Commit | Line | Data |
---|---|---|
059ec3d9 PH |
1 | /************************************************* |
2 | * Exim - an Internet mail transport agent * | |
3 | *************************************************/ | |
4 | ||
9242a7e8 | 5 | /* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2017 */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
6 | /* See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. */ |
7 | ||
8 | /* Functions for writing log files. The code for maintaining datestamped | |
9 | log files was originally contributed by Tony Sheen. */ | |
10 | ||
11 | ||
12 | #include "exim.h" | |
13 | ||
14 | #define LOG_NAME_SIZE 256 | |
15 | #define MAX_SYSLOG_LEN 870 | |
16 | ||
17 | #define LOG_MODE_FILE 1 | |
18 | #define LOG_MODE_SYSLOG 2 | |
19 | ||
921b12ca | 20 | enum { lt_main, lt_reject, lt_panic, lt_debug }; |
059ec3d9 | 21 | |
921b12ca | 22 | static uschar *log_names[] = { US"main", US"reject", US"panic", US"debug" }; |
059ec3d9 PH |
23 | |
24 | ||
25 | ||
26 | /************************************************* | |
27 | * Local static variables * | |
28 | *************************************************/ | |
29 | ||
30 | static uschar mainlog_name[LOG_NAME_SIZE]; | |
31 | static uschar rejectlog_name[LOG_NAME_SIZE]; | |
ed7f7860 | 32 | static uschar debuglog_name[LOG_NAME_SIZE]; |
059ec3d9 PH |
33 | |
34 | static uschar *mainlog_datestamp = NULL; | |
35 | static uschar *rejectlog_datestamp = NULL; | |
36 | ||
37 | static int mainlogfd = -1; | |
38 | static int rejectlogfd = -1; | |
39 | static ino_t mainlog_inode = 0; | |
40 | static ino_t rejectlog_inode = 0; | |
41 | ||
42 | static uschar *panic_save_buffer = NULL; | |
43 | static BOOL panic_recurseflag = FALSE; | |
44 | ||
45 | static BOOL syslog_open = FALSE; | |
46 | static BOOL path_inspected = FALSE; | |
47 | static int logging_mode = LOG_MODE_FILE; | |
48 | static uschar *file_path = US""; | |
49 | ||
2333e06f HSHR |
50 | static size_t pid_position[2]; |
51 | ||
059ec3d9 | 52 | |
37f3dc43 JH |
53 | /* These should be kept in-step with the private delivery error |
54 | number definitions in macros.h */ | |
55 | ||
56 | static const uschar * exim_errstrings[] = { | |
57 | US"", | |
58 | US"unknown error", | |
59 | US"user slash", | |
60 | US"exist race", | |
61 | US"not regular", | |
62 | US"not directory", | |
63 | US"bad ugid", | |
64 | US"bad mode", | |
65 | US"inode changed", | |
66 | US"lock failed", | |
67 | US"bad address2", | |
68 | US"forbid pipe", | |
69 | US"forbid file", | |
70 | US"forbid reply", | |
71 | US"missing pipe", | |
72 | US"missing file", | |
73 | US"missing reply", | |
74 | US"bad redirect", | |
75 | US"smtp closed", | |
76 | US"smtp format", | |
77 | US"spool format", | |
78 | US"not absolute", | |
79 | US"Exim-imposed quota", | |
80 | US"held", | |
81 | US"Delivery filter process failure", | |
82 | US"Delivery add/remove header failure", | |
83 | US"Delivery write incomplete error", | |
84 | US"Some expansion failed", | |
85 | US"Failed to get gid", | |
86 | US"Failed to get uid", | |
87 | US"Unset or non-existent transport", | |
88 | US"MBX length mismatch", | |
89 | US"Lookup failed routing or in smtp tpt", | |
90 | US"Can't match format in appendfile", | |
91 | US"Creation outside home in appendfile", | |
92 | US"Can't check a list; lookup defer", | |
93 | US"DNS lookup defer", | |
94 | US"Failed to start TLS session", | |
95 | US"Mandatory TLS session not started", | |
96 | US"Failed to chown a file", | |
97 | US"Failed to create a pipe", | |
98 | US"When verifying", | |
99 | US"When required by client", | |
100 | US"Used internally in smtp transport", | |
101 | US"RCPT gave 4xx error", | |
102 | US"MAIL gave 4xx error", | |
103 | US"DATA gave 4xx error", | |
104 | US"Negotiation failed for proxy configured host", | |
105 | US"Authenticator 'other' failure", | |
106 | US"target not supporting SMTPUTF8", | |
107 | US"", | |
108 | ||
109 | US"Not time for routing", | |
110 | US"Not time for local delivery", | |
111 | US"Not time for any remote host", | |
112 | US"Local-only delivery", | |
113 | US"Domain in queue_domains", | |
114 | US"Transport concurrency limit", | |
115 | }; | |
116 | ||
117 | ||
118 | /************************************************/ | |
119 | const uschar * | |
120 | exim_errstr(int err) | |
121 | { | |
584ddd64 | 122 | return err < 0 ? exim_errstrings[-err] : CUS strerror(err); |
37f3dc43 | 123 | } |
059ec3d9 PH |
124 | |
125 | /************************************************* | |
126 | * Write to syslog * | |
127 | *************************************************/ | |
128 | ||
129 | /* The given string is split into sections according to length, or at embedded | |
130 | newlines, and syslogged as a numbered sequence if it is overlong or if there is | |
9675b384 PH |
131 | more than one line. However, if we are running in the test harness, do not do |
132 | anything. (The test harness doesn't use syslog - for obvious reasons - but we | |
133 | can get here if there is a failure to open the panic log.) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
134 | |
135 | Arguments: | |
136 | priority syslog priority | |
2333e06f | 137 | s the string to be written, the string may be modified! |
059ec3d9 PH |
138 | |
139 | Returns: nothing | |
140 | */ | |
141 | ||
142 | static void | |
143 | write_syslog(int priority, uschar *s) | |
144 | { | |
145 | int len, pass; | |
146 | int linecount = 0; | |
147 | ||
9675b384 PH |
148 | if (running_in_test_harness) return; |
149 | ||
571b2715 | 150 | if (!syslog_timestamp) s += log_timezone ? 26 : 20; |
2333e06f HSHR |
151 | if (!syslog_pid && LOGGING(pid)) |
152 | memmove(s + pid_position[0], s + pid_position[1], pid_position[1] - pid_position[0]); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
153 | |
154 | len = Ustrlen(s); | |
155 | ||
156 | #ifndef NO_OPENLOG | |
157 | if (!syslog_open) | |
158 | { | |
159 | #ifdef SYSLOG_LOG_PID | |
160 | openlog(CS syslog_processname, LOG_PID|LOG_CONS, syslog_facility); | |
161 | #else | |
162 | openlog(CS syslog_processname, LOG_CONS, syslog_facility); | |
163 | #endif | |
164 | syslog_open = TRUE; | |
165 | } | |
166 | #endif | |
167 | ||
168 | /* First do a scan through the message in order to determine how many lines | |
169 | it is going to end up as. Then rescan to output it. */ | |
170 | ||
171 | for (pass = 0; pass < 2; pass++) | |
172 | { | |
173 | int i; | |
174 | int tlen; | |
175 | uschar *ss = s; | |
176 | for (i = 1, tlen = len; tlen > 0; i++) | |
177 | { | |
178 | int plen = tlen; | |
179 | uschar *nlptr = Ustrchr(ss, '\n'); | |
180 | if (nlptr != NULL) plen = nlptr - ss; | |
181 | #ifndef SYSLOG_LONG_LINES | |
182 | if (plen > MAX_SYSLOG_LEN) plen = MAX_SYSLOG_LEN; | |
183 | #endif | |
184 | tlen -= plen; | |
185 | if (ss[plen] == '\n') tlen--; /* chars left */ | |
186 | ||
187 | if (pass == 0) linecount++; else | |
188 | { | |
189 | if (linecount == 1) | |
190 | syslog(priority, "%.*s", plen, ss); | |
191 | else | |
192 | syslog(priority, "[%d%c%d] %.*s", i, | |
193 | (ss[plen] == '\n' && tlen != 0)? '\\' : '/', | |
194 | linecount, plen, ss); | |
195 | } | |
196 | ss += plen; | |
197 | if (*ss == '\n') ss++; | |
198 | } | |
199 | } | |
200 | } | |
201 | ||
202 | ||
203 | ||
204 | /************************************************* | |
205 | * Die tidily * | |
206 | *************************************************/ | |
207 | ||
208 | /* This is called when Exim is dying as a result of something going wrong in | |
