Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
Add an actual SSH server program.
This server is NOT SECURE! If anyone is reading this commit message,
DO NOT DEPLOY IT IN A HOSTILE-FACING ENVIRONMENT! Its purpose is to
speak the server end of everything PuTTY speaks on the client side, so
that I can test that I haven't broken PuTTY when I reorganise its
code, even things like RSA key exchange or chained auth methods which
it's hard to find a server that speaks at all.
(For this reason, it's declared with [UT] in the Recipe file, so that
it falls into the same category as programs like testbn, which won't
be installed by 'make install'.)
Working title is 'Uppity', partly for 'Universal PuTTY Protocol
Interaction Test Yoke', but mostly because it looks quite like the
word 'PuTTY' with part of it reversed. (Apparently 'test yoke' is a
very rarely used term meaning something not altogether unlike 'test
harness', which is a bit of a stretch, but it'll do.)
It doesn't actually _support_ everything I want yet. At the moment,
it's a proof of concept only. But it has most of the machinery
present, and the parts it's missing - such as chained auth methods -
should be easy enough to add because I've built in the required
flexibility, in the form of an AuthPolicy object which can request
them if it wants to. However, the current AuthPolicy object is
entirely trivial, and will let in any user with the password "weasel".
(Another way in which this is not a production-ready server is that it
also has no interaction with the OS's authentication system. In
particular, it will not only let in any user with the same password,
but it won't even change uid - it will open shells and forwardings
under whatever user id you started it up as.)
Currently, the program can only speak the SSH protocol on its standard
I/O channels (using the new FdSocket facility), so if you want it to
listen on a network port, you'll have to run it from some kind of
separate listening program similar to inetd. For my own tests, I'm not
even doing that: I'm just having PuTTY spawn it as a local proxy
process, which also conveniently eliminates the risk of anyone hostile
connecting to it.
The bulk of the actual code reorganisation is already done by previous
commits, so this change is _mostly_ just dropping in a new set of
server-specific source files alongside the client-specific ones I
created recently. The remaining changes in the shared SSH code are
numerous, but all minor:
- a few extra parameters to BPP and PPL constructors (e.g. 'are you
in server mode?'), and pass both sets of SSH-1 protocol flags from
the login to the connection layer
- in server mode, unconditionally send our version string _before_
waiting for the remote one
- a new hook in the SSH-1 BPP to handle enabling compression in
server mode, where the message exchange works the other way round
- new code in the SSH-2 BPP to do _deferred_ compression the other
way round (the non-deferred version is still nicely symmetric)
- in the SSH-2 transport layer, some adjustments to do key derivation
either way round (swapping round the identifying letters in the
various hash preimages, and making sure to list the KEXINITs in the
right order)
- also in the SSH-2 transport layer, an if statement that controls
whether we send SERVICE_REQUEST and wait for SERVICE_ACCEPT, or
vice versa
- new ConnectionLayer methods for opening outgoing channels for X and
agent forwardings
- new functions in portfwd.c to establish listening sockets suitable
for remote-to-local port forwarding (i.e. not under the direction
of a Conf the way it's done on the client side).
2018-10-20 21:09:54 +00:00
|
|
|
* Packet protocol layer for the client side of the SSH-2 userauth
|
|
|
|
* protocol (RFC 4252).
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#include <assert.h>
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#include "putty.h"
|
|
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|
#include "ssh.h"
|
2021-04-22 16:58:40 +00:00
|
|
|
#include "bpp.h"
|
|
|
|
#include "ppl.h"
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
#include "sshcr.h"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#ifndef NO_GSSAPI
|
2021-04-22 16:58:40 +00:00
|
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|
#include "gssc.h"
|
|
|
|
#include "gss.h"
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#define BANNER_LIMIT 131072
|
|
|
|
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
typedef struct agent_key {
|
|
|
|
strbuf *blob, *comment;
|
|
|
|
ptrlen algorithm;
|
|
|
|
} agent_key;
|
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state {
|
|
|
|
int crState;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PacketProtocolLayer *transport_layer, *successor_layer;
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
Filename *keyfile, *detached_cert_file;
|
New option to reject 'trivial' success of userauth.
Suggested by Manfred Kaiser, who also wrote most of this patch
(although outlying parts, like documentation and SSH-1 support, are by
me).
This is a second line of defence against the kind of spoofing attacks
in which a malicious or compromised SSH server rushes the client
through the userauth phase of SSH without actually requiring any auth
inputs (passwords or signatures or whatever), and then at the start of
the connection phase it presents something like a spoof prompt,
intended to be taken for part of userauth by the user but in fact with
some more sinister purpose.
Our existing line of defence against this is the trust sigil system,
and as far as I know, that's still working. This option allows a bit of
extra defence in depth: if you don't expect your SSH server to
trivially accept authentication in the first place, then enabling this
option will cause PuTTY to disconnect if it unexpectedly does so,
without the user having to spot the presence or absence of a fiddly
little sigil anywhere.
Several types of authentication count as 'trivial'. The obvious one is
the SSH-2 "none" method, which clients always try first so that the
failure message will tell them what else they can try, and which a
server can instead accept in order to authenticate you unconditionally.
But there are two other ways to do it that we know of: one is to run
keyboard-interactive authentication and send an empty INFO_REQUEST
packet containing no actual prompts for the user, and another even
weirder one is to send USERAUTH_SUCCESS in response to the user's
preliminary *offer* of a public key (instead of sending the usual PK_OK
to request an actual signature from the key).
This new option detects all of those, by clearing the 'is_trivial_auth'
flag only when we send some kind of substantive authentication response
(be it a password, a k-i prompt response, a signature, or a GSSAPI
token). So even if there's a further path through the userauth maze we
haven't spotted, that somehow avoids sending anything substantive, this
strategy should still pick it up.
2021-06-19 14:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
bool show_banner, tryagent, notrivialauth, change_username;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
char *hostname, *fullhostname;
|
2022-08-24 18:21:39 +00:00
|
|
|
int port;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
char *default_username;
|
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'.
My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as
_almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's
implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine,
no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a
variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it
bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1.
PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've
stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it.
But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99
bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first
place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing
'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed
as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables
are now spelled 'true' or 'false'.
I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang
plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out
where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent
job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years!
To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends
generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to
platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean;
I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the
platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code
have been converted wherever I found them.
In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in
_most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value,
or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users
don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and
'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something
more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer:
- the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which
the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1
and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean
- the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you
something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but
most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero'
- the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in
the wildcard.
- the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use
-1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any
caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_
key can treat them as boolean)
- term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in
terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h,
but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we
don't support.
In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool
even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above,
tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values
true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more
confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or
bad and the 1 positive or good:
- the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of
0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd
also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate
piece of work.
- the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1
represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious
reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive'
or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int.
ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int
return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it
never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the
function and its call sites agree that it's a bool.
In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I
don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the
return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the
return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've
accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So
where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd'
(the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern
practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them.
Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to
separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine
to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a
the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from
gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
|
|
|
bool try_ki_auth, try_gssapi_auth, try_gssapi_kex_auth, gssapi_fwd;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ptrlen session_id;
|
|
|
|
enum {
|
|
|
|
AUTH_TYPE_NONE,
|
|
|
|
AUTH_TYPE_PUBLICKEY,
|
|
|
|
AUTH_TYPE_PUBLICKEY_OFFER_LOUD,
|
|
|
|
AUTH_TYPE_PUBLICKEY_OFFER_QUIET,
|
|
|
|
AUTH_TYPE_PASSWORD,
|
|
|
|
AUTH_TYPE_GSSAPI, /* always QUIET */
|
|
|
|
AUTH_TYPE_KEYBOARD_INTERACTIVE,
|
|
|
|
AUTH_TYPE_KEYBOARD_INTERACTIVE_QUIET
|
|
|
|
} type;
|
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'.
My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as
_almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's
implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine,
no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a
variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it
bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1.
PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've
stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it.
But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99
bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first
place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing
'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed
as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables
are now spelled 'true' or 'false'.
I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang
plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out
where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent
job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years!
To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends
generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to
platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean;
I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the
platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code
have been converted wherever I found them.
In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in
_most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value,
or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users
don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and
'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something
more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer:
- the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which
the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1
and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean
- the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you
something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but
most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero'
- the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in
the wildcard.
- the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use
-1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any
caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_
key can treat them as boolean)
- term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in
terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h,
but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we
don't support.
In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool
even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above,
tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values
true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more
confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or
bad and the 1 positive or good:
- the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of
0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd
also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate
piece of work.
- the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1
represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious
reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive'
or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int.
ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int
return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it
never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the
function and its call sites agree that it's a bool.
In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I
don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the
return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the
return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've
accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So
where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd'
(the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern
practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them.
Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to
separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine
to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a
the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from
gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
|
|
|
bool need_pw, can_pubkey, can_passwd, can_keyb_inter;
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
SeatPromptResult spr;
|
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'.
My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as
_almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's
implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine,
no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a
variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it
bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1.
PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've
stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it.
But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99
bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first
place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing
'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed
as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables
are now spelled 'true' or 'false'.
I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang
plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out
where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent
job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years!
To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends
generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to
platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean;
I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the
platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code
have been converted wherever I found them.
In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in
_most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value,
or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users
don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and
'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something
more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer:
- the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which
the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1
and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean
- the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you
something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but
most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero'
- the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in
the wildcard.
- the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use
-1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any
caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_
key can treat them as boolean)
- term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in
terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h,
but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we
don't support.
In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool
even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above,
tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values
true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more
confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or
bad and the 1 positive or good:
- the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of
0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd
also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate
piece of work.
- the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1
represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious
reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive'
or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int.
ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int
return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it
never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the
function and its call sites agree that it's a bool.
In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I
don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the
return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the
return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've
accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So
where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd'
(the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern
practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them.
Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to
separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine
to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a
the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from
gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
|
|
|
bool tried_pubkey_config, done_agent;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
struct ssh_connection_shared_gss_state *shgss;
|
|
|
|
#ifndef NO_GSSAPI
|
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'.
My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as
_almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's
implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine,
no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a
variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it
bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1.
PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've
stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it.
But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99
bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first
place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing
'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed
as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables
are now spelled 'true' or 'false'.
I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang
plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out
where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent
job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years!
To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends
generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to
platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean;
I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the
platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code
have been converted wherever I found them.
In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in
_most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value,
or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users
don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and
'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something
more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer:
- the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which
the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1
and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean
- the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you
something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but
most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero'
- the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in
the wildcard.
- the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use
-1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any
caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_
key can treat them as boolean)
- term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in
terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h,
but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we
don't support.
In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool
even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above,
tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values
true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more
confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or
bad and the 1 positive or good:
- the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of
0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd
also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate
piece of work.
- the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1
represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious
reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive'
or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int.
ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int
return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it
never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the
function and its call sites agree that it's a bool.
In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I
don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the
return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the
return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've
accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So
where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd'
(the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern
practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them.
Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to
separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine
to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a
the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from
gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
|
|
|
bool can_gssapi;
|
|
|
|
bool can_gssapi_keyex_auth;
|
|
|
|
bool tried_gssapi;
|
|
|
|
bool tried_gssapi_keyex_auth;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
time_t gss_cred_expiry;
|
|
|
|
Ssh_gss_buf gss_buf;
|
|
|
|
Ssh_gss_buf gss_rcvtok, gss_sndtok;
|
|
|
|
Ssh_gss_stat gss_stat;
|
|
|
|
#endif
|
2018-12-06 18:08:56 +00:00
|
|
|
bool suppress_wait_for_response_packet;
|
2018-12-06 18:06:15 +00:00
|
|
|
strbuf *last_methods_string;
|
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'.
My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as
_almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's
implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine,
no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a
variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it
bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1.
PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've
stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it.
But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99
bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first
place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing
'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed
as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables
are now spelled 'true' or 'false'.
I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang
plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out
where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent
job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years!
To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends
generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to
platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean;
I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the
platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code
have been converted wherever I found them.
In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in
_most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value,
or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users
don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and
'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something
more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer:
- the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which
the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1
and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean
- the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you
something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but
most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero'
- the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in
the wildcard.
- the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use
-1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any
caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_
key can treat them as boolean)
- term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in
terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h,
but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we
don't support.
In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool
even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above,
tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values
true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more
confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or
bad and the 1 positive or good:
- the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of
0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd
also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate
piece of work.
- the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1
represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious
reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive'
or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int.
ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int
return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it
never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the
function and its call sites agree that it's a bool.
In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I
don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the
return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the
return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've
accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So
where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd'
(the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern
practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them.
Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to
separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine
to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a
the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from
gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
|
|
|
bool kbd_inter_refused;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
prompts_t *cur_prompt;
|
2019-05-05 09:10:54 +00:00
|
|
|
uint32_t num_prompts;
|
2019-07-06 17:06:04 +00:00
|
|
|
const char *username;
|
|
|
|
char *locally_allocated_username;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
char *password;
|
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'.
My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as
_almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's
implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine,
no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a
variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it
bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1.
PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've
stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it.
But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99
bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first
place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing
'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed
as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables
are now spelled 'true' or 'false'.
I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang
plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out
where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent
job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years!
To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends
generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to
platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean;
I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the
platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code
have been converted wherever I found them.
In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in
_most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value,
or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users
don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and
'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something
more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer:
- the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which
the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1
and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean
- the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you
something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but
most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero'
- the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in
the wildcard.
- the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use
-1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any
caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_
key can treat them as boolean)
- term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in
terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h,
but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we
don't support.
In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool
even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above,
tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values
true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more
confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or
bad and the 1 positive or good:
- the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of
0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd
also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate
piece of work.
- the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1
represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious
reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive'
or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int.
ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int
return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it
never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the
function and its call sites agree that it's a bool.
In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I
don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the
return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the
return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've
accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So
where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd'
(the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern
practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them.
Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to
separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine
to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a
the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from
gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
|
|
|
bool got_username;
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
strbuf *publickey_blob, *detached_cert_blob, *cert_pubkey_diagnosed;
|
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'.
My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as
_almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's
implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine,
no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a
variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it
bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1.
PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've
stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it.
But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99
bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first
place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing
'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed
as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables
are now spelled 'true' or 'false'.
I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang
plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out
where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent
job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years!
To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends
generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to
platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean;
I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the
platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code
have been converted wherever I found them.
In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in
_most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value,
or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users
don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and
'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something
more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer:
- the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which
the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1
and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean
- the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you
something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but
most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero'
- the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in
the wildcard.
- the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use
-1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any
caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_
key can treat them as boolean)
- term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in
terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h,
but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we
don't support.
In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool
even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above,
tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values
true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more
confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or
bad and the 1 positive or good:
- the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of
0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd
also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate
piece of work.
- the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1
represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious
reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive'
or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int.
ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int
return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it
never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the
function and its call sites agree that it's a bool.
In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I
don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the
return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the
return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've
accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So
where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd'
(the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern
practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them.
Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to
separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine
to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a
the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from
gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
|
|
|
bool privatekey_available, privatekey_encrypted;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
char *publickey_algorithm;
|
|
|
|
char *publickey_comment;
|
|
|
|
void *agent_response_to_free;
|
|
|
|
ptrlen agent_response;
|
|
|
|
BinarySource asrc[1]; /* for reading SSH agent response */
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
size_t agent_keys_len;
|
|
|
|
agent_key *agent_keys;
|
|
|
|
size_t agent_key_index, agent_key_limit;
|
2020-11-21 14:44:46 +00:00
|
|
|
ptrlen agent_keyalg;
|
|
|
|
unsigned signflags;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
int len;
|
|
|
|
PktOut *pktout;
|
New option to reject 'trivial' success of userauth.
Suggested by Manfred Kaiser, who also wrote most of this patch
(although outlying parts, like documentation and SSH-1 support, are by
me).
This is a second line of defence against the kind of spoofing attacks
in which a malicious or compromised SSH server rushes the client
through the userauth phase of SSH without actually requiring any auth
inputs (passwords or signatures or whatever), and then at the start of
the connection phase it presents something like a spoof prompt,
intended to be taken for part of userauth by the user but in fact with
some more sinister purpose.
Our existing line of defence against this is the trust sigil system,
and as far as I know, that's still working. This option allows a bit of
extra defence in depth: if you don't expect your SSH server to
trivially accept authentication in the first place, then enabling this
option will cause PuTTY to disconnect if it unexpectedly does so,
without the user having to spot the presence or absence of a fiddly
little sigil anywhere.
Several types of authentication count as 'trivial'. The obvious one is
the SSH-2 "none" method, which clients always try first so that the
failure message will tell them what else they can try, and which a
server can instead accept in order to authenticate you unconditionally.
But there are two other ways to do it that we know of: one is to run
keyboard-interactive authentication and send an empty INFO_REQUEST
packet containing no actual prompts for the user, and another even
weirder one is to send USERAUTH_SUCCESS in response to the user's
preliminary *offer* of a public key (instead of sending the usual PK_OK
to request an actual signature from the key).
This new option detects all of those, by clearing the 'is_trivial_auth'
flag only when we send some kind of substantive authentication response
(be it a password, a k-i prompt response, a signature, or a GSSAPI
token). So even if there's a further path through the userauth maze we
haven't spotted, that somehow avoids sending anything substantive, this
strategy should still pick it up.
2021-06-19 14:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
bool is_trivial_auth;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
agent_pending_query *auth_agent_query;
|
|
|
|
bufchain banner;
|
2019-03-05 21:13:48 +00:00
|
|
|
bufchain_sink banner_bs;
|
|
|
|
StripCtrlChars *banner_scc;
|
|
|
|
bool banner_scc_initialised;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
char *authplugin_cmd;
|
|
|
|
Socket *authplugin;
|
|
|
|
uint32_t authplugin_version;
|
|
|
|
Plug authplugin_plug;
|
|
|
|
bufchain authplugin_bc;
|
|
|
|
strbuf *authplugin_incoming_msg;
|
2022-09-02 17:18:29 +00:00
|
|
|
size_t authplugin_backlog;
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
bool authplugin_eof;
|
|
|
|
bool authplugin_ki_active;
|
|
|
|
|
2019-03-09 15:51:38 +00:00
|
|
|
StripCtrlChars *ki_scc;
|
|
|
|
bool ki_scc_initialised;
|
|
|
|
bool ki_printed_header;
|
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
PacketProtocolLayer ppl;
|
|
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_free(PacketProtocolLayer *);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_process_queue(PacketProtocolLayer *);
|
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'.
My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as
_almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's
implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine,
no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a
variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it
bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1.
PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've
stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it.
But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99
bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first
place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing
'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed
as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables
are now spelled 'true' or 'false'.
I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang
plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out
where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent
job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years!
To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends
generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to
platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean;
I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the
platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code
have been converted wherever I found them.
In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in
_most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value,
or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users
don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and
'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something
more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer:
- the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which
the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1
and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean
- the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you
something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but
most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero'
- the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in
the wildcard.
- the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use
-1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any
caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_
key can treat them as boolean)
- term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in
terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h,
but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we
don't support.
In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool
even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above,
tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values
true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more
confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or
bad and the 1 positive or good:
- the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of
0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd
also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate
piece of work.
- the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1
represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious
reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive'
or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int.
ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int
return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it
never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the
function and its call sites agree that it's a bool.
In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I
don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the
return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the
return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've
accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So
where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd'
(the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern
practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them.
Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to
separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine
to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a
the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from
gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
|
|
|
static bool ssh2_userauth_get_specials(
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
PacketProtocolLayer *ppl, add_special_fn_t add_special, void *ctx);
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_special_cmd(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl,
|
|
|
|
SessionSpecialCode code, int arg);
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_reconfigure(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl, Conf *conf);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_agent_query(struct ssh2_userauth_state *, strbuf *);
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_agent_callback(void *, void *, int);
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_add_sigblob(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, PktOut *pkt, ptrlen pkblob, ptrlen sigblob);
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_add_alg_and_publickey(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, PktOut *pkt, ptrlen alg, ptrlen pkblob);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_add_session_id(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, strbuf *sigdata);
|
|
|
|
#ifndef NO_GSSAPI
|
|
|
|
static PktOut *ssh2_userauth_gss_packet(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, const char *authtype);
|
|
|
|
#endif
|
2022-08-22 16:48:22 +00:00
|
|
|
static bool ssh2_userauth_ki_setup_prompts(
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, BinarySource *src, bool plugin);
|
2022-08-22 16:48:22 +00:00
|
|
|
static bool ssh2_userauth_ki_run_prompts(struct ssh2_userauth_state *s);
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_ki_write_responses(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, BinarySink *bs);
|
2023-04-29 10:37:17 +00:00
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_final_output(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2023-04-29 10:36:13 +00:00
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_print_banner(struct ssh2_userauth_state *s);
|
2023-05-04 17:24:18 +00:00
|
|
|
static ptrlen workaround_rsa_sha2_cert_userauth(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, ptrlen id);
|
2023-04-29 10:36:13 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Change vtable defs to use C99 designated initialisers.
This is a sweeping change applied across the whole code base by a spot
of Emacs Lisp. Now, everywhere I declare a vtable filled with function
pointers (and the occasional const data member), all the members of
the vtable structure are initialised by name using the '.fieldname =
value' syntax introduced in C99.
We were already using this syntax for a handful of things in the new
key-generation progress report system, so it's not new to the code
base as a whole.
The advantage is that now, when a vtable only declares a subset of the
available fields, I can initialise the rest to NULL or zero just by
leaving them out. This is most dramatic in a couple of the outlying
vtables in things like psocks (which has a ConnectionLayerVtable
containing only one non-NULL method), but less dramatically, it means
that the new 'flags' field in BackendVtable can be completely left out
of every backend definition except for the SUPDUP one which defines it
to a nonzero value. Similarly, the test_for_upstream method only used
by SSH doesn't have to be mentioned in the rest of the backends;
network Plugs for listening sockets don't have to explicitly null out
'receive' and 'sent', and vice versa for 'accepting', and so on.
While I'm at it, I've normalised the declarations so they don't use
the unnecessarily verbose 'struct' keyword. Also a handful of them
weren't const; now they are.
2020-03-10 21:06:29 +00:00
|
|
|
static const PacketProtocolLayerVtable ssh2_userauth_vtable = {
|
|
|
|
.free = ssh2_userauth_free,
|
|
|
|
.process_queue = ssh2_userauth_process_queue,
|
|
|
|
.get_specials = ssh2_userauth_get_specials,
|
|
|
|
.special_cmd = ssh2_userauth_special_cmd,
|
|
|
|
.reconfigure = ssh2_userauth_reconfigure,
|
|
|
|
.queued_data_size = ssh_ppl_default_queued_data_size,
|
2023-04-29 10:37:17 +00:00
|
|
|
.final_output = ssh2_userauth_final_output,
|
Change vtable defs to use C99 designated initialisers.
This is a sweeping change applied across the whole code base by a spot
of Emacs Lisp. Now, everywhere I declare a vtable filled with function
pointers (and the occasional const data member), all the members of
the vtable structure are initialised by name using the '.fieldname =
value' syntax introduced in C99.
We were already using this syntax for a handful of things in the new
key-generation progress report system, so it's not new to the code
base as a whole.
The advantage is that now, when a vtable only declares a subset of the
available fields, I can initialise the rest to NULL or zero just by
leaving them out. This is most dramatic in a couple of the outlying
vtables in things like psocks (which has a ConnectionLayerVtable
containing only one non-NULL method), but less dramatically, it means
that the new 'flags' field in BackendVtable can be completely left out
of every backend definition except for the SUPDUP one which defines it
to a nonzero value. Similarly, the test_for_upstream method only used
by SSH doesn't have to be mentioned in the rest of the backends;
network Plugs for listening sockets don't have to explicitly null out
'receive' and 'sent', and vice versa for 'accepting', and so on.
While I'm at it, I've normalised the declarations so they don't use
the unnecessarily verbose 'struct' keyword. Also a handful of them
weren't const; now they are.
