mirror of
https://git.tartarus.org/simon/putty.git
synced 2025-01-10 01:48:00 +00:00
a2ff884512
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!)
1014 lines
30 KiB
C
1014 lines
30 KiB
C
/*
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* Supporting routines used in common by all the various components of
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* the SSH system.
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*/
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#include <assert.h>
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#include <stdlib.h>
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#include "putty.h"
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#include "mpint.h"
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#include "ssh.h"
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#include "storage.h"
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#include "bpp.h"
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#include "ppl.h"
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#include "channel.h"
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/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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* Implementation of PacketQueue.
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*/
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static void pq_ensure_unlinked(PacketQueueNode *node)
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{
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if (node->on_free_queue) {
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node->next->prev = node->prev;
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node->prev->next = node->next;
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} else {
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assert(!node->next);
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assert(!node->prev);
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}
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}
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void pq_base_push(PacketQueueBase *pqb, PacketQueueNode *node)
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{
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pq_ensure_unlinked(node);
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node->next = &pqb->end;
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node->prev = pqb->end.prev;
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node->next->prev = node;
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node->prev->next = node;
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pqb->total_size += node->formal_size;
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if (pqb->ic)
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queue_idempotent_callback(pqb->ic);
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}
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void pq_base_push_front(PacketQueueBase *pqb, PacketQueueNode *node)
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{
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pq_ensure_unlinked(node);
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node->prev = &pqb->end;
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node->next = pqb->end.next;
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node->next->prev = node;
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node->prev->next = node;
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pqb->total_size += node->formal_size;
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if (pqb->ic)
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queue_idempotent_callback(pqb->ic);
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}
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static PacketQueueNode pktin_freeq_head = {
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&pktin_freeq_head, &pktin_freeq_head, true
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};
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static void pktin_free_queue_callback(void *vctx)
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{
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while (pktin_freeq_head.next != &pktin_freeq_head) {
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PacketQueueNode *node = pktin_freeq_head.next;
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PktIn *pktin = container_of(node, PktIn, qnode);
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pktin_freeq_head.next = node->next;
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sfree(pktin);
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}
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pktin_freeq_head.prev = &pktin_freeq_head;
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}
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static IdempotentCallback ic_pktin_free = {
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pktin_free_queue_callback, NULL, false
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};
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static inline void pq_unlink_common(PacketQueueBase *pqb,
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PacketQueueNode *node)
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{
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node->next->prev = node->prev;
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node->prev->next = node->next;
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/* Check total_size doesn't drift out of sync downwards, by
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* ensuring it doesn't underflow when we do this subtraction */
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assert(pqb->total_size >= node->formal_size);
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pqb->total_size -= node->formal_size;
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/* Check total_size doesn't drift out of sync upwards, by checking
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* that it's returned to exactly zero whenever a queue is
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* emptied */
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assert(pqb->end.next != &pqb->end || pqb->total_size == 0);
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}
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static PktIn *pq_in_after(PacketQueueBase *pqb,
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PacketQueueNode *prev, bool pop)
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{
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PacketQueueNode *node = prev->next;
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if (node == &pqb->end)
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return NULL;
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if (pop) {
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pq_unlink_common(pqb, node);
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node->prev = pktin_freeq_head.prev;
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node->next = &pktin_freeq_head;
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node->next->prev = node;
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node->prev->next = node;
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node->on_free_queue = true;
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queue_idempotent_callback(&ic_pktin_free);
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}
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return container_of(node, PktIn, qnode);
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}
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static PktOut *pq_out_after(PacketQueueBase *pqb,
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PacketQueueNode *prev, bool pop)
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{
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PacketQueueNode *node = prev->next;
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if (node == &pqb->end)
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return NULL;
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if (pop) {
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pq_unlink_common(pqb, node);
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node->prev = node->next = NULL;
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}
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return container_of(node, PktOut, qnode);
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}
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void pq_in_init(PktInQueue *pq)
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{
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pq->pqb.ic = NULL;
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pq->pqb.end.next = pq->pqb.end.prev = &pq->pqb.end;
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pq->after = pq_in_after;
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pq->pqb.total_size = 0;
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}
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void pq_out_init(PktOutQueue *pq)
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{
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pq->pqb.ic = NULL;
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pq->pqb.end.next = pq->pqb.end.prev = &pq->pqb.end;
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pq->after = pq_out_after;
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pq->pqb.total_size = 0;
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}
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void pq_in_clear(PktInQueue *pq)
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{
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PktIn *pkt;
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pq->pqb.ic = NULL;
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while ((pkt = pq_pop(pq)) != NULL) {
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/* No need to actually free these packets: pq_pop on a
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* PktInQueue will automatically move them to the free
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* queue. */
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}
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}
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void pq_out_clear(PktOutQueue *pq)
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{
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PktOut *pkt;
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pq->pqb.ic = NULL;
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while ((pkt = pq_pop(pq)) != NULL)
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ssh_free_pktout(pkt);
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}
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/*
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* Concatenate the contents of the two queues q1 and q2, and leave the
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* result in qdest. qdest must be either empty, or one of the input
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* queues.
