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mirror of https://git.tartarus.org/simon/putty.git synced 2025-01-10 09:58:01 +00:00
putty-source/misc.c
Simon Tatham 34f747421d Support for Windows PuTTY connecting straight to a local serial port
in place of making a network connection. This has involved a couple
of minor infrastructure changes:
 - New dlg_label_change() function in the dialog.h interface, which
   alters the label on a control. Only used, at present, to switch
   the Host Name and Port boxes into Serial Line and Speed, which
   means that any platform not implementing serial connections (i.e.
   currently all but Windows) does not need to actually do anything
   in this function. Yet.
 - New small piece of infrastructure: cfg_launchable() determines
   whether a Config structure describes a session ready to be
   launched. This was previously determined by seeing if it had a
   non-empty host name, but it has to check the serial line as well
   so there's a centralised function for it. I haven't gone through
   all front ends and arranged for this function to be used
   everywhere it needs to be; so far I've only checked Windows.
 - Similarly, cfg_dest() returns the destination of a connection
   (host name or serial line) in a text format suitable for putting
   into messages such as `Unable to connect to %s'.

[originally from svn r6815]
2006-08-28 10:35:12 +00:00

648 lines
15 KiB
C

/*
* Platform-independent routines shared between all PuTTY programs.
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include "putty.h"
/*
* Parse a string block size specification. This is approximately a
* subset of the block size specs supported by GNU fileutils:
* "nk" = n kilobytes
* "nM" = n megabytes
* "nG" = n gigabytes
* All numbers are decimal, and suffixes refer to powers of two.
* Case-insensitive.
*/
unsigned long parse_blocksize(const char *bs)
{
char *suf;
unsigned long r = strtoul(bs, &suf, 10);
if (*suf != '\0') {
while (*suf && isspace((unsigned char)*suf)) suf++;
switch (*suf) {
case 'k': case 'K':
r *= 1024ul;
break;
case 'm': case 'M':
r *= 1024ul * 1024ul;
break;
case 'g': case 'G':
r *= 1024ul * 1024ul * 1024ul;
break;
case '\0':
default:
break;
}
}
return r;
}
/*
* Parse a ^C style character specification.
* Returns NULL in `next' if we didn't recognise it as a control character,
* in which case `c' should be ignored.
* The precise current parsing is an oddity inherited from the terminal
* answerback-string parsing code. All sequences start with ^; all except
* ^<123> are two characters. The ones that are worth keeping are probably:
* ^? 127
* ^@A-Z[\]^_ 0-31
* a-z 1-26
* <num> specified by number (decimal, 0octal, 0xHEX)
* ~ ^ escape
*/
char ctrlparse(char *s, char **next)
{
char c = 0;
if (*s != '^') {
*next = NULL;
} else {
s++;
if (*s == '\0') {
*next = NULL;
} else if (*s == '<') {
s++;
c = (char)strtol(s, next, 0);
if ((*next == s) || (**next != '>')) {
c = 0;
*next = NULL;
} else
(*next)++;
} else if (*s >= 'a' && *s <= 'z') {
c = (*s - ('a' - 1));
*next = s+1;
} else if ((*s >= '@' && *s <= '_') || *s == '?' || (*s & 0x80)) {
c = ('@' ^ *s);
*next = s+1;
} else if (*s == '~') {
c = '^';
*next = s+1;
}
}
return c;
}
prompts_t *new_prompts(void *frontend)
{
prompts_t *p = snew(prompts_t);
p->prompts = NULL;
p->n_prompts = 0;
p->frontend = frontend;
p->data = NULL;
p->to_server = TRUE; /* to be on the safe side */
p->name = p->instruction = NULL;
p->name_reqd = p->instr_reqd = FALSE;
return p;
}
void add_prompt(prompts_t *p, char *promptstr, int echo, size_t len)
{
prompt_t *pr = snew(prompt_t);
unsigned char *result = snewn(len, unsigned char);
pr->prompt = promptstr;
pr->echo = echo;
pr->result = result;
pr->result_len = len;
p->n_prompts++;
p->prompts = sresize(p->prompts, p->n_prompts, prompt_t *);
p->prompts[p->n_prompts-1] = pr;
}
void free_prompts(prompts_t *p)
{
size_t i;
for (i=0; i < p->n_prompts; i++) {
prompt_t *pr = p->prompts[i];
memset(pr->result, 0, pr->result_len); /* burn the evidence */
sfree(pr->result);
sfree(pr->prompt);
sfree(pr);
}
sfree(p->prompts);
sfree(p->name);
sfree(p->instruction);
sfree(p);
}
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
* String handling routines.