2020-03-10 21:06:29 +00:00
|
|
|
.name = "ssh-userauth",
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PacketProtocolLayer *ssh2_userauth_new(
|
|
|
|
PacketProtocolLayer *successor_layer,
|
2022-08-24 18:21:39 +00:00
|
|
|
const char *hostname, int port, const char *fullhostname,
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
Filename *keyfile, Filename *detached_cert_file,
|
|
|
|
bool show_banner, bool tryagent, bool notrivialauth,
|
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'.
My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as
_almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's
implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine,
no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a
variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it
bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1.
PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've
stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it.
But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99
bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first
place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing
'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed
as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables
are now spelled 'true' or 'false'.
I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang
plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out
where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent
job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years!
To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends
generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to
platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean;
I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the
platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code
have been converted wherever I found them.
In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in
_most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value,
or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users
don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and
'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something
more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer:
- the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which
the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1
and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean
- the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you
something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but
most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero'
- the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in
the wildcard.
- the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use
-1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any
caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_
key can treat them as boolean)
- term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in
terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h,
but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we
don't support.
In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool
even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above,
tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values
true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more
confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or
bad and the 1 positive or good:
- the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of
0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd
also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate
piece of work.
- the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1
represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious
reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive'
or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int.
ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int
return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it
never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the
function and its call sites agree that it's a bool.
In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I
don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the
return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the
return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've
accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So
where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd'
(the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern
practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them.
Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to
separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine
to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a
the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from
gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
|
|
|
const char *default_username, bool change_username,
|
|
|
|
bool try_ki_auth, bool try_gssapi_auth, bool try_gssapi_kex_auth,
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
bool gssapi_fwd, struct ssh_connection_shared_gss_state *shgss,
|
|
|
|
const char *authplugin_cmd)
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s = snew(struct ssh2_userauth_state);
|
|
|
|
memset(s, 0, sizeof(*s));
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.vt = &ssh2_userauth_vtable;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->successor_layer = successor_layer;
|
|
|
|
s->hostname = dupstr(hostname);
|
2022-08-24 18:21:39 +00:00
|
|
|
s->port = port;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->fullhostname = dupstr(fullhostname);
|
|
|
|
s->keyfile = filename_copy(keyfile);
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
s->detached_cert_file = filename_copy(detached_cert_file);
|
2019-03-27 22:27:30 +00:00
|
|
|
s->show_banner = show_banner;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->tryagent = tryagent;
|
New option to reject 'trivial' success of userauth.
Suggested by Manfred Kaiser, who also wrote most of this patch
(although outlying parts, like documentation and SSH-1 support, are by
me).
This is a second line of defence against the kind of spoofing attacks
in which a malicious or compromised SSH server rushes the client
through the userauth phase of SSH without actually requiring any auth
inputs (passwords or signatures or whatever), and then at the start of
the connection phase it presents something like a spoof prompt,
intended to be taken for part of userauth by the user but in fact with
some more sinister purpose.
Our existing line of defence against this is the trust sigil system,
and as far as I know, that's still working. This option allows a bit of
extra defence in depth: if you don't expect your SSH server to
trivially accept authentication in the first place, then enabling this
option will cause PuTTY to disconnect if it unexpectedly does so,
without the user having to spot the presence or absence of a fiddly
little sigil anywhere.
Several types of authentication count as 'trivial'. The obvious one is
the SSH-2 "none" method, which clients always try first so that the
failure message will tell them what else they can try, and which a
server can instead accept in order to authenticate you unconditionally.
But there are two other ways to do it that we know of: one is to run
keyboard-interactive authentication and send an empty INFO_REQUEST
packet containing no actual prompts for the user, and another even
weirder one is to send USERAUTH_SUCCESS in response to the user's
preliminary *offer* of a public key (instead of sending the usual PK_OK
to request an actual signature from the key).
This new option detects all of those, by clearing the 'is_trivial_auth'
flag only when we send some kind of substantive authentication response
(be it a password, a k-i prompt response, a signature, or a GSSAPI
token). So even if there's a further path through the userauth maze we
haven't spotted, that somehow avoids sending anything substantive, this
strategy should still pick it up.
2021-06-19 14:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
s->notrivialauth = notrivialauth;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->default_username = dupstr(default_username);
|
|
|
|
s->change_username = change_username;
|
|
|
|
s->try_ki_auth = try_ki_auth;
|
|
|
|
s->try_gssapi_auth = try_gssapi_auth;
|
|
|
|
s->try_gssapi_kex_auth = try_gssapi_kex_auth;
|
|
|
|
s->gssapi_fwd = gssapi_fwd;
|
|
|
|
s->shgss = shgss;
|
2018-12-06 18:06:15 +00:00
|
|
|
s->last_methods_string = strbuf_new();
|
New option to reject 'trivial' success of userauth.
Suggested by Manfred Kaiser, who also wrote most of this patch
(although outlying parts, like documentation and SSH-1 support, are by
me).
This is a second line of defence against the kind of spoofing attacks
in which a malicious or compromised SSH server rushes the client
through the userauth phase of SSH without actually requiring any auth
inputs (passwords or signatures or whatever), and then at the start of
the connection phase it presents something like a spoof prompt,
intended to be taken for part of userauth by the user but in fact with
some more sinister purpose.
Our existing line of defence against this is the trust sigil system,
and as far as I know, that's still working. This option allows a bit of
extra defence in depth: if you don't expect your SSH server to
trivially accept authentication in the first place, then enabling this
option will cause PuTTY to disconnect if it unexpectedly does so,
without the user having to spot the presence or absence of a fiddly
little sigil anywhere.
Several types of authentication count as 'trivial'. The obvious one is
the SSH-2 "none" method, which clients always try first so that the
failure message will tell them what else they can try, and which a
server can instead accept in order to authenticate you unconditionally.
But there are two other ways to do it that we know of: one is to run
keyboard-interactive authentication and send an empty INFO_REQUEST
packet containing no actual prompts for the user, and another even
weirder one is to send USERAUTH_SUCCESS in response to the user's
preliminary *offer* of a public key (instead of sending the usual PK_OK
to request an actual signature from the key).
This new option detects all of those, by clearing the 'is_trivial_auth'
flag only when we send some kind of substantive authentication response
(be it a password, a k-i prompt response, a signature, or a GSSAPI
token). So even if there's a further path through the userauth maze we
haven't spotted, that somehow avoids sending anything substantive, this
strategy should still pick it up.
2021-06-19 14:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
s->is_trivial_auth = true;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
bufchain_init(&s->banner);
|
2019-03-05 21:13:48 +00:00
|
|
|
bufchain_sink_init(&s->banner_bs, &s->banner);
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
s->authplugin_cmd = dupstr(authplugin_cmd);
|
|
|
|
bufchain_init(&s->authplugin_bc);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
return &s->ppl;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
void ssh2_userauth_set_transport_layer(PacketProtocolLayer *userauth,
|
|
|
|
PacketProtocolLayer *transport)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s =
|
2018-10-05 22:49:08 +00:00
|
|
|
container_of(userauth, struct ssh2_userauth_state, ppl);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->transport_layer = transport;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_free(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s =
|
2018-10-05 22:49:08 +00:00
|
|
|
container_of(ppl, struct ssh2_userauth_state, ppl);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
bufchain_clear(&s->banner);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->successor_layer)
|
|
|
|
ssh_ppl_free(s->successor_layer);
|
|
|
|
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->agent_keys) {
|
|
|
|
for (size_t i = 0; i < s->agent_keys_len; i++) {
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(s->agent_keys[i].blob);
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(s->agent_keys[i].comment);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
sfree(s->agent_keys);
|
|
|
|
}
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
sfree(s->agent_response_to_free);
|
|
|
|
if (s->auth_agent_query)
|
|
|
|
agent_cancel_query(s->auth_agent_query);
|
|
|
|
filename_free(s->keyfile);
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
filename_free(s->detached_cert_file);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
sfree(s->default_username);
|
2019-07-06 17:06:04 +00:00
|
|
|
sfree(s->locally_allocated_username);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
sfree(s->hostname);
|
|
|
|
sfree(s->fullhostname);
|
2021-09-16 08:27:25 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->cur_prompt)
|
|
|
|
free_prompts(s->cur_prompt);
|
2019-07-06 16:44:15 +00:00
|
|
|
sfree(s->publickey_comment);
|
|
|
|
sfree(s->publickey_algorithm);
|
|
|
|
if (s->publickey_blob)
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(s->publickey_blob);
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->detached_cert_blob)
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(s->detached_cert_blob);
|
|
|
|
if (s->cert_pubkey_diagnosed)
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(s->cert_pubkey_diagnosed);
|
2018-12-06 18:06:15 +00:00
|
|
|
strbuf_free(s->last_methods_string);
|
2019-03-05 21:13:48 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->banner_scc)
|
|
|
|
stripctrl_free(s->banner_scc);
|
2019-03-09 15:51:38 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->ki_scc)
|
|
|
|
stripctrl_free(s->ki_scc);
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
sfree(s->authplugin_cmd);
|
|
|
|
if (s->authplugin)
|
|
|
|
sk_close(s->authplugin);
|
|
|
|
bufchain_clear(&s->authplugin_bc);
|
|
|
|
if (s->authplugin_incoming_msg)
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(s->authplugin_incoming_msg);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
sfree(s);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2023-04-29 10:36:13 +00:00
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_handle_banner_packet(struct ssh2_userauth_state *s,
|
|
|
|
PktIn *pktin)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
if (!s->show_banner)
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ptrlen string = get_string(pktin);
|
|
|
|
if (string.len > BANNER_LIMIT - bufchain_size(&s->banner))
|
|
|
|
string.len = BANNER_LIMIT - bufchain_size(&s->banner);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (!s->banner_scc_initialised) {
|
|
|
|
s->banner_scc = seat_stripctrl_new(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.seat, BinarySink_UPCAST(&s->banner_bs), SIC_BANNER);
|
|
|
|
if (s->banner_scc)
|
|
|
|
stripctrl_enable_line_limiting(s->banner_scc);
|
|
|
|
s->banner_scc_initialised = true;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->banner_scc)
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(s->banner_scc, string);
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(&s->banner_bs, string);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_filter_queue(struct ssh2_userauth_state *s)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
PktIn *pktin;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
while ((pktin = pq_peek(s->ppl.in_pq)) != NULL) {
|
|
|
|
switch (pktin->type) {
|
|
|
|
case SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_BANNER:
|
2023-04-29 10:36:13 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_handle_banner_packet(s, pktin);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
pq_pop(s->ppl.in_pq);
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
default:
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static PktIn *ssh2_userauth_pop(struct ssh2_userauth_state *s)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_filter_queue(s);
|
|
|
|
return pq_pop(s->ppl.in_pq);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2022-04-19 16:27:54 +00:00
|
|
|
static bool ssh2_userauth_signflags(struct ssh2_userauth_state *s,
|
|
|
|
unsigned *signflags, const char **algname)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
*signflags = 0; /* default */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
const ssh_keyalg *alg = find_pubkey_alg(*algname);
|
|
|
|
if (!alg)
|
|
|
|
return false; /* we don't know how to upgrade this */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
unsigned supported_flags = ssh_keyalg_supported_flags(alg);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->ppl.bpp->ext_info_rsa_sha512_ok &&
|
|
|
|
(supported_flags & SSH_AGENT_RSA_SHA2_512)) {
|
|
|
|
*signflags = SSH_AGENT_RSA_SHA2_512;
|
|
|
|
} else if (s->ppl.bpp->ext_info_rsa_sha256_ok &&
|
|
|
|
(supported_flags & SSH_AGENT_RSA_SHA2_256)) {
|
|
|
|
*signflags = SSH_AGENT_RSA_SHA2_256;
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
return false;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
*algname = ssh_keyalg_alternate_ssh_id(alg, *signflags);
|
|
|
|
return true;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2024-06-26 07:29:39 +00:00
|
|
|
static void authplugin_plug_log(Plug *plug, Socket *sock, PlugLogType type,
|
|
|
|
SockAddr *addr, int port,
|
|
|
|
const char *err_msg, int err_code)
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s = container_of(
|
|
|
|
plug, struct ssh2_userauth_state, authplugin_plug);
|
|
|
|
PacketProtocolLayer *ppl = &s->ppl; /* for ppl_logevent */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (type == PLUGLOG_PROXY_MSG)
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("%s", err_msg);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static void authplugin_plug_closing(
|
|
|
|
Plug *plug, PlugCloseType type, const char *error_msg)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s = container_of(
|
|
|
|
plug, struct ssh2_userauth_state, authplugin_plug);
|
|
|
|
s->authplugin_eof = true;
|
|
|
|
queue_idempotent_callback(&s->ppl.ic_process_queue);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static void authplugin_plug_receive(
|
|
|
|
Plug *plug, int urgent, const char *data, size_t len)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s = container_of(
|
|
|
|
plug, struct ssh2_userauth_state, authplugin_plug);
|
|
|
|
bufchain_add(&s->authplugin_bc, data, len);
|
|
|
|
queue_idempotent_callback(&s->ppl.ic_process_queue);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2022-09-02 17:18:29 +00:00
|
|
|
static void authplugin_plug_sent(Plug *plug, size_t bufsize)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s = container_of(
|
|
|
|
plug, struct ssh2_userauth_state, authplugin_plug);
|
|
|
|
s->authplugin_backlog = bufsize;
|
|
|
|
queue_idempotent_callback(&s->ppl.ic_process_queue);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
static const PlugVtable authplugin_plugvt = {
|
|
|
|
.log = authplugin_plug_log,
|
|
|
|
.closing = authplugin_plug_closing,
|
|
|
|
.receive = authplugin_plug_receive,
|
2022-09-02 17:18:29 +00:00
|
|
|
.sent = authplugin_plug_sent,
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static strbuf *authplugin_newmsg(uint8_t type)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
strbuf *amsg = strbuf_new_nm();
|
|
|
|
put_uint32(amsg, 0); /* fill in later */
|
|
|
|
put_byte(amsg, type);
|
|
|
|
return amsg;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static void authplugin_send_free(struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, strbuf *amsg)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
PUT_32BIT_MSB_FIRST(amsg->u, amsg->len - 4);
|
|
|
|
assert(s->authplugin);
|
2022-09-02 17:18:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->authplugin_backlog = sk_write(s->authplugin, amsg->u, amsg->len);
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
strbuf_free(amsg);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static bool authplugin_expect_msg(struct ssh2_userauth_state *s,
|
|
|
|
unsigned *type, BinarySource *src)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
if (s->authplugin_eof) {
|
|
|
|
*type = PLUGIN_EOF;
|
|
|
|
return true;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
uint8_t len[4];
|
|
|
|
if (!bufchain_try_fetch(&s->authplugin_bc, len, 4))
|
|
|
|
return false;
|
|
|
|
size_t size = GET_32BIT_MSB_FIRST(len);
|
|
|
|
if (bufchain_size(&s->authplugin_bc) - 4 < size)
|
|
|
|
return false;
|
|
|
|
if (s->authplugin_incoming_msg) {
|
|
|
|
strbuf_clear(s->authplugin_incoming_msg);
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
s->authplugin_incoming_msg = strbuf_new_nm();
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
bufchain_consume(&s->authplugin_bc, 4); /* eat length field */
|
|
|
|
bufchain_fetch_consume(
|
|
|
|
&s->authplugin_bc, strbuf_append(s->authplugin_incoming_msg, size),
|
|
|
|
size);
|
|
|
|
BinarySource_BARE_INIT_PL(
|
|
|
|
src, ptrlen_from_strbuf(s->authplugin_incoming_msg));
|
|
|
|
*type = get_byte(src);
|
|
|
|
if (get_err(src))
|
|
|
|
*type = PLUGIN_NOTYPE;
|
|
|
|
return true;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static void authplugin_bad_packet(struct ssh2_userauth_state *s,
|
|
|
|
unsigned type, const char *fmt, ...)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
strbuf *msg = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
switch (type) {
|
|
|
|
case PLUGIN_EOF:
|
|
|
|
put_dataz(msg, "Unexpected end of file from auth helper plugin");
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
case PLUGIN_NOTYPE:
|
|
|
|
put_dataz(msg, "Received malformed packet from auth helper plugin "
|
|
|
|
"(too short to have a type code)");
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
default:
|
|
|
|
put_fmt(msg, "Received unknown message type %u "
|
|
|
|
"from auth helper plugin", type);
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#define CASEDECL(name, value) \
|
|
|
|
case name: \
|
|
|
|
put_fmt(msg, "Received unexpected %s message from auth helper " \
|
|
|
|
"plugin", #name); \
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
AUTHPLUGIN_MSG_NAMES(CASEDECL);
|
|
|
|
#undef CASEDECL
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if (fmt) {
|
|
|
|
put_dataz(msg, " (");
|
|
|
|
va_list ap;
|
|
|
|
va_start(ap, fmt);
|
|
|
|
put_fmt(msg, fmt, ap);
|
|
|
|
va_end(ap);
|
|
|
|
put_dataz(msg, ")");
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
ssh_sw_abort(s->ppl.ssh, "%s", msg->s);
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(msg);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_process_queue(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s =
|
2018-10-05 22:49:08 +00:00
|
|
|
container_of(ppl, struct ssh2_userauth_state, ppl);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
PktIn *pktin;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_filter_queue(s); /* no matter why we were called */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
crBegin(s->crState);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#ifndef NO_GSSAPI
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->tried_gssapi = false;
|
|
|
|
s->tried_gssapi_keyex_auth = false;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Misc one-time setup for authentication.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
s->publickey_blob = NULL;
|
|
|
|
s->session_id = ssh2_transport_get_session_id(s->transport_layer);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Load the public half of any configured public key file for
|
|
|
|
* later use.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
if (!filename_is_null(s->keyfile)) {
|
|
|
|
int keytype;
|
2018-12-08 21:03:51 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Reading key file \"%s\"",
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
filename_to_str(s->keyfile));
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
keytype = key_type(s->keyfile);
|
|
|
|
if (keytype == SSH_KEYTYPE_SSH2 ||
|
|
|
|
keytype == SSH_KEYTYPE_SSH2_PUBLIC_RFC4716 ||
|
|
|
|
keytype == SSH_KEYTYPE_SSH2_PUBLIC_OPENSSH) {
|
|
|
|
const char *error;
|
|
|
|
s->publickey_blob = strbuf_new();
|
2020-01-05 10:28:45 +00:00
|
|
|
if (ppk_loadpub_f(s->keyfile, &s->publickey_algorithm,
|
|
|
|
BinarySink_UPCAST(s->publickey_blob),
|
|
|
|
&s->publickey_comment, &error)) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->privatekey_available = (keytype == SSH_KEYTYPE_SSH2);
|
|
|
|
if (!s->privatekey_available)
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Key file contains public key only");
|
2020-01-05 10:28:45 +00:00
|
|
|
s->privatekey_encrypted = ppk_encrypted_f(s->keyfile, NULL);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
} else {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Unable to load key (%s)", error);
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Unable to load key file \"%s\" (%s)\r\n",
|
|
|
|
filename_to_str(s->keyfile), error);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
strbuf_free(s->publickey_blob);
|
|
|
|
s->publickey_blob = NULL;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Unable to use this key file (%s)",
|
|
|
|
key_type_to_str(keytype));
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Unable to use key file \"%s\" (%s)\r\n",
|
|
|
|
filename_to_str(s->keyfile),
|
|
|
|
key_type_to_str(keytype));
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->publickey_blob = NULL;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* If the user provided a detached certificate file, load that.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
if (!filename_is_null(s->detached_cert_file)) {
|
|
|
|
char *cert_error = NULL;
|
|
|
|
strbuf *cert_blob = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
char *algname = NULL;
|
|
|
|
char *comment = NULL;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Reading certificate file \"%s\"",
|
|
|
|
filename_to_str(s->detached_cert_file));
|
|
|
|
int keytype = key_type(s->detached_cert_file);
|
|
|
|
if (!(keytype == SSH_KEYTYPE_SSH2_PUBLIC_RFC4716 ||
|
|
|
|
keytype == SSH_KEYTYPE_SSH2_PUBLIC_OPENSSH)) {
|
|
|
|
cert_error = dupstr(key_type_to_str(keytype));
|
|
|
|
goto cert_load_done;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
const char *error;
|
|
|
|
bool success = ppk_loadpub_f(
|
|
|
|
s->detached_cert_file, &algname,
|
|
|
|
BinarySink_UPCAST(cert_blob), &comment, &error);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (!success) {
|
|
|
|
cert_error = dupstr(error);
|
|
|
|
goto cert_load_done;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
const ssh_keyalg *certalg = find_pubkey_alg(algname);
|
|
|
|
if (!certalg) {
|
|
|
|
cert_error = dupprintf(
|
|
|
|
"unrecognised certificate type '%s'", algname);
|
|
|
|
goto cert_load_done;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (!certalg->is_certificate) {
|
|
|
|
cert_error = dupprintf(
|
|
|
|
"key type '%s' is not a certificate", certalg->ssh_id);
|
|
|
|
goto cert_load_done;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* OK, store the certificate blob to substitute for the
|
|
|
|
* public blob in all publickey auth packets. */
|
|
|
|
if (s->detached_cert_blob)
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(s->detached_cert_blob);
|
|
|
|
s->detached_cert_blob = cert_blob;
|
|
|
|
cert_blob = NULL; /* prevent free */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
cert_load_done:
|
|
|
|
if (cert_error) {
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Unable to use this certificate file (%s)",
|
|
|
|
cert_error);
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf(
|
|
|
|
"Unable to use certificate file \"%s\" (%s)\r\n",
|
|
|
|
filename_to_str(s->detached_cert_file), cert_error);
|
|
|
|
sfree(cert_error);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (cert_blob)
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(cert_blob);
|
|
|
|
sfree(algname);
|
|
|
|
sfree(comment);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Find out about any keys Pageant has (but if there's a public
|
|
|
|
* key configured, filter out all others).
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
if (s->tryagent && agent_exists()) {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Pageant is running. Requesting keys.");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Request the keys held by the agent. */
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
strbuf *request = strbuf_new_for_agent_query();
|
|
|
|
put_byte(request, SSH2_AGENTC_REQUEST_IDENTITIES);
|
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_agent_query(s, request);
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(request);
|
|
|
|
crWaitUntilV(!s->auth_agent_query);
|
|
|
|
}
|
2019-02-06 20:47:18 +00:00
|
|
|
BinarySource_BARE_INIT_PL(s->asrc, s->agent_response);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
get_uint32(s->asrc); /* skip length field */
|
|
|
|
if (get_byte(s->asrc) == SSH2_AGENT_IDENTITIES_ANSWER) {
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
size_t nkeys = get_uint32(s->asrc);
|
|
|
|
size_t origpos = s->asrc->pos;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Check that the agent response is well formed.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
for (size_t i = 0; i < nkeys; i++) {
|
|
|
|
get_string(s->asrc); /* blob */
|
|
|
|
get_string(s->asrc); /* comment */
|
|
|
|
if (get_err(s->asrc)) {
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Pageant's response was truncated");
|
|
|
|
goto done_agent_query;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
* Copy the list of public-key blobs out of the Pageant
|
|
|
|
* response.