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*/
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void pq_base_concatenate(PacketQueueBase *qdest,
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PacketQueueBase *q1, PacketQueueBase *q2)
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{
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struct PacketQueueNode *head1, *tail1, *head2, *tail2;
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size_t total_size = q1->total_size + q2->total_size;
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/*
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* Extract the contents from both input queues, and empty them.
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*/
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head1 = (q1->end.next == &q1->end ? NULL : q1->end.next);
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tail1 = (q1->end.prev == &q1->end ? NULL : q1->end.prev);
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head2 = (q2->end.next == &q2->end ? NULL : q2->end.next);
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tail2 = (q2->end.prev == &q2->end ? NULL : q2->end.prev);
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q1->end.next = q1->end.prev = &q1->end;
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q2->end.next = q2->end.prev = &q2->end;
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q1->total_size = q2->total_size = 0;
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/*
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* Link the two lists together, handling the case where one or
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* both is empty.
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*/
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if (tail1)
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tail1->next = head2;
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else
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head1 = head2;
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if (head2)
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head2->prev = tail1;
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else
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tail2 = tail1;
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/*
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* Check the destination queue is currently empty. (If it was one
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* of the input queues, then it will be, because we emptied both
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* of those just a moment ago.)
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*/
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assert(qdest->end.next == &qdest->end);
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assert(qdest->end.prev == &qdest->end);
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/*
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* If our concatenated list has anything in it, then put it in
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* dest.
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*/
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if (!head1) {
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assert(!tail2);
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} else {
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assert(tail2);
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qdest->end.next = head1;
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qdest->end.prev = tail2;
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head1->prev = &qdest->end;
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tail2->next = &qdest->end;
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if (qdest->ic)
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queue_idempotent_callback(qdest->ic);
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}
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qdest->total_size = total_size;
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}
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/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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* Low-level functions for the packet structures themselves.
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*/
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static void ssh_pkt_BinarySink_write(BinarySink *bs,
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const void *data, size_t len);
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PktOut *ssh_new_packet(void)
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{
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PktOut *pkt = snew(PktOut);
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BinarySink_INIT(pkt, ssh_pkt_BinarySink_write);
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pkt->data = NULL;
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pkt->length = 0;
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pkt->maxlen = 0;
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pkt->downstream_id = 0;
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pkt->additional_log_text = NULL;
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pkt->qnode.next = pkt->qnode.prev = NULL;
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pkt->qnode.on_free_queue = false;
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return pkt;
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}
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static void ssh_pkt_adddata(PktOut *pkt, const void *data, int len)
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{
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sgrowarrayn_nm(pkt->data, pkt->maxlen, pkt->length, len);
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memcpy(pkt->data + pkt->length, data, len);
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pkt->length += len;
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pkt->qnode.formal_size = pkt->length;
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}
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static void ssh_pkt_BinarySink_write(BinarySink *bs,
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const void *data, size_t len)
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{
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PktOut *pkt = BinarySink_DOWNCAST(bs, PktOut);
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ssh_pkt_adddata(pkt, data, len);
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}
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void ssh_free_pktout(PktOut *pkt)
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{
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sfree(pkt->data);
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sfree(pkt);
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}
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/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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* Implement zombiechan_new() and its trivial vtable.
