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202 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Simon Tatham
9da36bd897 Remove agent_schedule_callback().
This is another piece of the old 2003 attempt at async agent requests.
Nothing ever calls this function (in particular, the new working
version of async-agent doesn't need it). Remove it completely, and all
its special-window-message implementations too.

(If we _were_ still using this function, then it would surely be
possible to fold it into the more recently introduced general
toplevel-callback system, and get rid of all this single-use special
code. But we're not, so removing it completely is even easier.)

In particular, this system was the only reason why Windows Plink paid
any attention to its message queue. So now I can make it call plain
WaitForMultipleObjects instead of MsgWaitForMultipleObjects.
2020-01-30 06:40:21 +00:00
Simon Tatham
4ea811a0bf Remove 'GLOBAL int flags' completely!
It no longer has any flags in it at all, so its day is done.
2020-01-30 06:40:21 +00:00
Simon Tatham
e5f85fc269 Remove FLAG_SYNCAGENT.
This was the easiest flag to remove: nothing ever checks it at all!

It was part of an abandoned early attempt to make Pageant requests
asynchronous. The flag was added in commit 135abf244 (April 2003); the
code that used it was #ifdef-ed out in commit 98d735fde (January 2004),
and removed completely in commit f864265e3 (January 2017).

We now have an actually working system for async agent requests on
Windows, via the new named-pipe IPC. And we also have a perfectly good
way to force a particular agent request to work synchronously: just
pass NULL as the callback function pointer. All of that works just
fine, without ever using this flag. So begone!
2020-01-30 06:40:21 +00:00
Simon Tatham
dc59fcf8e3 Remove FLAG_INTERACTIVE.
This is simpler than FLAG_VERBOSE: everywhere we need to check it, we
have a Seat available, so we can just make it a Seat query method.
2020-01-30 06:40:21 +00:00
Simon Tatham
d20d3b20fd 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
Simon Tatham
5e468129f6 Refactor 'struct context *ctx = &actx' pattern.
When I'm declaring a local instance of some context structure type to
pass to a function which will pass it in turn to a callback, I've
tended to use a declaration of the form

    struct context actx, *ctx = &actx;

so that the outermost caller can initialise the context, and/or read
out fields of it afterwards, by the same syntax 'ctx->foo' that the
callback function will be using. So you get visual consistency between
the two functions that share this context.

It only just occurred to me that there's a much neater way to declare
a context struct of this kind, which still makes 'ctx' behave like a
pointer in the owning function, and doesn't need all that weird
verbiage or a spare variable name:

    struct context ctx[1];

That's much nicer! I've switched to doing that in all existing cases I
could find, and also in a couple of cases where I hadn't previously
bothered to do the previous more cumbersome idiom.
2019-12-24 13:47:46 +00:00
Simon Tatham
1547c9c1ec Make dupcat() into a variadic macro.
Up until now, it's been a variadic _function_, whose argument list
consists of 'const char *' ASCIZ strings to concatenate, terminated by
one containing a null pointer. Now, that function is dupcat_fn(), and
it's wrapped by a C99 variadic _macro_ called dupcat(), which
automatically suffixes the null-pointer terminating argument.

This has three benefits. Firstly, it's just less effort at every call
site. Secondly, it protects against the risk of accidentally leaving
off the NULL, causing arbitrary words of stack memory to be
dereferenced as char pointers. And thirdly, it protects against the
more subtle risk of writing a bare 'NULL' as the terminating argument,
instead of casting it explicitly to a pointer. That last one is
necessary because C permits the macro NULL to expand to an integer
constant such as 0, so NULL by itself may not have pointer type, and
worse, it may not be marshalled in a variadic argument list in the
same way as a pointer. (For example, on a 64-bit machine it might only
occupy 32 bits. And yet, on another 64-bit platform, it might work
just fine, so that you don't notice the mistake!)

I was inspired to do this by happening to notice one of those bare
NULL terminators, and thinking I'd better check if there were any
more. Turned out there were quite a few. Now there are none.
2019-10-14 19:42:37 +01:00
Simon Tatham
00112549bf Convert a few more universal asserts to unreachable().
When I introduced the unreachable() macro in commit 0112936ef, I
searched the source code for assert(0) and assert(false), together
with their variant form assert(0 && "explanatory text"). But I didn't
search for assert(!"explanatory text"), which is the form I used to
use before finding that assert(0 && "text") seemed to be preferred in
other code bases.

