int getline(FILE *stream, char *buf, size_t buflen, const char **errormsg)
Read a line from the FILE stream into buf/buflen using fgets(), so up
to buflen-1 chars will be read and the result will be NUL terminated.
If the line has a trailing newline it will be removed.
If the line is too long, excess characters will be read until
newline/EOF/error.
Various -ve return values indicate different errors, and errormsg
will be changed to an error description if it's not NULL.
Convert to use getline() instead of fgets() whenever reading user input
to ensure that an overly long input line doesn't leave excess characters
for the next input operation to accidentally use as input.
Zero out the password & account after we've finished with it.
Consistently use getpass(3) (i.e, character echo suppressed) when
reading the account data. For some reason, historically the "login"
code suppressed echo for Account: yet the "user" command did not!
Display the hostname in the "getaddrinfo failed" warning.
Appease some -Wcast-qual warnings. Fixing all of these requires
significant code refactoring. (mmm, legacy code).
connect(2) in xconnect() by temporarily setting O_NONBLOCK
on the socket and using xpoll() to wait for the operation
to succeed.
The timeout used is the '-q quittime' argument (defaults to
60s for accept(2), and the system default for connect(2)).
Idea inspired by discussion with Chuck Cranor.
This may (indirectly) fix various problems with timeouts
in active mode through broken firewalls.
Implement xpoll() as a wrapper around poll(2), to make it
easier to replace on systems without a functional poll(2).
Unconditionally use xpoll() instead of conditionally using
select(2) or poll(2).
making functions that should be static be static, and cleaning up
const usage. Added a guard against buffer overflow, but the domap function
is a bit too complicated for me to tackle right now. I will leave it
to the author; hi luke!
current directory.
The previous behaviour (of trusting the remote server's response when
retrieving the list of files to mget with prompting disabled) has been
in ftp ~forever, and has been a "known issue" for a long time.
Recently an advisory was published by D.J. Bernstein on behalf of
Yosef Klein warning of the problems with the previous behaviour, so
to alleviate concern I've fixed this with a sledgehammer.
Remember the local cwd after any operation which may change it.
Use "remotecwd" instead of "remotepwd".
in external programs (conditionalized on -DSTANDALONE_PROGRESS).
The following moved from util.c to progressbar.c:
alarmtimer(), progressmeter(), psummary(), ptransfer(),
xsignal(), xsignal_restart()
The following moved from extern.h and ftp_var.h to progressbar.h:
STALLTIME, verbose, fromatty, progress, quit_time, ttywidth
it to a numeric port number
* use parseport() in parse_url() and hookup()
* don't try and lookup the port number using getaddrinfo(), as it's too hard
to separate a failed host name lookup from a failed service name lookup.
this was causing lossage on systems that don't have `http' in services(5)
(such as solaris), but only crept in when we started using getaddrinfo()
unconditionally.
(from RFC 2389).
add support for MLST & MLSD (machine parseble listings) with 'mlst', 'mlsd'
and 'pmlsd' (mlsd |$PAGER) commands. (from draft-ietf-ftpext-mlst-11)
rename remotesyst() to getremoteinfo(), and modify to parse the result from
FEAT (if supported), and take into account the support for the various
extensions such as MDTM, SIZE, REST (STREAM), MLSD, and FEAT/OPTS.
put each feature into one of the following categories:
- known to work (explicit FEAT)
- unknown but assume works until explicit failure, when it's
then tagged as `known not to work'.
- known not to work (FEAT succeeded but didn't return anything,
or was unknown and then explicit failure)
assign results into features[] matrix.
add support to getreply() so that an optional callback will be called
for each line received from the server except for the first and last.
this is used in FEAT (and MLST) parsing.
modify various commands to check if REST (STREAM), MDTM and SIZE are
explicitly or implicitly supported before using.
fix `syst' when verbose is off.
minor knf (indent goto labels by one space, etc).
simply various command usage handlers by assuming that argv != NULL except
for quit() and disconnect().
call remotesyst() only when login has been successful
some servers don't let you run SYST until you've successfully logged in.