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*/
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static void zombiechan_free(Channel *chan);
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static size_t zombiechan_send(
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Channel *chan, bool is_stderr, const void *, size_t);
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static void zombiechan_set_input_wanted(Channel *chan, bool wanted);
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static void zombiechan_do_nothing(Channel *chan);
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static void zombiechan_open_failure(Channel *chan, const char *);
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static bool zombiechan_want_close(Channel *chan, bool sent_eof, bool rcvd_eof);
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static char *zombiechan_log_close_msg(Channel *chan) { return NULL; }
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static const ChannelVtable zombiechan_channelvt = {
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.free = zombiechan_free,
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.open_confirmation = zombiechan_do_nothing,
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.open_failed = zombiechan_open_failure,
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.send = zombiechan_send,
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.send_eof = zombiechan_do_nothing,
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.set_input_wanted = zombiechan_set_input_wanted,
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.log_close_msg = zombiechan_log_close_msg,
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.want_close = zombiechan_want_close,
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.rcvd_exit_status = chan_no_exit_status,
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.rcvd_exit_signal = chan_no_exit_signal,
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.rcvd_exit_signal_numeric = chan_no_exit_signal_numeric,
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.run_shell = chan_no_run_shell,
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.run_command = chan_no_run_command,
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.run_subsystem = chan_no_run_subsystem,
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.enable_x11_forwarding = chan_no_enable_x11_forwarding,
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.enable_agent_forwarding = chan_no_enable_agent_forwarding,
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.allocate_pty = chan_no_allocate_pty,
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.set_env = chan_no_set_env,
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.send_break = chan_no_send_break,
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.send_signal = chan_no_send_signal,
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.change_window_size = chan_no_change_window_size,
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.request_response = chan_no_request_response,
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};
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Channel *zombiechan_new(void)
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{
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Channel *chan = snew(Channel);
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chan->vt = &zombiechan_channelvt;
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chan->initial_fixed_window_size = 0;
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return chan;
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}
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static void zombiechan_free(Channel *chan)
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{
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assert(chan->vt == &zombiechan_channelvt);
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sfree(chan);
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}
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static void zombiechan_do_nothing(Channel *chan)
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{
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assert(chan->vt == &zombiechan_channelvt);
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}
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static void zombiechan_open_failure(Channel *chan, const char *errtext)
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{
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assert(chan->vt == &zombiechan_channelvt);
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}
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static size_t zombiechan_send(Channel *chan, bool is_stderr,
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const void *data, size_t length)
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{
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assert(chan->vt == &zombiechan_channelvt);
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return 0;
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}
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static void zombiechan_set_input_wanted(Channel *chan, bool enable)
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{
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assert(chan->vt == &zombiechan_channelvt);
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}
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static bool zombiechan_want_close(Channel *chan, bool sent_eof, bool rcvd_eof)
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{
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return true;
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}
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/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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* Common routines for handling SSH tty modes.
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*/
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static unsigned real_ttymode_opcode(unsigned our_opcode, int ssh_version)
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{
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switch (our_opcode) {
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case TTYMODE_ISPEED:
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return ssh_version == 1 ? TTYMODE_ISPEED_SSH1 : TTYMODE_ISPEED_SSH2;
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case TTYMODE_OSPEED:
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return ssh_version == 1 ? TTYMODE_OSPEED_SSH1 : TTYMODE_OSPEED_SSH2;
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default:
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return our_opcode;
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}
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}
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static unsigned our_ttymode_opcode(unsigned real_opcode, int ssh_version)
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{
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if (ssh_version == 1) {
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switch (real_opcode) {
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case TTYMODE_ISPEED_SSH1:
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return TTYMODE_ISPEED;
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case TTYMODE_OSPEED_SSH1:
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return TTYMODE_OSPEED;
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default:
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return real_opcode;
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}
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} else {
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switch (real_opcode) {
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case TTYMODE_ISPEED_SSH2:
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return TTYMODE_ISPEED;
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case TTYMODE_OSPEED_SSH2:
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return TTYMODE_OSPEED;
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default:
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return real_opcode;
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}
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}
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}
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struct ssh_ttymodes get_ttymodes_from_conf(Seat *seat, Conf *conf)
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{
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struct ssh_ttymodes modes;
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size_t i;
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static const struct mode_name_type {
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const char *mode;
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int opcode;
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enum { TYPE_CHAR, TYPE_BOOL } type;
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} modes_names_types[] = {
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#define TTYMODE_CHAR(name, val, index) { #name, val, TYPE_CHAR },
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#define TTYMODE_FLAG(name, val, field, mask) { #name, val, TYPE_BOOL },
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#include "ttymode-list.h"
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#undef TTYMODE_CHAR
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#undef TTYMODE_FLAG
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};
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memset(&modes, 0, sizeof(modes));
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for (i = 0; i < lenof(modes_names_types); i++) {
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const struct mode_name_type *mode = &modes_names_types[i];
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const char *sval = conf_get_str_str(conf, CONF_ttymodes, mode->mode);
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char *to_free = NULL;
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if (!sval)
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sval = "N"; /* just in case */
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/*
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* sval[0] can be
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* - 'V', indicating that an explicit value follows it;
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* - 'A', indicating that we should pass the value through from
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* the local environment via get_ttymode; or
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* - 'N', indicating that we should explicitly not send this
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* mode.