So, here's a belated replacement of all the assert(!"stuff") macros
with further instances of unreachable().
2019-09-09 19:12:02 +01:00
Simon Tatham
5d718ef64b Whitespace rationalisation of entire code base.
The number of people has been steadily increasing who read our source
code with an editor that thinks tab stops are 4 spaces apart, as
opposed to the traditional tty-derived 8 that the PuTTY code expects.

So I've been wondering for ages about just fixing it, and switching to
a spaces-only policy throughout the code. And I recently found out
about 'git blame -w', which should make this change not too disruptive
for the purposes of source-control archaeology; so perhaps now is the
time.

While I'm at it, I've also taken the opportunity to remove all the
trailing spaces from source lines (on the basis that git dislikes
them, and is the only thing that seems to have a strong opinion one
way or the other).
    
Apologies to anyone downstream of this code who has complicated patch
sets to rebase past this change. I don't intend it to be needed again.
2019-09-08 20:29:21 +01:00
Simon Tatham
70fd577e40 Fall back to not sorting large dirs in pscp -ls or psftp 'ls'.
This mitigates a borderline-DoS in which a malicious SFTP server sends
a ludicrously large number of file names in response to a SFTP
opendir/readdir request sequence, causing the client to buffer them
all and use up all the system's memory simply so that it can produce
the output in sorted order.

I call it a 'borderline' DoS because it's very likely that this is the
same server that you'll also trust to actually send you the _contents_
of some entire file or directory, in which case, if they want to DoS
you they can do that anyway at that point and you have no way to tell
a legit very large file from a bad one. So it's unclear to me that
anyone would get any real advantage out of 'exploiting' this that they
couldn't have got anyway by other means.

That said, it may have practical benefits in the occasional case.
Imagine a _legit_ gigantic directory (something like a maildir,
perhaps, and perhaps stored on a server-side filesystem specialising
in not choking on really huge single directories), together with a
client workflow that involves listing the whole directory but then
downloading only one particular file in it.

For the moment, the threshold size is fixed at 8Mb of total data
(counting the lengths of the file names as well as just the number of
files). If that needs to become configurable later, we can always add
an option.
2019-07-10 20:47:09 +01:00
Simon Tatham
e2a047ad8d Fix assorted memory leaks.
Affects command-line PuTTYgen, PSFTP, and anything running the SSH-2
userauth client layer.

Tweaked version of a patch due to Tim Kosse.
2019-07-06 18:07:42 +01:00
Simon Tatham
76d8d363be Seat method to set the current trust status.
In terminal-based GUI applications, this is passed through to
term_set_trust_status, to toggle whether lines are prefixed with the
new trust sigil. In console applications, the function returns false,
indicating to the backend that it should employ some other technique
for spoofing protection.
2019-03-16 12:25:23 +00:00
Simon Tatham
d049f0ab6c Make stripctrl_string take an existing StripCtrlChars.
Now instead of making a StripCtrlChars just for that function call, it
uses an existing one, pointing it at the output strbuf via
stripctrl_retarget.

This adds flexibility (now you can use the same convenient string-
sanitising function with a StripCtrl configured in any way you like)
and also saves pointless setting-up and tearing-down of identical sccs
all the time.

The existing call sites in PSCP and PSFTP now use a static
StripCtrlChars instance that was made at program startup.
2019-03-09 16:21:49 +00:00
Simon Tatham
d60dcc2c82 Add a Seat vtable method to get a stripctrl.
If centralised code like the SSH implementation wants to sanitise
escape sequences out of a piece of server-provided text, it will need
to do it by making a locale-based StripCtrlChars if it's running in a
console context, or a Terminal-based one if it's in a GUI terminal-
window application.

