busybox/printutils/lpd.c

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/* vi: set sw=4 ts=4: */
/*
* micro lpd
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*
* Copyright (C) 2008 by Vladimir Dronnikov <dronnikov@gmail.com>
*
* Licensed under GPLv2, see file LICENSE in this tarball for details.
*/
/*
* A typical usage of BB lpd looks as follows:
* # tcpsvd -E 0 515 lpd SPOOLDIR [HELPER-PROG [ARGS...]]
*
* This means a network listener is started on port 515 (default for LP protocol).
* When a client connection is made (via lpr) lpd first change its working directory to SPOOLDIR.
*
* SPOOLDIR is the spool directory which contains printing queues
* and should have the following structure:
*
* SPOOLDIR/
* <queue1>
* ...
* <queueN>
*
* <queueX> can be of two types:
* A. a printer character device or an ordinary file a link to such;
* B. a directory.
*
* In case A lpd just dumps the data it receives from client (lpr) to the
* end of queue file/device. This is non-spooling mode.
*
* In case B lpd enters spooling mode. It reliably saves client data along with control info
* in two unique files under the queue directory. These files are named dfAXXXHHHH and cfAXXXHHHH,
* where XXX is the job number and HHHH is the client hostname. Unless a printing helper application
* is specified lpd is done at this point.
*
* If HELPER-PROG (with optional arguments) is specified then lpd continues to process client data:
* 1. it reads and parses control file (cfA...). The parse process results in setting environment
* variables whose values were passed in control file; when parsing is complete, lpd deletes
* control file.
* 2. it spawns specified helper application. It is then the helper application who is responsible
* for both actual printing and deleting processed data file.
*
* A good lpr passes control files which when parsed provide the following variables:
* $H = host which issues the job
* $P = user who prints
* $C = class of printing (what is printed on banner page)
* $J = the name of the job
* $L = print banner page
* $M = the user to whom a mail should be sent if a problem occurs
* $l = name of datafile ("dfAxxx") - file whose content are to be printed
*
* Thus, a typical helper can be something like this:
* #!/bin/sh
* cat "$l" >/dev/lp0
* mv -f "$l" save/
*
*/
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#include "libbb.h"
// TODO: xmalloc_reads is vulnerable to remote OOM attack!
// strip argument of bad chars
static char *sane(char *str)
{
char *s = str;
char *p = s;
while (*s) {
if (isalnum(*s) || '-' == *s) {
*p++ = *s;
}
s++;
}
*p = '\0';
return str;
}
static void exec_helper(const char *fname, char **argv)
{
char *p, *q, *file;
char *our_env[12];
int env_idx;
// read control file
file = q = xmalloc_open_read_close(fname, NULL);
// delete control file
unlink(fname);
// parse control file by "\n"
env_idx = 0;
while ((p = strchr(q, '\n')) != NULL
&& isalpha(*q)
&& env_idx < ARRAY_SIZE(our_env)
) {
*p++ = '\0';
// here q is a line of <SYM><VALUE>
// let us set environment string <SYM>=<VALUE>
// N.B. setenv is leaky!
// We have to use putenv(malloced_str),
// and unsetenv+free (in parent)
our_env[env_idx] = xasprintf("%c=%s", *q, q+1);
putenv(our_env[env_idx]);
env_idx++;
// next line, plz!
q = p;
}
if (vfork() == 0) {
// CHILD
// we are the helper. we wanna be silent
// this call reopens stdio fds to "/dev/null"
// (no daemonization is done)
bb_daemonize_or_rexec(DAEMON_DEVNULL_STDIO | DAEMON_ONLY_SANITIZE, NULL);
BB_EXECVP(*argv, argv);
_exit(127);
}
// PARENT (or vfork error)
// clean up...
free(file);
while (--env_idx >= 0) {
*strchrnul(our_env[env_idx], '=') = '\0';
unsetenv(our_env[env_idx]);
}
}
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int lpd_main(int argc, char *argv[]) MAIN_EXTERNALLY_VISIBLE;
int lpd_main(int argc ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED, char *argv[])
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{
int spooling;
char *s, *queue;
// read command
s = xmalloc_reads(STDIN_FILENO, NULL);
// we understand only "receive job" command
if (2 != *s) {
unsupported_cmd:
printf("Command %02x %s\n",
(unsigned char)s[0], "is not supported");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
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// goto spool directory
if (*++argv)
xchdir(*argv++);
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// parse command: "\x2QUEUE_NAME\n"
queue = s + 1;
*strchrnul(s, '\n') = '\0';
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// protect against "/../" attacks
if (!*sane(queue))
return EXIT_FAILURE;
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// queue is a directory -> chdir to it and enter spooling mode
spooling = chdir(queue) + 1; /* 0: cannot chdir, 1: done */
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xdup2(STDOUT_FILENO, STDERR_FILENO);
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while (1) {
char *fname;
int fd;
// int is easier than ssize_t: can use xatoi_u,
// and can correctly display error returns (-1)
int expected_len, real_len;
// signal OK
write(STDOUT_FILENO, "", 1);
// get subcommand
s = xmalloc_reads(STDIN_FILENO, NULL);
if (!s)
return EXIT_SUCCESS; // probably EOF
// we understand only "control file" or "data file" cmds
if (2 != s[0] && 3 != s[0])
goto unsupported_cmd;
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*strchrnul(s, '\n') = '\0';
// valid s must be of form: SUBCMD | LEN | SP | FNAME
// N.B. we bail out on any error
fname = strchr(s, ' ');
if (!fname) {
printf("Command %02x %s\n",
(unsigned char)s[0], "lacks filename");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
*fname++ = '\0';
if (spooling) {
// spooling mode: dump both files
// job in flight has mode 0200 "only writable"
fd = xopen3(sane(fname), O_CREAT | O_WRONLY | O_TRUNC | O_EXCL, 0200);
} else {
// non-spooling mode:
// 2: control file (ignoring), 3: data file
fd = -1;
if (3 == s[0])
fd = xopen(queue, O_RDWR | O_APPEND);
}
expected_len = xatoi_u(s + 1);
real_len = bb_copyfd_size(STDIN_FILENO, fd, expected_len);
if (spooling && real_len != expected_len) {
unlink(fname); // don't keep corrupted files
printf("Expected %d but got %d bytes\n",
expected_len, real_len);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
// chmod completely downloaded file as "readable+writable" ...
if (spooling) {
fchmod(fd, 0600);
// ... and accumulate dump state.
// N.B. after all files are dumped spooling should be 1+2+3==6
spooling += s[0];
}
close(fd); // NB: can do close(-1). Who cares?
// are all files dumped? -> spawn spool helper
if (6 == spooling && *argv) {
fname[0] = 'c'; // pass control file name
exec_helper(fname, argv);
}
// get ACK and see whether it is NUL (ok)
if (read(STDIN_FILENO, s, 1) != 1 || s[0] != 0) {
// don't send error msg to peer - it obviously
// don't follow the protocol, so probably
// it can't understand us either
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
free(s);
} /* while (1) */
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}