* in fetch_ftp(), always call setpeer() with autologin disabled, and use
the following ftp_login() to DTRT.
this prevents ftp from trying to login a second time if the first autologin
fails when connecting to a remote site anonymously using autofetch.
* reset unix_proxy and unix_server in cleanuppeer()
* missed a function conversion in the KNF sweep...
typedef void (*sigfunc) __P((int));
and replace use of sig_t and void (*)(int).
certain other OSes define sig_t differently to that (they add extra arguments),
and it causes problems due to function mismatches, etc...
* fix bug where the second press of <TAB> on an empty word (i.e, list
all options) may have resulted in an strncmp() against NULL. (detected
by _DIAGASSERT())
EL_RPROMPT support i added to editline(3).
- allow $FTPPROMPT and $FTPRPROMPT to override defaults for the relevant
prompts
- move `%' formatting code from prompt() to expandbuf().
- implement `%.' and `%c', similar to the same % codes in tcsh(1)
(functionality I added to tcsh nearly 6 years ago), except that `%.'
always does `...trailing' and `%c' always does `/<x>trailing'.
- unknown `%foo' codes get printed as `%foo'
to contain the remote working directory.
- add `set prompt', a user configurable prompt. (defaults to `ftp> ').
the following escape characters a la tcsh(1) are supported: %/, %m,
%M, and %n.
- add global var `username'; used by prompt code
- fix a couple of minor memory leaks
- bump version
- add `usage'; displays the usage of a command.
implemented by calling the c_handler() with argc = 0, argv = "funcname".
- add `passive auto'; does the same as $FTPMODE=auto.
- add `set [option value]'; display all options, or set an option to a value.
- add `unset option'; unset an option.
- add getoptionvalue() to retrieve an option's value, and replace a few
global variables with calls to this.
- implement cleanuppeer(), which resets various bits of state back to
`disconnected'. call in disconnect() and lostpeer().
- support completing on `options'.
- improve recovery after a SIGINT may have closed the connection.
XXX: there's still a couple to fix
other stuff:
- various consistency fixes in the man page.
- ensure that the command usage strings in the code and man page match reality.
- mput/mget: check that the connection still exists before each xfer.
- minor cosmetic changes in confirm().
- set code correctly in sizecmd() and modtime()
- don't need \n in err() strings.
- change lostpeer to take an argument (rather than casting (sig_t)lostpeer
in signal handlers)
- knf and whitespace police.
* simplify main loop (don't need `top' variable any more)
* use a struct sockaddr_in6.sin6_addr for the result from inet_pton(),
rather than u_char buf[16]
* add a few more comments
* confirm(): move from util.c to cmds.c. display mnemonic string in its prompt.
add support for `q' (terminate current xfer), `?' (show help list)
* in various signal handlers, output a linefeed only if fromatty.
* if fgets(stdin) returned NULL (i.e, EOF), clearerr(stdin) because you don't
want future fgets to fail. this is not done for the fgets() in the main
command loop, since ftp will quit at that point.
* unless ftp is invoked with -a, don't retain the anonftp setting between
hosts (`ftp somehost:' sets anonftp, but you don't want that to `stick'
if you close that connection and open a new one).
stage. if this occurs, just call lostpeer() to close the connection. whilst this
might be considered brutal, it's also extremely handy if you're impatient or there's
lossage at the remote end.
don't save the signal mask on some foreign systems.
* ensure signal handlers don't use stdio and do reset errno if they
don't exit with siglongjmp()
* use a common SIGINT handler for {send,recv}request()
* implement xsignal_restart(), which only sets the SA_RESTART flag if
specifically requested
* xsignal() is now a wrapper to xsignal_restart(). INFO, USR1, USR2 and WINCH
are restartable, ALRM, INT, PIPE and QUIT are not.
