* implement closedataconn() and use appropriately (including in mlsd())
* only put leading space in front of MLST output (not MLSD output)
* MLSD: only output pdir and cdir entries when the type fact is requested.
* change error code for giving MLSD a non-directory from 550 to 501
* remove MLSx Type fact support for UNIX.* for now; it's not standardised yet.
* do a check_login when MLSD and MLST are given no args
* detect & complain about null facts in OPTS MLST
* cache getgroups() at login instead of calling each time in fact_perm()
other mods:
* implement cprintf(); as per fprintf() but increments total_bytes{,_out}
* implement CPUTC(); as per putc() but increments total_bytes{,_out}
* implement base64_encode()
* fact_unique() display base64 encoding of dev_t and ino_t rather than
hex output; should scale if size of those changes
* change reply() so that a negative code acts as the initial line in a reply,
code == 0 prefixes the line with 4 spaces, and code > 0 works as before.
deprecate lreply(code, ) and lreply(0, ) in favour of reply(-code, ) and
reply(0, ) respectively.
* use cprintf() and CPUTC() appropriately (often instead of printf(),
lreply(-2, ) or lreply(-1, ).
now we actually account for the data sent by MLST and MLSD.
* remove DEBUG support for sending MLSD output to control connection instead
of data connection (my ftp client now supports MLSD :-)
* implement draft-ietf-ftpext-mlst-10 commands, especially MLST and MLSD.
we already supported SIZE and MDTM. add the appropriate FEAT output lines.
* migrate a lot of the command code from ftpcmd.y and ftpd.c to cmds.c
* make dataconn(), feat(), lookup(), opts() and sizecmd() public
* modify struct tab so that it has a `flags' instead of `implemented' element,
and remove the `hasopts' element. If flags == 1, the command is implemented.
if flags == 2, the command is implemented and takes options
* add macros ISDOTDIR(x) (is x ".") and ISDOTDOTDIR(x) (is x "..")
* modify lreply() so that lreply(-2, ...) just outputs the given info without
a prefix or trailing \r\n. this saves doing b = printf(); total_* += b;
* enhance statcmd(). still needs work in the LPRT status stuff.
* crank version
some unsatisfied references (most often when compiled without necessary
-Wl,-R), so check for that instead of causing null-dereference;
this way the code has a chance to cleanup after itself and report
the error to caller
Thanks to Jason Thorpe for helping fix this!
- ftp(1): treats IPv4 mapped destination as IPv4 peer, not native IPv6 peer.
this does not support network with SIIT translator.
- rshd(8)/rlogind(8): rejects accesses from IPv4 mapped peer, to avoid
possible abuse of IPv4 mapped addr (rshd/rlogind use source address-based
auth so it is important to check the condition).
Problem noted in [bin/9642] by Takahiro Kambe <taca@sky.yamashina.kyoto.jp>,
(part of which already had been solved by itojun a while ago), and provided
patch covered most of the fixes needed. (Thanks Takahiro!)
- Consistently indent goto labels by one space.
than by itself. Besides being duplicated code the open-coded version
also did not take care of cleaning up after the object's DAG(!).
Fixes PR bin/8905.
of the port range used by passive connections. based on work in [bin/9158]
from Takahiro Kambe <taca@sky.yamashina.kyoto.jp>
* change the way global variables are defined and extern-ed to be more
consistent.
template class [refclass]
following directives for refclass will apply to class as well.
this makes setting up a `template' class with many default settings
easy, whilst allowing for class-specific overrides
* prevent crash when the optional limitfile wasn't given to limit
* document count_users()
* document default setting of limit in ftpd.conf(5)
* crank version
* add connection limits (`limit' keyword in ftpd.conf)
* move initialisation of curclass from parse_conf() to new function
init_curclass()
* implement count_users(), which determines the number of users in a given
class. a file - /var/run/ftpd.pids-<class> - is used to store a list
of pids in use (effectively an array of pid_t's), and its size is reduced
as necessary.
* new % modifiers in format_file:
%c class
%M maximum connection count
%N current connection count
* always end_login()s, even for refused connections
bugs fixed:
* remove \n from %T output
* fix some inconsistencies in the man pages
* ensure that both `ftp' *and* `anonymous' are allowed in ftpusers.