*/
char *dupstr(const char *s)
{
char *p = NULL;
if (s) {
int len = strlen(s);
p = snewn(len + 1, char);
strcpy(p, s);
}
return p;
}
/* Allocate the concatenation of N strings. Terminate arg list with NULL. */
char *dupcat(const char *s1, ...)
{
int len;
char *p, *q, *sn;
va_list ap;
len = strlen(s1);
va_start(ap, s1);
while (1) {
sn = va_arg(ap, char *);
if (!sn)
break;
len += strlen(sn);
}
va_end(ap);
p = snewn(len + 1, char);
strcpy(p, s1);
q = p + strlen(p);
va_start(ap, s1);
while (1) {
sn = va_arg(ap, char *);
if (!sn)
break;
strcpy(q, sn);
q += strlen(q);
}
va_end(ap);
return p;
}
/*
* Do an sprintf(), but into a custom-allocated buffer.
*
* Currently I'm doing this via vsnprintf. This has worked so far,
* but it's not good, because:
*
* - vsnprintf is not available on all platforms. There's an ifdef
* to use `_vsnprintf', which seems to be the local name for it
* on Windows. Other platforms may lack it completely, in which
* case it'll be time to rewrite this function in a totally
* different way.
*
* - technically you can't reuse a va_list like this: it is left
* unspecified whether advancing a va_list pointer modifies its
* value or something it points to, so on some platforms calling
* vsnprintf twice on the same va_list might fail hideously. It
* would be better to use the `va_copy' macro mandated by C99,
* but that too is not yet ubiquitous.
*
* The only `properly' portable solution I can think of is to
* implement my own format string scanner, which figures out an
* upper bound for the length of each formatting directive,
* allocates the buffer as it goes along, and calls sprintf() to
* actually process each directive. If I ever need to actually do
* this, some caveats:
*
* - It's very hard to find a reliable upper bound for
* floating-point values. %f, in particular, when supplied with
* a number near to the upper or lower limit of representable
* numbers, could easily take several hundred characters. It's
* probably feasible to predict this statically using the
* constants in <float.h>, or even to predict it dynamically by
* looking at the exponent of the specific float provided, but
* it won't be fun.
*
* - Don't forget to _check_, after calling sprintf, that it's
* used at most the amount of space we had available.
*
* - Fault any formatting directive we don't fully understand. The
* aim here is to _guarantee_ that we never overflow the buffer,
* because this is a security-critical function. If we see a
* directive we don't know about, we should panic and die rather
* than run any risk.
*/
char *dupprintf(const char *fmt, ...)
{
char *ret;
va_list ap;
va_start(ap, fmt);
ret = dupvprintf(fmt, ap);
va_end(ap);
return ret;
}
char *dupvprintf(const char *fmt, va_list ap)
{
char *buf;
int len, size;
buf = snewn(512, char);
size = 512;
while (1) {
#ifdef _WINDOWS
#define vsnprintf _vsnprintf
#endif
len = vsnprintf(buf, size, fmt, ap);
if (len >= 0 && len < size) {
/* This is the C99-specified criterion for snprintf to have
* been completely successful. */
return buf;
} else if (len > 0) {
/* This is the C99 error condition: the returned length is
* the required buffer size not counting the NUL. */
size = len + 1;
} else {
/* This is the pre-C99 glibc error condition: <0 means the
* buffer wasn't big enough, so we enlarge it a bit and hope. */
size += 512;
}
buf = sresize(buf, size, char);
}
}
/*
* Read an entire line of text from a file. Return a buffer
* malloced to be as big as necessary (caller must free).
*/
char *fgetline(FILE *fp)
{
char *ret = snewn(512, char);
int size = 512, len = 0;
while (fgets(ret + len, size - len, fp)) {
len += strlen(ret + len);
if (ret[len-1] == '\n')
break; /* got a newline, we're done */
size = len + 512;
ret = sresize(ret, size, char);
}
if (len == 0) { /* first fgets returned NULL */
sfree(ret);
return NULL;
}
ret[len] = '\0';
return ret;
}
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
* Base64 encoding routine. This is required in public-key writing
* but also in HTTP proxy handling, so it's centralised here.