209 | the logging, or after a log call with LOG_PANIC_DIE set. Optionally write a | |
210 | message to debug_file or a stderr file, if they exist. Then, if in the middle | |
8f128379 PH |
211 | of accepting a message, throw it away tidily by calling receive_bomb_out(); |
212 | this will attempt to send an SMTP response if appropriate. Passing NULL as the | |
213 | first argument stops it trying to run the NOTQUIT ACL (which might try further | |
214 | logging and thus cause problems). Otherwise, try to close down an outstanding | |
215 | SMTP call tidily. | |
059ec3d9 PH |
216 | |
217 | Arguments: | |
218 | s1 Error message to write to debug_file and/or stderr and syslog | |
219 | s2 Error message for any SMTP call that is in progress | |
220 | Returns: The function does not return | |
221 | */ | |
222 | ||
223 | static void | |
224 | die(uschar *s1, uschar *s2) | |
225 | { | |
571b2715 | 226 | if (s1) |
059ec3d9 PH |
227 | { |
228 | write_syslog(LOG_CRIT, s1); | |
571b2715 | 229 | if (debug_file) debug_printf("%s\n", s1); |
059ec3d9 PH |
230 | if (log_stderr != NULL && log_stderr != debug_file) |
231 | fprintf(log_stderr, "%s\n", s1); | |
232 | } | |
8f128379 | 233 | if (receive_call_bombout) receive_bomb_out(NULL, s2); /* does not return */ |
059ec3d9 | 234 | if (smtp_input) smtp_closedown(s2); |
9bfb7e1b | 235 | exim_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, NULL); |
059ec3d9 PH |
236 | } |
237 | ||
238 | ||
239 | ||
240 | /************************************************* | |
241 | * Create a log file * | |
242 | *************************************************/ | |
243 | ||
244 | /* This function is called to create and open a log file. It may be called in a | |
245 | subprocess when the original process is root. | |
246 | ||
247 | Arguments: | |
248 | name the file name | |
249 | ||
250 | The file name has been build in a working buffer, so it is permissible to | |
251 | overwrite it temporarily if it is necessary to create the directory. | |
252 | ||
253 | Returns: a file descriptor, or < 0 on failure (errno set) | |
254 | */ | |
255 | ||
4840604e | 256 | int |
921b12ca | 257 | log_create(uschar *name) |
059ec3d9 | 258 | { |
92b0827a JH |
259 | int fd = Uopen(name, |
260 | #ifdef O_CLOEXEC | |
261 | O_CLOEXEC | | |
262 | #endif | |
263 | O_CREAT|O_APPEND|O_WRONLY, LOG_MODE); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
264 | |
265 | /* If creation failed, attempt to build a log directory in case that is the | |
266 | problem. */ | |
267 | ||
268 | if (fd < 0 && errno == ENOENT) | |
269 | { | |
270 | BOOL created; | |
271 | uschar *lastslash = Ustrrchr(name, '/'); | |
272 | *lastslash = 0; | |
273 | created = directory_make(NULL, name, LOG_DIRECTORY_MODE, FALSE); | |
274 | DEBUG(D_any) debug_printf("%s log directory %s\n", | |
571b2715 | 275 | created ? "created" : "failed to create", name); |
059ec3d9 | 276 | *lastslash = '/'; |
92b0827a JH |
277 | if (created) fd = Uopen(name, |
278 | #ifdef O_CLOEXEC | |
279 | O_CLOEXEC | | |
280 | #endif | |
281 | O_CREAT|O_APPEND|O_WRONLY, LOG_MODE); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
282 | } |
283 | ||
284 | return fd; | |
285 | } | |
286 | ||
287 | ||
288 | ||
921b12ca TF |
289 | /************************************************* |
290 | * Create a log file as the exim user * | |
291 | *************************************************/ | |
292 | ||
293 | /* This function is called when we are root to spawn an exim:exim subprocess | |
294 | in which we can create a log file. It must be signal-safe since it is called | |
295 | by the usr1_handler(). | |
296 | ||
297 | Arguments: | |
298 | name the file name | |
299 | ||
300 | Returns: a file descriptor, or < 0 on failure (errno set) | |
301 | */ | |
302 | ||
303 | int | |
304 | log_create_as_exim(uschar *name) | |
305 | { | |
306 | pid_t pid = fork(); | |
307 | int status = 1; | |
308 | int fd = -1; | |
309 | ||
310 | /* In the subprocess, change uid/gid and do the creation. Return 0 from the | |
311 | subprocess on success. If we don't check for setuid failures, then the file | |
312 | can be created as root, so vulnerabilities which cause setuid to fail mean | |
313 | that the Exim user can use symlinks to cause a file to be opened/created as | |
314 | root. We always open for append, so can't nuke existing content but it would | |
315 | still be Rather Bad. */ | |
316 | ||
317 | if (pid == 0) | |
318 | { | |
319 | if (setgid(exim_gid) < 0) | |
320 | die(US"exim: setgid for log-file creation failed, aborting", | |
321 | US"Unexpected log failure, please try later"); | |
322 | if (setuid(exim_uid) < 0) | |
323 | die(US"exim: setuid for log-file creation failed, aborting", | |
324 | US"Unexpected log failure, please try later"); | |
325 | _exit((log_create(name) < 0)? 1 : 0); | |
326 | } | |
327 | ||
328 | /* If we created a subprocess, wait for it. If it succeeded, try the open. */ | |
329 | ||
330 | while (pid > 0 && waitpid(pid, &status, 0) != pid); | |
92b0827a JH |
331 | if (status == 0) fd = Uopen(name, |
332 | #ifdef O_CLOEXEC | |
333 | O_CLOEXEC | | |
334 | #endif | |
335 | O_APPEND|O_WRONLY, LOG_MODE); | |
921b12ca TF |
336 | |
337 | /* If we failed to create a subprocess, we are in a bad way. We return | |
338 | with fd still < 0, and errno set, letting the caller handle the error. */ | |
339 | ||
340 | return fd; | |
341 | } | |
342 | ||
343 | ||
344 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
345 | |
346 | /************************************************* | |
347 | * Open a log file * | |
348 | *************************************************/ | |
349 | ||
921b12ca TF |
350 | /* This function opens one of a number of logs, creating the log directory if |
351 | it does not exist. This may be called recursively on failure, in order to open | |
352 | the panic log. | |
059ec3d9 PH |
353 | |
354 | The directory is in the static variable file_path. This is static so that it | |
355 | the work of sorting out the path is done just once per Exim process. | |
356 | ||
357 | Exim is normally configured to avoid running as root wherever possible, the log | |
358 | files must be owned by the non-privileged exim user. To ensure this, first try | |
359 | an open without O_CREAT - most of the time this will succeed. If it fails, try | |
360 | to create the file; if running as root, this must be done in a subprocess to | |
361 | avoid races. | |
362 | ||
363 | Arguments: | |
364 | fd where to return the resulting file descriptor | |
921b12ca | 365 | type lt_main, lt_reject, lt_panic, or lt_debug |
ed7f7860 | 366 | tag optional tag to include in the name (only hooked up for debug) |
059ec3d9 PH |
367 | |
368 | Returns: nothing | |
369 | */ | |
370 | ||
371 | static void | |
ed7f7860 | 372 | open_log(int *fd, int type, uschar *tag) |
059ec3d9 PH |
373 | { |
374 | uid_t euid; | |
ed7f7860 | 375 | BOOL ok, ok2; |
059ec3d9 PH |
376 | uschar buffer[LOG_NAME_SIZE]; |
377 | ||
921b12ca TF |
378 | /* The names of the log files are controlled by file_path. The panic log is |
379 | written to the same directory as the main and reject logs, but its name does | |
f1e5fef5 PP |
380 | not have a datestamp. The use of datestamps is indicated by %D/%M in file_path. |
381 | When opening the panic log, if %D or %M is present, we remove the datestamp | |
382 | from the generated name; if it is at the start, remove a following | |
383 | non-alphanumeric character as well; otherwise, remove a preceding | |