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
*/
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
BinarySource_REWIND_TO(s->asrc, origpos);
|
|
|
|
s->agent_keys_len = nkeys;
|
|
|
|
s->agent_keys = snewn(s->agent_keys_len, agent_key);
|
|
|
|
for (size_t i = 0; i < nkeys; i++) {
|
2022-04-19 09:53:44 +00:00
|
|
|
s->agent_keys[i].blob = strbuf_dup(get_string(s->asrc));
|
|
|
|
s->agent_keys[i].comment = strbuf_dup(get_string(s->asrc));
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Also, extract the algorithm string from the start
|
|
|
|
* of the public-key blob. */
|
2022-04-21 10:00:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->agent_keys[i].algorithm = pubkey_blob_to_alg_name(
|
|
|
|
ptrlen_from_strbuf(s->agent_keys[i].blob));
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Pageant has %"SIZEu" SSH-2 keys", nkeys);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->publickey_blob) {
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* If we've been given a specific public key blob,
|
|
|
|
* filter the list of keys to try from the agent down
|
|
|
|
* to only that one, or none if it's not there.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
ptrlen our_blob = ptrlen_from_strbuf(s->publickey_blob);
|
|
|
|
size_t i;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
for (i = 0; i < nkeys; i++) {
|
|
|
|
if (ptrlen_eq_ptrlen(our_blob, ptrlen_from_strbuf(
|
|
|
|
s->agent_keys[i].blob)))
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
}
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (i < nkeys) {
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Pageant key #%"SIZEu" matches "
|
|
|
|
"configured key file", i);
|
|
|
|
s->agent_key_index = i;
|
|
|
|
s->agent_key_limit = i+1;
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Configured key file not in Pageant");
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
s->agent_key_index = 0;
|
|
|
|
s->agent_key_limit = 0;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Otherwise, try them all.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
s->agent_key_index = 0;
|
|
|
|
s->agent_key_limit = nkeys;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Failed to get reply from Pageant");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
done_agent_query:;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
s->got_username = false;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (*s->authplugin_cmd) {
|
|
|
|
s->authplugin_plug.vt = &authplugin_plugvt;
|
|
|
|
s->authplugin = platform_start_subprocess(
|
|
|
|
s->authplugin_cmd, &s->authplugin_plug, "plugin");
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Started authentication plugin: %s", s->authplugin_cmd);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->authplugin) {
|
|
|
|
strbuf *amsg = authplugin_newmsg(PLUGIN_INIT);
|
|
|
|
put_uint32(amsg, PLUGIN_PROTOCOL_MAX_VERSION);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(amsg, s->hostname);
|
|
|
|
put_uint32(amsg, s->port);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(amsg, s->username ? s->username : "");
|
|
|
|
authplugin_send_free(s, amsg);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
BinarySource src[1];
|
|
|
|
unsigned type;
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV(authplugin_expect_msg(s, &type, src));
|
|
|
|
switch (type) {
|
|
|
|
case PLUGIN_INIT_RESPONSE: {
|
|
|
|
s->authplugin_version = get_uint32(src);
|
|
|
|
ptrlen username = get_string(src);
|
|
|
|
if (get_err(src)) {
|
|
|
|
ssh_sw_abort(s->ppl.ssh, "Received malformed "
|
|
|
|
"PLUGIN_INIT_RESPONSE from auth helper plugin");
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if (s->authplugin_version > PLUGIN_PROTOCOL_MAX_VERSION) {
|
|
|
|
ssh_sw_abort(s->ppl.ssh, "Auth helper plugin announced "
|
|
|
|
"unsupported version number %"PRIu32,
|
|
|
|
s->authplugin_version);
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if (username.len) {
|
|
|
|
sfree(s->default_username);
|
|
|
|
s->default_username = mkstr(username);
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Authentication plugin set username '%s'",
|
|
|
|
s->default_username);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
case PLUGIN_INIT_FAILURE: {
|
|
|
|
ptrlen message = get_string(src);
|
|
|
|
if (get_err(src)) {
|
|
|
|
ssh_sw_abort(s->ppl.ssh, "Received malformed "
|
|
|
|
"PLUGIN_INIT_FAILURE from auth helper plugin");
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* This is a controlled error, so we need not completely
|
|
|
|
* abandon the connection. Instead, inform the user, and
|
|
|
|
* proceed as if the plugin was not present */
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Authentication plugin failed to initialise:\r\n");
|
|
|
|
seat_set_trust_status(s->ppl.seat, false);
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("%.*s\r\n", PTRLEN_PRINTF(message));
|
|
|
|
seat_set_trust_status(s->ppl.seat, true);
|
|
|
|
sk_close(s->authplugin);
|
|
|
|
s->authplugin = NULL;
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
default:
|
|
|
|
authplugin_bad_packet(s, type, "expected PLUGIN_INIT_RESPONSE or "
|
|
|
|
"PLUGIN_INIT_FAILURE");
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* We repeat this whole loop, including the username prompt,
|
|
|
|
* until we manage a successful authentication. If the user
|
|
|
|
* types the wrong _password_, they can be sent back to the
|
|
|
|
* beginning to try another username, if this is configured on.
|
|
|
|
* (If they specify a username in the config, they are never
|
|
|
|
* asked, even if they do give a wrong password.)
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
*
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
* I think this best serves the needs of
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
*
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
* - the people who have no configuration, no keys, and just
|
|
|
|
* want to try repeated (username,password) pairs until they
|
|
|
|
* type both correctly
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
*
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
* - people who have keys and configuration but occasionally
|
|
|
|
* need to fall back to passwords
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
*
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
* - people with a key held in Pageant, who might not have
|
|
|
|
* logged in to a particular machine before; so they want to
|
|
|
|
* type a username, and then _either_ their key will be
|
|
|
|
* accepted, _or_ they will type a password. If they mistype
|
|
|
|
* the username they will want to be able to get back and
|
|
|
|
* retype it!
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
while (1) {
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Get a username.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
2019-07-06 17:05:54 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->got_username && !s->change_username) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* We got a username last time round this loop, and
|
|
|
|
* with change_username turned off we don't try to get
|
|
|
|
* it again.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
} else if ((s->username = s->default_username) == NULL) {
|
Complete rework of terminal userpass input system.
The system for handling seat_get_userpass_input has always been
structured differently between GUI PuTTY and CLI tools like Plink.
In the CLI tools, password input is read directly from the OS
terminal/console device by console_get_userpass_input; this means that
you need to ensure the same terminal input data _hasn't_ already been
consumed by the main event loop and sent on to the backend. This is
achieved by the backend_sendok() method, which tells the event loop
when the backend has finished issuing password prompts, and hence,
when it's safe to start passing standard input to backend_send().
But in the GUI tools, input generated by the terminal window has
always been sent straight to backend_send(), regardless of whether
backend_sendok() says it wants it. So the terminal-based
implementation of username and password prompts has to work by
consuming input data that had _already_ been passed to the backend -
hence, any backend that needs to do that must keep its input on a
bufchain, and pass that bufchain to seat_get_userpass_input.
It's awkward that these two totally different systems coexist in the
first place. And now that SSH proxying needs to present interactive
prompts of its own, it's clear which one should win: the CLI style is
the Right Thing. So this change reworks the GUI side of the mechanism
to be more similar: terminal data now goes into a queue in the Ldisc,
and is not sent on to the backend until the backend says it's ready
for it via backend_sendok(). So terminal-based userpass prompts can
now consume data directly from that queue during the connection setup
stage.
As a result, the 'bufchain *' parameter has vanished from all the
userpass_input functions (both the official implementations of the
Seat trait method, and term_get_userpass_input() to which some of
those implementations delegate). The only function that actually used
that bufchain, namely term_get_userpass_input(), now instead reads
from the ldisc's input queue via a couple of new Ldisc functions.
(Not _trivial_ functions, since input buffered by Ldisc can be a
mixture of raw bytes and session specials like SS_EOL! The input queue
inside Ldisc is a bufchain containing a fiddly binary encoding that
can represent an arbitrary interleaving of those things.)
This greatly simplifies the calls to seat_get_userpass_input in
backends, which now don't have to mess about with passing their own
user_input bufchain around, or toggling their want_user_input flag
back and forth to request data to put on to that bufchain.
But the flip side is that now there has to be some _other_ method for
notifying the terminal when there's more input to be consumed during
an interactive prompt, and for notifying the backend when prompt input
has finished so that it can proceed to the next stage of the protocol.
This is done by a pair of extra callbacks: when more data is put on to
Ldisc's input queue, it triggers a call to term_get_userpass_input,
and when term_get_userpass_input finishes, it calls a callback
function provided in the prompts_t.
Therefore, any use of a prompts_t which *might* be asynchronous must
fill in the latter callback when setting up the prompts_t. In SSH, the
callback is centralised into a common PPL helper function, which
reinvokes the same PPL's process_queue coroutine; in rlogin we have to
set it up ourselves.
I'm sorry for this large and sprawling patch: I tried fairly hard to
break it up into individually comprehensible sub-patches, but I just
couldn't tease out any part of it that would stand sensibly alone.
2021-09-14 10:57:21 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = ssh_ppl_new_prompts(&s->ppl);
|
Add UTF-8 support to the new Windows ConsoleIO system.
This allows you to set a flag in conio_setup() which causes the
returned ConsoleIO object to interpret all its output as UTF-8, by
translating it to UTF-16 and using WriteConsoleW to write it in
Unicode. Similarly, input is read using ReadConsoleW and decoded from
UTF-16 to UTF-8.
This flag is set to false in most places, to avoid making sudden
breaking changes. But when we're about to present a prompts_t to the
user, it's set from the new 'utf8' flag in that prompt, which in turn
is set by the userauth layer in any case where the prompts are going
to the server.
The idea is that this should be the start of a fix for the long-
standing character-set handling bug that strings transmitted during
SSH userauth (usernames, passwords, k-i prompts and responses) are all
supposed to be in UTF-8, but we've always encoded them in whatever our
input system happens to be using, and not done any tidying up on them.
We get occasional complaints about this from users whose passwords
contain characters that are encoded differently between UTF-8 and
their local encoding, but I've never got round to fixing it because
it's a large piece of engineering.
Indeed, this isn't nearly the end of it. The next step is to add UTF-8
support to all the _other_ ways of presenting a prompts_t, as best we
can.
Like the previous change to console handling, it seems very likely
that this will break someone's workflow. So there's a fallback
command-line option '-legacy-charset-handling' to revert to PuTTY's
previous behaviour.
2022-11-25 12:57:43 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->utf8 = true;
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->to_server = true;
|
2019-03-09 15:50:23 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->from_server = false;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->name = dupstr("SSH login name");
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
add_prompt(s->cur_prompt, dupstr("login as: "), true);
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
s->spr = seat_get_userpass_input(
|
Framework for announcing which Interactor is talking.
All this Interactor business has been gradually working towards being
able to inform the user _which_ network connection is currently
presenting them with a password prompt (or whatever), in situations
where more than one of them might be, such as an SSH connection being
used as a proxy for another SSH connection when neither one has
one-touch login configured.
At some point, we have to arrange that any attempt to do a user
interaction during connection setup - be it a password prompt, a host
key confirmation dialog, or just displaying an SSH login banner -
makes it clear which host it's come from. That's going to mean calling
some kind of announcement function before doing any of those things.
But there are several of those functions in the Seat API, and calls to
them are scattered far and wide across the SSH backend. (And not even
just there - the Rlogin backend also uses seat_get_userpass_input).
How can we possibly make sure we don't forget a vital call site on
some obscure little-tested code path, and leave the user confused in
just that one case which nobody might notice for years?
Today I thought of a trick to solve that problem. We can use the C
type system to enforce it for us!
The plan is: we invent a new struct type which contains nothing but a
'Seat *'. Then, for every Seat method which does a thing that ought to
be clearly identified as relating to a particular Interactor, we
adjust the API for that function to take the new struct type where it
previously took a plain 'Seat *'. Or rather - doing less violence to
the existing code - we only need to adjust the API of the dispatch
functions inline in putty.h.
How does that help? Because the way you _get_ one of these
struct-wrapped Seat pointers is by calling interactor_announce() on
your Interactor, which will in turn call interactor_get_seat(), and
wrap the returned pointer into one of these structs.
The effect is that whenever the SSH (or Rlogin) code wants to call one
of those particular Seat methods, it _has_ to call
interactor_announce() just beforehand, which (once I finish all of
this) will make sure the user is aware of who is presenting the prompt
or banner or whatever. And you can't forget to call it, because if you
don't call it, then you just don't have a struct of the right type to
give to the Seat method you wanted to call!
(Of course, there's nothing stopping code from _deliberately_ taking a
Seat * it already has and wrapping it into the new struct. In fact
SshProxy has to do that, in order to forward these requests up the
chain of Seats. But the point is that you can't do it _by accident_,
just by forgetting to make a vital function call - when you do that,
you _know_ you're doing it on purpose.)
No functional change: the new interactor_announce() function exists,
and the type-system trick ensures it's called in all the right places,
but it doesn't actually _do_ anything yet.
2021-10-30 17:05:36 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl), s->cur_prompt);
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
while (s->spr.kind == SPRK_INCOMPLETE) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
crReturnV;
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
s->spr = seat_get_userpass_input(
|
Framework for announcing which Interactor is talking.
All this Interactor business has been gradually working towards being
able to inform the user _which_ network connection is currently
presenting them with a password prompt (or whatever), in situations
where more than one of them might be, such as an SSH connection being
used as a proxy for another SSH connection when neither one has
one-touch login configured.
At some point, we have to arrange that any attempt to do a user
interaction during connection setup - be it a password prompt, a host
key confirmation dialog, or just displaying an SSH login banner -
makes it clear which host it's come from. That's going to mean calling
some kind of announcement function before doing any of those things.
But there are several of those functions in the Seat API, and calls to
them are scattered far and wide across the SSH backend. (And not even
just there - the Rlogin backend also uses seat_get_userpass_input).
How can we possibly make sure we don't forget a vital call site on
some obscure little-tested code path, and leave the user confused in
just that one case which nobody might notice for years?
Today I thought of a trick to solve that problem. We can use the C
type system to enforce it for us!
The plan is: we invent a new struct type which contains nothing but a
'Seat *'. Then, for every Seat method which does a thing that ought to
be clearly identified as relating to a particular Interactor, we
adjust the API for that function to take the new struct type where it
previously took a plain 'Seat *'. Or rather - doing less violence to
the existing code - we only need to adjust the API of the dispatch
functions inline in putty.h.
How does that help? Because the way you _get_ one of these
struct-wrapped Seat pointers is by calling interactor_announce() on
your Interactor, which will in turn call interactor_get_seat(), and
wrap the returned pointer into one of these structs.
The effect is that whenever the SSH (or Rlogin) code wants to call one
of those particular Seat methods, it _has_ to call
interactor_announce() just beforehand, which (once I finish all of
this) will make sure the user is aware of who is presenting the prompt
or banner or whatever. And you can't forget to call it, because if you
don't call it, then you just don't have a struct of the right type to
give to the Seat method you wanted to call!
(Of course, there's nothing stopping code from _deliberately_ taking a
Seat * it already has and wrapping it into the new struct. In fact
SshProxy has to do that, in order to forward these requests up the
chain of Seats. But the point is that you can't do it _by accident_,
just by forgetting to make a vital function call - when you do that,
you _know_ you're doing it on purpose.)
No functional change: the new interactor_announce() function exists,
and the type-system trick ensures it's called in all the right places,
but it doesn't actually _do_ anything yet.
2021-10-30 17:05:36 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl), s->cur_prompt);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
if (spr_is_abort(s->spr)) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
New abstraction 'Seat', to pass to backends.
This is a new vtable-based abstraction which is passed to a backend in
place of Frontend, and it implements only the subset of the Frontend
functions needed by a backend. (Many other Frontend functions still
exist, notably the wide range of things called by terminal.c providing
platform-independent operations on the GUI terminal window.)
The purpose of making it a vtable is that this opens up the
possibility of creating a backend as an internal implementation detail
of some other activity, by providing just that one backend with a
custom Seat that implements the methods differently.
For example, this refactoring should make it feasible to directly
implement an SSH proxy type, aka the 'jump host' feature supported by
OpenSSH, aka 'open a secondary SSH session in MAINCHAN_DIRECT_TCP
mode, and then expose the main channel of that as the Socket for the
primary connection'. (Which of course you can already do by spawning
'plink -nc' as a separate proxy process, but this would permit it in
the _same_ process without anything getting confused.)
I've centralised a full set of stub methods in misc.c for the new
abstraction, which allows me to get rid of several annoying stubs in
the previous code. Also, while I'm here, I've moved a lot of
duplicated modalfatalbox() type functions from application main
program files into wincons.c / uxcons.c, which I think saves
duplication overall. (A minor visible effect is that the prefixes on
those console-based fatal error messages will now be more consistent
between applications.)
2018-10-11 18:58:42 +00:00
|
|
|
* seat_get_userpass_input() failed to get a username.
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
* Terminate.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
free_prompts(s->cur_prompt);
|
2021-09-16 08:27:25 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = NULL;
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh_spr_close(s->ppl.ssh, s->spr, "username prompt");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
2019-07-06 17:06:04 +00:00
|
|
|
sfree(s->locally_allocated_username); /* for change_username */
|
|
|
|
s->username = s->locally_allocated_username =
|
2020-01-21 20:19:47 +00:00
|
|
|
prompt_get_result(s->cur_prompt->prompts[0]);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
free_prompts(s->cur_prompt);
|
2021-09-16 08:27:25 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = NULL;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
} else {
|
2020-01-30 06:40:21 +00:00
|
|
|
if (seat_verbose(s->ppl.seat) || seat_interactive(s->ppl.seat))
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Using username \"%s\".\r\n", s->username);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->got_username = true;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Send an authentication request using method "none": (a)
|
|
|
|
* just in case it succeeds, and (b) so that we know what
|
|
|
|
* authentication methods we can usefully try next.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp->pls->actx = SSH2_PKTCTX_NOAUTH;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->username);
|
2018-10-09 17:11:17 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->successor_layer->vt->name);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, "none"); /* method */
|
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
|
|
|
s->type = AUTH_TYPE_NONE;
|
|
|
|
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->tried_pubkey_config = false;
|
|
|
|
s->kbd_inter_refused = false;
|
|
|
|
s->done_agent = false;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
while (1) {
|
|
|
|
/*
|
2018-12-06 18:08:56 +00:00
|
|
|
* Wait for the result of the last authentication request,
|
|
|
|
* unless the request terminated for some reason on our
|
|
|
|
* own side.
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
*/
|
2018-12-06 18:08:56 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->suppress_wait_for_response_packet) {
|
|
|
|
pktin = NULL;
|
|
|
|
s->suppress_wait_for_response_packet = false;
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV((pktin = ssh2_userauth_pop(s)) != NULL);
|
|
|
|
}
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Now is a convenient point to spew any banner material
|
|
|
|
* that we've accumulated. (This should ensure that when
|
|
|
|
* we exit the auth loop, we haven't any left to deal
|
|
|
|
* with.)
|
2019-03-03 19:38:35 +00:00
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* Don't show the banner if we're operating in non-verbose
|
|
|
|
* non-interactive mode. (It's probably a script, which
|
|
|
|
* means nobody will read the banner _anyway_, and
|
|
|
|
* moreover the printing of the banner will screw up
|
|
|
|
* processing on the output of (say) plink.)
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* The banner data has been sanitised already by this
|
|
|
|
* point, but we still need to precede and follow it with
|
|
|
|
* anti-spoofing header lines.
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
*/
|
2023-04-29 10:36:13 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_print_banner(s);
|
2019-03-03 19:38:35 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2018-12-06 18:08:56 +00:00
|
|
|
if (pktin && pktin->type == SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS) {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Access granted");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
goto userauth_success;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2018-12-06 18:08:56 +00:00
|
|
|
if (pktin && pktin->type != SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE &&
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->type != AUTH_TYPE_GSSAPI) {
|
|
|
|
ssh_proto_error(s->ppl.ssh, "Received unexpected packet "
|
|
|
|
"in response to authentication request, "
|
|
|
|
"type %d (%s)", pktin->type,
|
|
|
|
ssh2_pkt_type(s->ppl.bpp->pls->kctx,
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp->pls->actx,
|
|
|
|
pktin->type));
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* OK, we're now sitting on a USERAUTH_FAILURE message, so
|
|
|
|
* we can look at the string in it and know what we can
|
|
|
|
* helpfully try next.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
2018-12-06 18:08:56 +00:00
|
|
|
if (pktin && pktin->type == SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE) {
|
2018-12-06 18:06:15 +00:00
|
|
|
ptrlen methods = get_string(pktin);
|
|
|
|
bool partial_success = get_bool(pktin);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (!partial_success) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* We have received an unequivocal Access
|
|
|
|
* Denied. This can translate to a variety of
|
|
|
|
* messages, or no message at all.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* For forms of authentication which are attempted
|
|
|
|
* implicitly, by which I mean without printing
|
|
|
|
* anything in the window indicating that we're
|
|
|
|
* trying them, we should never print 'Access
|
|
|
|
* denied'.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* If we do print a message saying that we're
|
|
|
|
* attempting some kind of authentication, it's OK
|
|
|
|
* to print a followup message saying it failed -
|
|
|
|
* but the message may sometimes be more specific
|
|
|
|
* than simply 'Access denied'.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* Additionally, if we'd just tried password
|
|
|
|
* authentication, we should break out of this
|
|
|
|
* whole loop so as to go back to the username
|
|
|
|
* prompt (iff we're configured to allow
|
|
|
|
* username change attempts).
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
if (s->type == AUTH_TYPE_NONE) {
|
|
|
|
/* do nothing */
|
|
|
|
} else if (s->type == AUTH_TYPE_PUBLICKEY_OFFER_LOUD ||
|
|
|
|
s->type == AUTH_TYPE_PUBLICKEY_OFFER_QUIET) {
|
|
|
|
if (s->type == AUTH_TYPE_PUBLICKEY_OFFER_LOUD)
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Server refused our key\r\n");
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Server refused our key");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
} else if (s->type == AUTH_TYPE_PUBLICKEY) {
|
|
|
|
/* This _shouldn't_ happen except by a
|
|
|
|
* protocol bug causing client and server to
|
|
|
|
* disagree on what is a correct signature. */
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Server refused public-key signature"
|
|
|
|
" despite accepting key!\r\n");
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Server refused public-key signature"
|
|
|
|
" despite accepting key!");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
} else if (s->type==AUTH_TYPE_KEYBOARD_INTERACTIVE_QUIET) {
|
|
|
|
/* quiet, so no ppl_printf */
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Server refused keyboard-interactive "
|
|
|
|
"authentication");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
} else if (s->type==AUTH_TYPE_GSSAPI) {
|
|
|
|
/* always quiet, so no ppl_printf */
|
|
|
|
/* also, the code down in the GSSAPI block has
|
|
|
|
* already logged this in the Event Log */
|
|
|
|
} else if (s->type == AUTH_TYPE_KEYBOARD_INTERACTIVE) {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Keyboard-interactive authentication "
|
|
|
|
"failed");
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Access denied\r\n");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
assert(s->type == AUTH_TYPE_PASSWORD);
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Password authentication failed");
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Access denied\r\n");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->change_username) {
|
|
|
|
/* XXX perhaps we should allow
|
|
|
|
* keyboard-interactive to do this too? */
|
|
|
|
goto try_new_username;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Further authentication required\r\n");
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Further authentication required");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2018-12-06 18:06:15 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Save the methods string for use in error messages.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
2020-01-21 20:16:28 +00:00
|
|
|
strbuf_clear(s->last_methods_string);
|
2019-01-01 19:00:19 +00:00
|
|
|
put_datapl(s->last_methods_string, methods);
|
2018-12-06 18:06:15 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Scan it for method identifiers we know about.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
2018-12-06 18:35:27 +00:00
|
|
|
bool srv_pubkey = false, srv_passwd = false;
|
2019-03-25 23:46:59 +00:00
|
|
|
bool srv_keyb_inter = false;
|
|
|
|
#ifndef NO_GSSAPI
|
|
|
|
bool srv_gssapi = false, srv_gssapi_keyex_auth = false;
|
|
|
|
#endif
|
2018-12-06 18:35:27 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
for (ptrlen method; get_commasep_word(&methods, &method) ;) {
|
|
|
|
if (ptrlen_eq_string(method, "publickey"))
|
|
|
|
srv_pubkey = true;
|
|
|
|
else if (ptrlen_eq_string(method, "password"))
|
|
|
|
srv_passwd = true;
|
|
|
|
else if (ptrlen_eq_string(method, "keyboard-interactive"))
|
|
|
|
srv_keyb_inter = true;
|
2019-03-25 23:46:59 +00:00
|
|
|
#ifndef NO_GSSAPI
|
2018-12-06 18:35:27 +00:00
|
|
|
else if (ptrlen_eq_string(method, "gssapi-with-mic"))
|
|
|
|
srv_gssapi = true;
|
|
|
|
else if (ptrlen_eq_string(method, "gssapi-keyex"))
|
|
|
|
srv_gssapi_keyex_auth = true;
|
2019-03-25 23:46:59 +00:00
|
|
|
#endif
|
2018-12-06 18:35:27 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* And combine those flags with our own configuration
|
|
|
|
* and context to set the main can_foo variables.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
s->can_pubkey = srv_pubkey;
|
|
|
|
s->can_passwd = srv_passwd;
|
|
|
|
s->can_keyb_inter = s->try_ki_auth && srv_keyb_inter;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
#ifndef NO_GSSAPI
|
2018-12-06 18:35:27 +00:00
|
|
|
s->can_gssapi = s->try_gssapi_auth && srv_gssapi &&
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->shgss->libs->nlibraries > 0;
|
2018-12-06 18:35:27 +00:00
|
|
|
s->can_gssapi_keyex_auth = s->try_gssapi_kex_auth &&
|
|
|
|
srv_gssapi_keyex_auth &&
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->libs->nlibraries > 0 && s->shgss->ctx;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp->pls->actx = SSH2_PKTCTX_NOAUTH;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#ifndef NO_GSSAPI
|
|
|
|
if (s->can_gssapi_keyex_auth && !s->tried_gssapi_keyex_auth) {
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* gssapi-keyex authentication */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->type = AUTH_TYPE_GSSAPI;
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->tried_gssapi_keyex_auth = true;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp->pls->actx = SSH2_PKTCTX_GSSAPI;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->shgss->lib->gsslogmsg)
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("%s", s->shgss->lib->gsslogmsg);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Trying gssapi-keyex...");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh2_userauth_gss_packet(s, "gssapi-keyex");
|
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->lib->release_cred(s->shgss->lib, &s->shgss->ctx);
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->ctx = NULL;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
continue;
|
|
|
|
} else
|
|
|
|
#endif /* NO_GSSAPI */
|
|
|
|
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->can_pubkey && !s->done_agent &&
|
|
|
|
s->agent_key_index < s->agent_key_limit) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Attempt public-key authentication using a key from Pageant.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
2020-11-21 14:44:46 +00:00
|
|
|
s->agent_keyalg = s->agent_keys[s->agent_key_index].algorithm;
|
2022-04-19 16:27:54 +00:00
|
|
|
char *alg_tmp = mkstr(s->agent_keyalg);
|
|
|
|
const char *newalg = alg_tmp;
|
|
|
|
if (ssh2_userauth_signflags(s, &s->signflags, &newalg))
|
|
|
|
s->agent_keyalg = ptrlen_from_asciz(newalg);
|
|
|
|
sfree(alg_tmp);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp->pls->actx = SSH2_PKTCTX_PUBLICKEY;
|
|
|
|
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Trying Pageant key #%"SIZEu, s->agent_key_index);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* See if server will accept it */
|
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->username);
|
2018-10-09 17:11:17 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->successor_layer->vt->name);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, "publickey");
|
|
|
|
/* method */
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
put_bool(s->pktout, false); /* no signature included */
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_add_alg_and_publickey(
|
|
|
|
s, s->pktout, s->agent_keyalg, ptrlen_from_strbuf(
|
|
|
|
s->agent_keys[s->agent_key_index].blob));
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
|
|
|
s->type = AUTH_TYPE_PUBLICKEY_OFFER_QUIET;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV((pktin = ssh2_userauth_pop(s)) != NULL);
|
|
|
|
if (pktin->type != SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_PK_OK) {
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Offer of key refused, presumably via
|
|
|
|
* USERAUTH_FAILURE. Requeue for the next iteration. */
|
|
|
|
pq_push_front(s->ppl.in_pq, pktin);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
strbuf *agentreq, *sigdata;
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
ptrlen comment = ptrlen_from_strbuf(
|
|
|
|
s->agent_keys[s->agent_key_index].comment);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Remove FLAG_VERBOSE.