All the other changes of behaviour needed between those two contexts
are handled by providing reconfigurable methods in the Seat vtable;
this one is no different. So now there's a new method in the Seat
vtable that will construct a StripCtrlChars appropriate to that kind
of seat. Terminal-window seats (gtkwin.c, window.c) implement it by
calling the new stripctrl_new_term(), and console ones use the locale-
based stripctrl_new().
2019-03-06 20:31:26 +00:00
Simon Tatham
e0a76971cc New array-growing macros: sgrowarray and sgrowarrayn.
The idea of these is that they centralise the common idiom along the
lines of

   if (logical_array_len >= physical_array_size) {
       physical_array_size = logical_array_len * 5 / 4 + 256;
       array = sresize(array, physical_array_size, ElementType);
   }

which happens at a zillion call sites throughout this code base, with
different random choices of the geometric factor and additive
constant, sometimes forgetting them completely, and generally doing a
lot of repeated work.

The new macro sgrowarray(array,size,n) has the semantics: here are the
array pointer and its physical size for you to modify, now please
ensure that the nth element exists, so I can write into it. And
sgrowarrayn(array,size,n,m) is the same except that it ensures that
the array has size at least n+m (so sgrowarray is just the special
case where m=1).

Now that this is a single centralised implementation that will be used
everywhere, I've also gone to more effort in the implementation, with
careful overflow checks that would have been painful to put at all the
previous call sites.

This commit also switches over every use of sresize(), apart from a
few where I really didn't think it would gain anything. A consequence
of that is that a lot of array-size variables have to have their types
changed to size_t, because the macros require that (they address-take
the size to pass to the underlying function).
2019-02-28 20:15:38 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
21299b9cd5 Remove duplicate -no-sanitise-stderr from usage(). 2019-02-21 00:27:56 +00:00
Simon Tatham
2675f9578d File transfer tools: sanitise remote filenames and stderr.
This commit adds sanitisation to PSCP and PSFTP in the same style as
I've just put it into Plink. This time, standard error is sanitised
without reference to whether it's redirected (at least unless you give
an override option), on the basis that where Plink is _sometimes_ an
SSH transport for some other protocol, PSCP and PSFTP _always_ are.

But also, the sanitiser is run over any remote filename sent by the
server, substituting ? for any control characters it finds. That
removes another avenue for the server to deliberately confuse the
display.

This commit fixes our bug 'pscp-unsanitised-server-output', aka the
two notional 'vulnerabilities' CVE-2019-6109 and CVE-2019-6110.
(Although we regard those in isolation as only bugs, not serious
vulnerabilities, because their main threat was in hiding the evidence
of a server having exploited other more serious vulns that we never
had.)
2019-02-20 07:27:22 +00:00
Simon Tatham
0cda34c6f8 Make lots of 'int' length fields into size_t.
This is a general cleanup which has been overdue for some time: lots
of length fields are now the machine word type rather than the (in
practice) fixed 'int'.
2019-02-06 21:46:10 +00:00
Simon Tatham
0aa8cf7b0d Add some missing 'const'.
plug_receive(), sftp_senddata() and handle_gotdata() in particular now
take const pointers. Also fixed 'char *receive_data' in struct
ProxySocket.
2019-02-06 21:46:10 +00:00
Simon Tatham
0b14e7376e Replace all 'sizeof(x)/sizeof(*x)' with lenof.
I noticed a few of these in the course of preparing the previous
commit. I must have been writing that idiom out by hand for _ages_
before it became totally habitual to #define it as 'lenof' in every
codebase I touch. Now I've gone through and replaced all the old
verbosity with nice terse lenofs.
2019-01-04 08:04:39 +00:00
Simon Tatham
85fbb4216e pscp: replace crash with diagnostic on opendir failure.
A user points out that the call to close_directory() in pscp.c's
rsource() function should have been inside rather than outside the if
statement that checks whether the directory handle is NULL. As a
result, any failed attempt to open a directory during a 'pscp -r'
recursive upload leads to a null-pointer dereference.

Moved the close_directory call to where it should be, and also
arranged to print the OS error code if the directory-open fails, by
also changing the API of open_directory to return an error string on
failure.
2018-12-27 16:52:23 +00:00
Simon Tatham
e9b49fdced psftp: stop checking the return of canonify() for NULL.
It hasn't been possible for canonify() to return a null pointer since
commit 094dd30d9, in 2001. But the whole of psftp.c is full of error
checking clauses that allow for the possibility that it might!
2018-12-01 17:01:32 +00:00
Simon Tatham
144b738f31 pscp, psftp: use a bufchain in ssh_scp_recv.
The ad-hoc code that received data from the SCP or SFTP server
predated even not-very-modern conveniences such as bufchain, and was
quite horrible and cumbersome.

