314 lines
7.5 KiB
C
314 lines
7.5 KiB
C
/* $NetBSD: workarounds.c,v 1.6 2000/01/21 17:08:34 mycroft Exp $ */
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/*
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* Workarounds for known system software bugs. This module provides wrappers
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* around library functions and system calls that are known to have problems
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* on some systems. Most of these workarounds won't do any harm on regular
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* systems.
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*
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* Author: Wietse Venema, Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands.
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*/
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#include <sys/cdefs.h>
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#ifndef lint
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#if 0
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char sccsid[] = "@(#) workarounds.c 1.6 96/03/19 16:22:25";
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#else
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__RCSID("$NetBSD: workarounds.c,v 1.6 2000/01/21 17:08:34 mycroft Exp $");
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#endif
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#endif
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#include <sys/types.h>
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#include <sys/param.h>
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#include <sys/socket.h>
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#include <netinet/in.h>
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#include <arpa/inet.h>
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#include <netdb.h>
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#include <errno.h>
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <syslog.h>
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#include <string.h>
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#include "tcpd.h"
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/*
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* Some AIX versions advertise a too small MAXHOSTNAMELEN value (32).
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* Result: long hostnames would be truncated, and connections would be
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* dropped because of host name verification failures. Adrian van Bloois
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* (A.vanBloois@info.nic.surfnet.nl) figured out what was the problem.
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*/
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#if (MAXHOSTNAMELEN < 64)
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#undef MAXHOSTNAMELEN
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#endif
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/* In case not defined in <sys/param.h>. */
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#ifndef MAXHOSTNAMELEN
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#define MAXHOSTNAMELEN 256 /* storage for host name */
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#endif
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/*
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* Some DG/UX inet_addr() versions return a struct/union instead of a long.
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* You have this problem when the compiler complains about illegal lvalues
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* or something like that. The following code fixes this mutant behaviour.
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* It should not be enabled on "normal" systems.
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*
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* Bug reported by ben@piglet.cr.usgs.gov (Rev. Ben A. Mesander).
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*/
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#ifdef INET_ADDR_BUG
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#undef inet_addr
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long fix_inet_addr(string)
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char *string;
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{
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return (inet_addr(string).s_addr);
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}
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#endif /* INET_ADDR_BUG */
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/*
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* With some System-V versions, the fgets() library function does not
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* account for partial reads from e.g. sockets. The result is that fgets()
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* gives up too soon, causing username lookups to fail. Problem first
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* reported for IRIX 4.0.5, by Steve Kotsopoulos <steve@ecf.toronto.edu>.
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* The following code works around the problem. It does no harm on "normal"
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* systems.
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*/
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#ifdef BROKEN_FGETS
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#undef fgets
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char *fix_fgets(buf, len, fp)
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char *buf;
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int len;
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FILE *fp;
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{
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char *cp = buf;
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int c;
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/*
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* Copy until the buffer fills up, until EOF, or until a newline is
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* found.
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*/
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while (len > 1 && (c = getc(fp)) != EOF) {
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len--;
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*cp++ = c;
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if (c == '\n')
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break;
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}
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/*
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* Return 0 if nothing was read. This is correct even when a silly buffer
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* length was specified.
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*/
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if (cp > buf) {
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*cp = 0;
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return (buf);
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} else {
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return (0);
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}
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}
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#endif /* BROKEN_FGETS */
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/*
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* With early SunOS 5 versions, recvfrom() does not completely fill in the
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* source address structure when doing a non-destructive read. The following
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* code works around the problem. It does no harm on "normal" systems.
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*/
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#ifdef RECVFROM_BUG
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#undef recvfrom
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int fix_recvfrom(sock, buf, buflen, flags, from, fromlen)
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int sock;
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char *buf;
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int buflen;
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int flags;
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struct sockaddr *from;
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int *fromlen;
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{
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int ret;
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/* Assume that both ends of a socket belong to the same address family. */
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if ((ret = recvfrom(sock, buf, buflen, flags, from, fromlen)) >= 0) {
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if (from->sa_family == 0) {
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struct sockaddr_storage my_addr;
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int my_addr_len = sizeof(my_addr);
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if (getsockname(0, (struct sockaddr *)&my_addr, &my_addr_len)) {
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tcpd_warn("getsockname: %m");
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} else {
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from->sa_family = my_addr.sa_family;
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}
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}
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}
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return (ret);
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}
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#endif /* RECVFROM_BUG */
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/*
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* The Apollo SR10.3 and some SYSV4 getpeername(2) versions do not return an
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* error in case of a datagram-oriented socket. Instead, they claim that all
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* UDP requests come from address 0.0.0.0. The following code works around
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* the problem. It does no harm on "normal" systems.