The global 'int flags' has always been an ugly feature of this code
base, and I suddenly thought that perhaps it's time to start throwing
it out, one flag at a time, until it's totally unused.
My first target is FLAG_VERBOSE. This was usually set by cmdline.c
when it saw a -v option on the program's command line, except that GUI
PuTTY itself sets it unconditionally on startup. And then various bits
of the code would check it in order to decide whether to print a given
message.
In the current system of front-end abstraction traits, there's no
_one_ place that I can move it to. But there are two: every place that
checked FLAG_VERBOSE has access to either a Seat or a LogPolicy. So
now each of those traits has a query method for 'do I want verbose
messages?'.
A good effect of this is that subsidiary Seats, like the ones used in
Uppity for the main SSH server module itself and the server end of
shell channels, now get to have their own verbosity setting instead of
inheriting the one global one. In fact I don't expect any code using
those Seats to be generating any messages at all, but if that changes
later, we'll have a way to control it. (Who knows, perhaps logging in
Uppity might become a thing.)
As part of this cleanup, I've added a new flag to cmdline_tooltype,
called TOOLTYPE_NO_VERBOSE_OPTION. The unconditionally-verbose tools
now set that, and it has the effect of making cmdline.c disallow -v
completely. So where 'putty -v' would previously have been silently
ignored ("I was already verbose"), it's now an error, reminding you
that that option doesn't actually do anything.
Finally, the 'default_logpolicy' provided by uxcons.c and wincons.c
(with identical definitions) has had to move into a new file of its
own, because now it has to ask cmdline.c for the verbosity setting as
well as asking console.c for the rest of its methods. So there's a new
file clicons.c which can only be included by programs that link
against both cmdline.c _and_ one of the *cons.c, and I've renamed the
logpolicy to reflect that.
2020-01-30 06:40:21 +00:00
|
|
|
if (seat_verbose(s->ppl.seat))
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Authenticating with public key "
|
|
|
|
"\"%.*s\" from agent\r\n",
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
PTRLEN_PRINTF(comment));
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Server is willing to accept the key.
|
|
|
|
* Construct a SIGN_REQUEST.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->username);
|
2018-10-09 17:11:17 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->successor_layer->vt->name);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, "publickey");
|
|
|
|
/* method */
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
put_bool(s->pktout, true); /* signature included */
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_add_alg_and_publickey(
|
|
|
|
s, s->pktout, s->agent_keyalg, ptrlen_from_strbuf(
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
s->agent_keys[s->agent_key_index].blob));
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Ask agent for signature. */
|
|
|
|
agentreq = strbuf_new_for_agent_query();
|
|
|
|
put_byte(agentreq, SSH2_AGENTC_SIGN_REQUEST);
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringpl(agentreq, ptrlen_from_strbuf(
|
2022-08-03 19:48:46 +00:00
|
|
|
s->agent_keys[s->agent_key_index].blob));
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/* Now the data to be signed... */
|
|
|
|
sigdata = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_add_session_id(s, sigdata);
|
|
|
|
put_data(sigdata, s->pktout->data + 5,
|
|
|
|
s->pktout->length - 5);
|
|
|
|
put_stringsb(agentreq, sigdata);
|
2020-11-21 14:44:46 +00:00
|
|
|
/* And finally the flags word. */
|
|
|
|
put_uint32(agentreq, s->signflags);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_agent_query(s, agentreq);
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(agentreq);
|
|
|
|
crWaitUntilV(!s->auth_agent_query);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->agent_response.ptr) {
|
|
|
|
ptrlen sigblob;
|
|
|
|
BinarySource src[1];
|
|
|
|
BinarySource_BARE_INIT(src, s->agent_response.ptr,
|
|
|
|
s->agent_response.len);
|
|
|
|
get_uint32(src); /* skip length field */
|
|
|
|
if (get_byte(src) == SSH2_AGENT_SIGN_RESPONSE &&
|
|
|
|
(sigblob = get_string(src), !get_err(src))) {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Sending Pageant's response");
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_add_sigblob(
|
|
|
|
s, s->pktout,
|
|
|
|
ptrlen_from_strbuf(
|
|
|
|
s->agent_keys[s->agent_key_index].blob),
|
|
|
|
sigblob);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
|
|
|
s->type = AUTH_TYPE_PUBLICKEY;
|
New option to reject 'trivial' success of userauth.
Suggested by Manfred Kaiser, who also wrote most of this patch
(although outlying parts, like documentation and SSH-1 support, are by
me).
This is a second line of defence against the kind of spoofing attacks
in which a malicious or compromised SSH server rushes the client
through the userauth phase of SSH without actually requiring any auth
inputs (passwords or signatures or whatever), and then at the start of
the connection phase it presents something like a spoof prompt,
intended to be taken for part of userauth by the user but in fact with
some more sinister purpose.
Our existing line of defence against this is the trust sigil system,
and as far as I know, that's still working. This option allows a bit of
extra defence in depth: if you don't expect your SSH server to
trivially accept authentication in the first place, then enabling this
option will cause PuTTY to disconnect if it unexpectedly does so,
without the user having to spot the presence or absence of a fiddly
little sigil anywhere.
Several types of authentication count as 'trivial'. The obvious one is
the SSH-2 "none" method, which clients always try first so that the
failure message will tell them what else they can try, and which a
server can instead accept in order to authenticate you unconditionally.
But there are two other ways to do it that we know of: one is to run
keyboard-interactive authentication and send an empty INFO_REQUEST
packet containing no actual prompts for the user, and another even
weirder one is to send USERAUTH_SUCCESS in response to the user's
preliminary *offer* of a public key (instead of sending the usual PK_OK
to request an actual signature from the key).
This new option detects all of those, by clearing the 'is_trivial_auth'
flag only when we send some kind of substantive authentication response
(be it a password, a k-i prompt response, a signature, or a GSSAPI
token). So even if there's a further path through the userauth maze we
haven't spotted, that somehow avoids sending anything substantive, this
strategy should still pick it up.
2021-06-19 14:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
s->is_trivial_auth = false;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
} else {
|
2019-02-10 08:51:36 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Pageant refused signing request");
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Pageant failed to "
|
|
|
|
"provide a signature\r\n");
|
|
|
|
s->suppress_wait_for_response_packet = true;
|
2020-02-02 18:53:15 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh_free_pktout(s->pktout);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2020-02-02 18:53:24 +00:00
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Pageant failed to respond to "
|
|
|
|
"signing request");
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Pageant failed to "
|
|
|
|
"respond to signing request\r\n");
|
|
|
|
s->suppress_wait_for_response_packet = true;
|
|
|
|
ssh_free_pktout(s->pktout);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Do we have any keys left to try? */
|
Rework parsing of agent key list.
Now, in both SSH-1 and SSH-2, we go through the whole response from
the SSH agent, parse out the public blob and comment of every key, and
stash them in a data structure to iterate through later.
Previously, we were iterating through the agent response _in situ_,
while it was still stored in the s->agent_response memory buffer in
the form the agent sent it, and had the ongoing s->asrc BinarySource
pointing at it. This led to a remotely triggerable stale-pointer bug:
as soon as we send a _second_ agent request trying to authenticate
with one of the keys, it causes s->agent_response to be freed. In
normal usage this doesn't happen, because if a server sends PK_OK (or
an RSA1 challenge) then it's going to accept our response, so we never
go back to iterating over the rest of the agent's key list. But if a
server sends PK_OK or an RSA1 challenge and _then_ rejects
authentication after we go to the effort of responding, we'll go back
to iterating over the agent's key list and cause a crash.
So now, we extract everything we need from the key-list agent
response, and by the time we're making further agent requests, we
don't need it any more.
2020-02-09 08:24:28 +00:00
|
|
|
if (++s->agent_key_index >= s->agent_key_limit)
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->done_agent = true;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
} else if (s->can_pubkey && s->publickey_blob &&
|
|
|
|
s->privatekey_available && !s->tried_pubkey_config) {
|
|
|
|
|
2019-01-04 06:51:44 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh2_userkey *key; /* not live over crReturn */
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
char *passphrase; /* not live over crReturn */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp->pls->actx = SSH2_PKTCTX_PUBLICKEY;
|
|
|
|
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->tried_pubkey_config = true;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Try the public key supplied in the configuration.
|
|
|
|
*
|
2020-11-21 14:44:46 +00:00
|
|
|
* First, try to upgrade its algorithm.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
2022-04-19 16:27:54 +00:00
|
|
|
const char *newalg = s->publickey_algorithm;
|
|
|
|
if (ssh2_userauth_signflags(s, &s->signflags, &newalg)) {
|
|
|
|
sfree(s->publickey_algorithm);
|
|
|
|
s->publickey_algorithm = dupstr(newalg);
|
2020-11-21 14:44:46 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Offer the public blob to see if the server is willing to
|
|
|
|
* accept it.
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->username);
|
2018-10-09 17:11:17 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->successor_layer->vt->name);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, "publickey"); /* method */
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
put_bool(s->pktout, false);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/* no signature included */
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_add_alg_and_publickey(
|
|
|
|
s, s->pktout, ptrlen_from_asciz(s->publickey_algorithm),
|
|
|
|
ptrlen_from_strbuf(s->publickey_blob));
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Offered public key");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV((pktin = ssh2_userauth_pop(s)) != NULL);
|
|
|
|
if (pktin->type != SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_PK_OK) {
|
|
|
|
/* Key refused. Give up. */
|
|
|
|
pq_push_front(s->ppl.in_pq, pktin);
|
|
|
|
s->type = AUTH_TYPE_PUBLICKEY_OFFER_LOUD;
|
|
|
|
continue; /* process this new message */
|
|
|
|
}
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Offer of public key accepted");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Actually attempt a serious authentication using
|
|
|
|
* the key.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
Remove FLAG_VERBOSE.
The global 'int flags' has always been an ugly feature of this code
base, and I suddenly thought that perhaps it's time to start throwing
it out, one flag at a time, until it's totally unused.
My first target is FLAG_VERBOSE. This was usually set by cmdline.c
when it saw a -v option on the program's command line, except that GUI
PuTTY itself sets it unconditionally on startup. And then various bits
of the code would check it in order to decide whether to print a given
message.
In the current system of front-end abstraction traits, there's no
_one_ place that I can move it to. But there are two: every place that
checked FLAG_VERBOSE has access to either a Seat or a LogPolicy. So
now each of those traits has a query method for 'do I want verbose
messages?'.
A good effect of this is that subsidiary Seats, like the ones used in
Uppity for the main SSH server module itself and the server end of
shell channels, now get to have their own verbosity setting instead of
inheriting the one global one. In fact I don't expect any code using
those Seats to be generating any messages at all, but if that changes
later, we'll have a way to control it. (Who knows, perhaps logging in
Uppity might become a thing.)
As part of this cleanup, I've added a new flag to cmdline_tooltype,
called TOOLTYPE_NO_VERBOSE_OPTION. The unconditionally-verbose tools
now set that, and it has the effect of making cmdline.c disallow -v
completely. So where 'putty -v' would previously have been silently
ignored ("I was already verbose"), it's now an error, reminding you
that that option doesn't actually do anything.
Finally, the 'default_logpolicy' provided by uxcons.c and wincons.c
(with identical definitions) has had to move into a new file of its
own, because now it has to ask cmdline.c for the verbosity setting as
well as asking console.c for the rest of its methods. So there's a new
file clicons.c which can only be included by programs that link
against both cmdline.c _and_ one of the *cons.c, and I've renamed the
logpolicy to reflect that.
2020-01-30 06:40:21 +00:00
|
|
|
if (seat_verbose(s->ppl.seat))
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Authenticating with public key \"%s\"\r\n",
|
|
|
|
s->publickey_comment);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
key = NULL;
|
|
|
|
while (!key) {
|
|
|
|
const char *error; /* not live over crReturn */
|
|
|
|
if (s->privatekey_encrypted) {
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Get a passphrase from the user.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
Complete rework of terminal userpass input system.
The system for handling seat_get_userpass_input has always been
structured differently between GUI PuTTY and CLI tools like Plink.
In the CLI tools, password input is read directly from the OS
terminal/console device by console_get_userpass_input; this means that
you need to ensure the same terminal input data _hasn't_ already been
consumed by the main event loop and sent on to the backend. This is
achieved by the backend_sendok() method, which tells the event loop
when the backend has finished issuing password prompts, and hence,
when it's safe to start passing standard input to backend_send().
But in the GUI tools, input generated by the terminal window has
always been sent straight to backend_send(), regardless of whether
backend_sendok() says it wants it. So the terminal-based
implementation of username and password prompts has to work by
consuming input data that had _already_ been passed to the backend -
hence, any backend that needs to do that must keep its input on a
bufchain, and pass that bufchain to seat_get_userpass_input.
It's awkward that these two totally different systems coexist in the
first place. And now that SSH proxying needs to present interactive
prompts of its own, it's clear which one should win: the CLI style is
the Right Thing. So this change reworks the GUI side of the mechanism
to be more similar: terminal data now goes into a queue in the Ldisc,
and is not sent on to the backend until the backend says it's ready
for it via backend_sendok(). So terminal-based userpass prompts can
now consume data directly from that queue during the connection setup
stage.
As a result, the 'bufchain *' parameter has vanished from all the
userpass_input functions (both the official implementations of the
Seat trait method, and term_get_userpass_input() to which some of
those implementations delegate). The only function that actually used
that bufchain, namely term_get_userpass_input(), now instead reads
from the ldisc's input queue via a couple of new Ldisc functions.
(Not _trivial_ functions, since input buffered by Ldisc can be a
mixture of raw bytes and session specials like SS_EOL! The input queue
inside Ldisc is a bufchain containing a fiddly binary encoding that
can represent an arbitrary interleaving of those things.)
This greatly simplifies the calls to seat_get_userpass_input in
backends, which now don't have to mess about with passing their own
user_input bufchain around, or toggling their want_user_input flag
back and forth to request data to put on to that bufchain.
But the flip side is that now there has to be some _other_ method for
notifying the terminal when there's more input to be consumed during
an interactive prompt, and for notifying the backend when prompt input
has finished so that it can proceed to the next stage of the protocol.
This is done by a pair of extra callbacks: when more data is put on to
Ldisc's input queue, it triggers a call to term_get_userpass_input,
and when term_get_userpass_input finishes, it calls a callback
function provided in the prompts_t.
Therefore, any use of a prompts_t which *might* be asynchronous must
fill in the latter callback when setting up the prompts_t. In SSH, the
callback is centralised into a common PPL helper function, which
reinvokes the same PPL's process_queue coroutine; in rlogin we have to
set it up ourselves.
I'm sorry for this large and sprawling patch: I tried fairly hard to
break it up into individually comprehensible sub-patches, but I just
couldn't tease out any part of it that would stand sensibly alone.
2021-09-14 10:57:21 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = ssh_ppl_new_prompts(&s->ppl);
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->to_server = false;
|
2019-03-09 15:50:23 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->from_server = false;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->name = dupstr("SSH key passphrase");
|
|
|
|
add_prompt(s->cur_prompt,
|
2018-12-08 21:03:51 +00:00
|
|
|
dupprintf("Passphrase for key \"%s\": ",
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->publickey_comment),
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
false);
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
s->spr = seat_get_userpass_input(
|
Framework for announcing which Interactor is talking.
All this Interactor business has been gradually working towards being
able to inform the user _which_ network connection is currently
presenting them with a password prompt (or whatever), in situations
where more than one of them might be, such as an SSH connection being
used as a proxy for another SSH connection when neither one has
one-touch login configured.
At some point, we have to arrange that any attempt to do a user
interaction during connection setup - be it a password prompt, a host
key confirmation dialog, or just displaying an SSH login banner -
makes it clear which host it's come from. That's going to mean calling
some kind of announcement function before doing any of those things.
But there are several of those functions in the Seat API, and calls to
them are scattered far and wide across the SSH backend. (And not even
just there - the Rlogin backend also uses seat_get_userpass_input).
How can we possibly make sure we don't forget a vital call site on
some obscure little-tested code path, and leave the user confused in
just that one case which nobody might notice for years?
Today I thought of a trick to solve that problem. We can use the C
type system to enforce it for us!
The plan is: we invent a new struct type which contains nothing but a
'Seat *'. Then, for every Seat method which does a thing that ought to
be clearly identified as relating to a particular Interactor, we
adjust the API for that function to take the new struct type where it
previously took a plain 'Seat *'. Or rather - doing less violence to
the existing code - we only need to adjust the API of the dispatch
functions inline in putty.h.
How does that help? Because the way you _get_ one of these
struct-wrapped Seat pointers is by calling interactor_announce() on
your Interactor, which will in turn call interactor_get_seat(), and
wrap the returned pointer into one of these structs.
The effect is that whenever the SSH (or Rlogin) code wants to call one
of those particular Seat methods, it _has_ to call
interactor_announce() just beforehand, which (once I finish all of
this) will make sure the user is aware of who is presenting the prompt
or banner or whatever. And you can't forget to call it, because if you
don't call it, then you just don't have a struct of the right type to
give to the Seat method you wanted to call!
(Of course, there's nothing stopping code from _deliberately_ taking a
Seat * it already has and wrapping it into the new struct. In fact
SshProxy has to do that, in order to forward these requests up the
chain of Seats. But the point is that you can't do it _by accident_,
just by forgetting to make a vital function call - when you do that,
you _know_ you're doing it on purpose.)
No functional change: the new interactor_announce() function exists,
and the type-system trick ensures it's called in all the right places,
but it doesn't actually _do_ anything yet.
2021-10-30 17:05:36 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl), s->cur_prompt);
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
while (s->spr.kind == SPRK_INCOMPLETE) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
crReturnV;
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
s->spr = seat_get_userpass_input(
|
Framework for announcing which Interactor is talking.
All this Interactor business has been gradually working towards being
able to inform the user _which_ network connection is currently
presenting them with a password prompt (or whatever), in situations
where more than one of them might be, such as an SSH connection being
used as a proxy for another SSH connection when neither one has
one-touch login configured.
At some point, we have to arrange that any attempt to do a user
interaction during connection setup - be it a password prompt, a host
key confirmation dialog, or just displaying an SSH login banner -
makes it clear which host it's come from. That's going to mean calling
some kind of announcement function before doing any of those things.
But there are several of those functions in the Seat API, and calls to
them are scattered far and wide across the SSH backend. (And not even
just there - the Rlogin backend also uses seat_get_userpass_input).
How can we possibly make sure we don't forget a vital call site on
some obscure little-tested code path, and leave the user confused in
just that one case which nobody might notice for years?
Today I thought of a trick to solve that problem. We can use the C
type system to enforce it for us!
The plan is: we invent a new struct type which contains nothing but a
'Seat *'. Then, for every Seat method which does a thing that ought to
be clearly identified as relating to a particular Interactor, we
adjust the API for that function to take the new struct type where it
previously took a plain 'Seat *'. Or rather - doing less violence to
the existing code - we only need to adjust the API of the dispatch
functions inline in putty.h.
How does that help? Because the way you _get_ one of these
struct-wrapped Seat pointers is by calling interactor_announce() on
your Interactor, which will in turn call interactor_get_seat(), and
wrap the returned pointer into one of these structs.
The effect is that whenever the SSH (or Rlogin) code wants to call one
of those particular Seat methods, it _has_ to call
interactor_announce() just beforehand, which (once I finish all of
this) will make sure the user is aware of who is presenting the prompt
or banner or whatever. And you can't forget to call it, because if you
don't call it, then you just don't have a struct of the right type to
give to the Seat method you wanted to call!
(Of course, there's nothing stopping code from _deliberately_ taking a
Seat * it already has and wrapping it into the new struct. In fact
SshProxy has to do that, in order to forward these requests up the
chain of Seats. But the point is that you can't do it _by accident_,
just by forgetting to make a vital function call - when you do that,
you _know_ you're doing it on purpose.)
No functional change: the new interactor_announce() function exists,
and the type-system trick ensures it's called in all the right places,
but it doesn't actually _do_ anything yet.