Particularly nasty was the part where ssh_scp_recv set a _global_
pointer variable to the buffer it was in the middle of writing to, and
then recursed and expected a callback to use that pointer. That caused
clang-analyzer to grumble at me, in a particular case where the output
buffer was in the ultimate caller's stack frame; even though I'm
confident the code _worked_, I can't blame clang for being unhappy!

So now we do things the modern and much simpler way: the callback when
data comes in just puts it on a bufchain, and the top-level
ssh_scp_recv repeatedly waits until data arrives in the bufchain and
then copies it to the output buffer.
2018-12-01 16:56:25 +00:00
Pavel I. Kryukov
a4b5f66d93 Remove 'static' qualifier from Conf pointer
Configuration pointer is globally visible from winstuff.h, so it cannot
be 'static' any longer.
2018-11-04 08:29:15 +00:00
Simon Tatham
91d16881ab Add missing 'static' on file-internal declarations.
sk_startup and sk_nextaddr are entirely internal to winnet.c; nearly
all of import.c and minibidi.c's internal routines should have been
static and weren't; {read,write}_utf8 are internal to charset/utf8.c
(and didn't even need separate declarations at all); do_sftp_cleanup
is internal to psftp.c, and get_listitemheight to gtkdlg.c.

While I was editing those prototypes anyway, I've also added missing
'const' to the 'char *' passphrase parameters in import,c.
2018-11-03 13:45:00 +00:00
Simon Tatham
3214563d8e 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'!
2018-11-03 13:45:00 +00:00
Simon Tatham
1378bb049a Switch some Conf settings over to being bool.
I think this is the full set of things that ought logically to be
boolean.

One annoyance is that quite a few radio-button controls in config.c
address Conf fields that are now bool rather than int, which means
that the shared handler function can't just access them all with
conf_{get,set}_int. Rather than back out the rigorous separation of
int and bool in conf.c itself, I've just added a similar alternative
handler function for the bool-typed ones.
2018-11-03 13:45:00 +00:00
Simon Tatham
a6f1709c2f Adopt C99 <stdbool.h>'s true/false.
This commit includes <stdbool.h> from defs.h and deletes my
traditional definitions of TRUE and FALSE, but other than that, it's a
100% mechanical search-and-replace transforming all uses of TRUE and
FALSE into the C99-standardised lowercase spellings.

No actual types are changed in this commit; that will come next. This
is just getting the noise out of the way, so that subsequent commits
can have a higher proportion of signal.
2018-11-03 13:45:00 +00:00
Simon Tatham
a647f2ba11 Adopt C99 <stdint.h> integer types.
The annoying int64.h is completely retired, since C99 guarantees a
64-bit integer type that you can actually treat like an ordinary
integer. Also, I've replaced the local typedefs uint32 and word32
(scattered through different parts of the crypto code) with the
standard uint32_t.
2018-11-03 13:25:50 +00:00
Simon Tatham
a081dd0a4c Add an SFTP server to the SSH server code.
Unlike the traditional Unix SSH server organisation, the SFTP server
is built into the same process as all the rest of the code. sesschan.c
spots a subsystem request for "sftp", and responds to it by
instantiating an SftpServer object and swapping out its own vtable for
one that talks to it.

(I rather like the idea of an object swapping its own vtable for a
different one in the middle of its lifetime! This is one of those
tricks that would be absurdly hard to implement in a 'proper' OO
language, but when you're doing vtables by hand in C, it's no more
difficult than any other piece of ordinary pointer manipulation. As
long as the methods in both vtables expect the same physical structure
layout, it doesn't cause a problem.)

The SftpServer object doesn't deal directly with SFTP packet formats;
it implements the SFTP server logic in a more abstract way, by having
a vtable method for each SFTP request type with an appropriate
parameter list. It sends its replies by calling methods in another
vtable called SftpReplyBuilder, which in the normal case will write an
SFTP reply packet to send back to the client. So SftpServer can focus
more or less completely on the details of a particular filesystem API
- and hence, the implementation I've got lives in the unix source
directory, and works directly with file descriptors and struct stat
and the like.

