front of the
* current t. If at the front of the list,
* the new guy becomes the new head of the list.
*/
if (t == new) {
t = np;
np = np->n_flink;
t->n_flink = new;
new->n_blink = t;
t->n_blink = NULL;
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
new = t;
continue;
}
/*
* The normal case -- we are inserting into the
* middle of the list.
*/
x = np;
np = np->n_flink;
x->n_flink = t;
x->n_blink = t->n_blink;
t->n_blink->n_flink = x;
t->n_blink = x;
}
/*
* Now the list headed up by new is sorted.
* Go through it and remove duplicates.
*/
np = new;
while (np != NULL) {
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
t = np;
while (t->n_flink != NULL &&
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
strcasecmp(np->n_name, t->n_flink->n_name) == 0)
t = t->n_flink;
if (t == np || t == NULL) {
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
np = np->n_flink;
continue;
}
/*
* Now t points to the last entry with the same name
* as np. Make np point beyond t.
*/
np->n_flink = t->n_flink;
if (t->n_flink != NULL)
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
t->n_flink->n_blink = np;
np = np->n_flink;
}
return(new);
}
/*
* Put another node onto a list of names and return
* the list.
*/
struct name *
2002-03-02 17:59:35 +03:00
put(struct name *list, struct name *node)
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
{
node->n_flink = list;
node->n_blink = NULL;
if (list != NULL)
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
list->n_blink = node;
return(node);
}
/*
* Determine the number of undeleted elements in
* a name list and return it.
*/
1994-06-29 09:09:04 +04:00
int
2002-03-02 17:59:35 +03:00
count(struct name *np)
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
{
int c;
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
for (c = 0; np != NULL; np = np->n_flink)
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
if ((np->n_type & GDEL) == 0)
c++;
return c;
}
/*
* Delete the given name from a namelist.
*/
struct name *
2002-03-02 17:59:35 +03:00
delname(struct name *np, char name[])
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
{
struct name *p;
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
for (p = np; p != NULL; p = p->n_flink)
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
if (strcasecmp(p->n_name, name) == 0) {
if (p->n_blink == NULL) {
if (p->n_flink != NULL)
p->n_flink->n_blink = NULL;
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
np = p->n_flink;
continue;
}
if (p->n_flink == NULL) {
if (p->n_blink != NULL)
p->n_blink->n_flink = NULL;
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
continue;
}
p->n_blink->n_flink = p->n_flink;
p->n_flink->n_blink = p->n_blink;
}
return np;
}
/*
* Pretty print a name list
* Uncomment it if you need it.
*/
/*
1994-06-29 09:09:04 +04:00
void
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
prettyprint(name)
struct name *name;
{
struct name *np;
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
np = name;
while (np != NULL) {
2005-07-20 03:07:10 +04:00
(void)fprintf(stderr, "%s(%d) ", np->n_name, np->n_type);
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
np = np->n_flink;
}
2005-07-20 03:07:10 +04:00
(void)fprintf(stderr, "\n");
1993-03-21 12:45:37 +03:00
}
*/