2021-10-30 17:05:36 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl), s->cur_prompt);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
if (spr_is_abort(s->spr)) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/* Failed to get a passphrase. Terminate. */
|
|
|
|
free_prompts(s->cur_prompt);
|
2021-09-16 08:27:25 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = NULL;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh_bpp_queue_disconnect(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, "Unable to authenticate",
|
|
|
|
SSH2_DISCONNECT_AUTH_CANCELLED_BY_USER);
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh_spr_close(s->ppl.ssh, s->spr,
|
|
|
|
"passphrase prompt");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
passphrase =
|
2020-01-21 20:19:47 +00:00
|
|
|
prompt_get_result(s->cur_prompt->prompts[0]);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
free_prompts(s->cur_prompt);
|
2021-09-16 08:27:25 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = NULL;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
passphrase = NULL; /* no passphrase needed */
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Try decrypting the key.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
2020-01-05 10:28:45 +00:00
|
|
|
key = ppk_load_f(s->keyfile, passphrase, &error);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
if (passphrase) {
|
|
|
|
/* burn the evidence */
|
|
|
|
smemclr(passphrase, strlen(passphrase));
|
|
|
|
sfree(passphrase);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if (key == SSH2_WRONG_PASSPHRASE || key == NULL) {
|
|
|
|
if (passphrase &&
|
|
|
|
(key == SSH2_WRONG_PASSPHRASE)) {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Wrong passphrase\r\n");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
key = NULL;
|
|
|
|
/* and loop again */
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Unable to load private key (%s)\r\n",
|
|
|
|
error);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
key = NULL;
|
2019-02-10 08:44:59 +00:00
|
|
|
s->suppress_wait_for_response_packet = true;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
break; /* try something else */
|
|
|
|
}
|
2019-02-11 20:20:50 +00:00
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
/* FIXME: if we ever support variable signature
|
|
|
|
* flags, this is somewhere they'll need to be
|
|
|
|
* put */
|
|
|
|
char *invalid = ssh_key_invalid(key->key, 0);
|
|
|
|
if (invalid) {
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Cannot use this private key (%s)\r\n",
|
|
|
|
invalid);
|
|
|
|
ssh_key_free(key->key);
|
|
|
|
sfree(key->comment);
|
|
|
|
sfree(key);
|
|
|
|
sfree(invalid);
|
|
|
|
key = NULL;
|
|
|
|
s->suppress_wait_for_response_packet = true;
|
|
|
|
break; /* try something else */
|
|
|
|
}
|
2019-02-10 08:44:59 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (key) {
|
|
|
|
strbuf *pkblob, *sigdata, *sigblob;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* We have loaded the private key and the server
|
|
|
|
* has announced that it's willing to accept it.
|
|
|
|
* Hallelujah. Generate a signature and send it.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->username);
|
2018-10-09 17:11:17 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->successor_layer->vt->name);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, "publickey"); /* method */
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
put_bool(s->pktout, true); /* signature follows */
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
pkblob = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
ssh_key_public_blob(key->key, BinarySink_UPCAST(pkblob));
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_add_alg_and_publickey(
|
|
|
|
s, s->pktout,
|
|
|
|
ptrlen_from_asciz(s->publickey_algorithm),
|
|
|
|
ptrlen_from_strbuf(pkblob));
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* The data to be signed is:
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* string session-id
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* followed by everything so far placed in the
|
|
|
|
* outgoing packet.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
sigdata = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_add_session_id(s, sigdata);
|
|
|
|
put_data(sigdata, s->pktout->data + 5,
|
|
|
|
s->pktout->length - 5);
|
|
|
|
sigblob = strbuf_new();
|
2020-11-21 14:44:46 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh_key_sign(key->key, ptrlen_from_strbuf(sigdata),
|
|
|
|
s->signflags, BinarySink_UPCAST(sigblob));
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
strbuf_free(sigdata);
|
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_add_sigblob(
|
2018-10-13 15:30:59 +00:00
|
|
|
s, s->pktout, ptrlen_from_strbuf(pkblob),
|
|
|
|
ptrlen_from_strbuf(sigblob));
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
strbuf_free(pkblob);
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(sigblob);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Sent public key signature");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->type = AUTH_TYPE_PUBLICKEY;
|
|
|
|
ssh_key_free(key->key);
|
|
|
|
sfree(key->comment);
|
|
|
|
sfree(key);
|
New option to reject 'trivial' success of userauth.
Suggested by Manfred Kaiser, who also wrote most of this patch
(although outlying parts, like documentation and SSH-1 support, are by
me).
This is a second line of defence against the kind of spoofing attacks
in which a malicious or compromised SSH server rushes the client
through the userauth phase of SSH without actually requiring any auth
inputs (passwords or signatures or whatever), and then at the start of
the connection phase it presents something like a spoof prompt,
intended to be taken for part of userauth by the user but in fact with
some more sinister purpose.
Our existing line of defence against this is the trust sigil system,
and as far as I know, that's still working. This option allows a bit of
extra defence in depth: if you don't expect your SSH server to
trivially accept authentication in the first place, then enabling this
option will cause PuTTY to disconnect if it unexpectedly does so,
without the user having to spot the presence or absence of a fiddly
little sigil anywhere.
Several types of authentication count as 'trivial'. The obvious one is
the SSH-2 "none" method, which clients always try first so that the
failure message will tell them what else they can try, and which a
server can instead accept in order to authenticate you unconditionally.
But there are two other ways to do it that we know of: one is to run
keyboard-interactive authentication and send an empty INFO_REQUEST
packet containing no actual prompts for the user, and another even
weirder one is to send USERAUTH_SUCCESS in response to the user's
preliminary *offer* of a public key (instead of sending the usual PK_OK
to request an actual signature from the key).
This new option detects all of those, by clearing the 'is_trivial_auth'
flag only when we send some kind of substantive authentication response
(be it a password, a k-i prompt response, a signature, or a GSSAPI
token). So even if there's a further path through the userauth maze we
haven't spotted, that somehow avoids sending anything substantive, this
strategy should still pick it up.
2021-06-19 14:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
s->is_trivial_auth = false;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#ifndef NO_GSSAPI
|
|
|
|
} else if (s->can_gssapi && !s->tried_gssapi) {
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* gssapi-with-mic authentication */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ptrlen data;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->type = AUTH_TYPE_GSSAPI;
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->tried_gssapi = true;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp->pls->actx = SSH2_PKTCTX_GSSAPI;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->shgss->lib->gsslogmsg)
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("%s", s->shgss->lib->gsslogmsg);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Sending USERAUTH_REQUEST with "gssapi-with-mic" method */
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Trying gssapi-with-mic...");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->username);
|
2018-10-09 17:11:17 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->successor_layer->vt->name);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, "gssapi-with-mic");
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Attempting GSSAPI authentication");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* add mechanism info */
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->lib->indicate_mech(s->shgss->lib, &s->gss_buf);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* number of GSSAPI mechanisms */
|
|
|
|
put_uint32(s->pktout, 1);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* length of OID + 2 */
|
|
|
|
put_uint32(s->pktout, s->gss_buf.length + 2);
|
|
|
|
put_byte(s->pktout, SSH2_GSS_OIDTYPE);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* length of OID */
|
|
|
|
put_byte(s->pktout, s->gss_buf.length);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
put_data(s->pktout, s->gss_buf.value, s->gss_buf.length);
|
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV((pktin = ssh2_userauth_pop(s)) != NULL);
|
|
|
|
if (pktin->type != SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_GSSAPI_RESPONSE) {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("GSSAPI authentication request refused");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
pq_push_front(s->ppl.in_pq, pktin);
|
|
|
|
continue;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* check returned packet ... */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
data = get_string(pktin);
|
|
|
|
s->gss_rcvtok.value = (char *)data.ptr;
|
|
|
|
s->gss_rcvtok.length = data.len;
|
|
|
|
if (s->gss_rcvtok.length != s->gss_buf.length + 2 ||
|
|
|
|
((char *)s->gss_rcvtok.value)[0] != SSH2_GSS_OIDTYPE ||
|
|
|
|
((char *)s->gss_rcvtok.value)[1] != s->gss_buf.length ||
|
|
|
|
memcmp((char *)s->gss_rcvtok.value + 2,
|
|
|
|
s->gss_buf.value,s->gss_buf.length) ) {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("GSSAPI authentication - wrong response "
|
|
|
|
"from server");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
continue;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Import server name if not cached from KEX */
|
|
|
|
if (s->shgss->srv_name == GSS_C_NO_NAME) {
|
|
|
|
s->gss_stat = s->shgss->lib->import_name(
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->lib, s->fullhostname, &s->shgss->srv_name);
|
|
|
|
if (s->gss_stat != SSH_GSS_OK) {
|
|
|
|
if (s->gss_stat == SSH_GSS_BAD_HOST_NAME)
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("GSSAPI import name failed -"
|
|
|
|
" Bad service name");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
else
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("GSSAPI import name failed");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
continue;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Allocate our gss_ctx */
|
|
|
|
s->gss_stat = s->shgss->lib->acquire_cred(
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->lib, &s->shgss->ctx, NULL);
|
|
|
|
if (s->gss_stat != SSH_GSS_OK) {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("GSSAPI authentication failed to get "
|
|
|
|
"credentials");
|
2018-12-06 18:08:56 +00:00
|
|
|
/* The failure was on our side, so the server
|
|
|
|
* won't be sending a response packet indicating
|
|
|
|
* failure. Avoid waiting for it next time round
|
|
|
|
* the loop. */
|
|
|
|
s->suppress_wait_for_response_packet = true;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
continue;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* initial tokens are empty */
|
|
|
|
SSH_GSS_CLEAR_BUF(&s->gss_rcvtok);
|
|
|
|
SSH_GSS_CLEAR_BUF(&s->gss_sndtok);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* now enter the loop */
|
|
|
|
do {
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* When acquire_cred yields no useful expiration, go with
|
|
|
|
* the service ticket expiration.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
Formatting: standardise on "func(\n", not "func\n(".
If the function name (or expression) in a function call or declaration
is itself so long that even the first argument doesn't fit after it on
the same line, or if that would leave so little space that it would be
silly to try to wrap all the run-on lines into a tall thin column,
then I used to do this
ludicrously_long_function_name
(arg1, arg2, arg3);
and now prefer this
ludicrously_long_function_name(
arg1, arg2, arg3);
I picked up the habit from Python, where the latter idiom is required
by Python's syntactic significance of newlines (you can write the
former if you use a backslash-continuation, but pretty much everyone
seems to agree that that's much uglier). But I've found it works well
in C as well: it makes it more obvious that the previous line is
incomplete, it gives you a tiny bit more space to wrap the following
lines into (the old idiom indents the _third_ line one space beyond
the second), and I generally turn out to agree with the knock-on
indentation decisions made by at least Emacs if you do it in the
middle of a complex expression. Plus, of course, using the _same_
idiom between C and Python means less state-switching.
So, while I'm making annoying indentation changes in general, this
seems like a good time to dig out all the cases of the old idiom in
this code, and switch them over to the new.
2022-08-03 19:48:46 +00:00
|
|
|
s->gss_stat = s->shgss->lib->init_sec_context(
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->lib,
|
|
|
|
&s->shgss->ctx,
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->srv_name,
|
|
|
|
s->gssapi_fwd,
|
|
|
|
&s->gss_rcvtok,
|
|
|
|
&s->gss_sndtok,
|
|
|
|
NULL,
|
|
|
|
NULL);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->gss_stat!=SSH_GSS_S_COMPLETE &&
|
|
|
|
s->gss_stat!=SSH_GSS_S_CONTINUE_NEEDED) {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("GSSAPI authentication initialisation "
|
|
|
|
"failed");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2022-08-03 19:48:46 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->shgss->lib->display_status(
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->lib, s->shgss->ctx, &s->gss_buf)
|
|
|
|
== SSH_GSS_OK) {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("%s", (char *)s->gss_buf.value);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
sfree(s->gss_buf.value);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
pq_push_front(s->ppl.in_pq, pktin);
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
}
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("GSSAPI authentication initialised");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Client and server now exchange tokens until GSSAPI
|
|
|
|
* no longer says CONTINUE_NEEDED
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
if (s->gss_sndtok.length != 0) {
|
New option to reject 'trivial' success of userauth.
Suggested by Manfred Kaiser, who also wrote most of this patch
(although outlying parts, like documentation and SSH-1 support, are by
me).
This is a second line of defence against the kind of spoofing attacks
in which a malicious or compromised SSH server rushes the client
through the userauth phase of SSH without actually requiring any auth
inputs (passwords or signatures or whatever), and then at the start of
the connection phase it presents something like a spoof prompt,
intended to be taken for part of userauth by the user but in fact with
some more sinister purpose.
Our existing line of defence against this is the trust sigil system,
and as far as I know, that's still working. This option allows a bit of
extra defence in depth: if you don't expect your SSH server to
trivially accept authentication in the first place, then enabling this
option will cause PuTTY to disconnect if it unexpectedly does so,
without the user having to spot the presence or absence of a fiddly
little sigil anywhere.
Several types of authentication count as 'trivial'. The obvious one is
the SSH-2 "none" method, which clients always try first so that the
failure message will tell them what else they can try, and which a
server can instead accept in order to authenticate you unconditionally.
But there are two other ways to do it that we know of: one is to run
keyboard-interactive authentication and send an empty INFO_REQUEST
packet containing no actual prompts for the user, and another even
weirder one is to send USERAUTH_SUCCESS in response to the user's
preliminary *offer* of a public key (instead of sending the usual PK_OK
to request an actual signature from the key).
This new option detects all of those, by clearing the 'is_trivial_auth'
flag only when we send some kind of substantive authentication response
(be it a password, a k-i prompt response, a signature, or a GSSAPI
token). So even if there's a further path through the userauth maze we
haven't spotted, that somehow avoids sending anything substantive, this
strategy should still pick it up.
2021-06-19 14:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
s->is_trivial_auth = false;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->pktout =
|
|
|
|
ssh_bpp_new_pktout(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_GSSAPI_TOKEN);
|
|
|
|
put_string(s->pktout,
|
|
|
|
s->gss_sndtok.value, s->gss_sndtok.length);
|
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->lib->free_tok(s->shgss->lib, &s->gss_sndtok);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->gss_stat == SSH_GSS_S_CONTINUE_NEEDED) {
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV((pktin = ssh2_userauth_pop(s)) != NULL);
|
2018-11-15 18:12:19 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (pktin->type == SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_GSSAPI_ERRTOK) {
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Per RFC 4462 section 3.9, this packet
|
|
|
|
* type MUST immediately precede an
|
|
|
|
* ordinary USERAUTH_FAILURE.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* We currently don't know how to do
|
|
|
|
* anything with the GSSAPI error token
|
|
|
|
* contained in this packet, so we ignore
|
|
|
|
* it and just wait for the following
|
|
|
|
* FAILURE.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV(
|
|
|
|
(pktin = ssh2_userauth_pop(s)) != NULL);
|
|
|
|
if (pktin->type != SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE) {
|
|
|
|
ssh_proto_error(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.ssh, "Received unexpected packet "
|
|
|
|
"after SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_GSSAPI_ERRTOK "
|
|
|
|
"(expected SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE): "
|
|
|
|
"type %d (%s)", pktin->type,
|
|
|
|
ssh2_pkt_type(s->ppl.bpp->pls->kctx,
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp->pls->actx,
|
|
|
|
pktin->type));
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (pktin->type == SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE) {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("GSSAPI authentication failed");
|
2018-11-15 18:12:19 +00:00
|
|
|
s->gss_stat = SSH_GSS_FAILURE;
|
|
|
|
pq_push_front(s->ppl.in_pq, pktin);
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
} else if (pktin->type !=
|
|
|
|
SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_GSSAPI_TOKEN) {
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("GSSAPI authentication -"
|
|
|
|
" bad server response");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->gss_stat = SSH_GSS_FAILURE;
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
data = get_string(pktin);
|
|
|
|
s->gss_rcvtok.value = (char *)data.ptr;
|
|
|
|
s->gss_rcvtok.length = data.len;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
} while (s-> gss_stat == SSH_GSS_S_CONTINUE_NEEDED);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->gss_stat != SSH_GSS_OK) {
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->lib->release_cred(s->shgss->lib, &s->shgss->ctx);
|
|
|
|
continue;
|
|
|
|
}
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("GSSAPI authentication loop finished OK");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Now send the MIC */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh2_userauth_gss_packet(s, "gssapi-with-mic");
|
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->lib->release_cred(s->shgss->lib, &s->shgss->ctx);
|
|
|
|
continue;
|
|
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
} else if (s->can_keyb_inter && !s->kbd_inter_refused) {
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Keyboard-interactive authentication.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->type = AUTH_TYPE_KEYBOARD_INTERACTIVE;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp->pls->actx = SSH2_PKTCTX_KBDINTER;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->username);
|
2018-10-09 17:11:17 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->successor_layer->vt->name);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, "keyboard-interactive");
|
|
|
|
/* method */
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, ""); /* lang */
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, ""); /* submethods */
|
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Attempting keyboard-interactive authentication");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->authplugin) {
|
|
|
|
strbuf *amsg = authplugin_newmsg(PLUGIN_PROTOCOL);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(amsg, "keyboard-interactive");
|
|
|
|
authplugin_send_free(s, amsg);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
BinarySource src[1];
|
|
|
|
unsigned type;
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV(authplugin_expect_msg(s, &type, src));
|
|
|
|
switch (type) {
|
|
|
|
case PLUGIN_PROTOCOL_REJECT: {
|
|
|
|
ptrlen message = PTRLEN_LITERAL("");
|
|
|
|
if (s->authplugin_version >= 2) {
|
|
|
|
/* draft protocol didn't include a message here */
|
|
|
|
message = get_string(src);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if (get_err(src)) {
|
|
|
|
ssh_sw_abort(s->ppl.ssh, "Received malformed "
|
|
|
|
"PLUGIN_PROTOCOL_REJECT from auth "
|
|
|
|
"helper plugin");
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if (message.len) {
|
|
|
|
/* If the plugin sent a message about
|
|
|
|
* _why_ it didn't want to do k-i, pass
|
|
|
|
* that message on to the user. (It might
|
|
|
|
* say, for example, what went wrong when
|
|
|
|
* it tried to open its config file.) */
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Authentication plugin failed to set "
|
|
|
|
"up keyboard-interactive "
|
|
|
|
"authentication:\r\n");
|
|
|
|
seat_set_trust_status(s->ppl.seat, false);
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("%.*s\r\n", PTRLEN_PRINTF(message));
|
|
|
|
seat_set_trust_status(s->ppl.seat, true);
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Authentication plugin declined to "
|
|
|
|
"help with keyboard-interactive: "
|
|
|
|
"%.*s", PTRLEN_PRINTF(message));
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Authentication plugin declined to "
|
|
|
|
"help with keyboard-interactive");
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
s->authplugin_ki_active = false;
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
case PLUGIN_PROTOCOL_ACCEPT:
|
|
|
|
s->authplugin_ki_active = true;
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Authentication plugin agreed to help "
|
|
|
|
"with keyboard-interactive");
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
default:
|
|
|
|
authplugin_bad_packet(
|
|
|
|
s, type, "expected PLUGIN_PROTOCOL_ACCEPT or "
|
|
|
|
"PLUGIN_PROTOCOL_REJECT");
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
s->authplugin_ki_active = false;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2019-03-09 15:51:38 +00:00
|
|
|
if (!s->ki_scc_initialised) {
|
|
|
|
s->ki_scc = seat_stripctrl_new(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.seat, NULL, SIC_KI_PROMPTS);
|
|
|
|
if (s->ki_scc)
|
|
|
|
stripctrl_enable_line_limiting(s->ki_scc);
|
|
|
|
s->ki_scc_initialised = true;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV((pktin = ssh2_userauth_pop(s)) != NULL);
|
|
|
|
if (pktin->type != SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_INFO_REQUEST) {
|
|
|
|
/* Server is not willing to do keyboard-interactive
|
|
|
|
* at all (or, bizarrely but legally, accepts the
|
|
|
|
* user without actually issuing any prompts).
|
|
|
|
* Give up on it entirely. */
|
|
|
|
pq_push_front(s->ppl.in_pq, pktin);
|
|
|
|
s->type = AUTH_TYPE_KEYBOARD_INTERACTIVE_QUIET;
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->kbd_inter_refused = true; /* don't try it again */
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
continue;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2019-03-09 15:51:38 +00:00
|
|
|
s->ki_printed_header = false;
|
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
* Loop while we still have prompts to send to the user.
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
*/
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
if (!s->authplugin_ki_active) {
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* The simple case: INFO_REQUESTs are passed on to
|
|
|
|
* the user, and responses are sent straight back
|
|
|
|
* to the SSH server.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
while (pktin->type == SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_INFO_REQUEST) {
|
|
|
|
if (!ssh2_userauth_ki_setup_prompts(
|
|
|
|
s, BinarySource_UPCAST(pktin), false))
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV(ssh2_userauth_ki_run_prompts(s));
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (spr_is_abort(s->spr)) {
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Failed to get responses. Terminate.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
free_prompts(s->cur_prompt);
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = NULL;
|
|
|
|
ssh_bpp_queue_disconnect(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, "Unable to authenticate",
|
|
|
|
SSH2_DISCONNECT_AUTH_CANCELLED_BY_USER);
|
|
|
|
ssh_spr_close(s->ppl.ssh, s->spr, "keyboard-"
|
|
|
|
"interactive authentication prompt");
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
* Send the response(s) to the server.
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
*/
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_INFO_RESPONSE);
|
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_ki_write_responses(
|
|
|
|
s, BinarySink_UPCAST(s->pktout));
|
|
|
|
s->pktout->minlen = 256;
|
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Get the next packet in case it's another
|
|
|
|
* INFO_REQUEST.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV(
|
|
|
|
(pktin = ssh2_userauth_pop(s)) != NULL);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
* The case where a plugin is involved:
|
|
|
|
* INFO_REQUEST from the server is sent to the
|
|
|
|
* plugin, which sends responses that we hand back
|
|
|
|
* to the server. But in the meantime, the plugin
|
|
|
|
* might send USER_REQUEST for us to pass to the
|
|
|
|
* user, and then we send responses to that.
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
*/
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
while (pktin->type == SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_INFO_REQUEST) {
|
|
|
|
strbuf *amsg = authplugin_newmsg(
|
|
|
|
PLUGIN_KI_SERVER_REQUEST);
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(amsg, get_data(pktin, get_avail(pktin)));
|
|
|
|
authplugin_send_free(s, amsg);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
BinarySource src[1];
|
|
|
|
unsigned type;
|
|
|
|
while (true) {
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV(authplugin_expect_msg(
|
|
|
|
s, &type, src));
|
|
|
|
if (type != PLUGIN_KI_USER_REQUEST)
|
|
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (!ssh2_userauth_ki_setup_prompts(s, src, true))
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV(ssh2_userauth_ki_run_prompts(s));
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (spr_is_abort(s->spr)) {
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Failed to get responses. Terminate.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
free_prompts(s->cur_prompt);
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = NULL;
|
|
|
|
ssh_bpp_queue_disconnect(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, "Unable to authenticate",
|
|
|
|
SSH2_DISCONNECT_AUTH_CANCELLED_BY_USER);
|
|
|
|
ssh_spr_close(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.ssh, s->spr, "keyboard-"
|
|
|
|
"interactive authentication prompt");
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Send the responses on to the plugin.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
strbuf *amsg = authplugin_newmsg(
|
|
|
|
PLUGIN_KI_USER_RESPONSE);
|
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_ki_write_responses(
|
|
|
|
s, BinarySink_UPCAST(amsg));
|
|
|
|
authplugin_send_free(s, amsg);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (type != PLUGIN_KI_SERVER_RESPONSE) {
|
|
|
|
authplugin_bad_packet(
|
|
|
|
s, type, "expected PLUGIN_KI_SERVER_RESPONSE "
|
|
|
|
"or PLUGIN_PROTOCOL_USER_REQUEST");
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_INFO_RESPONSE);
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(s->pktout, get_data(src, get_avail(src)));
|
|
|
|
s->pktout->minlen = 256;
|
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Get the next packet in case it's another
|
|
|
|
* INFO_REQUEST.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV(
|
|
|
|
(pktin = ssh2_userauth_pop(s)) != NULL);
|
|
|
|
}
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2019-03-09 15:51:38 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Print our trailer line, if we printed a header.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
2019-03-10 14:42:11 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->ki_printed_header) {
|
|
|
|
seat_set_trust_status(s->ppl.seat, true);
|
2021-09-16 10:43:02 +00:00
|
|
|
seat_antispoof_msg(
|
Framework for announcing which Interactor is talking.
All this Interactor business has been gradually working towards being
able to inform the user _which_ network connection is currently
presenting them with a password prompt (or whatever), in situations
where more than one of them might be, such as an SSH connection being
used as a proxy for another SSH connection when neither one has
one-touch login configured.
At some point, we have to arrange that any attempt to do a user
interaction during connection setup - be it a password prompt, a host
key confirmation dialog, or just displaying an SSH login banner -
makes it clear which host it's come from. That's going to mean calling
some kind of announcement function before doing any of those things.
But there are several of those functions in the Seat API, and calls to
them are scattered far and wide across the SSH backend. (And not even
just there - the Rlogin backend also uses seat_get_userpass_input).