384 | non-alphanumeric character. This is definitely kludgy, but it sort of does what | |
385 | people want, I hope. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 386 | |
921b12ca TF |
387 | ok = string_format(buffer, sizeof(buffer), CS file_path, log_names[type]); |
388 | ||
389 | /* Save the name of the mainlog for rollover processing. Without a datestamp, | |
390 | it gets statted to see if it has been cycled. With a datestamp, the datestamp | |
391 | will be compared. The static slot for saving it is the same size as buffer, | |
392 | and the text has been checked above to fit, so this use of strcpy() is OK. */ | |
393 | ||
cd2e3fd0 | 394 | if (type == lt_main && string_datestamp_offset >= 0) |
059ec3d9 | 395 | { |
921b12ca TF |
396 | Ustrcpy(mainlog_name, buffer); |
397 | mainlog_datestamp = mainlog_name + string_datestamp_offset; | |
398 | } | |
059ec3d9 | 399 | |
921b12ca | 400 | /* Ditto for the reject log */ |
059ec3d9 | 401 | |
cd2e3fd0 | 402 | else if (type == lt_reject && string_datestamp_offset >= 0) |
921b12ca TF |
403 | { |
404 | Ustrcpy(rejectlog_name, buffer); | |
405 | rejectlog_datestamp = rejectlog_name + string_datestamp_offset; | |
406 | } | |
059ec3d9 | 407 | |
921b12ca TF |
408 | /* and deal with the debug log (which keeps the datestamp, but does not |
409 | update it) */ | |
059ec3d9 | 410 | |
921b12ca TF |
411 | else if (type == lt_debug) |
412 | { | |
413 | Ustrcpy(debuglog_name, buffer); | |
414 | if (tag) | |
059ec3d9 | 415 | { |
921b12ca TF |
416 | /* this won't change the offset of the datestamp */ |
417 | ok2 = string_format(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "%s%s", | |
418 | debuglog_name, tag); | |
419 | if (ok2) | |
420 | Ustrcpy(debuglog_name, buffer); | |
059ec3d9 | 421 | } |
921b12ca | 422 | } |
059ec3d9 | 423 | |
921b12ca TF |
424 | /* Remove any datestamp if this is the panic log. This is rare, so there's no |
425 | need to optimize getting the datestamp length. We remove one non-alphanumeric | |
426 | char afterwards if at the start, otherwise one before. */ | |
ed7f7860 | 427 | |
921b12ca TF |
428 | else if (string_datestamp_offset >= 0) |
429 | { | |
430 | uschar *from = buffer + string_datestamp_offset; | |
431 | uschar *to = from + string_datestamp_length; | |
432 | if (from == buffer || from[-1] == '/') | |
ed7f7860 | 433 | { |
921b12ca | 434 | if (!isalnum(*to)) to++; |
ed7f7860 | 435 | } |
921b12ca | 436 | else |
059ec3d9 | 437 | { |
921b12ca TF |
438 | if (!isalnum(from[-1])) from--; |
439 | } | |
059ec3d9 | 440 | |
921b12ca | 441 | /* This strcpy is ok, because we know that to is a substring of from. */ |
059ec3d9 | 442 | |
921b12ca | 443 | Ustrcpy(from, to); |
059ec3d9 PH |
444 | } |
445 | ||
446 | /* If the file name is too long, it is an unrecoverable disaster */ | |
447 | ||
448 | if (!ok) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
449 | die(US"exim: log file path too long: aborting", |
450 | US"Logging failure; please try later"); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
451 | |
452 | /* We now have the file name. Try to open an existing file. After a successful | |
453 | open, arrange for automatic closure on exec(), and then return. */ | |
454 | ||
92b0827a JH |
455 | *fd = Uopen(buffer, |
456 | #ifdef O_CLOEXEC | |
457 | O_CLOEXEC | | |
458 | #endif | |
459 | O_APPEND|O_WRONLY, LOG_MODE); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
460 | |
461 | if (*fd >= 0) | |
462 | { | |
92b0827a | 463 | #ifndef O_CLOEXEC |
ff790e47 | 464 | (void)fcntl(*fd, F_SETFD, fcntl(*fd, F_GETFD) | FD_CLOEXEC); |
92b0827a | 465 | #endif |
059ec3d9 PH |
466 | return; |
467 | } | |
468 | ||
469 | /* Open was not successful: try creating the file. If this is a root process, | |
470 | we must do the creating in a subprocess set to exim:exim in order to ensure | |
471 | that the file is created with the right ownership. Otherwise, there can be a | |
901f42cb PH |
472 | race if another Exim process is trying to write to the log at the same time. |
473 | The use of SIGUSR1 by the exiwhat utility can provoke a lot of simultaneous | |
474 | writing. */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
475 | |
476 | euid = geteuid(); | |
477 | ||
478 | /* If we are already running as the Exim user (even if that user is root), | |
479 | we can go ahead and create in the current process. */ | |
480 | ||
921b12ca | 481 | if (euid == exim_uid) *fd = log_create(buffer); |
059ec3d9 PH |
482 | |
483 | /* Otherwise, if we are root, do the creation in an exim:exim subprocess. If we | |
484 | are neither exim nor root, creation is not attempted. */ | |
485 | ||
921b12ca | 486 | else if (euid == root_uid) *fd = log_create_as_exim(buffer); |
059ec3d9 PH |
487 | |
488 | /* If we now have an open file, set the close-on-exec flag and return. */ | |
489 | ||
490 | if (*fd >= 0) | |
491 | { | |
92b0827a | 492 | #ifndef O_CLOEXEC |
ff790e47 | 493 | (void)fcntl(*fd, F_SETFD, fcntl(*fd, F_GETFD) | FD_CLOEXEC); |
92b0827a | 494 | #endif |
059ec3d9 PH |
495 | return; |
496 | } | |
497 | ||
498 | /* Creation failed. There are some circumstances in which we get here when | |
499 | the effective uid is not root or exim, which is the problem. (For example, a | |
500 | non-setuid binary with log_arguments set, called in certain ways.) Rather than | |
501 | just bombing out, force the log to stderr and carry on if stderr is available. | |
502 | */ | |
503 | ||
504 | if (euid != root_uid && euid != exim_uid && log_stderr != NULL) | |
505 | { | |
506 | *fd = fileno(log_stderr); | |
507 | return; | |
508 | } | |
509 | ||
510 | /* Otherwise this is a disaster. This call is deliberately ONLY to the panic | |
511 | log. If possible, save a copy of the original line that was being logged. If we | |
512 | are recursing (can't open the panic log either), the pointer will already be | |
513 | set. */ | |
514 | ||
40c90bca JH |
515 | if (!panic_save_buffer) |
516 | if ((panic_save_buffer = US malloc(LOG_BUFFER_SIZE))) | |
059ec3d9 | 517 | memcpy(panic_save_buffer, log_buffer, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE); |
059ec3d9 PH |
518 | |
519 | log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Cannot open %s log file \"%s\": %s: " | |
520 | "euid=%d egid=%d", log_names[type], buffer, strerror(errno), euid, getegid()); | |
521 | /* Never returns */ | |
522 | } | |
523 | ||
524 | ||
b0d68adc JH |
525 | static void |
526 | unlink_log(int type) | |
527 | { | |
528 | if (type == lt_debug) unlink(CS debuglog_name); | |
529 | } | |
530 | ||
531 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
532 | |
533 | /************************************************* | |
534 | * Add configuration file info to log line * | |
535 | *************************************************/ | |
536 | ||
537 | /* This is put in a function because it's needed twice (once for debugging, | |
538 | once for real). | |
539 | ||
540 | Arguments: | |
541 | ptr pointer to the end of the line we are building | |
542 | flags log flags | |
543 | ||
544 | Returns: updated pointer | |
545 | */ | |
546 | ||
547 | static uschar * | |
548 | log_config_info(uschar *ptr, int flags) | |
549 | { | |
550 | Ustrcpy(ptr, "Exim configuration error"); | |
551 | ptr += 24; | |
552 | ||
553 | if ((flags & (LOG_CONFIG_FOR & ~LOG_CONFIG)) != 0) | |
554 | { | |
555 | Ustrcpy(ptr, " for "); | |
556 | return ptr + 5; | |
557 | } | |
558 | ||
559 | if ((flags & (LOG_CONFIG_IN & ~LOG_CONFIG)) != 0) | |