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*/
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#ifdef GETPEERNAME_BUG
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#undef getpeername
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int fix_getpeername(sock, sa, len)
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int sock;
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struct sockaddr *sa;
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int *len;
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{
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int ret;
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struct sockaddr_in *sin = (struct sockaddr_in *) sa;
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if ((ret = getpeername(sock, sa, len)) >= 0
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&& sa->sa_family == AF_INET
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&& sin->sin_addr.s_addr == 0) {
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errno = ENOTCONN;
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return (-1);
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} else {
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return (ret);
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}
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}
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#endif /* GETPEERNAME_BUG */
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/*
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* According to Karl Vogel (vogelke@c-17igp.wpafb.af.mil) some Pyramid
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* versions have no yp_default_domain() function. We use getdomainname()
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* instead.
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*/
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#ifdef USE_GETDOMAIN
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int yp_get_default_domain(ptr)
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char **ptr;
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{
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static char mydomain[MAXHOSTNAMELEN];
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*ptr = mydomain;
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return (getdomainname(mydomain, MAXHOSTNAMELEN));
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}
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#endif /* USE_GETDOMAIN */
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#ifndef INADDR_NONE
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#define INADDR_NONE 0xffffffff
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#endif
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/*
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* Solaris 2.4 gethostbyname() has problems with multihomed hosts. When
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* doing DNS through NIS, only one host address ends up in the address list.
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* All other addresses end up in the hostname alias list, interspersed with
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* copies of the official host name. This would wreak havoc with tcpd's
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* hostname double checks. Below is a workaround that should do no harm when
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* accidentally left in. A side effect of the workaround is that address
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* list members are no longer properly aligned for structure access.
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*/
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#ifdef SOLARIS_24_GETHOSTBYNAME_BUG
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#undef gethostbyname
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struct hostent *fix_gethostbyname(name)
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char *name;
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{
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struct hostent *hp;
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struct in_addr addr;
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char **o_addr_list;
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char **o_aliases;
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char **n_addr_list;
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int broken_gethostbyname = 0;
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if ((hp = gethostbyname(name)) && !hp->h_addr_list[1] && hp->h_aliases[1]) {
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for (o_aliases = n_addr_list = hp->h_aliases; *o_aliases; o_aliases++) {
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if ((addr.s_addr = inet_addr(*o_aliases)) != INADDR_NONE) {
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memcpy(*n_addr_list++, (char *) &addr, hp->h_length);
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broken_gethostbyname = 1;
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}
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}
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if (broken_gethostbyname) {
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o_addr_list = hp->h_addr_list;
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memcpy(*n_addr_list++, *o_addr_list, hp->h_length);
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*n_addr_list = 0;
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hp->h_addr_list = hp->h_aliases;
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hp->h_aliases = o_addr_list + 1;
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}
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}
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return (hp);
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}
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#endif /* SOLARIS_24_GETHOSTBYNAME_BUG */
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/*
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* Horror! Some FreeBSD 2.0 libc routines call strtok(). Since tcpd depends
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* heavily on strtok(), strange things may happen. Workaround: use our
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* private strtok(). This has been fixed in the meantime.
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*/
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#ifdef USE_STRSEP
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char *fix_strtok(buf, sep)
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char *buf;
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char *sep;
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{
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static char *state;
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char *result;
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if (buf)
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state = buf;
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while ((result = strsep(&state, sep)) && result[0] == 0)
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/* void */ ;
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return (result);
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}
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#endif /* USE_STRSEP */
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/*
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* IRIX 5.3 (and possibly earlier versions, too) library routines call the
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* non-reentrant strtok() library routine, causing hosts to slip through
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* allow/deny filters. Workaround: don't rely on the vendor and use our own
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* strtok() function. FreeBSD 2.0 has a similar problem (fixed in 2.0.5).
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*/
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#ifdef LIBC_CALLS_STRTOK
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char *my_strtok(buf, sep)
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char *buf;
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char *sep;
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{
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static char *state;
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char *result;
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if (buf)
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state = buf;
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/*
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* Skip over separator characters and detect end of string.
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*/
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if (*(state += strspn(state, sep)) == 0)
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return (0);
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/*
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* Skip over non-separator characters and terminate result.
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*/
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result = state;
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if (*(state += strcspn(state, sep)) != 0)
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*state++ = 0;
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return (result);
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}
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#endif /* LIBC_CALLS_STRTOK */
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