How can we possibly make sure we don't forget a vital call site on
some obscure little-tested code path, and leave the user confused in
just that one case which nobody might notice for years?
Today I thought of a trick to solve that problem. We can use the C
type system to enforce it for us!
The plan is: we invent a new struct type which contains nothing but a
'Seat *'. Then, for every Seat method which does a thing that ought to
be clearly identified as relating to a particular Interactor, we
adjust the API for that function to take the new struct type where it
previously took a plain 'Seat *'. Or rather - doing less violence to
the existing code - we only need to adjust the API of the dispatch
functions inline in putty.h.
How does that help? Because the way you _get_ one of these
struct-wrapped Seat pointers is by calling interactor_announce() on
your Interactor, which will in turn call interactor_get_seat(), and
wrap the returned pointer into one of these structs.
The effect is that whenever the SSH (or Rlogin) code wants to call one
of those particular Seat methods, it _has_ to call
interactor_announce() just beforehand, which (once I finish all of
this) will make sure the user is aware of who is presenting the prompt
or banner or whatever. And you can't forget to call it, because if you
don't call it, then you just don't have a struct of the right type to
give to the Seat method you wanted to call!
(Of course, there's nothing stopping code from _deliberately_ taking a
Seat * it already has and wrapping it into the new struct. In fact
SshProxy has to do that, in order to forward these requests up the
chain of Seats. But the point is that you can't do it _by accident_,
just by forgetting to make a vital function call - when you do that,
you _know_ you're doing it on purpose.)
No functional change: the new interactor_announce() function exists,
and the type-system trick ensures it's called in all the right places,
but it doesn't actually _do_ anything yet.
2021-10-30 17:05:36 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl),
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
(s->authplugin_ki_active ?
|
|
|
|
"End of keyboard-interactive prompts from plugin" :
|
|
|
|
"End of keyboard-interactive prompts from server"));
|
2019-03-10 14:42:11 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2019-03-09 15:51:38 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* We should have SUCCESS or FAILURE now.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
pq_push_front(s->ppl.in_pq, pktin);
|
|
|
|
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->authplugin_ki_active) {
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* As our last communication with the plugin, tell
|
|
|
|
* it whether the k-i authentication succeeded.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
int plugin_msg = -1;
|
|
|
|
if (pktin->type == SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_SUCCESS) {
|
|
|
|
plugin_msg = PLUGIN_AUTH_SUCCESS;
|
|
|
|
} else if (pktin->type == SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_FAILURE) {
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Peek in the failure packet to see if it's a
|
|
|
|
* partial success.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
BinarySource src[1];
|
|
|
|
BinarySource_BARE_INIT(
|
|
|
|
src, get_ptr(pktin), get_avail(pktin));
|
|
|
|
get_string(pktin); /* skip methods */
|
|
|
|
bool partial_success = get_bool(pktin);
|
|
|
|
if (!get_err(src)) {
|
|
|
|
plugin_msg = partial_success ?
|
|
|
|
PLUGIN_AUTH_SUCCESS : PLUGIN_AUTH_FAILURE;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (plugin_msg >= 0) {
|
|
|
|
strbuf *amsg = authplugin_newmsg(plugin_msg);
|
|
|
|
authplugin_send_free(s, amsg);
|
2022-09-02 17:18:29 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Wait until we've actually sent it, in case
|
|
|
|
* we close the connection to the plugin
|
|
|
|
* before that outgoing message has left our
|
|
|
|
* own buffers */
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV(s->authplugin_backlog == 0);
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
} else if (s->can_passwd) {
|
New option to reject 'trivial' success of userauth.
Suggested by Manfred Kaiser, who also wrote most of this patch
(although outlying parts, like documentation and SSH-1 support, are by
me).
This is a second line of defence against the kind of spoofing attacks
in which a malicious or compromised SSH server rushes the client
through the userauth phase of SSH without actually requiring any auth
inputs (passwords or signatures or whatever), and then at the start of
the connection phase it presents something like a spoof prompt,
intended to be taken for part of userauth by the user but in fact with
some more sinister purpose.
Our existing line of defence against this is the trust sigil system,
and as far as I know, that's still working. This option allows a bit of
extra defence in depth: if you don't expect your SSH server to
trivially accept authentication in the first place, then enabling this
option will cause PuTTY to disconnect if it unexpectedly does so,
without the user having to spot the presence or absence of a fiddly
little sigil anywhere.
Several types of authentication count as 'trivial'. The obvious one is
the SSH-2 "none" method, which clients always try first so that the
failure message will tell them what else they can try, and which a
server can instead accept in order to authenticate you unconditionally.
But there are two other ways to do it that we know of: one is to run
keyboard-interactive authentication and send an empty INFO_REQUEST
packet containing no actual prompts for the user, and another even
weirder one is to send USERAUTH_SUCCESS in response to the user's
preliminary *offer* of a public key (instead of sending the usual PK_OK
to request an actual signature from the key).
This new option detects all of those, by clearing the 'is_trivial_auth'
flag only when we send some kind of substantive authentication response
(be it a password, a k-i prompt response, a signature, or a GSSAPI
token). So even if there's a further path through the userauth maze we
haven't spotted, that somehow avoids sending anything substantive, this
strategy should still pick it up.
2021-06-19 14:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
s->is_trivial_auth = false;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Plain old password authentication.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'.
My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as
_almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's
implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine,
no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a
variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it
bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1.
PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've
stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it.
But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99
bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first
place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing
'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed
as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables
are now spelled 'true' or 'false'.
I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang
plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out
where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent
job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years!
To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends
generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to
platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean;
I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the
platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code
have been converted wherever I found them.
In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in
_most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value,
or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users
don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and
'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something
more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer:
- the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which
the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1
and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean
- the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you
something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but
most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero'
- the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in
the wildcard.
- the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use
-1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any
caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_
key can treat them as boolean)
- term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in
terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h,
but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we
don't support.
In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool
even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above,
tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values
true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more
confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or
bad and the 1 positive or good:
- the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of
0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd
also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate
piece of work.
- the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1
represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious
reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive'
or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int.
ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int
return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it
never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the
function and its call sites agree that it's a bool.
In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I
don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the
return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the
return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've
accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So
where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd'
(the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern
practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them.
Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to
separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine
to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a
the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from
gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
|
|
|
bool changereq_first_time; /* not live over crReturn */
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp->pls->actx = SSH2_PKTCTX_PASSWORD;
|
|
|
|
|
Complete rework of terminal userpass input system.
The system for handling seat_get_userpass_input has always been
structured differently between GUI PuTTY and CLI tools like Plink.
In the CLI tools, password input is read directly from the OS
terminal/console device by console_get_userpass_input; this means that
you need to ensure the same terminal input data _hasn't_ already been
consumed by the main event loop and sent on to the backend. This is
achieved by the backend_sendok() method, which tells the event loop
when the backend has finished issuing password prompts, and hence,
when it's safe to start passing standard input to backend_send().
But in the GUI tools, input generated by the terminal window has
always been sent straight to backend_send(), regardless of whether
backend_sendok() says it wants it. So the terminal-based
implementation of username and password prompts has to work by
consuming input data that had _already_ been passed to the backend -
hence, any backend that needs to do that must keep its input on a
bufchain, and pass that bufchain to seat_get_userpass_input.
It's awkward that these two totally different systems coexist in the
first place. And now that SSH proxying needs to present interactive
prompts of its own, it's clear which one should win: the CLI style is
the Right Thing. So this change reworks the GUI side of the mechanism
to be more similar: terminal data now goes into a queue in the Ldisc,
and is not sent on to the backend until the backend says it's ready
for it via backend_sendok(). So terminal-based userpass prompts can
now consume data directly from that queue during the connection setup
stage.
As a result, the 'bufchain *' parameter has vanished from all the
userpass_input functions (both the official implementations of the
Seat trait method, and term_get_userpass_input() to which some of
those implementations delegate). The only function that actually used
that bufchain, namely term_get_userpass_input(), now instead reads
from the ldisc's input queue via a couple of new Ldisc functions.
(Not _trivial_ functions, since input buffered by Ldisc can be a
mixture of raw bytes and session specials like SS_EOL! The input queue
inside Ldisc is a bufchain containing a fiddly binary encoding that
can represent an arbitrary interleaving of those things.)
This greatly simplifies the calls to seat_get_userpass_input in
backends, which now don't have to mess about with passing their own
user_input bufchain around, or toggling their want_user_input flag
back and forth to request data to put on to that bufchain.
But the flip side is that now there has to be some _other_ method for
notifying the terminal when there's more input to be consumed during
an interactive prompt, and for notifying the backend when prompt input
has finished so that it can proceed to the next stage of the protocol.
This is done by a pair of extra callbacks: when more data is put on to
Ldisc's input queue, it triggers a call to term_get_userpass_input,
and when term_get_userpass_input finishes, it calls a callback
function provided in the prompts_t.
Therefore, any use of a prompts_t which *might* be asynchronous must
fill in the latter callback when setting up the prompts_t. In SSH, the
callback is centralised into a common PPL helper function, which
reinvokes the same PPL's process_queue coroutine; in rlogin we have to
set it up ourselves.
I'm sorry for this large and sprawling patch: I tried fairly hard to
break it up into individually comprehensible sub-patches, but I just
couldn't tease out any part of it that would stand sensibly alone.
2021-09-14 10:57:21 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = ssh_ppl_new_prompts(&s->ppl);
|
Add UTF-8 support to the new Windows ConsoleIO system.
This allows you to set a flag in conio_setup() which causes the
returned ConsoleIO object to interpret all its output as UTF-8, by
translating it to UTF-16 and using WriteConsoleW to write it in
Unicode. Similarly, input is read using ReadConsoleW and decoded from
UTF-16 to UTF-8.
This flag is set to false in most places, to avoid making sudden
breaking changes. But when we're about to present a prompts_t to the
user, it's set from the new 'utf8' flag in that prompt, which in turn
is set by the userauth layer in any case where the prompts are going
to the server.
The idea is that this should be the start of a fix for the long-
standing character-set handling bug that strings transmitted during
SSH userauth (usernames, passwords, k-i prompts and responses) are all
supposed to be in UTF-8, but we've always encoded them in whatever our
input system happens to be using, and not done any tidying up on them.
We get occasional complaints about this from users whose passwords
contain characters that are encoded differently between UTF-8 and
their local encoding, but I've never got round to fixing it because
it's a large piece of engineering.
Indeed, this isn't nearly the end of it. The next step is to add UTF-8
support to all the _other_ ways of presenting a prompts_t, as best we
can.
Like the previous change to console handling, it seems very likely
that this will break someone's workflow. So there's a fallback
command-line option '-legacy-charset-handling' to revert to PuTTY's
previous behaviour.
2022-11-25 12:57:43 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->utf8 = true;
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->to_server = true;
|
2019-03-09 15:50:23 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->from_server = false;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->name = dupstr("SSH password");
|
|
|
|
add_prompt(s->cur_prompt, dupprintf("%s@%s's password: ",
|
|
|
|
s->username, s->hostname),
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
false);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
s->spr = seat_get_userpass_input(
|
Framework for announcing which Interactor is talking.
All this Interactor business has been gradually working towards being
able to inform the user _which_ network connection is currently
presenting them with a password prompt (or whatever), in situations
where more than one of them might be, such as an SSH connection being
used as a proxy for another SSH connection when neither one has
one-touch login configured.
At some point, we have to arrange that any attempt to do a user
interaction during connection setup - be it a password prompt, a host
key confirmation dialog, or just displaying an SSH login banner -
makes it clear which host it's come from. That's going to mean calling
some kind of announcement function before doing any of those things.
But there are several of those functions in the Seat API, and calls to
them are scattered far and wide across the SSH backend. (And not even
just there - the Rlogin backend also uses seat_get_userpass_input).
How can we possibly make sure we don't forget a vital call site on
some obscure little-tested code path, and leave the user confused in
just that one case which nobody might notice for years?
Today I thought of a trick to solve that problem. We can use the C
type system to enforce it for us!
The plan is: we invent a new struct type which contains nothing but a
'Seat *'. Then, for every Seat method which does a thing that ought to
be clearly identified as relating to a particular Interactor, we
adjust the API for that function to take the new struct type where it
previously took a plain 'Seat *'. Or rather - doing less violence to
the existing code - we only need to adjust the API of the dispatch
functions inline in putty.h.
How does that help? Because the way you _get_ one of these
struct-wrapped Seat pointers is by calling interactor_announce() on
your Interactor, which will in turn call interactor_get_seat(), and
wrap the returned pointer into one of these structs.
The effect is that whenever the SSH (or Rlogin) code wants to call one
of those particular Seat methods, it _has_ to call
interactor_announce() just beforehand, which (once I finish all of
this) will make sure the user is aware of who is presenting the prompt
or banner or whatever. And you can't forget to call it, because if you
don't call it, then you just don't have a struct of the right type to
give to the Seat method you wanted to call!
(Of course, there's nothing stopping code from _deliberately_ taking a
Seat * it already has and wrapping it into the new struct. In fact
SshProxy has to do that, in order to forward these requests up the
chain of Seats. But the point is that you can't do it _by accident_,
just by forgetting to make a vital function call - when you do that,
you _know_ you're doing it on purpose.)
No functional change: the new interactor_announce() function exists,
and the type-system trick ensures it's called in all the right places,
but it doesn't actually _do_ anything yet.
2021-10-30 17:05:36 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl), s->cur_prompt);
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
while (s->spr.kind == SPRK_INCOMPLETE) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
crReturnV;
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
s->spr = seat_get_userpass_input(
|
Framework for announcing which Interactor is talking.
All this Interactor business has been gradually working towards being
able to inform the user _which_ network connection is currently
presenting them with a password prompt (or whatever), in situations
where more than one of them might be, such as an SSH connection being
used as a proxy for another SSH connection when neither one has
one-touch login configured.
At some point, we have to arrange that any attempt to do a user
interaction during connection setup - be it a password prompt, a host
key confirmation dialog, or just displaying an SSH login banner -
makes it clear which host it's come from. That's going to mean calling
some kind of announcement function before doing any of those things.
But there are several of those functions in the Seat API, and calls to
them are scattered far and wide across the SSH backend. (And not even
just there - the Rlogin backend also uses seat_get_userpass_input).
How can we possibly make sure we don't forget a vital call site on
some obscure little-tested code path, and leave the user confused in
just that one case which nobody might notice for years?
Today I thought of a trick to solve that problem. We can use the C
type system to enforce it for us!
The plan is: we invent a new struct type which contains nothing but a
'Seat *'. Then, for every Seat method which does a thing that ought to
be clearly identified as relating to a particular Interactor, we
adjust the API for that function to take the new struct type where it
previously took a plain 'Seat *'. Or rather - doing less violence to
the existing code - we only need to adjust the API of the dispatch
functions inline in putty.h.
How does that help? Because the way you _get_ one of these
struct-wrapped Seat pointers is by calling interactor_announce() on
your Interactor, which will in turn call interactor_get_seat(), and
wrap the returned pointer into one of these structs.
The effect is that whenever the SSH (or Rlogin) code wants to call one
of those particular Seat methods, it _has_ to call
interactor_announce() just beforehand, which (once I finish all of
this) will make sure the user is aware of who is presenting the prompt
or banner or whatever. And you can't forget to call it, because if you
don't call it, then you just don't have a struct of the right type to
give to the Seat method you wanted to call!
(Of course, there's nothing stopping code from _deliberately_ taking a
Seat * it already has and wrapping it into the new struct. In fact
SshProxy has to do that, in order to forward these requests up the
chain of Seats. But the point is that you can't do it _by accident_,
just by forgetting to make a vital function call - when you do that,
you _know_ you're doing it on purpose.)
No functional change: the new interactor_announce() function exists,
and the type-system trick ensures it's called in all the right places,
but it doesn't actually _do_ anything yet.
2021-10-30 17:05:36 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl), s->cur_prompt);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
if (spr_is_abort(s->spr)) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Failed to get responses. Terminate.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
free_prompts(s->cur_prompt);
|
2021-09-16 08:27:25 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = NULL;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh_bpp_queue_disconnect(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, "Unable to authenticate",
|
|
|
|
SSH2_DISCONNECT_AUTH_CANCELLED_BY_USER);
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh_spr_close(s->ppl.ssh, s->spr, "password prompt");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Squirrel away the password. (We may need it later if
|
|
|
|
* asked to change it.)
|
|
|
|
*/
|
2020-01-21 20:19:47 +00:00
|
|
|
s->password = prompt_get_result(s->cur_prompt->prompts[0]);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
free_prompts(s->cur_prompt);
|
2021-09-16 08:27:25 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = NULL;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Send the password packet.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* We pad out the password packet to 256 bytes to make
|
|
|
|
* it harder for an attacker to find the length of the
|
|
|
|
* user's password.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* Anyone using a password longer than 256 bytes
|
|
|
|
* probably doesn't have much to worry about from
|
|
|
|
* people who find out how long their password is!
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->username);
|
2018-10-09 17:11:17 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->successor_layer->vt->name);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, "password");
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
put_bool(s->pktout, false);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->password);
|
|
|
|
s->pktout->minlen = 256;
|
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Sent password");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->type = AUTH_TYPE_PASSWORD;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Wait for next packet, in case it's a password change
|
|
|
|
* request.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV((pktin = ssh2_userauth_pop(s)) != NULL);
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
changereq_first_time = true;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
while (pktin->type == SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_PASSWD_CHANGEREQ) {
|
|
|
|
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
* We're being asked for a new password
|
|
|
|
* (perhaps not for the first time).
|
|
|
|
* Loop until the server accepts it.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
|
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'.
My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as
_almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's
implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine,
no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a
variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it
bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1.
PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've
stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it.
But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99
bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first
place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing
'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed
as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables
are now spelled 'true' or 'false'.
I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang
plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out
where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent
job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years!
To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends
generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to
platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean;
I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the
platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code
have been converted wherever I found them.
In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in
_most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value,
or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users
don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and
'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something
more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer:
- the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which
the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1
and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean
- the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you
something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but
most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero'
- the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in
the wildcard.
- the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use
-1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any
caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_
key can treat them as boolean)
- term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in
terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h,
but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we
don't support.
In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool
even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above,
tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values
true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more
confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or
bad and the 1 positive or good:
- the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of
0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd
also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate
piece of work.
- the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1
represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious
reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive'
or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int.
ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int
return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it
never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the
function and its call sites agree that it's a bool.
In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I
don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the
return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the
return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've
accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So
where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd'
(the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern
practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them.
Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to
separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine
to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a
the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from
gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
|
|
|
bool got_new = false; /* not live over crReturn */
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
ptrlen prompt; /* not live over crReturn */
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
const char *msg;
|
|
|
|
if (changereq_first_time)
|
|
|
|
msg = "Server requested password change";
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
msg = "Server rejected new password";
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("%s", msg);
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("%s\r\n", msg);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
prompt = get_string(pktin);
|
|
|
|
|
Complete rework of terminal userpass input system.
The system for handling seat_get_userpass_input has always been
structured differently between GUI PuTTY and CLI tools like Plink.
In the CLI tools, password input is read directly from the OS
terminal/console device by console_get_userpass_input; this means that
you need to ensure the same terminal input data _hasn't_ already been
consumed by the main event loop and sent on to the backend. This is
achieved by the backend_sendok() method, which tells the event loop
when the backend has finished issuing password prompts, and hence,
when it's safe to start passing standard input to backend_send().
But in the GUI tools, input generated by the terminal window has
always been sent straight to backend_send(), regardless of whether
backend_sendok() says it wants it. So the terminal-based
implementation of username and password prompts has to work by
consuming input data that had _already_ been passed to the backend -
hence, any backend that needs to do that must keep its input on a
bufchain, and pass that bufchain to seat_get_userpass_input.
It's awkward that these two totally different systems coexist in the
first place. And now that SSH proxying needs to present interactive
prompts of its own, it's clear which one should win: the CLI style is
the Right Thing. So this change reworks the GUI side of the mechanism
to be more similar: terminal data now goes into a queue in the Ldisc,
and is not sent on to the backend until the backend says it's ready
for it via backend_sendok(). So terminal-based userpass prompts can
now consume data directly from that queue during the connection setup
stage.
As a result, the 'bufchain *' parameter has vanished from all the
userpass_input functions (both the official implementations of the
Seat trait method, and term_get_userpass_input() to which some of
those implementations delegate). The only function that actually used
that bufchain, namely term_get_userpass_input(), now instead reads
from the ldisc's input queue via a couple of new Ldisc functions.
(Not _trivial_ functions, since input buffered by Ldisc can be a
mixture of raw bytes and session specials like SS_EOL! The input queue
inside Ldisc is a bufchain containing a fiddly binary encoding that
can represent an arbitrary interleaving of those things.)
This greatly simplifies the calls to seat_get_userpass_input in
backends, which now don't have to mess about with passing their own
user_input bufchain around, or toggling their want_user_input flag
back and forth to request data to put on to that bufchain.
But the flip side is that now there has to be some _other_ method for
notifying the terminal when there's more input to be consumed during
an interactive prompt, and for notifying the backend when prompt input
has finished so that it can proceed to the next stage of the protocol.
This is done by a pair of extra callbacks: when more data is put on to
Ldisc's input queue, it triggers a call to term_get_userpass_input,
and when term_get_userpass_input finishes, it calls a callback
function provided in the prompts_t.
Therefore, any use of a prompts_t which *might* be asynchronous must
fill in the latter callback when setting up the prompts_t. In SSH, the
callback is centralised into a common PPL helper function, which
reinvokes the same PPL's process_queue coroutine; in rlogin we have to
set it up ourselves.
I'm sorry for this large and sprawling patch: I tried fairly hard to
break it up into individually comprehensible sub-patches, but I just
couldn't tease out any part of it that would stand sensibly alone.
2021-09-14 10:57:21 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = ssh_ppl_new_prompts(&s->ppl);
|
Add UTF-8 support to the new Windows ConsoleIO system.
This allows you to set a flag in conio_setup() which causes the
returned ConsoleIO object to interpret all its output as UTF-8, by
translating it to UTF-16 and using WriteConsoleW to write it in
Unicode. Similarly, input is read using ReadConsoleW and decoded from
UTF-16 to UTF-8.
This flag is set to false in most places, to avoid making sudden
breaking changes. But when we're about to present a prompts_t to the
user, it's set from the new 'utf8' flag in that prompt, which in turn
is set by the userauth layer in any case where the prompts are going
to the server.
The idea is that this should be the start of a fix for the long-
standing character-set handling bug that strings transmitted during
SSH userauth (usernames, passwords, k-i prompts and responses) are all
supposed to be in UTF-8, but we've always encoded them in whatever our
input system happens to be using, and not done any tidying up on them.
We get occasional complaints about this from users whose passwords
contain characters that are encoded differently between UTF-8 and
their local encoding, but I've never got round to fixing it because
it's a large piece of engineering.
Indeed, this isn't nearly the end of it. The next step is to add UTF-8
support to all the _other_ ways of presenting a prompts_t, as best we
can.
Like the previous change to console handling, it seems very likely
that this will break someone's workflow. So there's a fallback
command-line option '-legacy-charset-handling' to revert to PuTTY's
previous behaviour.
2022-11-25 12:57:43 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->utf8 = true;
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->to_server = true;
|
2019-03-09 15:50:23 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->from_server = false;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->name = dupstr("New SSH password");
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->instruction = mkstr(prompt);
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->instr_reqd = true;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* There's no explicit requirement in the protocol
|
|
|
|
* for the "old" passwords in the original and
|
|
|
|
* password-change messages to be the same, and
|
|
|
|
* apparently some Cisco kit supports password change
|
|
|
|
* by the user entering a blank password originally
|
|
|
|
* and the real password subsequently, so,
|
|
|
|
* reluctantly, we prompt for the old password again.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* (On the other hand, some servers don't even bother
|
|
|
|
* to check this field.)
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
add_prompt(s->cur_prompt,
|
|
|
|
dupstr("Current password (blank for previously entered password): "),
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
false);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
add_prompt(s->cur_prompt, dupstr("Enter new password: "),
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
false);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
add_prompt(s->cur_prompt, dupstr("Confirm new password: "),
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
false);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Loop until the user manages to enter the same
|
|
|
|
* password twice.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
while (!got_new) {
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
s->spr = seat_get_userpass_input(
|
Framework for announcing which Interactor is talking.