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*/
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if (sval[0] == 'A') {
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sval = to_free = seat_get_ttymode(seat, mode->mode);
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} else if (sval[0] == 'V') {
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sval++; /* skip the 'V' */
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} else {
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/* else 'N', or something from the future we don't understand */
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continue;
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}
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if (sval) {
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/*
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* Parse the string representation of the tty mode
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* into the integer value it will take on the wire.
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*/
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unsigned ival = 0;
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switch (mode->type) {
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case TYPE_CHAR:
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if (*sval) {
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char *next = NULL;
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/* We know ctrlparse won't write to the string, so
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* casting away const is ugly but allowable. */
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ival = ctrlparse((char *)sval, &next);
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if (!next)
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ival = sval[0];
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} else {
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ival = 255; /* special value meaning "don't set" */
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}
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break;
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case TYPE_BOOL:
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if (stricmp(sval, "yes") == 0 ||
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stricmp(sval, "on") == 0 ||
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stricmp(sval, "true") == 0 ||
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stricmp(sval, "+") == 0)
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ival = 1; /* true */
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else if (stricmp(sval, "no") == 0 ||
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stricmp(sval, "off") == 0 ||
|
|
stricmp(sval, "false") == 0 ||
|
|
stricmp(sval, "-") == 0)
|
|
ival = 0; /* false */
|
|
else
|
|
ival = (atoi(sval) != 0);
|
|
break;
|
|
default:
|
|
unreachable("Bad mode->type");
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
modes.have_mode[mode->opcode] = true;
|
|
modes.mode_val[mode->opcode] = ival;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
sfree(to_free);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
unsigned ospeed, ispeed;
|
|
|
|
/* Unpick the terminal-speed config string. */
|
|
ospeed = ispeed = 38400; /* last-resort defaults */
|
|
sscanf(conf_get_str(conf, CONF_termspeed), "%u,%u", &ospeed, &ispeed);
|
|
/* Currently we unconditionally set these */
|
|
modes.have_mode[TTYMODE_ISPEED] = true;
|
|
modes.mode_val[TTYMODE_ISPEED] = ispeed;
|
|
modes.have_mode[TTYMODE_OSPEED] = true;
|
|
modes.mode_val[TTYMODE_OSPEED] = ospeed;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return modes;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
struct ssh_ttymodes read_ttymodes_from_packet(
|
|
BinarySource *bs, int ssh_version)
|
|
{
|
|
struct ssh_ttymodes modes;
|
|
memset(&modes, 0, sizeof(modes));
|
|
|
|
while (1) {
|
|
unsigned real_opcode, our_opcode;
|
|
|
|
real_opcode = get_byte(bs);
|
|
if (real_opcode == TTYMODE_END_OF_LIST)
|
|
break;
|
|
if (real_opcode >= 160) {
|
|
/*
|
|
* RFC 4254 (and the SSH 1.5 spec): "Opcodes 160 to 255
|
|
* are not yet defined, and cause parsing to stop (they
|
|
* should only be used after any other data)."
|
|
*
|
|
* My interpretation of this is that if one of these
|
|
* opcodes appears, it's not a parse _error_, but it is
|
|
* something that we don't know how to parse even well
|
|
* enough to step over it to find the next opcode, so we
|
|
* stop parsing now and assume that the rest of the string
|
|
* is composed entirely of things we don't understand and
|
|
* (as usual for unsupported terminal modes) silently
|
|
* ignore.