(One purpose of this abstraction layer is that I may well want to
write a second dummy implementation, for test-suite purposes, with
completely controllable behaviour, and now I have a handy place to
plug it in in place of the live filesystem.)

In between sesschan's parsing of the byte stream into SFTP packets and
the SftpServer object, there's a layer in the new file sftpserver.c
which does the actual packet decoding and encoding: each request
packet is passed to that, which pulls the fields out of the request
packet and calls the appropriate method of SftpServer. It also
provides the default SftpReplyBuilder which makes the output packet.

I've moved some code out of the previous SFTP client implementation -
basic packet construction code, and in particular the BinarySink/
BinarySource marshalling fuinction for fxp_attrs - into sftpcommon.c,
so that the two directions can share as much as possible.
2018-10-21 10:02:10 +01:00
Simon Tatham
99c215e761 Change Seat's get_char_cell_size to get_window_pixel_size.
That's more directly useful in uxpty.c (which is currently the only
actual client of the function), and also matches the data that SSH
clients send in "pty-req". Also, it makes that method behave more like
the GUI query function get_window_pixels used by terminal.c (with the
sole exception that unlike g_w_p it's allowed to return failure), so
it becomes even more trivial to implement in the GUI front ends.
2018-10-21 10:02:10 +01:00
Simon Tatham
b4c8fd9d86 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 19:58:42 +01:00
Simon Tatham
ad0c502cef Refactor the LogContext type.
LogContext is now the owner of the logevent() function that back ends
and so forth are constantly calling. Previously, logevent was owned by
the Frontend, which would store the message into its list for the GUI
Event Log dialog (or print it to standard error, or whatever) and then
pass it _back_ to LogContext to write to the currently open log file.
Now it's the other way round: LogContext gets the message from the
back end first, writes it to its log file if it feels so inclined, and
communicates it back to the front end.

This means that lots of parts of the back end system no longer need to
have a pointer to a full-on Frontend; the only thing they needed it
for was logging, so now they just have a LogContext (which many of
them had to have anyway, e.g. for logging SSH packets or session
traffic).

LogContext itself also doesn't get a full Frontend pointer any more:
it now talks back to the front end via a little vtable of its own
called LogPolicy, which contains the method that passes Event Log
entries through, the old askappend() function that decides whether to
truncate a pre-existing log file, and an emergency function for
printing an especially prominent message if the log file can't be
created. One minor nice effect of this is that console and GUI apps
can implement that last function subtly differently, so that Unix
console apps can write it with a plain \n instead of the \r\n
(harmless but inelegant) that the old centralised implementation
generated.

One other consequence of this is that the LogContext has to be
provided to backend_init() so that it's available to backends from the
instant of creation, rather than being provided via a separate API
call a couple of function calls later, because backends have typically
started doing things that need logging (like making network
connections) before the call to backend_provide_logctx. Fortunately,
there's no case in the whole code base where we don't already have
logctx by the time we make a backend (so I don't actually remember why
I ever delayed providing one). So that shortens the backend API by one
function, which is always nice.

While I'm tidying up, I've also moved the printf-style logeventf() and
the handy logevent_and_free() into logging.c, instead of having copies
of them scattered around other places. This has also let me remove
some stub functions from a couple of outlying applications like
Pageant. Finally, I've removed the pointless "_tag" at the end of
LogContext's official struct name.
2018-10-10 21:50:50 +01:00
Simon Tatham
6c0f22bb9f Give fxp_mkdir_send an attrs parameter.
It's not used anywhere, but this would make it one step easier to add
a mode argument to PSFTP's mkdir command, if anyone needs it. Mostly
the point is to get rid of the FIXME comment in fxp_mkdir_send itself.
2018-10-06 11:57:59 +01:00
Simon Tatham
f4fbaa1bd9 Rework special-commands system to add an integer argument.
In order to list cross-certifiable host keys in the GUI specials menu,
the SSH backend has been inventing new values on the end of the
Telnet_Special enumeration, starting from the value TS_LOCALSTART.
This is inelegant, and also makes it awkward to break up special
handlers (e.g. to dispatch different specials to different SSH
layers), since if all you know about a special is that it's somewhere
in the TS_LOCALSTART+n space, you can't tell what _general kind_ of
thing it is. Also, if I ever need another open-ended set of specials
in future, I'll have to remember which TS_LOCALSTART+n codes are in
which set.