All this Interactor business has been gradually working towards being
able to inform the user _which_ network connection is currently
presenting them with a password prompt (or whatever), in situations
where more than one of them might be, such as an SSH connection being
used as a proxy for another SSH connection when neither one has
one-touch login configured.
At some point, we have to arrange that any attempt to do a user
interaction during connection setup - be it a password prompt, a host
key confirmation dialog, or just displaying an SSH login banner -
makes it clear which host it's come from. That's going to mean calling
some kind of announcement function before doing any of those things.
But there are several of those functions in the Seat API, and calls to
them are scattered far and wide across the SSH backend. (And not even
just there - the Rlogin backend also uses seat_get_userpass_input).
How can we possibly make sure we don't forget a vital call site on
some obscure little-tested code path, and leave the user confused in
just that one case which nobody might notice for years?
Today I thought of a trick to solve that problem. We can use the C
type system to enforce it for us!
The plan is: we invent a new struct type which contains nothing but a
'Seat *'. Then, for every Seat method which does a thing that ought to
be clearly identified as relating to a particular Interactor, we
adjust the API for that function to take the new struct type where it
previously took a plain 'Seat *'. Or rather - doing less violence to
the existing code - we only need to adjust the API of the dispatch
functions inline in putty.h.
How does that help? Because the way you _get_ one of these
struct-wrapped Seat pointers is by calling interactor_announce() on
your Interactor, which will in turn call interactor_get_seat(), and
wrap the returned pointer into one of these structs.
The effect is that whenever the SSH (or Rlogin) code wants to call one
of those particular Seat methods, it _has_ to call
interactor_announce() just beforehand, which (once I finish all of
this) will make sure the user is aware of who is presenting the prompt
or banner or whatever. And you can't forget to call it, because if you
don't call it, then you just don't have a struct of the right type to
give to the Seat method you wanted to call!
(Of course, there's nothing stopping code from _deliberately_ taking a
Seat * it already has and wrapping it into the new struct. In fact
SshProxy has to do that, in order to forward these requests up the
chain of Seats. But the point is that you can't do it _by accident_,
just by forgetting to make a vital function call - when you do that,
you _know_ you're doing it on purpose.)
No functional change: the new interactor_announce() function exists,
and the type-system trick ensures it's called in all the right places,
but it doesn't actually _do_ anything yet.
2021-10-30 17:05:36 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl), s->cur_prompt);
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
while (s->spr.kind == SPRK_INCOMPLETE) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
crReturnV;
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
s->spr = seat_get_userpass_input(
|
Framework for announcing which Interactor is talking.
All this Interactor business has been gradually working towards being
able to inform the user _which_ network connection is currently
presenting them with a password prompt (or whatever), in situations
where more than one of them might be, such as an SSH connection being
used as a proxy for another SSH connection when neither one has
one-touch login configured.
At some point, we have to arrange that any attempt to do a user
interaction during connection setup - be it a password prompt, a host
key confirmation dialog, or just displaying an SSH login banner -
makes it clear which host it's come from. That's going to mean calling
some kind of announcement function before doing any of those things.
But there are several of those functions in the Seat API, and calls to
them are scattered far and wide across the SSH backend. (And not even
just there - the Rlogin backend also uses seat_get_userpass_input).
How can we possibly make sure we don't forget a vital call site on
some obscure little-tested code path, and leave the user confused in
just that one case which nobody might notice for years?
Today I thought of a trick to solve that problem. We can use the C
type system to enforce it for us!
The plan is: we invent a new struct type which contains nothing but a
'Seat *'. Then, for every Seat method which does a thing that ought to
be clearly identified as relating to a particular Interactor, we
adjust the API for that function to take the new struct type where it
previously took a plain 'Seat *'. Or rather - doing less violence to
the existing code - we only need to adjust the API of the dispatch
functions inline in putty.h.
How does that help? Because the way you _get_ one of these
struct-wrapped Seat pointers is by calling interactor_announce() on
your Interactor, which will in turn call interactor_get_seat(), and
wrap the returned pointer into one of these structs.
The effect is that whenever the SSH (or Rlogin) code wants to call one
of those particular Seat methods, it _has_ to call
interactor_announce() just beforehand, which (once I finish all of
this) will make sure the user is aware of who is presenting the prompt
or banner or whatever. And you can't forget to call it, because if you
don't call it, then you just don't have a struct of the right type to
give to the Seat method you wanted to call!
(Of course, there's nothing stopping code from _deliberately_ taking a
Seat * it already has and wrapping it into the new struct. In fact
SshProxy has to do that, in order to forward these requests up the
chain of Seats. But the point is that you can't do it _by accident_,
just by forgetting to make a vital function call - when you do that,
you _know_ you're doing it on purpose.)
No functional change: the new interactor_announce() function exists,
and the type-system trick ensures it's called in all the right places,
but it doesn't actually _do_ anything yet.
2021-10-30 17:05:36 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl), s->cur_prompt);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
if (spr_is_abort(s->spr)) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Failed to get responses. Terminate.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/* burn the evidence */
|
|
|
|
free_prompts(s->cur_prompt);
|
2021-09-16 08:27:25 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = NULL;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
smemclr(s->password, strlen(s->password));
|
|
|
|
sfree(s->password);
|
|
|
|
ssh_bpp_queue_disconnect(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, "Unable to authenticate",
|
|
|
|
SSH2_DISCONNECT_AUTH_CANCELLED_BY_USER);
|
Richer data type for interactive prompt results.
All the seat functions that request an interactive prompt of some kind
to the user - both the main seat_get_userpass_input and the various
confirmation dialogs for things like host keys - were using a simple
int return value, with the general semantics of 0 = "fail", 1 =
"proceed" (and in the case of seat_get_userpass_input, answers to the
prompts were provided), and -1 = "request in progress, wait for a
callback".
In this commit I change all those functions' return types to a new
struct called SeatPromptResult, whose primary field is an enum
replacing those simple integer values.
The main purpose is that the enum has not three but _four_ values: the
"fail" result has been split into 'user abort' and 'software abort'.
The distinction is that a user abort occurs as a result of an
interactive UI action, such as the user clicking 'cancel' in a dialog
box or hitting ^D or ^C at a terminal password prompt - and therefore,
there's no need to display an error message telling the user that the
interactive operation has failed, because the user already knows,
because they _did_ it. 'Software abort' is from any other cause, where
PuTTY is the first to know there was a problem, and has to tell the
user.
We already had this 'user abort' vs 'software abort' distinction in
other parts of the code - the SSH backend has separate termination
functions which protocol layers can call. But we assumed that any
failure from an interactive prompt request fell into the 'user abort'
category, which is not true. A couple of examples: if you configure a
host key fingerprint in your saved session via the SSH > Host keys
pane, and the server presents a host key that doesn't match it, then
verify_ssh_host_key would report that the user had aborted the
connection, and feel no need to tell the user what had gone wrong!
Similarly, if a password provided on the command line was not
accepted, then (after I fixed the semantics of that in the previous
commit) the same wrong handling would occur.
So now, those Seat prompt functions too can communicate whether the
user or the software originated a connection abort. And in the latter
case, we also provide an error message to present to the user. Result:
in those two example cases (and others), error messages should no
longer go missing.
Implementation note: to avoid the hassle of having the error message
in a SeatPromptResult being a dynamically allocated string (and hence,
every recipient of one must always check whether it's non-NULL and
free it on every exit path, plus being careful about copying the
struct around), I've instead arranged that the structure contains a
function pointer and a couple of parameters, so that the string form
of the message can be constructed on demand. That way, the only users
who need to free it are the ones who actually _asked_ for it in the
first place, which is a much smaller set.
(This is one of the rare occasions that I regret not having C++'s
extra features available in this code base - a unique_ptr or
shared_ptr to a string would have been just the thing here, and the
compiler would have done all the hard work for me of remembering where
to insert the frees!)
2021-12-28 17:52:00 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh_spr_close(s->ppl.ssh, s->spr,
|
|
|
|
"password-change prompt");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* If the user specified a new original password
|
|
|
|
* (IYSWIM), overwrite any previously specified
|
|
|
|
* one.
|
|
|
|
* (A side effect is that the user doesn't have to
|
|
|
|
* re-enter it if they louse up the new password.)
|
|
|
|
*/
|
2020-01-21 20:19:47 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->cur_prompt->prompts[0]->result->s[0]) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
smemclr(s->password, strlen(s->password));
|
|
|
|
/* burn the evidence */
|
|
|
|
sfree(s->password);
|
2020-01-21 20:19:47 +00:00
|
|
|
s->password = prompt_get_result(
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->prompts[0]);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Check the two new passwords match.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
2020-01-21 20:19:47 +00:00
|
|
|
got_new = !strcmp(
|
|
|
|
prompt_get_result_ref(s->cur_prompt->prompts[1]),
|
|
|
|
prompt_get_result_ref(s->cur_prompt->prompts[2]));
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
if (!got_new)
|
|
|
|
/* They don't. Silly user. */
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Passwords do not match\r\n");
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Send the new password (along with the old one).
|
|
|
|
* (see above for padding rationale)
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
s->pktout = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->username);
|
2018-10-09 17:11:17 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->successor_layer->vt->name);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, "password");
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
put_bool(s->pktout, true);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, s->password);
|
2020-01-21 20:19:47 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(s->pktout, prompt_get_result_ref(
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->prompts[1]));
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
free_prompts(s->cur_prompt);
|
2021-09-16 08:27:25 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = NULL;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
s->pktout->minlen = 256;
|
|
|
|
pq_push(s->ppl.out_pq, s->pktout);
|
Start using C99 variadic macros.
In the past, I've had a lot of macros which you call with double
parentheses, along the lines of debug(("format string", params)), so
that the inner parens protect the commas and permit the macro to treat
the whole printf-style argument list as one macro argument.
That's all very well, but it's a bit inconvenient (it doesn't leave
you any way to implement such a macro by prepending another argument
to the list), and now this code base's rules allow C99isms, I can
switch all those macros to using a single pair of parens, using the
C99 ability to say '...' in the parameter list of the #define and get
at the corresponding suffix of the arguments as __VA_ARGS__.
So I'm doing it. I've made the following printf-style macros variadic:
bpp_logevent, ppl_logevent, ppl_printf and debug.
While I'm here, I've also fixed up a collection of conditioned-out
calls to debug() in the Windows front end which were clearly expecting
a macro with a different calling syntax, because they had an integer
parameter first. If I ever have a need to condition those back in,
they should actually work now.
2018-12-08 20:32:31 +00:00
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Sent new password");
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Now see what the server has to say about it.
|
|
|
|
* (If it's CHANGEREQ again, it's not happy with the
|
|
|
|
* new password.)
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
crMaybeWaitUntilV((pktin = ssh2_userauth_pop(s)) != NULL);
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
changereq_first_time = false;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* We need to reexamine the current pktin at the top
|
|
|
|
* of the loop. Either:
|
|
|
|
* - we weren't asked to change password at all, in
|
|
|
|
* which case it's a SUCCESS or FAILURE with the
|
|
|
|
* usual meaning
|
|
|
|
* - we sent a new password, and the server was
|
|
|
|
* either OK with it (SUCCESS or FAILURE w/partial
|
|
|
|
* success) or unhappy with the _old_ password
|
|
|
|
* (FAILURE w/o partial success)
|
|
|
|
* In any of these cases, we go back to the top of
|
|
|
|
* the loop and start again.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
pq_push_front(s->ppl.in_pq, pktin);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* We don't need the old password any more, in any
|
|
|
|
* case. Burn the evidence.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
smemclr(s->password, strlen(s->password));
|
|
|
|
sfree(s->password);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
ssh_bpp_queue_disconnect(
|
|
|
|
s->ppl.bpp,
|
|
|
|
"No supported authentication methods available",
|
|
|
|
SSH2_DISCONNECT_NO_MORE_AUTH_METHODS_AVAILABLE);
|
|
|
|
ssh_sw_abort(s->ppl.ssh, "No supported authentication methods "
|
2018-12-06 18:06:15 +00:00
|
|
|
"available (server sent: %s)",
|
|
|
|
s->last_methods_string->s);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
try_new_username:;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
userauth_success:
|
New option to reject 'trivial' success of userauth.
Suggested by Manfred Kaiser, who also wrote most of this patch
(although outlying parts, like documentation and SSH-1 support, are by
me).
This is a second line of defence against the kind of spoofing attacks
in which a malicious or compromised SSH server rushes the client
through the userauth phase of SSH without actually requiring any auth
inputs (passwords or signatures or whatever), and then at the start of
the connection phase it presents something like a spoof prompt,
intended to be taken for part of userauth by the user but in fact with
some more sinister purpose.
Our existing line of defence against this is the trust sigil system,
and as far as I know, that's still working. This option allows a bit of
extra defence in depth: if you don't expect your SSH server to
trivially accept authentication in the first place, then enabling this
option will cause PuTTY to disconnect if it unexpectedly does so,
without the user having to spot the presence or absence of a fiddly
little sigil anywhere.
Several types of authentication count as 'trivial'. The obvious one is
the SSH-2 "none" method, which clients always try first so that the
failure message will tell them what else they can try, and which a
server can instead accept in order to authenticate you unconditionally.
But there are two other ways to do it that we know of: one is to run
keyboard-interactive authentication and send an empty INFO_REQUEST
packet containing no actual prompts for the user, and another even
weirder one is to send USERAUTH_SUCCESS in response to the user's
preliminary *offer* of a public key (instead of sending the usual PK_OK
to request an actual signature from the key).
This new option detects all of those, by clearing the 'is_trivial_auth'
flag only when we send some kind of substantive authentication response
(be it a password, a k-i prompt response, a signature, or a GSSAPI
token). So even if there's a further path through the userauth maze we
haven't spotted, that somehow avoids sending anything substantive, this
strategy should still pick it up.
2021-06-19 14:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
if (s->notrivialauth && s->is_trivial_auth) {
|
|
|
|
ssh_proto_error(s->ppl.ssh, "Authentication was trivial! "
|
|
|
|
"Abandoning session as specified in configuration.");
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* We've just received USERAUTH_SUCCESS, and we haven't sent
|
|
|
|
* any packets since. Signal the transport layer to consider
|
|
|
|
* doing an immediate rekey, if it has any reason to want to.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
ssh2_transport_notify_auth_done(s->transport_layer);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Finally, hand over to our successor layer, and return
|
|
|
|
* immediately without reaching the crFinishV: ssh_ppl_replace
|
|
|
|
* will have freed us, so crFinishV's zeroing-out of crState would
|
|
|
|
* be a use-after-free bug.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
PacketProtocolLayer *successor = s->successor_layer;
|
|
|
|
s->successor_layer = NULL; /* avoid freeing it ourself */
|
|
|
|
ssh_ppl_replace(&s->ppl, successor);
|
|
|
|
return; /* we've just freed s, so avoid even touching s->crState */
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
crFinishV;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2023-04-29 10:36:13 +00:00
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_print_banner(struct ssh2_userauth_state *s)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
if (bufchain_size(&s->banner) &&
|
|
|
|
(seat_verbose(s->ppl.seat) || seat_interactive(s->ppl.seat))) {
|
|
|
|
if (s->banner_scc) {
|
|
|
|
seat_antispoof_msg(
|
|
|
|
ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl),
|
|
|
|
"Pre-authentication banner message from server:");
|
|
|
|
seat_set_trust_status(s->ppl.seat, false);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
bool mid_line = false;
|
|
|
|
while (bufchain_size(&s->banner) > 0) {
|
|
|
|
ptrlen data = bufchain_prefix(&s->banner);
|
|
|
|
seat_banner_pl(ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl), data);
|
|
|
|
mid_line =
|
|
|
|
(((const char *)data.ptr)[data.len-1] != '\n');
|
|
|
|
bufchain_consume(&s->banner, data.len);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
bufchain_clear(&s->banner);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (mid_line)
|
|
|
|
seat_banner_pl(ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl),
|
|
|
|
PTRLEN_LITERAL("\r\n"));
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->banner_scc) {
|
|
|
|
seat_set_trust_status(s->ppl.seat, true);
|
|
|
|
seat_antispoof_msg(ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl),
|
|
|
|
"End of banner message from server");
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2022-08-22 16:48:22 +00:00
|
|
|
static bool ssh2_userauth_ki_setup_prompts(
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, BinarySource *src, bool plugin)
|
2022-08-22 16:48:22 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
ptrlen name, inst;
|
|
|
|
strbuf *sb;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* We've got a fresh USERAUTH_INFO_REQUEST. Get the preamble and
|
|
|
|
* start building a prompt.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
name = get_string(src);
|
|
|
|
inst = get_string(src);
|
|
|
|
get_string(src); /* skip language tag */
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = ssh_ppl_new_prompts(&s->ppl);
|
Add UTF-8 support to the new Windows ConsoleIO system.
This allows you to set a flag in conio_setup() which causes the
returned ConsoleIO object to interpret all its output as UTF-8, by
translating it to UTF-16 and using WriteConsoleW to write it in
Unicode. Similarly, input is read using ReadConsoleW and decoded from
UTF-16 to UTF-8.
This flag is set to false in most places, to avoid making sudden
breaking changes. But when we're about to present a prompts_t to the
user, it's set from the new 'utf8' flag in that prompt, which in turn
is set by the userauth layer in any case where the prompts are going
to the server.
The idea is that this should be the start of a fix for the long-
standing character-set handling bug that strings transmitted during
SSH userauth (usernames, passwords, k-i prompts and responses) are all
supposed to be in UTF-8, but we've always encoded them in whatever our
input system happens to be using, and not done any tidying up on them.
We get occasional complaints about this from users whose passwords
contain characters that are encoded differently between UTF-8 and
their local encoding, but I've never got round to fixing it because
it's a large piece of engineering.
Indeed, this isn't nearly the end of it. The next step is to add UTF-8
support to all the _other_ ways of presenting a prompts_t, as best we
can.
Like the previous change to console handling, it seems very likely
that this will break someone's workflow. So there's a fallback
command-line option '-legacy-charset-handling' to revert to PuTTY's
previous behaviour.
2022-11-25 12:57:43 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->utf8 = true;
|
2022-08-22 16:48:22 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->to_server = true;
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->from_server = true;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Get any prompt(s) from the packet.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
s->num_prompts = get_uint32(src);
|
|
|
|
for (uint32_t i = 0; i < s->num_prompts; i++) {
|
|
|
|
s->is_trivial_auth = false;
|
|
|
|
ptrlen prompt = get_string(src);
|
|
|
|
bool echo = get_bool(src);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (get_err(src)) {
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh_proto_error(s->ppl.ssh, "%s sent truncated %s packet",
|
|
|
|
plugin ? "Plugin" : "Server",
|
|
|
|
plugin ? "PLUGIN_KI_USER_REQUEST" :
|
|
|
|
"SSH_MSG_USERAUTH_INFO_REQUEST");
|
2022-08-22 16:48:22 +00:00
|
|
|
return false;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
sb = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
if (!prompt.len) {
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
put_fmt(sb, "<%s failed to send prompt>: ",
|
|
|
|
plugin ? "plugin" : "server");
|
2022-08-22 16:48:22 +00:00
|
|
|
} else if (s->ki_scc) {
|
|
|
|
stripctrl_retarget(s->ki_scc, BinarySink_UPCAST(sb));
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(s->ki_scc, prompt);
|
|
|
|
stripctrl_retarget(s->ki_scc, NULL);
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(sb, prompt);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
add_prompt(s->cur_prompt, strbuf_to_str(sb), echo);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Make the header strings. This includes the 'name' (optional
|
|
|
|
* dialog-box title) and 'instruction' from the server.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* First, display our disambiguating header line if this is the
|
|
|
|
* first time round the loop - _unless_ the server has sent a
|
|
|
|
* completely empty k-i packet with no prompts _or_ text, which
|
|
|
|
* apparently some do. In that situation there's no need to alert
|
|
|
|
* the user that the following text is server- supplied, because,
|
|
|
|
* well, _what_ text?
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* We also only do this if we got a stripctrl, because if we
|
|
|
|
* didn't, that suggests this is all being done via dialog boxes
|
|
|
|
* anyway.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
if (!s->ki_printed_header && s->ki_scc &&
|
|
|
|
(s->num_prompts || name.len || inst.len)) {
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
seat_antispoof_msg(
|
|
|
|
ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl),
|
|
|
|
(plugin ?
|
|
|
|
"Keyboard-interactive authentication prompts from plugin:" :
|
|
|
|
"Keyboard-interactive authentication prompts from server:"));
|
2022-08-22 16:48:22 +00:00
|
|
|
s->ki_printed_header = true;
|
|
|
|
seat_set_trust_status(s->ppl.seat, false);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
sb = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
if (name.len) {
|
|
|
|
if (s->ki_scc) {
|
|
|
|
stripctrl_retarget(s->ki_scc, BinarySink_UPCAST(sb));
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(s->ki_scc, name);
|
|
|
|
stripctrl_retarget(s->ki_scc, NULL);
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(sb, name);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->name_reqd = true;
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
New feature: k-i authentication helper plugins.
In recent months I've had two requests from different people to build
support into PuTTY for automatically handling complicated third-party
auth protocols layered on top of keyboard-interactive - the kind of
thing where you're asked to enter some auth response, and you have to
refer to some external source like a web server to find out what the
right response _is_, which is a pain to do by hand, so you'd prefer it
to be automated in the SSH client.
That seems like a reasonable thing for an end user to want, but I
didn't think it was a good idea to build support for specific
protocols of that kind directly into PuTTY, where there would no doubt
be an ever-lengthening list, and maintenance needed on all of them.
So instead, in collaboration with one of my correspondents, I've
designed and implemented a protocol to be spoken between PuTTY and a
plugin running as a subprocess. The plugin can opt to handle the
keyboard-interactive authentication loop on behalf of the user, in
which case PuTTY passes on all the INFO_REQUEST packets to it, and
lets it make up responses. It can also ask questions of the user if
necessary.
The protocol spec is provided in a documentation appendix. The entire
configuration for the end user consists of providing a full command
line to use as the subprocess.
In the contrib directory I've provided an example plugin written in
Python. It gives a set of fixed responses suitable for getting through
Uppity's made-up k-i system, because that was a reasonable thing I
already had lying around to test against. But it also provides example
code that someone else could pick up and insert their own live
response-provider into the middle of, assuming they were happy with it
being in Python.