571b2715 | 560 | ptr += sprintf(CS ptr, " in line %d of %s", config_lineno, config_filename); |
059ec3d9 PH |
561 | |
562 | Ustrcpy(ptr, ":\n "); | |
563 | return ptr + 4; | |
564 | } | |
565 | ||
566 | ||
567 | /************************************************* | |
568 | * A write() operation failed * | |
569 | *************************************************/ | |
570 | ||
571 | /* This function is called when write() fails on anything other than the panic | |
572 | log, which can happen if a disk gets full or a file gets too large or whatever. | |
573 | We try to save the relevant message in the panic_save buffer before crashing | |
574 | out. | |
575 | ||
23ecb73d PP |
576 | The potential invoker should probably not call us for EINTR -1 writes. But |
577 | otherwise, short writes are bad as we don't do non-blocking writes to fds | |
578 | subject to flow control. (If we do, that's new and the logic of this should | |
579 | be reconsidered). | |
580 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
581 | Arguments: |
582 | name the name of the log being written | |
583 | length the string length being written | |
584 | rc the return value from write() | |
585 | ||
586 | Returns: does not return | |
587 | */ | |
588 | ||
589 | static void | |
590 | log_write_failed(uschar *name, int length, int rc) | |
591 | { | |
592 | int save_errno = errno; | |
593 | ||
40c90bca JH |
594 | if (!panic_save_buffer) |
595 | if ((panic_save_buffer = US malloc(LOG_BUFFER_SIZE))) | |
059ec3d9 | 596 | memcpy(panic_save_buffer, log_buffer, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE); |
059ec3d9 PH |
597 | |
598 | log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE, "failed to write to %s: length=%d result=%d " | |
599 | "errno=%d (%s)", name, length, rc, save_errno, | |
600 | (save_errno == 0)? "write incomplete" : strerror(save_errno)); | |
601 | /* Never returns */ | |
602 | } | |
603 | ||
604 | ||
605 | ||
0599f9cf PP |
606 | /************************************************* |
607 | * Write to an fd, retrying after signals * | |
608 | *************************************************/ | |
609 | ||
610 | /* Basic write to fd for logs, handling EINTR. | |
611 | ||
612 | Arguments: | |
613 | fd the fd to write to | |
614 | buf the string to write | |
615 | length the string length being written | |
616 | ||
617 | Returns: | |
618 | length actually written, persisting an errno from write() | |
619 | */ | |
620 | ssize_t | |
17c76198 | 621 | write_to_fd_buf(int fd, const uschar *buf, size_t length) |
0599f9cf PP |
622 | { |
623 | ssize_t wrote; | |
624 | size_t total_written = 0; | |
17c76198 | 625 | const uschar *p = buf; |
0599f9cf PP |
626 | size_t left = length; |
627 | ||
628 | while (1) | |
629 | { | |
630 | wrote = write(fd, p, left); | |
631 | if (wrote == (ssize_t)-1) | |
632 | { | |
633 | if (errno == EINTR) continue; | |
634 | return wrote; | |
635 | } | |
636 | total_written += wrote; | |
637 | if (wrote == left) | |
638 | break; | |
639 | else | |
640 | { | |
641 | p += wrote; | |
642 | left -= wrote; | |
643 | } | |
644 | } | |
645 | return total_written; | |
646 | } | |
647 | ||
648 | ||
e4a6fb35 JH |
649 | |
650 | static void | |
651 | set_file_path(void) | |
652 | { | |
653 | int sep = ':'; /* Fixed separator - outside use */ | |
654 | uschar *t; | |
655 | const uschar *tt = US LOG_FILE_PATH; | |
656 | while ((t = string_nextinlist(&tt, &sep, log_buffer, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE))) | |
657 | { | |
658 | if (Ustrcmp(t, "syslog") == 0 || t[0] == 0) continue; | |
659 | file_path = string_copy(t); | |
660 | break; | |
661 | } | |
662 | } | |
663 | ||
664 | ||
9cd319d9 JH |
665 | void |
666 | mainlog_close(void) | |
667 | { | |
668 | if (mainlogfd < 0) return; | |
669 | (void)close(mainlogfd); | |
670 | mainlogfd = -1; | |
671 | mainlog_inode = 0; | |
672 | } | |
e4a6fb35 | 673 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
674 | /************************************************* |
675 | * Write message to log file * | |
676 | *************************************************/ | |
677 | ||
678 | /* Exim can be configured to log to local files, or use syslog, or both. This | |
679 | is controlled by the setting of log_file_path. The following cases are | |
680 | recognized: | |
681 | ||
682 | log_file_path = "" write files in the spool/log directory | |
683 | log_file_path = "xxx" write files in the xxx directory | |
684 | log_file_path = "syslog" write to syslog | |
685 | log_file_path = "syslog : xxx" write to syslog and to files (any order) | |
686 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
687 | The message always gets '\n' added on the end of it, since more than one |
688 | process may be writing to the log at once and we don't want intermingling to | |
689 | happen in the middle of lines. To be absolutely sure of this we write the data | |
690 | into a private buffer and then put it out in a single write() call. | |
691 | ||
692 | The flags determine which log(s) the message is written to, or for syslogging, | |
693 | which priority to use, and in the case of the panic log, whether the process | |
694 | should die afterwards. | |
695 | ||
696 | The variable really_exim is TRUE only when exim is running in privileged state | |
697 | (i.e. not with a changed configuration or with testing options such as -brw). | |
698 | If it is not, don't try to write to the log because permission will probably be | |
699 | denied. | |
700 | ||
701 | Avoid actually writing to the logs when exim is called with -bv or -bt to | |
4c04137d | 702 | test an address, but take other actions, such as panicking. |
059ec3d9 PH |
703 | |
704 | In Exim proper, the buffer for building the message is got at start-up, so that | |
705 | nothing gets done if it can't be got. However, some functions that are also | |
706 | used in utilities occasionally obey log_write calls in error situations, and it | |
707 | is simplest to put a single malloc() here rather than put one in each utility. | |
708 | Malloc is used directly because the store functions may call log_write(). | |
709 | ||
710 | If a message_id exists, we include it after the timestamp. | |
711 | ||
712 | Arguments: | |
713 | selector write to main log or LOG_INFO only if this value is zero, or if | |
6c6d6e48 | 714 | its bit is set in log_selector[0] |
059ec3d9 PH |
715 | flags each bit indicates some independent action: |
716 | LOG_SENDER add raw sender to the message | |
717 | LOG_RECIPIENTS add raw recipients list to message | |
718 | LOG_CONFIG add "Exim configuration error" | |
719 | LOG_CONFIG_FOR add " for " instead of ":\n " | |
720 | LOG_CONFIG_IN add " in line x[ of file y]" | |
721 | LOG_MAIN write to main log or syslog LOG_INFO | |
722 | LOG_REJECT write to reject log or syslog LOG_NOTICE | |
723 | LOG_PANIC write to panic log or syslog LOG_ALERT | |
724 | LOG_PANIC_DIE write to panic log or LOG_ALERT and then crash | |
059ec3d9 PH |
725 | format a printf() format |
726 | ... arguments for format | |
727 | ||
728 | Returns: nothing | |
729 | */ | |
730 | ||
731 | void | |
1ba28e2b | 732 | log_write(unsigned int selector, int flags, const char *format, ...) |
059ec3d9 | 733 | { |
571b2715 | 734 | uschar * ptr; |
0599f9cf | 735 | int length; |
059ec3d9 | 736 | int paniclogfd; |
23ecb73d | 737 | ssize_t written_len; |
059ec3d9 PH |
738 | va_list ap; |
739 | ||
740 | /* If panic_recurseflag is set, we have failed to open the panic log. This is | |