So here's a revamp that causes every special to take an extra integer
argument. For all previously numbered specials, this argument is
passed as zero and ignored, but there's a new main special code for
SSH host key cross-certification, in which the integer argument is an
index into the backend's list of available keys. TS_LOCALSTART is now
a thing of the past: if I need any other open-ended sets of specials
in future, I can add a new top-level code with a nicely separated
space of arguments.

While I'm at it, I've removed the legacy misnomer 'Telnet_Special'
from the code completely; the enum is now SessionSpecialCode, the
struct containing full details of a menu entry is SessionSpecial, and
the enum values now start SS_ rather than TS_.
2018-09-24 09:43:39 +01:00
Simon Tatham
e230751853 Remove FLAG_STDERR completely.
Originally, it controlled whether ssh.c should send terminal messages
(such as login and password prompts) to terminal.c or to stderr. But
we've had the from_backend() abstraction for ages now, which even has
an existing flag to indicate that the data is stderr rather than
stdout data; applications which set FLAG_STDERR are precisely those
that link against uxcons or wincons, so from_backend will do the
expected thing anyway with data sent to it with that flag set. So
there's no reason ssh.c can't just unconditionally pass everything
through that, and remove the special case.

FLAG_STDERR was also used by winproxy and uxproxy to decide whether to
capture standard error from a local proxy command, or whether to let
the proxy command send its diagnostics directly to the usual standard
error. On reflection, I think it's better to unconditionally capture
the proxy's stderr, for three reasons. Firstly, it means proxy
diagnostics are prefixed with 'proxy:' so that you can tell them apart
from any other stderr spew (which used to be particularly confusing if
both the main application and the proxy command were instances of
Plink); secondly, proxy diagnostics are now reliably copied to packet
log files along with all the other Event Log entries, even by
command-line tools; and thirdly, this means the option to suppress
proxy command diagnostics after the main session starts will actually
_work_ in the command-line tools, which it previously couldn't.

A more minor structure change is that copying of Event Log messages to
stderr in verbose mode is now done by wincons/uxcons, instead of
centrally in logging.c (since logging.c can now no longer check
FLAG_STDERR to decide whether to do it). The total amount of code to
do this is considerably smaller than the defensive-sounding comment in
logevent.c explaining why I did it the other way instead :-)
2018-09-21 16:46:03 +01:00
Simon Tatham
63a14f26f7 Rework handling of untrusted terminal data.
Now there's a centralised routine in misc.c to do the sanitisation,
which copies data on to an outgoing bufchain. This allows me to remove
from_backend_untrusted() completely from the frontend API, simplifying
code in several places.

Two use cases for untrusted-terminal-data sanitisation were in the
terminal.c prompts handler, and in the collection of SSH-2 userauth
banners. Both of those were writing output to a bufchain anyway, so
it was very convenient to just replace a bufchain_add with
sanitise_term_data and then not have to worry about it again.

There was also a simplistic sanitiser in uxcons.c, which I've now
replaced with a call to the good one - and in wincons.c there was a
FIXME saying I ought to get round to that, which now I have!
2018-09-19 23:08:28 +01:00
Simon Tatham
8dfb2a1186 Introduce a typedef for frontend handles.
This is another major source of unexplained 'void *' parameters
throughout the code.

In particular, the currently unused testback.c actually gave the wrong
pointer type to its internal store of the frontend handle - it cast
the input void * to a Terminal *, from which it got implicitly cast
back again when calling from_backend, and nobody noticed. Now it uses
the right type internally as well as externally.
2018-09-19 22:10:58 +01:00
Simon Tatham
eefebaaa9e Turn Backend into a sensible classoid.
Nearly every part of the code that ever handles a full backend
structure has historically done it using a pair of pointer variables,
one pointing at a constant struct full of function pointers, and the
other pointing to a 'void *' state object that's passed to each of
those.