* improve getreply()'s timeout code to take advantage of the above.
other changes:
* improve wording of how globbing works for `classic' URLs (host:path).
suggested by John Refling <johnr@imageworks.com> in relation to PRs
[bin/8519] and [bin/8520]
* always compile in the `edit' command even if NO_EDITCOMPLETE defined.
it's just a no-op in the latter case, which is more consistent to
the users.
* always compile in about: support (i.e, remove NO_ABOUT).
i'm entitled to some vanity in this program...
* clean up some whitespace
to "extern" if it's not set. define GLOBAL to (empty) in main.c.
this effectively moves all the globals into main.c whilst retaining
namespace access to them in other source files.
(global vars in header files confuse foreign linkers)
should be in host order. found/fixed by Matthias Pfaller <leo@dachau.marco.de>
* parse_url(): improve checking of portnum, and add an extra argument to pass
back the parsed portnum to the caller (reduces a bit of code duplication)
* Move the KAME/WIDE copyrights after the BSD/TNFi ones. Since there was
significantly less code added under the former, it's only fair on the latter.
lpage page local files
pdir as dir, but through your $PAGER
pls as ls, but through your $PAGER
* implement docase() (a la dotrans() et al) and use appropriately, rototilling
some duplicated code
* globulize(): modify to return a pointer to the strdup()ed result in all cases,
and hack the code that calls it to take this into account
* replace strcpy() and strncpy() with strlcpy()
* put(), getit(): use some aptly named local vars instead of argv[...]
* delint
prototype for idle() in <unistd.h> (which i thought was against namespace
and sensibility guidelines, but...)
* consistently use xsignal() instead of signal(). we get known behaviour
in all cases (SA_RESTART), which is good for some borken foreign systems.
* remove signal.h from most files; it's unnecessary now
* fetch_url(): use `long chunksize' instead of ssize_t; it's more portable, and
we're setting chunksize with strtol() anyway
* xsignal(): only use SA_RESTART if it exists. SunOS 4.x doesn't have it
but has the inverse (SA_INTERRUPT). the original function i was inspired
from had this support (lib/signal.c, W. Richard Stevens' `UNP 2nd ed Vol 1').
* remove <termios.h> from util.c; it should be unnecessary now
it's more portable and more obvious
* remove the mkgmtime() && HAVE_TIMEGM stuff:
a) why should netbsd have to define HAVE_TIMEGM to compile cleanly?
b) foreign compiles of ftp should just be linked with working
timegm function
a more portable version of this ftp client will be released as a 3rdparty
product; no use polluting our code with half-baked attempts...
* document the above three commands
* rototill the way the sndbuf and rcvbuf work. remove resetsockbufsize()
* use the appropriate socket buffer size as the size of the buffer that
the read()/write() loops use. speeds up things in some cases.
the an empty directory (e.g, between `some' and `path' in
`ftp://host/some//path'), then execute `CWD ' (without a path).
This command will probably fail on rfc 959 compliant servers, so
issue a warning in this case and bail. [noted by cgd].
(i wonder if the people who wrote rfc 1738 actually realised that this
requirement appears to contravene the spec for `cwd' in rfc 959 ?)
* replace isurl() with isipv6addr(), and use appropriately. fixes
auto-login with `classic ftp URLs' (e.g, `ftp somehost:')
* cleanup and rework some of the ipv6 stuff in parse_url()
* prevent potential coredump in fetch_ftp() when parsing `;type=X'
* KNF a few lines
* fix a couple of comments
* cleanup the man page a bit
this is mainly for (hypothetical) ftp server which disconnect clients
that use EPSV/EPRT. I've never seen any ftp server like this, but
epsv4 command may be of use when such an ftp server is found.
features:
---------
* transfer rate throttling with the new `rate' command. syntax:
rate direction [max [incr]]
where direction is `all', `get' or `put'.
if max is not supplied, the current settings are displayed.
if max is supplied, then transfers in the given direction will
be throttled to this value.
if incr is supplied, the increment for the `on-the-fly' scaling
will be set to that, otherwise `1024' is used.
currently implemented for binary get, binary put, and url fetches.
not yet supported for ascii get or put, or local file copies.