|
|
*/
|
|
return modes;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
our_opcode = our_ttymode_opcode(real_opcode, ssh_version);
|
|
assert(our_opcode < TTYMODE_LIMIT);
|
|
modes.have_mode[our_opcode] = true;
|
|
|
|
if (ssh_version == 1 && real_opcode >= 1 && real_opcode <= 127)
|
|
modes.mode_val[our_opcode] = get_byte(bs);
|
|
else
|
|
modes.mode_val[our_opcode] = get_uint32(bs);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return modes;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
void write_ttymodes_to_packet(BinarySink *bs, int ssh_version,
|
|
struct ssh_ttymodes modes)
|
|
{
|
|
unsigned i;
|
|
|
|
for (i = 0; i < TTYMODE_LIMIT; i++) {
|
|
if (modes.have_mode[i]) {
|
|
unsigned val = modes.mode_val[i];
|
|
unsigned opcode = real_ttymode_opcode(i, ssh_version);
|
|
|
|
put_byte(bs, opcode);
|
|
if (ssh_version == 1 && opcode >= 1 && opcode <= 127)
|
|
put_byte(bs, val);
|
|
else
|
|
put_uint32(bs, val);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
put_byte(bs, TTYMODE_END_OF_LIST);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
* Routine for allocating a new channel ID, given a means of finding
|
|
* the index field in a given channel structure.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
unsigned alloc_channel_id_general(tree234 *channels, size_t localid_offset)
|
|
{
|
|
const unsigned CHANNEL_NUMBER_OFFSET = 256;
|
|
search234_state ss;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* First-fit allocation of channel numbers: we always pick the
|
|
* lowest unused one.
|
|
*
|
|
* Every channel before that, and no channel after it, has an ID
|
|
* exactly equal to its tree index plus CHANNEL_NUMBER_OFFSET. So
|
|
* we can use the search234 system to identify the length of that
|
|
* initial sequence, in a single log-time pass down the channels
|
|
* tree.
|
|
*/
|
|
search234_start(&ss, channels);
|
|
while (ss.element) {
|
|
unsigned localid = *(unsigned *)((char *)ss.element + localid_offset);
|
|
if (localid == ss.index + CHANNEL_NUMBER_OFFSET)
|
|
search234_step(&ss, +1);
|
|
else
|
|
search234_step(&ss, -1);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Now ss.index gives exactly the number of channels in that
|
|
* initial sequence. So adding CHANNEL_NUMBER_OFFSET to it must
|
|
* give precisely the lowest unused channel number.
|
|
*/
|
|
return ss.index + CHANNEL_NUMBER_OFFSET;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
* Functions for handling the comma-separated strings used to store
|
|
* lists of protocol identifiers in SSH-2.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
void add_to_commasep(strbuf *buf, const char *data)
|
|
{
|
|
if (buf->len > 0)
|
|
put_byte(buf, ',');
|
|
put_data(buf, data, strlen(data));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
bool get_commasep_word(ptrlen *list, ptrlen *word)
|
|
{
|
|
const char *comma;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Discard empty list elements, should there be any, because we
|
|
* never want to return one as if it was a real string. (This
|
|
* introduces a mild tolerance of badly formatted data in lists we
|
|
* receive, but I think that's acceptable.)
|
|
*/
|
|
while (list->len > 0 && *(const char *)list->ptr == ',') {
|
|
list->ptr = (const char *)list->ptr + 1;
|
|
list->len--;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if (!list->len)
|
|
return false;
|
|
|
|
comma = memchr(list->ptr, ',', list->len);
|
|
if (!comma) {
|
|
*word = *list;
|
|
list->len = 0;
|
|
} else {
|
|
size_t wordlen = comma - (const char *)list->ptr;
|
|
word->ptr = list->ptr;
|
|
word->len = wordlen;
|
|
list->ptr = (const char *)list->ptr + wordlen + 1;
|
|
list->len -= wordlen + 1;
|
|
}
|
|
return true;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
* Functions for translating SSH packet type codes into their symbolic
|
|
* string names.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
#define TRANSLATE_UNIVERSAL(y, name, value) \
|
|
if (type == value) return #name;
|
|
#define TRANSLATE_KEX(y, name, value, ctx) \
|
|
if (type == value && pkt_kctx == ctx) return #name;
|
|