While I'm modernising the rest of the code, this seems like a good
time to turn that into the same more or less type-safe and less
cumbersome system as I'm using for other parts of the code, such as
Socket, Plug, BinaryPacketProtocol and so forth: the Backend structure
contains a vtable pointer, and a system of macro wrappers handles
dispatching through that vtable.
2018-09-19 22:10:58 +01:00
Simon Tatham
3814a5cee8 Make 'LogContext' a typedef visible throughout the code.
Same principle again - the more of these structures have globally
visible tags (even if the structure contents are still opaque in most
places), the fewer of them I can mistake for each other.
2018-09-19 22:10:57 +01:00
Simon Tatham
e72e8ebe59 Expose the Ldisc structure tag throughout the code.
That's one fewer anonymous 'void *' which might be accidentally
confused with some other pointer type if I misremember the order of
function arguments.

While I'm here, I've made its pointer-nature explicit - that is,
'Ldisc' is now a typedef for the structure type itself rather than a
pointer to it. A stylistic change only, but it feels more natural to
me these days for a thing you're going to eventually pass to a 'free'
function.
2018-09-19 22:10:57 +01:00
Simon Tatham
7babe66a83 Make lots of generic data parameters into 'void *'.
This is a cleanup I started to notice a need for during the BinarySink
work. It removes a lot of faffing about casting things to char * or
unsigned char * so that some API will accept them, even though lots of
such APIs really take a plain 'block of raw binary data' argument and
don't care what C thinks the signedness of that data might be - they
may well reinterpret it back and forth internally.

So I've tried to arrange for all the function call APIs that ought to
have a void * (or const void *) to have one, and those that need to do
pointer arithmetic on the parameter internally can cast it back at the
top of the function. That saves endless ad-hoc casts at the call
sites.
2018-05-26 09:22:43 +01:00
Simon Tatham
4f3f4ed691 Get rid of fatalbox() completely.
It's an incoherent concept! There should not be any such thing as an
error box that terminates the entire program but is not modal. If it's
bad enough to terminate the whole program, i.e. _all_ currently live
connections, then there's no point in permitting progress to continue
in windows other than the affected one, because all windows are
affected anyway.

So all previous uses of fatalbox() have become modalfatalbox(), except
those which looked to me as if they shouldn't have been fatal in the
first place, e.g. lingering pieces of error handling in winnet.c which
ought to have had the severity of 'give up on this particular Socket
and close it' rather than 'give up on the ENTIRE UNIVERSE'.
2017-11-26 17:43:02 +00:00
Simon Tatham
d61897414c Fixes spotted by Coverity.
A lenof() being applied to a non-array, a couple of missing frees on
an error path, and a case in pfd_receive() where we could have gone
round a loop again after freeing the port forwarding structure it was
working on.
2017-06-20 21:17:43 +01:00
Ilya Shipitsin
5efee18356 resolve couple of issues found by cppcheck:
[psftp.c:1135] -> [psftp.c:1134]: (warning) Either the condition '!dir' is redundant or there is possible null pointer dereference: dir.
[psftp.c:1420] -> [psftp.c:1419]: (warning) Either the condition '!dir' is redundant or there is possible null pointer dereference: dir.
2017-06-19 21:39:32 +05:00
Owen Dunn
988e26068e Regard dir/ls on non-existent directory as an error.
sftp_cmd_ls - return an error if attempting to open the directory
fails.
2017-02-18 22:51:03 +00:00
Owen Dunn
52a4ccad27 Return zero when reporting our version.
When called with -V to ask for our version, return 0 rather than 1.
This is the usual behaviour observed by ssh(1) and other Unix commands.
Also use exit() rather than cleanup_exit() in pscp.c and psftp.c ; at
this point we have nothing to cleanup!
2017-02-15 20:54:10 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
b14c3443d3 Document -proxycmd in help and man pages.
Also, in the main documentation, note the hazard that backslashes in the
command argument must be doubled.
2017-02-11 23:03:46 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
9a2730806c Log when -restrict-acl is in use.
Partly to reassure the user that they got what they asked for, and
partly so that's a clue for us in the logs when we get bug reports.

This involved repurposing platform_psftp_post_option_setup() (no longer
used since e22120fe) as platform_psftp_pre_conn_setup(), and moving it
to after logging is set up.
2017-02-11 00:44:00 +00:00
Jacob Nevins
415224eab5 Start logging earlier in PSCP and PSFTP.
We were missing log messages about the start of the network connection.
2017-02-11 00:23:36 +00:00