741 | the ultimate disaster. First try to write the message to a debug file and/or | |
742 | stderr and also to syslog. If panic_save_buffer is not NULL, it contains the | |
743 | original log line that caused the problem. Afterwards, expire. */ | |
744 | ||
745 | if (panic_recurseflag) | |
746 | { | |
747 | uschar *extra = (panic_save_buffer == NULL)? US"" : panic_save_buffer; | |
748 | if (debug_file != NULL) debug_printf("%s%s", extra, log_buffer); | |
749 | if (log_stderr != NULL && log_stderr != debug_file) | |
750 | fprintf(log_stderr, "%s%s", extra, log_buffer); | |
751 | if (*extra != 0) write_syslog(LOG_CRIT, extra); | |
752 | write_syslog(LOG_CRIT, log_buffer); | |
753 | die(US"exim: could not open panic log - aborting: see message(s) above", | |
754 | US"Unexpected log failure, please try later"); | |
755 | } | |
756 | ||
757 | /* Ensure we have a buffer (see comment above); this should never be obeyed | |
758 | when running Exim proper, only when running utilities. */ | |
759 | ||
40c90bca JH |
760 | if (!log_buffer) |
761 | if (!(log_buffer = US malloc(LOG_BUFFER_SIZE))) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
762 | { |
763 | fprintf(stderr, "exim: failed to get store for log buffer\n"); | |
9bfb7e1b | 764 | exim_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, NULL); |
059ec3d9 | 765 | } |
059ec3d9 PH |
766 | |
767 | /* If we haven't already done so, inspect the setting of log_file_path to | |
768 | determine whether to log to files and/or to syslog. Bits in logging_mode | |
769 | control this, and for file logging, the path must end up in file_path. This | |
770 | variable must be in permanent store because it may be required again later in | |
771 | the process. */ | |
772 | ||
773 | if (!path_inspected) | |
774 | { | |
775 | BOOL multiple = FALSE; | |
776 | int old_pool = store_pool; | |
777 | ||
778 | store_pool = POOL_PERM; | |
779 | ||
780 | /* If nothing has been set, don't waste effort... the default values for the | |
781 | statics are file_path="" and logging_mode = LOG_MODE_FILE. */ | |
782 | ||
e4a6fb35 | 783 | if (*log_file_path) |
059ec3d9 PH |
784 | { |
785 | int sep = ':'; /* Fixed separator - outside use */ | |
786 | uschar *s; | |
55414b25 | 787 | const uschar *ss = log_file_path; |
059ec3d9 | 788 | logging_mode = 0; |
55414b25 | 789 | while ((s = string_nextinlist(&ss, &sep, log_buffer, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE))) |
059ec3d9 PH |
790 | { |
791 | if (Ustrcmp(s, "syslog") == 0) | |
792 | logging_mode |= LOG_MODE_SYSLOG; | |
793 | else if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_FILE) != 0) multiple = TRUE; | |
794 | else | |
795 | { | |
796 | logging_mode |= LOG_MODE_FILE; | |
797 | ||
798 | /* If a non-empty path is given, use it */ | |
799 | ||
e4a6fb35 | 800 | if (*s) |
059ec3d9 | 801 | file_path = string_copy(s); |
059ec3d9 PH |
802 | |
803 | /* If the path is empty, we want to use the first non-empty, non- | |
804 | syslog item in LOG_FILE_PATH, if there is one, since the value of | |
805 | log_file_path may have been set at runtime. If there is no such item, | |
806 | use the ultimate default in the spool directory. */ | |
807 | ||
808 | else | |
e4a6fb35 | 809 | set_file_path(); /* Empty item in log_file_path */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
810 | } /* First non-syslog item in log_file_path */ |
811 | } /* Scan of log_file_path */ | |
812 | } | |
813 | ||
814 | /* If no modes have been selected, it is a major disaster */ | |
815 | ||
816 | if (logging_mode == 0) | |
817 | die(US"Neither syslog nor file logging set in log_file_path", | |
818 | US"Unexpected logging failure"); | |
819 | ||
820 | /* Set up the ultimate default if necessary. Then revert to the old store | |
821 | pool, and record that we've sorted out the path. */ | |
822 | ||
823 | if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_FILE) != 0 && file_path[0] == 0) | |
824 | file_path = string_sprintf("%s/log/%%slog", spool_directory); | |
825 | store_pool = old_pool; | |
826 | path_inspected = TRUE; | |
827 | ||
828 | /* If more than one file path was given, log a complaint. This recursive call | |
829 | should work since we have now set up the routing. */ | |
830 | ||
831 | if (multiple) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
832 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, |
833 | "More than one path given in log_file_path: using %s", file_path); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
834 | } |
835 | ||
836 | /* If debugging, show all log entries, but don't show headers. Do it all | |
837 | in one go so that it doesn't get split when multi-processing. */ | |
838 | ||
839 | DEBUG(D_any|D_v) | |
840 | { | |
841 | int i; | |
842 | ptr = log_buffer; | |
843 | ||
844 | Ustrcpy(ptr, "LOG:"); | |
845 | ptr += 4; | |
846 | ||
6c6d6e48 | 847 | /* Show the selector that was passed into the call. */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
848 | |
849 | for (i = 0; i < log_options_count; i++) | |
850 | { | |
ac881e27 TF |
851 | unsigned int bitnum = log_options[i].bit; |
852 | if (bitnum < BITWORDSIZE && selector == BIT(bitnum)) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
853 | { |
854 | *ptr++ = ' '; | |
855 | Ustrcpy(ptr, log_options[i].name); | |
856 | while (*ptr) ptr++; | |
857 | } | |
858 | } | |
859 | ||
5976eb99 | 860 | ptr += sprintf(CS ptr, "%s%s%s%s\n ", |
059ec3d9 PH |
861 | ((flags & LOG_MAIN) != 0)? " MAIN" : "", |
862 | ((flags & LOG_PANIC) != 0)? " PANIC" : "", | |
863 | ((flags & LOG_PANIC_DIE) == LOG_PANIC_DIE)? " DIE" : "", | |
059ec3d9 PH |
864 | ((flags & LOG_REJECT) != 0)? " REJECT" : ""); |
865 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
866 | if ((flags & LOG_CONFIG) != 0) ptr = log_config_info(ptr, flags); |
867 | ||
868 | va_start(ap, format); | |
869 | if (!string_vformat(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer)-1, format, ap)) | |
870 | Ustrcpy(ptr, "**** log string overflowed log buffer ****"); | |
871 | va_end(ap); | |
872 | ||
873 | while(*ptr) ptr++; | |
874 | Ustrcat(ptr, "\n"); | |
875 | debug_printf("%s", log_buffer); | |
876 | } | |
877 | ||
878 | /* If no log file is specified, we are in a mess. */ | |
879 | ||
921b12ca | 880 | if ((flags & (LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC|LOG_REJECT)) == 0) |
059ec3d9 PH |
881 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "log_write called with no log " |
882 | "flags set"); | |
883 | ||
884 | /* There are some weird circumstances in which logging is disabled. */ | |
885 | ||
886 | if (disable_logging) | |
887 | { | |
888 | DEBUG(D_any) debug_printf("log writing disabled\n"); | |
889 | return; | |
890 | } | |
891 | ||
a7d7aa58 PH |
892 | /* Handle disabled reject log */ |
893 | ||
894 | if (!write_rejectlog) flags &= ~LOG_REJECT; | |
895 | ||
921b12ca TF |
896 | /* Create the main message in the log buffer. Do not include the message id |
897 | when called by a utility. */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
898 | |
899 | ptr = log_buffer; | |
571b2715 | 900 | ptr += sprintf(CS ptr, "%s ", tod_stamp(tod_log)); |
f3f065bb | 901 | |
6c6d6e48 | 902 | if (LOGGING(pid)) |
f3f065bb | 903 | { |
dd7b74e9 | 904 | if (!syslog_pid) pid_position[0] = ptr - log_buffer; /* remember begin … */ |
571b2715 | 905 | ptr += sprintf(CS ptr, "[%d] ", (int)getpid()); |
dd7b74e9 | 906 | if (!syslog_pid) pid_position[1] = ptr - log_buffer; /* … and end+1 of the PID */ |