(this was accidently broken in a recent commit to be ``or'' not ``and'')
* use MAXPATHLEN not MAXPATHLEN+1
* crank copyright date on modified files
* crank version
the name advertised to the client, even if ftpd can determine it from
the ip address that ftpd is bound to. requested by mrg.
* remove -4/-6; they were effectively no-ops since itojun's change in 1.75.
* crank version
* use .Dv and .Tn in the man pages as appropriate
* KNF a bit
The following were inspired by similar changes in openbsd, but may
have additional improvements by me:
* add more check_login tests to the parser rules
* nuke a few memory leaks in the parser rules
* clear passwords before free()ing them, for safety
* don't display \r\n in setproctitle() output
* add support for -U, which enables managing /var/run/utmp entries for
connections. solves [bin/2217] by Jason Downs <downsj@teeny.org>
* fix oob handling for STAT command
* use SIG_ERR instead of -1
as (useful for virtual ftp servers in conjunction with inetd.conf(5)'s
ability to bind to a specific address).
if this option is used, add `hostname' to the syslog messages.
* improve documentation of command-line options
* don't allow class names of `all' or `none' in ftpusers
userglob [allow|deny]
to
userglob[@host] [allow|deny [classname]]
where class is a userdefined classname.
- if host is given it may either be a CIDR address (e.g, `1.2.3.0/24') or a
hostglob (e.g, `*.foo.com'), and the remote host is matched against that.
- if classname is given, use that to match entries in ftpd.conf (defaults
to `guest' for `anonymous'/`ftp' logins, `chroot' for users found in
/etc/ftpchroot, and `real' for everyone else.
* implement new /etc/ftpd.conf directives:
classtype classname type set type of classname to GUEST, CHROOT, or REAL
motd classname file file to use instead of /etc/motd
rateget classname rate set rateget throttle to rate
rateput classname rate set rateput throttle to rate
upload classname allow/deny uploads (STOU, STOR, APPE). if
denied, also acts as `modify deny'.
* implement new `SITE' commands:
RATEGET as per /etc/ftpd.conf rateget, but cannot exceed that
RATEPUT as per /etc/ftpd.conf rateput, but cannot exceed that
* implement format_file(), which outputs a file to the user, parsing %
escapes. use to print /etc/ftpwelcome, /etc/motd, and the `display' file.
* implement strsuftoi() (from ftp(1)), which parses a number and
optional suffix (for use with rateget, etc)
* don't bother seteuid(0) ; bind(...) ; seteuid(pw->pw_uid), since
we don't need reserved ports (at wasn't getting them anyway).
* update & reorder copyrights
* use strlcpy() as appropriate
the string tokenisation must be performed by the caller (which is
generally easy because it's almost always a static command).
* change do_conversion() to return a char *argv[] instead of char *cmd.
tokenisation of the command is done internally.
* change retrieve() to take char *argv[] instead of char *cmd.
(to take advantage of the above changes). fixes [bin/8173]
* use fparseln() instead of fgetln()
* store conversions in listed order (rather than reverse order)
* use stringlists instead of handrolling code to manage an argv.
connection destination, hoping this to help ftpd's behavior with
scoped IPv6 addresses.
I'm not sure if it is the right way, but it is the best way available to us.
LPRT or EPRT command gives no information about which interface (or scope)
to be used for new data connection.
ftp(1): On data connection establishment, warn if scoped address is used.
If peer (ftp daemon) does not handle scoped address, data connection
may not work right.
This seems to be sort of protocol spec hole, not implementation issue.
is not monotonically increasing (e.g. clock is slaved to another system)
the optimization will result in segments being treated as corrupt
(uncleanable). If enough such "bad" segments were created, the cleaner would
clean continuously, and after some time the system would panic with "no
clean segments".
(Legitimately old partial-segments are relatively rare, and will have their
blocks culled by lfs_bmapv.)
testing and archival for now. I don't expect anyone to work with it
since the binutils and gas changes are still pending. But you got to
crawl before you walk.