* on-the-fly scaling of the throttle based on signals:
- SIGUSR1 raises the throttle rate by the increment for that direction
- SIGUSR2 lowers the throttle rate by the increment for that direction
* -T dir,max[,incr] option to set rate from the command line
* `k', `m', `g' suffix support for bytecounts in the `hash', `rate',
`rcvbuf' and `sndbuf' commands)
bug fixes and code mods:
------------------------
* fix up ftp_login() so that ruserpass() is always called, even for
command-line url fetches.
* implement strsuftoi(), which parses a given number into a int with
suffix support. replaces getsockbufsize()
* implement parserate(), which does the argv parsing for -T and rate
* save and restore errno in signal handlers (may not be necessary, but
it doesn't hurt)
notes:
------
the rate command has had reasonable testing, but I'd like feedback
if it doesn't do the right thing, especially from people on slower
(i.e, modem) links.
I haven't tested the rate throttle against a http server which does
`transfer-encoding: chunked' because I couldn't find a server to
test against.
NO_PROGRESS. -DSMALL still implies all of those. progress meter support
isn't necessary for the smallest possible ftp client, but it adds very
little space and makes users' lives much better. Therefore, it should
be enabled for installation media if at all possible.
* fix fetch_ftp() so that hcode parsing is not done for file:// urls
(a } in the wrong place, and code at the wrong indent level...)
* change outfile to being a global (so it gets correctly reset)
* change parse_url to not remove leading '/' for non ftp urls.
whilst this is not totally rfc1738 compliant, other code kinda
assumes this is the case, and it doesn't hurt
* implement ftpvis(), which \ quotes the following in the given string:
SP, TAB, \, CR, "
* use ftpvis() in complete_ambiguous(), to escape characters in a word
which would confuse makeargv()/slurpstring().
1. changed to use timegm(3) on NetBSD and
2. supply alternative code for other Unix-like OSs
(NetBSD ftp shall be portable for some reasons :-).
This fix closes PR #6448.
NOTE: This should be fixed again if a portable UTC to time_t
conversion method is specified in some standards.
* support $no_proxy, which is a comma or space separated list of
host[:port] elements for which proxying is to be disabled.
(asked for by cgd in [bin/5027])
* if $FTPANONPASS is defined, use that as the anon ftp password
(instead of "`whoami`@")
* allow http URL's without a filename as long as an output file
is specified.
other stuff:
* implement parse_url(), which breaks up a URL into its bits, and use.
* simplify url_get() and auto_fetch() to use parse_url() and to not
modify the supplied URL or a copy of it.
* implement xmalloc() and xstrdup(); error-checked malloc()/strdup()
* add more consistency to messages, quoting strings in output as `%s'
remove server from using a persistent connection, which speeds
up such requests.
* support http 301 and 302 redirects
* rewrite guts of url_get() to use fparseln() et al instead of
read(s,&p,1)... enables each in the header to be parsed
as necessary
* rename login to ftp_login, to remove conflict with util.h::login
* cleanup verbose messages during http proxy requests
which in turn can allow the use of larger TCP windows. This is a work in
progress; there is not yet support for specifying global defaults or
user prefrences on a host/network basis.
* default to passive with active fallback. $FTPMODE modifies this behaviour.
-A forces active connection.
* support '-o outfile' for auto-fetched files. outfile can be a file,
`-' (for stdout), or '|command' (to output each file through command).
* support '-r waittime', which retries the connection after waittime seconds
if it fails.
* fix 'page file' when restart is non-zero.
* try all ip-addresses of a host in a http fetch (as the normal ftp fetch
does).
XXX: a ``broken pipe'' error sometimes occurs with -o '|command';
i haven't tracked this down yet.