f3f065bb PH |
907 | } |
908 | ||
921b12ca | 909 | if (really_exim && message_id[0] != 0) |
571b2715 | 910 | ptr += sprintf(CS ptr, "%s ", message_id); |
059ec3d9 | 911 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
912 | if ((flags & LOG_CONFIG) != 0) ptr = log_config_info(ptr, flags); |
913 | ||
914 | va_start(ap, format); | |
915 | if (!string_vformat(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer)-1, format, ap)) | |
916 | Ustrcpy(ptr, "**** log string overflowed log buffer ****\n"); | |
917 | while(*ptr) ptr++; | |
918 | va_end(ap); | |
919 | ||
920 | /* Add the raw, unrewritten, sender to the message if required. This is done | |
921 | this way because it kind of fits with LOG_RECIPIENTS. */ | |
922 | ||
923 | if ((flags & LOG_SENDER) != 0 && | |
ccfdb010 | 924 | ptr < log_buffer + LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - 10 - Ustrlen(raw_sender)) |
571b2715 | 925 | ptr += sprintf(CS ptr, " from <%s>", raw_sender); |
059ec3d9 PH |
926 | |
927 | /* Add list of recipients to the message if required; the raw list, | |
928 | before rewriting, was saved in raw_recipients. There may be none, if an ACL | |
929 | discarded them all. */ | |
930 | ||
931 | if ((flags & LOG_RECIPIENTS) != 0 && ptr < log_buffer + LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - 6 && | |
932 | raw_recipients_count > 0) | |
933 | { | |
934 | int i; | |
571b2715 | 935 | ptr += sprintf(CS ptr, " for"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
936 | for (i = 0; i < raw_recipients_count; i++) |
937 | { | |
571b2715 | 938 | uschar * s = raw_recipients[i]; |
059ec3d9 | 939 | if (log_buffer + LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - ptr < Ustrlen(s) + 3) break; |
571b2715 | 940 | ptr += sprintf(CS ptr, " %s", s); |
059ec3d9 PH |
941 | } |
942 | } | |
943 | ||
571b2715 | 944 | ptr += sprintf(CS ptr, "\n"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
945 | length = ptr - log_buffer; |
946 | ||
947 | /* Handle loggable errors when running a utility, or when address testing. | |
948 | Write to log_stderr unless debugging (when it will already have been written), | |
949 | or unless there is no log_stderr (expn called from daemon, for example). */ | |
950 | ||
951 | if (!really_exim || log_testing_mode) | |
952 | { | |
953 | if (debug_selector == 0 && log_stderr != NULL && | |
6c6d6e48 | 954 | (selector == 0 || (selector & log_selector[0]) != 0)) |
059ec3d9 PH |
955 | { |
956 | if (host_checking) | |
957 | fprintf(log_stderr, "LOG: %s", CS(log_buffer + 20)); /* no timestamp */ | |
958 | else | |
959 | fprintf(log_stderr, "%s", CS log_buffer); | |
960 | } | |
9bfb7e1b | 961 | if ((flags & LOG_PANIC_DIE) == LOG_PANIC_DIE) exim_exit(EXIT_FAILURE, US""); |
059ec3d9 PH |
962 | return; |
963 | } | |
964 | ||
965 | /* Handle the main log. We know that either syslog or file logging (or both) is | |
966 | set up. A real file gets left open during reception or delivery once it has | |
967 | been opened, but we don't want to keep on writing to it for too long after it | |
968 | has been renamed. Therefore, do a stat() and see if the inode has changed, and | |
969 | if so, re-open. */ | |
970 | ||
3cc3f762 JH |
971 | if ( flags & LOG_MAIN |
972 | && (!selector || selector & log_selector[0])) | |
059ec3d9 | 973 | { |
3cc3f762 JH |
974 | if ( logging_mode & LOG_MODE_SYSLOG |
975 | && (syslog_duplication || !(flags & (LOG_REJECT|LOG_PANIC)))) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
976 | write_syslog(LOG_INFO, log_buffer); |
977 | ||
3cc3f762 | 978 | if (logging_mode & LOG_MODE_FILE) |
059ec3d9 PH |
979 | { |
980 | struct stat statbuf; | |
981 | ||
982 | /* Check for a change to the mainlog file name when datestamping is in | |
983 | operation. This happens at midnight, at which point we want to roll over | |
984 | the file. Closing it has the desired effect. */ | |
985 | ||
cd2e3fd0 | 986 | if (mainlog_datestamp) |
059ec3d9 | 987 | { |
f1e5fef5 | 988 | uschar *nowstamp = tod_stamp(string_datestamp_type); |
059ec3d9 PH |
989 | if (Ustrncmp (mainlog_datestamp, nowstamp, Ustrlen(nowstamp)) != 0) |
990 | { | |
f1e894f3 | 991 | (void)close(mainlogfd); /* Close the file */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
992 | mainlogfd = -1; /* Clear the file descriptor */ |
993 | mainlog_inode = 0; /* Unset the inode */ | |
994 | mainlog_datestamp = NULL; /* Clear the datestamp */ | |
995 | } | |
996 | } | |
997 | ||
998 | /* Otherwise, we want to check whether the file has been renamed by a | |
999 | cycling script. This could be "if else", but for safety's sake, leave it as | |
1000 | "if" so that renaming the log starts a new file even when datestamping is | |
1001 | happening. */ | |
1002 | ||
1003 | if (mainlogfd >= 0) | |
059ec3d9 | 1004 | if (Ustat(mainlog_name, &statbuf) < 0 || statbuf.st_ino != mainlog_inode) |
9cd319d9 | 1005 | mainlog_close(); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1006 | |
1007 | /* If the log is closed, open it. Then write the line. */ | |
1008 | ||
1009 | if (mainlogfd < 0) | |
1010 | { | |
ed7f7860 | 1011 | open_log(&mainlogfd, lt_main, NULL); /* No return on error */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
1012 | if (fstat(mainlogfd, &statbuf) >= 0) mainlog_inode = statbuf.st_ino; |
1013 | } | |
1014 | ||
1015 | /* Failing to write to the log is disastrous */ | |
1016 | ||
0599f9cf | 1017 | written_len = write_to_fd_buf(mainlogfd, log_buffer, length); |
23ecb73d | 1018 | if (written_len != length) |
059ec3d9 | 1019 | { |
23ecb73d | 1020 | log_write_failed(US"main log", length, written_len); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1021 | /* That function does not return */ |
1022 | } | |
1023 | } | |
1024 | } | |
1025 | ||
a7d7aa58 PH |
1026 | /* Handle the log for rejected messages. This can be globally disabled, in |
1027 | which case the flags are altered above. If there are any header lines (i.e. if | |
1028 | the rejection is happening after the DATA phase), log the recipients and the | |
1029 | headers. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 1030 | |
a7d7aa58 | 1031 | if ((flags & LOG_REJECT) != 0) |
059ec3d9 PH |
1032 | { |
1033 | header_line *h; | |
1034 | ||
6c6d6e48 | 1035 | if (header_list != NULL && LOGGING(rejected_header)) |
059ec3d9 PH |
1036 | { |
1037 | if (recipients_count > 0) | |
1038 | { | |
1039 | int i; | |
1040 | ||
1041 | /* List the sender */ | |
1042 | ||
1043 | string_format(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer), | |
1044 | "Envelope-from: <%s>\n", sender_address); | |
1045 | while (*ptr) ptr++; | |
1046 | ||
1047 | /* List up to 5 recipients */ | |
1048 | ||
1049 | string_format(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer), | |
1050 | "Envelope-to: <%s>\n", recipients_list[0].address); | |
1051 | while (*ptr) ptr++; | |
1052 | ||
1053 | for (i = 1; i < recipients_count && i < 5; i++) | |
1054 | { | |
1055 | string_format(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer), " <%s>\n", | |
1056 | recipients_list[i].address); | |
1057 | while (*ptr) ptr++; | |
1058 | } | |
1059 | ||
1060 | if (i < recipients_count) | |
1061 | { | |
1062 | (void)string_format(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer), | |
1063 | " ...\n"); | |
1064 | while (*ptr) ptr++; | |
1065 | } | |
1066 | } | |
1067 | ||
1068 | /* A header with a NULL text is an unfilled in Received: header */ | |
1069 | ||