#define TRANSLATE_AUTH(y, name, value, ctx) \
|
|
if (type == value && pkt_actx == ctx) return #name;
|
|
|
|
const char *ssh1_pkt_type(int type)
|
|
{
|
|
SSH1_MESSAGE_TYPES(TRANSLATE_UNIVERSAL, y);
|
|
return "unknown";
|
|
}
|
|
const char *ssh2_pkt_type(Pkt_KCtx pkt_kctx, Pkt_ACtx pkt_actx, int type)
|
|
{
|
|
SSH2_MESSAGE_TYPES(TRANSLATE_UNIVERSAL, TRANSLATE_KEX, TRANSLATE_AUTH, y);
|
|
return "unknown";
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
#undef TRANSLATE_UNIVERSAL
|
|
#undef TRANSLATE_KEX
|
|
#undef TRANSLATE_AUTH
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
* Common helper function for clients and implementations of
|
|
* PacketProtocolLayer.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
void ssh_ppl_replace(PacketProtocolLayer *old, PacketProtocolLayer *new)
|
|
{
|
|
new->bpp = old->bpp;
|
|
ssh_ppl_setup_queues(new, old->in_pq, old->out_pq);
|
|
new->selfptr = old->selfptr;
|
|
new->seat = old->seat;
|
|
new->ssh = old->ssh;
|
|
|
|
*new->selfptr = new;
|
|
ssh_ppl_free(old);
|
|
|
|
/* The new layer might need to be the first one that sends a
|
|
* packet, so trigger a call to its main coroutine immediately. If
|
|
* it doesn't need to go first, the worst that will do is return
|
|
* straight away. */
|
|
queue_idempotent_callback(&new->ic_process_queue);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
void ssh_ppl_free(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl)
|
|
{
|
|
delete_callbacks_for_context(ppl);
|
|
ppl->vt->free(ppl);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
static void ssh_ppl_ic_process_queue_callback(void *context)
|
|
{
|
|
PacketProtocolLayer *ppl = (PacketProtocolLayer *)context;
|
|
ssh_ppl_process_queue(ppl);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
void ssh_ppl_setup_queues(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl,
|
|
PktInQueue *inq, PktOutQueue *outq)
|
|
{
|
|
ppl->in_pq = inq;
|
|
ppl->out_pq = outq;
|
|
ppl->in_pq->pqb.ic = &ppl->ic_process_queue;
|
|
ppl->ic_process_queue.fn = ssh_ppl_ic_process_queue_callback;
|
|
ppl->ic_process_queue.ctx = ppl;
|
|
|
|
/* If there's already something on the input queue, it will want
|
|
* handling immediately. */
|
|
if (pq_peek(ppl->in_pq))
|
|
queue_idempotent_callback(&ppl->ic_process_queue);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
void ssh_ppl_user_output_string_and_free(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl, char *text)
|
|
{
|
|
/* Messages sent via this function are from the SSH layer, not
|
|
* from the server-side process, so they always have the stderr
|
|
* flag set. */
|
|
seat_stderr_pl(ppl->seat, ptrlen_from_asciz(text));
|
|
sfree(text);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
size_t ssh_ppl_default_queued_data_size(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl)
|
|
{
|
|
return ppl->out_pq->pqb.total_size;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
static void ssh_ppl_prompts_callback(void *ctx)
|
|
{
|
|
ssh_ppl_process_queue((PacketProtocolLayer *)ctx);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
prompts_t *ssh_ppl_new_prompts(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl)
|
|
{
|
|
prompts_t *p = new_prompts();
|
|
p->callback = ssh_ppl_prompts_callback;
|
|
p->callback_ctx = ppl;
|
|
return p;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
* Common helper functions for clients and implementations of
|
|
* BinaryPacketProtocol.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
static void ssh_bpp_input_raw_data_callback(void *context)
|
|
{
|
|
BinaryPacketProtocol *bpp = (BinaryPacketProtocol *)context;
|
|
Ssh *ssh = bpp->ssh; /* in case bpp is about to get freed */
|
|
ssh_bpp_handle_input(bpp);
|
|
/* If we've now cleared enough backlog on the input connection, we
|
|
* may need to unfreeze it. */
|
|
ssh_conn_processed_data(ssh);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
static void ssh_bpp_output_packet_callback(void *context)
|
|
{
|
|
BinaryPacketProtocol *bpp = (BinaryPacketProtocol *)context;
|
|
ssh_bpp_handle_output(bpp);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