2022-09-01 18:38:46 +00:00
|
|
|
if (plugin)
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(sb, PTRLEN_LITERAL(
|
|
|
|
"Communication with authentication plugin"));
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(sb, PTRLEN_LITERAL("SSH server authentication"));
|
2022-08-22 16:48:22 +00:00
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->name_reqd = false;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->name = strbuf_to_str(sb);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
sb = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
if (inst.len) {
|
|
|
|
if (s->ki_scc) {
|
|
|
|
stripctrl_retarget(s->ki_scc, BinarySink_UPCAST(sb));
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(s->ki_scc, inst);
|
|
|
|
stripctrl_retarget(s->ki_scc, NULL);
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(sb, inst);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->instr_reqd = true;
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->instr_reqd = false;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if (sb->len)
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt->instruction = strbuf_to_str(sb);
|
|
|
|
else
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(sb);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
return true;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static bool ssh2_userauth_ki_run_prompts(struct ssh2_userauth_state *s)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
s->spr = seat_get_userpass_input(
|
|
|
|
ppl_get_iseat(&s->ppl), s->cur_prompt);
|
|
|
|
return s->spr.kind != SPRK_INCOMPLETE;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_ki_write_responses(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, BinarySink *bs)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
put_uint32(bs, s->num_prompts);
|
|
|
|
for (uint32_t i = 0; i < s->num_prompts; i++)
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(bs, prompt_get_result_ref(s->cur_prompt->prompts[i]));
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Free the prompts structure from this iteration. If there's
|
|
|
|
* another, a new one will be allocated when we return to the top
|
|
|
|
* of this while loop.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
free_prompts(s->cur_prompt);
|
|
|
|
s->cur_prompt = NULL;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_add_session_id(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, strbuf *sigdata)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
if (s->ppl.remote_bugs & BUG_SSH2_PK_SESSIONID) {
|
2019-01-01 19:00:19 +00:00
|
|
|
put_datapl(sigdata, s->session_id);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
put_stringpl(sigdata, s->session_id);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_agent_query(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, strbuf *req)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
void *response;
|
|
|
|
int response_len;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
sfree(s->agent_response_to_free);
|
|
|
|
s->agent_response_to_free = NULL;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->auth_agent_query = agent_query(req, &response, &response_len,
|
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_agent_callback, s);
|
|
|
|
if (!s->auth_agent_query)
|
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_agent_callback(s, response, response_len);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_agent_callback(void *uav, void *reply, int replylen)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s = (struct ssh2_userauth_state *)uav;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
s->auth_agent_query = NULL;
|
|
|
|
s->agent_response_to_free = reply;
|
|
|
|
s->agent_response = make_ptrlen(reply, replylen);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
queue_idempotent_callback(&s->ppl.ic_process_queue);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Helper function to add the algorithm and public key strings to a
|
|
|
|
* "publickey" auth packet. Deals with overriding both strings if the
|
|
|
|
* user has provided a detached certificate which matches the public
|
|
|
|
* key in question.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_add_alg_and_publickey(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, PktOut *pkt, ptrlen alg, ptrlen pkblob)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
PacketProtocolLayer *ppl = &s->ppl; /* for ppl_logevent */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (s->detached_cert_blob) {
|
|
|
|
ptrlen detached_cert_pl = ptrlen_from_strbuf(s->detached_cert_blob);
|
|
|
|
strbuf *certbase = NULL, *pkbase = NULL;
|
|
|
|
bool done = false;
|
|
|
|
const ssh_keyalg *pkalg = find_pubkey_alg_len(alg);
|
|
|
|
ssh_key *certkey = NULL, *pk = NULL;
|
|
|
|
strbuf *fail_reason = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
bool verbose = true;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Whether or not we send the certificate, we're likely to
|
|
|
|
* generate a log message about it. But we don't want to log
|
|
|
|
* once for the offer and once for the real auth attempt, so
|
|
|
|
* we de-duplicate by remembering the last public key this
|
|
|
|
* function saw. */
|
|
|
|
if (!s->cert_pubkey_diagnosed)
|
|
|
|
s->cert_pubkey_diagnosed = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
if (ptrlen_eq_ptrlen(ptrlen_from_strbuf(s->cert_pubkey_diagnosed),
|
|
|
|
pkblob)) {
|
|
|
|
verbose = false;
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
/* Log this time, but arrange that we don't mention it next time */
|
|
|
|
strbuf_clear(s->cert_pubkey_diagnosed);
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(s->cert_pubkey_diagnosed, pkblob);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Check that the public key we're replacing is compatible
|
|
|
|
* with the certificate, in that they should have the same
|
|
|
|
* base public key.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
const ssh_keyalg *certalg = pubkey_blob_to_alg(detached_cert_pl);
|
|
|
|
assert(certalg); /* we checked this before setting s->detached_blob */
|
|
|
|
assert(certalg->is_certificate); /* and this too */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
certkey = ssh_key_new_pub(certalg, detached_cert_pl);
|
|
|
|
if (!certkey) {
|
|
|
|
put_fmt(fail_reason, "certificate key file is invalid");
|
|
|
|
goto no_match;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
certbase = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
ssh_key_public_blob(ssh_key_base_key(certkey),
|
|
|
|
BinarySink_UPCAST(certbase));
|
|
|
|
if (ptrlen_eq_ptrlen(pkblob, ptrlen_from_strbuf(certbase)))
|
|
|
|
goto match; /* yes, a match! */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* If we reach here, the certificate's base key was not
|
|
|
|
* identical to the key we're given. But it might still be
|
|
|
|
* identical to the _base_ key of the key we're given, if we
|
|
|
|
* were using a differently certified version of the same key.
|
|
|
|
* In that situation, the detached cert should still override.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
if (!pkalg) {
|
|
|
|
put_fmt(fail_reason, "unable to identify algorithm of base key");
|
|
|
|
goto no_match;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
pk = ssh_key_new_pub(pkalg, pkblob);
|
|
|
|
if (!pk) {
|
|
|
|
put_fmt(fail_reason, "base public key is invalid");
|
|
|
|
goto no_match;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
pkbase = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
ssh_key_public_blob(ssh_key_base_key(pk), BinarySink_UPCAST(pkbase));
|
|
|
|
if (ptrlen_eq_ptrlen(ptrlen_from_strbuf(pkbase),
|
|
|
|
ptrlen_from_strbuf(certbase)))
|
|
|
|
goto match; /* yes, a match on 2nd attempt! */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Give up; we've tried to match these keys up and failed. */
|
|
|
|
put_fmt(fail_reason, "base public key does not match certificate");
|
|
|
|
goto no_match;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
match:
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* The two keys match, so insert the detached certificate into
|
|
|
|
* the output packet in place of the public key we were given.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* However, we need to be a bit careful with the algorithm
|
|
|
|
* name: we might need to upgrade it to one that matches the
|
|
|
|
* original algorithm name. (If we were asked to add an
|
|
|
|
* ssh-rsa key but were given algorithm name "rsa-sha2-512",
|
|
|
|
* then instead of the certificate's algorithm name
|
|
|
|
* ssh-rsa-cert-v01@... we need to write the corresponding
|
|
|
|
* SHA-512 name rsa-sha2-512-cert-v01@... .)
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
if (verbose) {
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Sending public key with certificate from \"%s\"",
|
|
|
|
filename_to_str(s->detached_cert_file));
|
|
|
|
}
|
2023-05-04 16:59:37 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
/* Strip off any existing certificate-nature from pkalg,
|
|
|
|
* for the case where we're replacing a cert embedded in
|
|
|
|
* the key with the detached one. The second argument of
|
|
|
|
* ssh_keyalg_related_alg is expected to be one of the
|
|
|
|
* bare key algorithms, or nothing useful will happen. */
|
|
|
|
const ssh_keyalg *pkalg_base =
|
|
|
|
pkalg->base_alg ? pkalg->base_alg : pkalg;
|
2023-05-04 17:24:18 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Construct an algorithm string that includes both the
|
|
|
|
* signature subtype (e.g. rsa-sha2-512) and the
|
|
|
|
* certificate-ness. Exception: in earlier versions of
|
|
|
|
* OpenSSH we don't want to do that, and must send just
|
|
|
|
* ssh-rsa-cert-... even when we're delivering a non-SHA-1
|
|
|
|
* signature. */
|
2023-05-04 16:59:37 +00:00
|
|
|
const ssh_keyalg *output_alg =
|
|
|
|
ssh_keyalg_related_alg(certalg, pkalg_base);
|
2023-05-04 17:24:18 +00:00
|
|
|
ptrlen output_id = ptrlen_from_asciz(output_alg->ssh_id);
|
|
|
|
output_id = workaround_rsa_sha2_cert_userauth(s, output_id);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
put_stringpl(pkt, output_id);
|
2023-05-04 16:59:37 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringpl(pkt, ptrlen_from_strbuf(s->detached_cert_blob));
|
|
|
|
done = true;
|
|
|
|
goto out;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
no_match:
|
|
|
|
/* Log that we didn't send the certificate, if this public key
|
|
|
|
* isn't the same one as last call to this function. (Need to
|
|
|
|
* avoid verbosely logging once for the offer and once for the
|
|
|
|
* real auth attempt.) */
|
|
|
|
if (verbose) {
|
|
|
|
ppl_logevent("Not substituting certificate \"%s\" for public "
|
|
|
|
"key: %s", filename_to_str(s->detached_cert_file),
|
|
|
|
fail_reason->s);
|
|
|
|
if (s->publickey_blob) {
|
|
|
|
/* If the user provided a specific key file to use (i.e.
|
|
|
|
* this wasn't just a key we picked opportunistically out
|
|
|
|
* of an agent), then they probably _care_ that we didn't
|
|
|
|
* send the certificate, so we should make a loud error
|
|
|
|
* message about it as well as just commenting in the
|
|
|
|
* Event Log. */
|
|
|
|
ppl_printf("Unable to use certificate \"%s\" with public "
|
|
|
|
"key \"%s\": %s\r\n",
|
|
|
|
filename_to_str(s->detached_cert_file),
|
|
|
|
filename_to_str(s->keyfile),
|
|
|
|
fail_reason->s);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
out:
|
|
|
|
/* Whether we did that or not, free our stuff. */
|
|
|
|
if (certbase)
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(certbase);
|
|
|
|
if (pkbase)
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(pkbase);
|
|
|
|
if (certkey)
|
|
|
|
ssh_key_free(certkey);
|
|
|
|
if (pk)
|
|
|
|
ssh_key_free(pk);
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(fail_reason);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* And if we did, don't fall through to the alternative below */
|
|
|
|
if (done)
|
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2023-05-04 17:24:18 +00:00
|
|
|
/* In all other cases, basically just put in what we were given -
|
|
|
|
* except for the same bug workaround as above. */
|
|
|
|
alg = workaround_rsa_sha2_cert_userauth(s, alg);
|
Support for detached certificates in userauth.
This is triggered by a new config option, or alternatively a -cert
command-line option. You provide a certificate file (i.e. a public key
containing one of the cert key formats), and then, whenever you
authenticate with a private key that matches the public key inside
that certificate, the certificate will be sent to the server in place
of whatever public key it would have used before.
I expect this to be more convenient for some users than the approach
of baking the certificate into a modified version of the PPK file -
especially users who want to use different certificates on the same
key, either in sequence (if a CA continually reissues certificates
with short lifetimes) or in parallel (if different hosts trust
different CAs).
In particular, this substitution is applied consistently, even when
doing authentication via an agent. So if your bare private key is held
in Pageant, you can _still_ specify a detached certificate, and PuTTY
will spot that the key it's picked from Pageant matches that
certificate, and do the same substitution.
The detached certificate also overrides an existing certificate, if
there was one on the public key already.
2022-04-21 09:55:44 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringpl(pkt, alg);
|
|
|
|
put_stringpl(pkt, pkblob);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2023-05-04 17:24:18 +00:00
|
|
|
static ptrlen workaround_rsa_sha2_cert_userauth(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, ptrlen id)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
if (!(s->ppl.remote_bugs & BUG_RSA_SHA2_CERT_USERAUTH))
|
|
|
|
return id;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* No need to try to do this in a general way based on the
|
|
|
|
* relations between ssh_keyalgs; we know there are a limited
|
|
|
|
* number of affected versions of OpenSSH, so this doesn't have to
|
|
|
|
* be futureproof against later additions to the family.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
if (ptrlen_eq_string(id, "rsa-sha2-256-cert-v01@openssh.com") ||
|
|
|
|
ptrlen_eq_string(id, "rsa-sha2-512-cert-v01@openssh.com"))
|
|
|
|
return PTRLEN_LITERAL("ssh-rsa-cert-v01@openssh.com");
|
|
|
|
return id;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Helper function to add an SSH-2 signature blob to a packet. Expects
|
|
|
|
* to be shown the public key blob as well as the signature blob.
|
|
|
|
* Normally just appends the sig blob unmodified as a string, except
|
|
|
|
* that it optionally breaks it open and fiddle with it to work around
|
|
|
|
* BUG_SSH2_RSA_PADDING.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_add_sigblob(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, PktOut *pkt, ptrlen pkblob, ptrlen sigblob)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
BinarySource pk[1], sig[1];
|
2019-02-06 20:47:18 +00:00
|
|
|
BinarySource_BARE_INIT_PL(pk, pkblob);
|
|
|
|
BinarySource_BARE_INIT_PL(sig, sigblob);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* dmemdump(pkblob, pkblob_len); */
|
|
|
|
/* dmemdump(sigblob, sigblob_len); */
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* See if this is in fact an ssh-rsa signature and a buggy
|
|
|
|
* server; otherwise we can just do this the easy way.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
if ((s->ppl.remote_bugs & BUG_SSH2_RSA_PADDING) &&
|
|
|
|
ptrlen_eq_string(get_string(pk), "ssh-rsa") &&
|
|
|
|
ptrlen_eq_string(get_string(sig), "ssh-rsa")) {
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
ptrlen mod_mp, sig_mp;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
size_t sig_prefix_len;
|
|
|
|
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Find the modulus and signature integers.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
get_string(pk); /* skip over exponent */
|
|
|
|
mod_mp = get_string(pk); /* remember modulus */
|
|
|
|
sig_prefix_len = sig->pos;
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
sig_mp = get_string(sig);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
if (get_err(pk) || get_err(sig))
|
|
|
|
goto give_up;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Find the byte length of the modulus, not counting leading
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
* zeroes.
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
*/
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
while (mod_mp.len > 0 && *(const char *)mod_mp.ptr == 0) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
mod_mp.len--;
|
|
|
|
mod_mp.ptr = (const char *)mod_mp.ptr + 1;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
/* debug("modulus length is %d\n", len); */
|
|
|
|
/* debug("signature length is %d\n", siglen); */
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2019-10-14 18:58:59 +00:00
|
|
|
if (mod_mp.len > sig_mp.len) {
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
strbuf *substr = strbuf_new();
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
put_data(substr, sigblob.ptr, sig_prefix_len);
|
|
|
|
put_uint32(substr, mod_mp.len);
|
|
|
|
put_padding(substr, mod_mp.len - sig_mp.len, 0);
|
|
|
|
put_datapl(substr, sig_mp);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringsb(pkt, substr);
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
}
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2019-09-08 19:29:00 +00:00
|
|
|
/* Otherwise fall through and do it the easy way. We also come
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
* here as a fallback if we discover above that the key blob
|
|
|
|
* is misformatted in some way. */
|
|
|
|
give_up:;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
put_stringpl(pkt, sigblob);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#ifndef NO_GSSAPI
|
|
|
|
static PktOut *ssh2_userauth_gss_packet(
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s, const char *authtype)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
strbuf *sb;
|
|
|
|
PktOut *p;
|
|
|
|
Ssh_gss_buf buf;
|
|
|
|
Ssh_gss_buf mic;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* The mic is computed over the session id + intended
|
|
|
|
* USERAUTH_REQUEST packet.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
sb = strbuf_new();
|
|
|
|
put_stringpl(sb, s->session_id);
|
|
|
|
put_byte(sb, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(sb, s->username);
|
2018-10-09 17:11:17 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(sb, s->successor_layer->vt->name);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(sb, authtype);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Compute the mic */
|
|
|
|
buf.value = sb->s;
|
|
|
|
buf.length = sb->len;
|
|
|
|
s->shgss->lib->get_mic(s->shgss->lib, s->shgss->ctx, &buf, &mic);
|
|
|
|
strbuf_free(sb);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Now we can build the real packet */
|
|
|
|
if (strcmp(authtype, "gssapi-with-mic") == 0) {
|
|
|
|
p = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_GSSAPI_MIC);
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
p = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(s->ppl.bpp, SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_REQUEST);
|
|
|
|
put_stringz(p, s->username);
|
2018-10-09 17:11:17 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(p, s->successor_layer->vt->name);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
put_stringz(p, authtype);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
put_string(p, mic.value, mic.length);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
return p;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
|
Convert a lot of 'int' variables to 'bool'.
My normal habit these days, in new code, is to treat int and bool as
_almost_ completely separate types. I'm still willing to use C's
implicit test for zero on an integer (e.g. 'if (!blob.len)' is fine,
no need to spell it out as blob.len != 0), but generally, if a
variable is going to be conceptually a boolean, I like to declare it
bool and assign to it using 'true' or 'false' rather than 0 or 1.
PuTTY is an exception, because it predates the C99 bool, and I've
stuck to its existing coding style even when adding new code to it.
But it's been annoying me more and more, so now that I've decided C99
bool is an acceptable thing to require from our toolchain in the first
place, here's a quite thorough trawl through the source doing
'boolification'. Many variables and function parameters are now typed
as bool rather than int; many assignments of 0 or 1 to those variables
are now spelled 'true' or 'false'.
I managed this thorough conversion with the help of a custom clang
plugin that I wrote to trawl the AST and apply heuristics to point out
where things might want changing. So I've even managed to do a decent
job on parts of the code I haven't looked at in years!
To make the plugin's work easier, I pushed platform front ends
generally in the direction of using standard 'bool' in preference to
platform-specific boolean types like Windows BOOL or GTK's gboolean;
I've left the platform booleans in places they _have_ to be for the
platform APIs to work right, but variables only used by my own code
have been converted wherever I found them.
In a few places there are int values that look very like booleans in
_most_ of the places they're used, but have a rarely-used third value,
or a distinction between different nonzero values that most users
don't care about. In these cases, I've _removed_ uses of 'true' and
'false' for the return values, to emphasise that there's something
more subtle going on than a simple boolean answer:
- the 'multisel' field in dialog.h's list box structure, for which
the GTK front end in particular recognises a difference between 1
and 2 but nearly everything else treats as boolean
- the 'urgent' parameter to plug_receive, where 1 vs 2 tells you
something about the specific location of the urgent pointer, but
most clients only care about 0 vs 'something nonzero'
- the return value of wc_match, where -1 indicates a syntax error in
the wildcard.
- the return values from SSH-1 RSA-key loading functions, which use
-1 for 'wrong passphrase' and 0 for all other failures (so any
caller which already knows it's not loading an _encrypted private_
key can treat them as boolean)
- term->esc_query, and the 'query' parameter in toggle_mode in
terminal.c, which _usually_ hold 0 for ESC[123h or 1 for ESC[?123h,
but can also hold -1 for some other intervening character that we
don't support.
In a few places there's an integer that I haven't turned into a bool
even though it really _can_ only take values 0 or 1 (and, as above,
tried to make the call sites consistent in not calling those values
true and false), on the grounds that I thought it would make it more
confusing to imply that the 0 value was in some sense 'negative' or
bad and the 1 positive or good:
- the return value of plug_accepting uses the POSIXish convention of
0=success and nonzero=error; I think if I made it bool then I'd
also want to reverse its sense, and that's a job for a separate
piece of work.
- the 'screen' parameter to lineptr() in terminal.c, where 0 and 1
represent the default and alternate screens. There's no obvious
reason why one of those should be considered 'true' or 'positive'
or 'success' - they're just indices - so I've left it as int.
ssh_scp_recv had particularly confusing semantics for its previous int
return value: its call sites used '<= 0' to check for error, but it
never actually returned a negative number, just 0 or 1. Now the
function and its call sites agree that it's a bool.
In a couple of places I've renamed variables called 'ret', because I
don't like that name any more - it's unclear whether it means the
return value (in preparation) for the _containing_ function or the
return value received from a subroutine call, and occasionally I've
accidentally used the same variable for both and introduced a bug. So
where one of those got in my way, I've renamed it to 'toret' or 'retd'
(the latter short for 'returned') in line with my usual modern
practice, but I haven't done a thorough job of finding all of them.
Finally, one amusing side effect of doing this is that I've had to
separate quite a few chained assignments. It used to be perfectly fine
to write 'a = b = c = TRUE' when a,b,c were int and TRUE was just a
the 'true' defined by stdbool.h, that idiom provokes a warning from
gcc: 'suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value'!
2018-11-02 19:23:19 +00:00
|
|
|
static bool ssh2_userauth_get_specials(
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
PacketProtocolLayer *ppl, add_special_fn_t add_special, void *ctx)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
/* No specials provided by this layer. */
|
2018-10-29 19:50:29 +00:00
|
|
|
return false;
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_special_cmd(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl,
|
|
|
|
SessionSpecialCode code, int arg)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
/* No specials provided by this layer. */
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_reconfigure(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl, Conf *conf)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s =
|
2018-10-05 22:49:08 +00:00
|
|
|
container_of(ppl, struct ssh2_userauth_state, ppl);
|
Move most of ssh.c out into separate source files.
I've tried to separate out as many individually coherent changes from
this work as I could into their own commits, but here's where I run
out and have to commit the rest of this major refactoring as a
big-bang change.
Most of ssh.c is now no longer in ssh.c: all five of the main
coroutines that handle layers of the SSH-1 and SSH-2 protocols now
each have their own source file to live in, and a lot of the
supporting functions have moved into the appropriate one of those too.
The new abstraction is a vtable called 'PacketProtocolLayer', which
has an input and output packet queue. Each layer's main coroutine is
invoked from the method ssh_ppl_process_queue(), which is usually
(though not exclusively) triggered automatically when things are
pushed on the input queue. In SSH-2, the base layer is the transport
protocol, and it contains a pair of subsidiary queues by which it
passes some of its packets to the higher SSH-2 layers - first userauth
and then connection, which are peers at the same level, with the
former abdicating in favour of the latter at the appropriate moment.
SSH-1 is simpler: the whole login phase of the protocol (crypto setup
and authentication) is all in one module, and since SSH-1 has no
repeat key exchange, that setup layer abdicates in favour of the
connection phase when it's done.
ssh.c itself is now about a tenth of its old size (which all by itself
is cause for celebration!). Its main job is to set up all the layers,
hook them up to each other and to the BPP, and to funnel data back and
forth between that collection of modules and external things such as
the network and the terminal. Once it's set up a collection of packet
protocol layers, it communicates with them partly by calling methods
of the base layer (and if that's ssh2transport then it will delegate
some functionality to the corresponding methods of its higher layer),
and partly by talking directly to the connection layer no matter where
it is in the stack by means of the separate ConnectionLayer vtable
which I introduced in commit 8001dd4cb, and to which I've now added
quite a few extra methods replacing services that used to be internal
function calls within ssh.c.
(One effect of this is that the SSH-1 and SSH-2 channel storage is now
no longer shared - there are distinct struct types ssh1_channel and
ssh2_channel. That means a bit more code duplication, but on the plus
side, a lot fewer confusing conditionals in the middle of half-shared
functions, and less risk of a piece of SSH-1 escaping into SSH-2 or
vice versa, which I remember has happened at least once in the past.)
The bulk of this commit introduces the five new source files, their
common header sshppl.h and some shared supporting routines in
sshcommon.c, and rewrites nearly all of ssh.c itself. But it also
includes a couple of other changes that I couldn't separate easily
enough:
Firstly, there's a new handling for socket EOF, in which ssh.c sets an
'input_eof' flag in the BPP, and that responds by checking a flag that
tells it whether to report the EOF as an error or not. (This is the
main reason for those new BPP_READ / BPP_WAITFOR macros - they can
check the EOF flag every time the coroutine is resumed.)
Secondly, the error reporting itself is changed around again. I'd
expected to put some data fields in the public PacketProtocolLayer
structure that it could set to report errors in the same way as the
BPPs have been doing, but in the end, I decided propagating all those
data fields around was a pain and that even the BPPs shouldn't have
been doing it that way. So I've reverted to a system where everything
calls back to functions in ssh.c itself to report any connection-
ending condition. But there's a new family of those functions,
categorising the possible such conditions by semantics, and each one
has a different set of detailed effects (e.g. how rudely to close the
network connection, what exit status should be passed back to the
whole application, whether to send a disconnect message and/or display
a GUI error box).
I don't expect this to be immediately perfect: of course, the code has
been through a big upheaval, new bugs are expected, and I haven't been
able to do a full job of testing (e.g. I haven't tested every auth or
kex method). But I've checked that it _basically_ works - both SSH
protocols, all the different kinds of forwarding channel, more than
one auth method, Windows and Linux, connection sharing - and I think
it's now at the point where the easiest way to find further bugs is to
let it out into the wild and see what users can spot.
2018-09-24 17:28:16 +00:00
|
|
|
ssh_ppl_reconfigure(s->successor_layer, conf);
|
|
|
|
}
|
2023-04-29 10:37:17 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
static void ssh2_userauth_final_output(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl)
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
struct ssh2_userauth_state *s =
|
|
|
|
container_of(ppl, struct ssh2_userauth_state, ppl);
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
|
|
* Check for any unconsumed banner packets that might have landed
|
|
|
|
* in our queue just before the server closed the connection, and
|
|
|
|
* add them to our banner buffer.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
for (PktIn *pktin = pq_first(s->ppl.in_pq); pktin != NULL;
|
|
|
|
pktin = pq_next(s->ppl.in_pq, pktin)) {
|
|
|
|
if (pktin->type == SSH2_MSG_USERAUTH_BANNER)
|
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_handle_banner_packet(s, pktin);
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* And now make sure we've shown the banner, before exiting */
|
|
|
|
ssh2_userauth_print_banner(s);
|
|
|
|
}
|