571b2715 | 1070 | for (h = header_list; h; h = h->next) if (h->text) |
059ec3d9 | 1071 | { |
571b2715 | 1072 | BOOL fitted = string_format(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer), |
059ec3d9 PH |
1073 | "%c %s", h->type, h->text); |
1074 | while(*ptr) ptr++; | |
1075 | if (!fitted) /* Buffer is full; truncate */ | |
1076 | { | |
1077 | ptr -= 100; /* For message and separator */ | |
1078 | if (ptr[-1] == '\n') ptr--; | |
1079 | Ustrcpy(ptr, "\n*** truncated ***\n"); | |
1080 | while (*ptr) ptr++; | |
1081 | break; | |
1082 | } | |
1083 | } | |
1084 | ||
1085 | length = ptr - log_buffer; | |
1086 | } | |
1087 | ||
1088 | /* Write to syslog or to a log file */ | |
1089 | ||
1090 | if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_SYSLOG) != 0 && | |
1091 | (syslog_duplication || (flags & LOG_PANIC) == 0)) | |
1092 | write_syslog(LOG_NOTICE, log_buffer); | |
1093 | ||
1094 | /* Check for a change to the rejectlog file name when datestamping is in | |
1095 | operation. This happens at midnight, at which point we want to roll over | |
1096 | the file. Closing it has the desired effect. */ | |
1097 | ||
1098 | if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_FILE) != 0) | |
1099 | { | |
1100 | struct stat statbuf; | |
1101 | ||
571b2715 | 1102 | if (rejectlog_datestamp) |
059ec3d9 | 1103 | { |
f1e5fef5 | 1104 | uschar *nowstamp = tod_stamp(string_datestamp_type); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1105 | if (Ustrncmp (rejectlog_datestamp, nowstamp, Ustrlen(nowstamp)) != 0) |
1106 | { | |
f1e894f3 | 1107 | (void)close(rejectlogfd); /* Close the file */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
1108 | rejectlogfd = -1; /* Clear the file descriptor */ |
1109 | rejectlog_inode = 0; /* Unset the inode */ | |
1110 | rejectlog_datestamp = NULL; /* Clear the datestamp */ | |
1111 | } | |
1112 | } | |
1113 | ||
1114 | /* Otherwise, we want to check whether the file has been renamed by a | |
1115 | cycling script. This could be "if else", but for safety's sake, leave it as | |
1116 | "if" so that renaming the log starts a new file even when datestamping is | |
1117 | happening. */ | |
1118 | ||
1119 | if (rejectlogfd >= 0) | |
1120 | { | |
1121 | if (Ustat(rejectlog_name, &statbuf) < 0 || | |
1122 | statbuf.st_ino != rejectlog_inode) | |
1123 | { | |
f1e894f3 | 1124 | (void)close(rejectlogfd); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1125 | rejectlogfd = -1; |
1126 | rejectlog_inode = 0; | |
1127 | } | |
1128 | } | |
1129 | ||
1130 | /* Open the file if necessary, and write the data */ | |
1131 | ||
1132 | if (rejectlogfd < 0) | |
1133 | { | |
ed7f7860 | 1134 | open_log(&rejectlogfd, lt_reject, NULL); /* No return on error */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
1135 | if (fstat(rejectlogfd, &statbuf) >= 0) rejectlog_inode = statbuf.st_ino; |
1136 | } | |
1137 | ||
0599f9cf PP |
1138 | written_len = write_to_fd_buf(rejectlogfd, log_buffer, length); |
1139 | if (written_len != length) | |
059ec3d9 | 1140 | { |
0599f9cf | 1141 | log_write_failed(US"reject log", length, written_len); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1142 | /* That function does not return */ |
1143 | } | |
1144 | } | |
1145 | } | |
1146 | ||
1147 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
1148 | /* Handle the panic log, which is not kept open like the others. If it fails to |
1149 | open, there will be a recursive call to log_write(). We detect this above and | |
1150 | attempt to write to the system log as a last-ditch try at telling somebody. In | |
47c7a64a | 1151 | all cases except mua_wrapper, try to write to log_stderr. */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
1152 | |
1153 | if ((flags & LOG_PANIC) != 0) | |
1154 | { | |
47c7a64a | 1155 | if (log_stderr != NULL && log_stderr != debug_file && !mua_wrapper) |
059ec3d9 PH |
1156 | fprintf(log_stderr, "%s", CS log_buffer); |
1157 | ||
1158 | if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_SYSLOG) != 0) | |
059ec3d9 | 1159 | write_syslog(LOG_ALERT, log_buffer); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1160 | |
1161 | /* If this panic logging was caused by a failure to open the main log, | |
1162 | the original log line is in panic_save_buffer. Make an attempt to write it. */ | |
1163 | ||
1164 | if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_FILE) != 0) | |
1165 | { | |
1166 | panic_recurseflag = TRUE; | |
ed7f7860 | 1167 | open_log(&paniclogfd, lt_panic, NULL); /* Won't return on failure */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
1168 | panic_recurseflag = FALSE; |
1169 | ||
1170 | if (panic_save_buffer != NULL) | |
1ac6b2e7 JH |
1171 | { |
1172 | int i = write(paniclogfd, panic_save_buffer, Ustrlen(panic_save_buffer)); | |
1173 | i = i; /* compiler quietening */ | |
1174 | } | |
059ec3d9 | 1175 | |
0599f9cf PP |
1176 | written_len = write_to_fd_buf(paniclogfd, log_buffer, length); |
1177 | if (written_len != length) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1178 | { |
1179 | int save_errno = errno; | |
1180 | write_syslog(LOG_CRIT, log_buffer); | |
1181 | sprintf(CS log_buffer, "write failed on panic log: length=%d result=%d " | |
0599f9cf | 1182 | "errno=%d (%s)", length, (int)written_len, save_errno, strerror(save_errno)); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1183 | write_syslog(LOG_CRIT, log_buffer); |
1184 | flags |= LOG_PANIC_DIE; | |
1185 | } | |
1186 | ||
f1e894f3 | 1187 | (void)close(paniclogfd); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1188 | } |
1189 | ||
1190 | /* Give up if the DIE flag is set */ | |
1191 | ||
1192 | if ((flags & LOG_PANIC_DIE) != LOG_PANIC) | |
1193 | die(NULL, US"Unexpected failure, please try later"); | |
1194 | } | |
1195 | } | |
1196 | ||
1197 | ||
1198 | ||
1199 | /************************************************* | |
1200 | * Close any open log files * | |
1201 | *************************************************/ | |
1202 | ||
1203 | void | |
1204 | log_close_all(void) | |
1205 | { | |
1206 | if (mainlogfd >= 0) | |
f1e894f3 | 1207 | { (void)close(mainlogfd); mainlogfd = -1; } |
059ec3d9 | 1208 | if (rejectlogfd >= 0) |
f1e894f3 | 1209 | { (void)close(rejectlogfd); rejectlogfd = -1; } |
059ec3d9 PH |
1210 | closelog(); |
1211 | syslog_open = FALSE; | |
1212 | } | |
1213 | ||
ed7f7860 PP |
1214 | |
1215 | ||
6c6d6e48 TF |
1216 | /************************************************* |
1217 | * Multi-bit set or clear * | |
1218 | *************************************************/ | |
1219 | ||
1220 | /* These functions take a list of bit indexes (terminated by -1) and | |
1221 | clear or set the corresponding bits in the selector. | |
1222 | ||
1223 | Arguments: | |
1224 | selector address of the bit string | |
1225 | selsize number of words in the bit string | |
1226 | bits list of bits to set | |
1227 | */ | |
1228 | ||
1229 | void | |
1230 | bits_clear(unsigned int *selector, size_t selsize, int *bits) | |
1231 | { | |
1232 | for(; *bits != -1; ++bits) | |
1233 | BIT_CLEAR(selector, selsize, *bits); | |
1234 | } | |
1235 | ||
1236 | void | |
1237 | bits_set(unsigned int *selector, size_t selsize, int *bits) | |
1238 | { | |
1239 | for(; *bits != -1; ++bits) | |
1240 | BIT_SET(selector, selsize, *bits); | |
1241 | } | |
1242 | ||
1243 | ||
1244 | ||
ed7f7860 PP |
1245 | /************************************************* |
1246 | * Decode bit settings for log/debug * | |
1247 | *************************************************/ | |