void ssh_bpp_common_setup(BinaryPacketProtocol *bpp)
|
|
{
|
|
pq_in_init(&bpp->in_pq);
|
|
pq_out_init(&bpp->out_pq);
|
|
bpp->input_eof = false;
|
|
bpp->ic_in_raw.fn = ssh_bpp_input_raw_data_callback;
|
|
bpp->ic_in_raw.ctx = bpp;
|
|
bpp->ic_out_pq.fn = ssh_bpp_output_packet_callback;
|
|
bpp->ic_out_pq.ctx = bpp;
|
|
bpp->out_pq.pqb.ic = &bpp->ic_out_pq;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
void ssh_bpp_free(BinaryPacketProtocol *bpp)
|
|
{
|
|
delete_callbacks_for_context(bpp);
|
|
bpp->vt->free(bpp);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
void ssh2_bpp_queue_disconnect(BinaryPacketProtocol *bpp,
|
|
const char *msg, int category)
|
|
{
|
|
PktOut *pkt = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(bpp, SSH2_MSG_DISCONNECT);
|
|
put_uint32(pkt, category);
|
|
put_stringz(pkt, msg);
|
|
put_stringz(pkt, "en"); /* language tag */
|
|
pq_push(&bpp->out_pq, pkt);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
#define BITMAP_UNIVERSAL(y, name, value) \
|
|
| (value >= y && value < y+32 \
|
|
? 1UL << (value >= y && value < y+32 ? (value-y) : 0) \
|
|
: 0)
|
|
#define BITMAP_CONDITIONAL(y, name, value, ctx) \
|
|
BITMAP_UNIVERSAL(y, name, value)
|
|
#define SSH2_BITMAP_WORD(y) \
|
|
(0 SSH2_MESSAGE_TYPES(BITMAP_UNIVERSAL, BITMAP_CONDITIONAL, \
|
|
BITMAP_CONDITIONAL, (32*y)))
|
|
|
|
bool ssh2_bpp_check_unimplemented(BinaryPacketProtocol *bpp, PktIn *pktin)
|
|
{
|
|
static const unsigned valid_bitmap[] = {
|
|
SSH2_BITMAP_WORD(0),
|
|
SSH2_BITMAP_WORD(1),
|
|
SSH2_BITMAP_WORD(2),
|
|
SSH2_BITMAP_WORD(3),
|
|
SSH2_BITMAP_WORD(4),
|
|
SSH2_BITMAP_WORD(5),
|
|
SSH2_BITMAP_WORD(6),
|
|
SSH2_BITMAP_WORD(7),
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
if (pktin->type < 0x100 &&
|
|
!((valid_bitmap[pktin->type >> 5] >> (pktin->type & 0x1F)) & 1)) {
|
|
PktOut *pkt = ssh_bpp_new_pktout(bpp, SSH2_MSG_UNIMPLEMENTED);
|
|
put_uint32(pkt, pktin->sequence);
|
|
pq_push(&bpp->out_pq, pkt);
|
|
return true;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return false;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
#undef BITMAP_UNIVERSAL
|
|
#undef BITMAP_CONDITIONAL
|
|
#undef SSH1_BITMAP_WORD
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
* Centralised component of SSH host key verification.
|
|
*
|
|
* verify_ssh_host_key is called from both the SSH-1 and SSH-2
|
|
* transport layers, and does the initial work of checking whether the
|
|
* host key is already known. If so, it returns success on its own
|
|
* account; otherwise, it calls out to the Seat to give an interactive
|
|
* prompt (the nature of which varies depending on the Seat itself).
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
SeatPromptResult verify_ssh_host_key(
|
|
InteractionReadySeat iseat, Conf *conf, const char *host, int port,
|
|
ssh_key *key, const char *keytype, char *keystr, const char *keydisp,
|
|
char **fingerprints, void (*callback)(void *ctx, SeatPromptResult result),
|
|
void *ctx)
|
|
{
|
|
/*
|
|
* First, check if the Conf includes a manual specification of the
|
|
* expected host key. If so, that completely supersedes everything
|
|
* else, including the normal host key cache _and_ including
|
|
* manual overrides: we return success or failure immediately,
|
|
* entirely based on whether the key matches the Conf.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (conf_get_str_nthstrkey(conf, CONF_ssh_manual_hostkeys, 0)) {
|
|
if (fingerprints) {
|
|
for (size_t i = 0; i < SSH_N_FPTYPES; i++) {
|
|
/*
|
|
* Each fingerprint string we've been given will have
|
|
* things like 'ssh-rsa 2048' at the front of it. Strip
|
|
* those off and narrow down to just the hash at the end
|
|
* of the string.
|
|
*/
|
|
const char *fingerprint = fingerprints[i];
|
|
if (!fingerprint)
|
|
continue;
|
|
const char *p = strrchr(fingerprint, ' ');
|
|
fingerprint = p ? p+1 : fingerprint;
|
|
if (conf_get_str_str_opt(conf, CONF_ssh_manual_hostkeys,
|
|
fingerprint))
|
|
return SPR_OK;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if (key) {
|
|
/*
|
|
* Construct the base64-encoded public key blob and see if
|
|
* that's listed.