*/
void base64_encode_atom(unsigned char *data, int n, char *out)
{
static const char base64_chars[] =
"ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789+/";
unsigned word;
word = data[0] << 16;
if (n > 1)
word |= data[1] << 8;
if (n > 2)
word |= data[2];
out[0] = base64_chars[(word >> 18) & 0x3F];
out[1] = base64_chars[(word >> 12) & 0x3F];
if (n > 1)
out[2] = base64_chars[(word >> 6) & 0x3F];
else
out[2] = '=';
if (n > 2)
out[3] = base64_chars[word & 0x3F];
else
out[3] = '=';
}
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
* Generic routines to deal with send buffers: a linked list of
* smallish blocks, with the operations
*
* - add an arbitrary amount of data to the end of the list
* - remove the first N bytes from the list
* - return a (pointer,length) pair giving some initial data in
* the list, suitable for passing to a send or write system
* call
* - retrieve a larger amount of initial data from the list
* - return the current size of the buffer chain in bytes
*/
#define BUFFER_GRANULE 512
struct bufchain_granule {
struct bufchain_granule *next;
int buflen, bufpos;
char buf[BUFFER_GRANULE];
};
void bufchain_init(bufchain *ch)
{
ch->head = ch->tail = NULL;
ch->buffersize = 0;
}
void bufchain_clear(bufchain *ch)
{
struct bufchain_granule *b;
while (ch->head) {
b = ch->head;
ch->head = ch->head->next;
sfree(b);
}
ch->tail = NULL;
ch->buffersize = 0;
}
int bufchain_size(bufchain *ch)
{
return ch->buffersize;
}
void bufchain_add(bufchain *ch, const void *data, int len)
{
const char *buf = (const char *)data;
if (len == 0) return;
ch->buffersize += len;
if (ch->tail && ch->tail->buflen < BUFFER_GRANULE) {
int copylen = min(len, BUFFER_GRANULE - ch->tail->buflen);
memcpy(ch->tail->buf + ch->tail->buflen, buf, copylen);
buf += copylen;
len -= copylen;
ch->tail->buflen += copylen;
}
while (len > 0) {
int grainlen = min(len, BUFFER_GRANULE);
struct bufchain_granule *newbuf;
newbuf = snew(struct bufchain_granule);
newbuf->bufpos = 0;
newbuf->buflen = grainlen;
memcpy(newbuf->buf, buf, grainlen);
buf += grainlen;
len -= grainlen;
if (ch->tail)
ch->tail->next = newbuf;
else
ch->head = ch->tail = newbuf;
newbuf->next = NULL;
ch->tail = newbuf;
}
}
void bufchain_consume(bufchain *ch, int len)
{
struct bufchain_granule *tmp;
assert(ch->buffersize >= len);
while (len > 0) {
int remlen = len;
assert(ch->head != NULL);
if (remlen >= ch->head->buflen - ch->head->bufpos) {
remlen = ch->head->buflen - ch->head->bufpos;
tmp = ch->head;
ch->head = tmp->next;
sfree(tmp);
if (!ch->head)
ch->tail = NULL;
} else
ch->head->bufpos += remlen;
ch->buffersize -= remlen;
len -= remlen;
}
}
void bufchain_prefix(bufchain *ch, void **data, int *len)
{
*len = ch->head->buflen - ch->head->bufpos;
*data = ch->head->buf + ch->head->bufpos;
}
void bufchain_fetch(bufchain *ch, void *data, int len)
{
struct bufchain_granule *tmp;
char *data_c = (char *)data;
tmp = ch->head;
assert(ch->buffersize >= len);
while (len > 0) {
int remlen = len;
assert(tmp != NULL);
if (remlen >= tmp->buflen - tmp->bufpos)
remlen = tmp->buflen - tmp->bufpos;
memcpy(data_c, tmp->buf + tmp->bufpos, remlen);
tmp = tmp->next;
len -= remlen;
data_c += remlen;
}
}
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
* My own versions of malloc, realloc and free. Because I want
* malloc and realloc to bomb out and exit the program if they run
* out of memory, realloc to reliably call malloc if passed a NULL
* pointer, and free to reliably do nothing if passed a NULL
* pointer. We can also put trace printouts in, if we need to; and
* we can also replace the allocator with an ElectricFence-like
* one.