1248 | ||
1249 | /* This function decodes a string containing bit settings in the form of +name | |
1250 | and/or -name sequences, and sets/unsets bits in a bit string accordingly. It | |
1251 | also recognizes a numeric setting of the form =<number>, but this is not | |
1252 | intended for user use. It's an easy way for Exim to pass the debug settings | |
1253 | when it is re-exec'ed. | |
1254 | ||
6c6d6e48 TF |
1255 | The option table is a list of names and bit indexes. The index -1 |
1256 | means "set all bits, except for those listed in notall". The notall | |
1257 | list is terminated by -1. | |
ed7f7860 PP |
1258 | |
1259 | The action taken for bad values varies depending upon why we're here. | |
1260 | For log messages, or if the debugging is triggered from config, then we write | |
1261 | to the log on the way out. For debug setting triggered from the command-line, | |
1262 | we treat it as an unknown option: error message to stderr and die. | |
1263 | ||
1264 | Arguments: | |
6c6d6e48 TF |
1265 | selector address of the bit string |
1266 | selsize number of words in the bit string | |
1267 | notall list of bits to exclude from "all" | |
ed7f7860 PP |
1268 | string the configured string |
1269 | options the table of option names | |
1270 | count size of table | |
1271 | which "log" or "debug" | |
1272 | flags DEBUG_FROM_CONFIG | |
1273 | ||
1274 | Returns: nothing on success - bomb out on failure | |
1275 | */ | |
1276 | ||
1277 | void | |
6c6d6e48 TF |
1278 | decode_bits(unsigned int *selector, size_t selsize, int *notall, |
1279 | uschar *string, bit_table *options, int count, uschar *which, int flags) | |
ed7f7860 PP |
1280 | { |
1281 | uschar *errmsg; | |
1282 | if (string == NULL) return; | |
1283 | ||
1284 | if (*string == '=') | |
1285 | { | |
1286 | char *end; /* Not uschar */ | |
6c6d6e48 TF |
1287 | memset(selector, 0, sizeof(*selector)*selsize); |
1288 | *selector = strtoul(CS string+1, &end, 0); | |
ed7f7860 PP |
1289 | if (*end == 0) return; |
1290 | errmsg = string_sprintf("malformed numeric %s_selector setting: %s", which, | |
1291 | string); | |
1292 | goto ERROR_RETURN; | |
1293 | } | |
1294 | ||
1295 | /* Handle symbolic setting */ | |
1296 | ||
1297 | else for(;;) | |
1298 | { | |
1299 | BOOL adding; | |
1300 | uschar *s; | |
1301 | int len; | |
1302 | bit_table *start, *end; | |
1303 | ||
1304 | while (isspace(*string)) string++; | |
1305 | if (*string == 0) return; | |
1306 | ||
1307 | if (*string != '+' && *string != '-') | |
1308 | { | |
1309 | errmsg = string_sprintf("malformed %s_selector setting: " | |
1310 | "+ or - expected but found \"%s\"", which, string); | |
1311 | goto ERROR_RETURN; | |
1312 | } | |
1313 | ||
1314 | adding = *string++ == '+'; | |
1315 | s = string; | |
1316 | while (isalnum(*string) || *string == '_') string++; | |
1317 | len = string - s; | |
1318 | ||
1319 | start = options; | |
1320 | end = options + count; | |
1321 | ||
1322 | while (start < end) | |
1323 | { | |
1324 | bit_table *middle = start + (end - start)/2; | |
1325 | int c = Ustrncmp(s, middle->name, len); | |
1326 | if (c == 0) | |
1327 | { | |
1328 | if (middle->name[len] != 0) c = -1; else | |
1329 | { | |
1330 | unsigned int bit = middle->bit; | |
ed7f7860 | 1331 | |
6c6d6e48 TF |
1332 | if (bit == -1) |
1333 | { | |
1334 | if (adding) | |
1335 | { | |
1336 | memset(selector, -1, sizeof(*selector)*selsize); | |
1337 | bits_clear(selector, selsize, notall); | |
1338 | } | |
1339 | else | |
1340 | memset(selector, 0, sizeof(*selector)*selsize); | |
1341 | } | |
1342 | else if (adding) | |
1343 | BIT_SET(selector, selsize, bit); | |
1344 | else | |
1345 | BIT_CLEAR(selector, selsize, bit); | |
1346 | ||
ed7f7860 PP |
1347 | break; /* Out of loop to match selector name */ |
1348 | } | |
1349 | } | |
1350 | if (c < 0) end = middle; else start = middle + 1; | |
1351 | } /* Loop to match selector name */ | |
1352 | ||
1353 | if (start >= end) | |
1354 | { | |
1355 | errmsg = string_sprintf("unknown %s_selector setting: %c%.*s", which, | |
1356 | adding? '+' : '-', len, s); | |
1357 | goto ERROR_RETURN; | |
1358 | } | |
1359 | } /* Loop for selector names */ | |
1360 | ||
1361 | /* Handle disasters */ | |
1362 | ||
1363 | ERROR_RETURN: | |
1364 | if (Ustrcmp(which, "debug") == 0) | |
1365 | { | |
1366 | if (flags & DEBUG_FROM_CONFIG) | |
1367 | { | |
1368 | log_write(0, LOG_CONFIG|LOG_PANIC, "%s", errmsg); | |
1369 | return; | |
1370 | } | |
1371 | fprintf(stderr, "exim: %s\n", errmsg); | |
1372 | exit(EXIT_FAILURE); | |
1373 | } | |
1374 | else log_write(0, LOG_CONFIG|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "%s", errmsg); | |
1375 | } | |
1376 | ||
1377 | ||
1378 | ||
1379 | /************************************************* | |
1380 | * Activate a debug logfile (late) * | |
1381 | *************************************************/ | |
1382 | ||
1383 | /* Normally, debugging is activated from the command-line; it may be useful | |
1384 | within the configuration to activate debugging later, based on certain | |
1385 | conditions. If debugging is already in progress, we return early, no action | |
1386 | taken (besides debug-logging that we wanted debug-logging). | |
1387 | ||
1388 | Failures in options are not fatal but will result in paniclog entries for the | |
1389 | misconfiguration. | |
1390 | ||
1391 | The first use of this is in ACL logic, "control = debug/tag=foo/opts=+expand" | |
1392 | which can be combined with conditions, etc, to activate extra logging only | |
9ee44efb | 1393 | for certain sources. The second use is inetd wait mode debug preservation. */ |
ed7f7860 PP |
1394 | |
1395 | void | |
1396 | debug_logging_activate(uschar *tag_name, uschar *opts) | |
1397 | { | |
1398 | int fd = -1; | |
1399 | ||
1400 | if (debug_file) | |
1401 | { | |
1402 | debug_printf("DEBUGGING ACTIVATED FROM WITHIN CONFIG.\n" | |
b0d68adc | 1403 | "DEBUG: Tag=\"%s\" opts=\"%s\"\n", tag_name, opts ? opts : US""); |
ed7f7860 PP |
1404 | return; |
1405 | } | |
1406 | ||
1407 | if (tag_name != NULL && (Ustrchr(tag_name, '/') != NULL)) | |
1408 | { | |
1409 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "debug tag may not contain a '/' in: %s", | |
1410 | tag_name); | |
1411 | return; | |
1412 | } | |
1413 | ||
1414 | debug_selector = D_default; | |
1415 | if (opts) | |
6c6d6e48 | 1416 | decode_bits(&debug_selector, 1, debug_notall, opts, |
ed7f7860 | 1417 | debug_options, debug_options_count, US"debug", DEBUG_FROM_CONFIG); |
ed7f7860 | 1418 | |
e4a6fb35 JH |
1419 | /* When activating from a transport process we may never have logged at all |
1420 | resulting in certain setup not having been done. Hack this for now so we | |
1421 | do not segfault; note that nondefault log locations will not work */ | |
1422 | ||
1423 | if (!*file_path) set_file_path(); | |
1424 | ||
ed7f7860 PP |
1425 | open_log(&fd, lt_debug, tag_name); |
1426 | ||
1427 | if (fd != -1) | |
1428 | debug_file = fdopen(fd, "w"); | |
1429 | else | |
1430 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "unable to open debug log"); | |
1431 | } | |
1432 | ||
1433 | ||
b0d68adc JH |
1434 | void |
1435 | debug_logging_stop(void) | |
1436 | { | |
1437 | if (!debug_file || !debuglog_name[0]) return; | |
1438 | ||
1439 | debug_selector = 0; | |
1440 | fclose(debug_file); | |
1441 | debug_file = NULL; | |
1442 | unlink_log(lt_debug); | |
1443 | } | |
1444 | ||
1445 | ||
059ec3d9 | 1446 | /* End of log.c */ |