|
|
*/
|
|
strbuf *binblob;
|
|
char *base64blob;
|
|
int atoms, i;
|
|
binblob = strbuf_new();
|
|
ssh_key_public_blob(key, BinarySink_UPCAST(binblob));
|
|
atoms = (binblob->len + 2) / 3;
|
|
base64blob = snewn(atoms * 4 + 1, char);
|
|
for (i = 0; i < atoms; i++)
|
|
base64_encode_atom(binblob->u + 3*i,
|
|
binblob->len - 3*i, base64blob + 4*i);
|
|
base64blob[atoms * 4] = '\0';
|
|
strbuf_free(binblob);
|
|
if (conf_get_str_str_opt(conf, CONF_ssh_manual_hostkeys,
|
|
base64blob)) {
|
|
sfree(base64blob);
|
|
return SPR_OK;
|
|
}
|
|
sfree(base64blob);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return SPR_SW_ABORT("Host key not in manually configured list");
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Next, check the host key cache.
|
|
*/
|
|
int storage_status = check_stored_host_key(host, port, keytype, keystr);
|
|
if (storage_status == 0) /* matching key was found in the cache */
|
|
return SPR_OK;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* The key is either missing from the cache, or does not match.
|
|
* Either way, fall back to an interactive prompt from the Seat.
|
|
*/
|
|
bool mismatch = (storage_status != 1);
|
|
return seat_confirm_ssh_host_key(
|
|
iseat, host, port, keytype, keystr, keydisp, fingerprints, mismatch,
|
|
callback, ctx);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
* Common functions shared between SSH-1 layers.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
bool ssh1_common_get_specials(
|
|
PacketProtocolLayer *ppl, add_special_fn_t add_special, void *ctx)
|
|
{
|
|
/*
|
|
* Don't bother offering IGNORE if we've decided the remote
|
|
* won't cope with it, since we wouldn't bother sending it if
|
|
* asked anyway.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (!(ppl->remote_bugs & BUG_CHOKES_ON_SSH1_IGNORE)) {
|
|
add_special(ctx, "IGNORE message", SS_NOP, 0);
|
|
return true;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return false;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
bool ssh1_common_filter_queue(PacketProtocolLayer *ppl)
|
|
{
|
|
PktIn *pktin;
|
|
ptrlen msg;
|
|
|
|
while ((pktin = pq_peek(ppl->in_pq)) != NULL) {
|
|
switch (pktin->type) {
|
|
case SSH1_MSG_DISCONNECT:
|
|
msg = get_string(pktin);
|
|
ssh_remote_error(ppl->ssh,
|
|
"Remote side sent disconnect message:\n\"%.*s\"",
|
|
PTRLEN_PRINTF(msg));
|
|
/* don't try to pop the queue, because we've been freed! */
|
|
return true; /* indicate that we've been freed */
|
|
|
|
case SSH1_MSG_DEBUG:
|
|
msg = get_string(pktin);
|
|
ppl_logevent("Remote debug message: %.*s", PTRLEN_PRINTF(msg));
|
|
pq_pop(ppl->in_pq);
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
case SSH1_MSG_IGNORE:
|
|
/* Do nothing, because we're ignoring it! Duhh. */
|
|
pq_pop(ppl->in_pq);
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
default:
|
|
return false;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return false;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
void ssh1_compute_session_id(
|
|
unsigned char *session_id, const unsigned char *cookie,
|
|
RSAKey *hostkey, RSAKey *servkey)
|
|
{
|
|
ssh_hash *hash = ssh_hash_new(&ssh_md5);
|
|
|
|
for (size_t i = (mp_get_nbits(hostkey->modulus) + 7) / 8; i-- ;)
|
|
put_byte(hash, mp_get_byte(hostkey->modulus, i));
|
|
for (size_t i = (mp_get_nbits(servkey->modulus) + 7) / 8; i-- ;)
|
|
put_byte(hash, mp_get_byte(servkey->modulus, i));
|
|
put_data(hash, cookie, 8);
|
|
ssh_hash_final(hash, session_id);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
* Wrapper function to handle the abort-connection modes of a
|
|
* SeatPromptResult without a lot of verbiage at every call site.
|
|
*
|
|
* Can become ssh_sw_abort or ssh_user_close, depending on the kind of
|
|
* negative SeatPromptResult.
|
|
*/
|
|
void ssh_spr_close(Ssh *ssh, SeatPromptResult spr, const char *context)
|
|
{
|
|
if (spr.kind == SPRK_USER_ABORT) {
|
|
ssh_user_close(ssh, "User aborted at %s", context);
|
|
} else {
|
|
assert(spr.kind == SPRK_SW_ABORT);
|
|
char *err = spr_get_error_message(spr);
|
|
ssh_sw_abort(ssh, "%s", err);
|
|
sfree(err);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|