*/
#ifdef MINEFIELD
void *minefield_c_malloc(size_t size);
void minefield_c_free(void *p);
void *minefield_c_realloc(void *p, size_t size);
#endif
#ifdef MALLOC_LOG
static FILE *fp = NULL;
static char *mlog_file = NULL;
static int mlog_line = 0;
void mlog(char *file, int line)
{
mlog_file = file;
mlog_line = line;
if (!fp) {
fp = fopen("putty_mem.log", "w");
setvbuf(fp, NULL, _IONBF, BUFSIZ);
}
if (fp)
fprintf(fp, "%s:%d: ", file, line);
}
#endif
void *safemalloc(size_t n, size_t size)
{
void *p;
if (n > INT_MAX / size) {
p = NULL;
} else {
size *= n;
if (size == 0) size = 1;
#ifdef MINEFIELD
p = minefield_c_malloc(size);
#else
p = malloc(size);
#endif
}
if (!p) {
char str[200];
#ifdef MALLOC_LOG
sprintf(str, "Out of memory! (%s:%d, size=%d)",
mlog_file, mlog_line, size);
fprintf(fp, "*** %s\n", str);
fclose(fp);
#else
strcpy(str, "Out of memory!");
#endif
modalfatalbox(str);
}
#ifdef MALLOC_LOG
if (fp)
fprintf(fp, "malloc(%d) returns %p\n", size, p);
#endif
return p;
}
void *saferealloc(void *ptr, size_t n, size_t size)
{
void *p;
if (n > INT_MAX / size) {
p = NULL;
} else {
size *= n;
if (!ptr) {
#ifdef MINEFIELD
p = minefield_c_malloc(size);
#else
p = malloc(size);
#endif
} else {
#ifdef MINEFIELD
p = minefield_c_realloc(ptr, size);
#else
p = realloc(ptr, size);
#endif
}
}
if (!p) {
char str[200];
#ifdef MALLOC_LOG
sprintf(str, "Out of memory! (%s:%d, size=%d)",
mlog_file, mlog_line, size);
fprintf(fp, "*** %s\n", str);
fclose(fp);
#else
strcpy(str, "Out of memory!");
#endif
modalfatalbox(str);
}
#ifdef MALLOC_LOG
if (fp)
fprintf(fp, "realloc(%p,%d) returns %p\n", ptr, size, p);
#endif
return p;
}
void safefree(void *ptr)
{
if (ptr) {
#ifdef MALLOC_LOG
if (fp)
fprintf(fp, "free(%p)\n", ptr);
#endif
#ifdef MINEFIELD
minefield_c_free(ptr);
#else
free(ptr);
#endif
}
#ifdef MALLOC_LOG
else if (fp)
fprintf(fp, "freeing null pointer - no action taken\n");
#endif
}
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
* Debugging routines.
*/
#ifdef DEBUG
extern void dputs(char *); /* defined in per-platform *misc.c */
void debug_printf(char *fmt, ...)
{
char *buf;
va_list ap;
va_start(ap, fmt);
buf = dupvprintf(fmt, ap);
dputs(buf);
sfree(buf);
va_end(ap);
}
void debug_memdump(void *buf, int len, int L)
{
int i;
unsigned char *p = buf;
char foo[17];
if (L) {
int delta;
debug_printf("\t%d (0x%x) bytes:\n", len, len);
delta = 15 & (int) p;
p -= delta;
len += delta;
}
for (; 0 < len; p += 16, len -= 16) {
dputs(" ");
if (L)
debug_printf("%p: ", p);
strcpy(foo, "................"); /* sixteen dots */
for (i = 0; i < 16 && i < len; ++i) {
if (&p[i] < (unsigned char *) buf) {
dputs(" "); /* 3 spaces */
foo[i] = ' ';
} else {
debug_printf("%c%02.2x",
&p[i] != (unsigned char *) buf
&& i % 4 ? '.' : ' ', p[i]
);
if (p[i] >= ' ' && p[i] <= '~')
foo[i] = (char) p[i];
}
}
foo[i] = '\0';
debug_printf("%*s%s\n", (16 - i) * 3 + 2, "", foo);
}
}
#endif /* def DEBUG */
/*
* Determine whether or not a Config structure represents a session
* which can sensibly be launched right now.
*/
int cfg_launchable(const Config *cfg)
{
if (cfg->protocol == PROT_SERIAL)
return cfg->serline[0] != 0;
else
return cfg->host[0] != 0;
}
char const *cfg_dest(const Config *cfg)
{
if (cfg->protocol == PROT_SERIAL)
return cfg->serline;
else
return cfg->host;
}