Forgot T_SOA when adding the backup T_xxx definitions. Also, T_SOA was
[exim.git] / src / src / dns.c
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885ccd3e 1/* $Cambridge: exim/src/src/dns.c,v 1.9 2005/06/29 10:56:35 ph10 Exp $ */
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2
3/*************************************************
4* Exim - an Internet mail transport agent *
5*************************************************/
6
c988f1f4 7/* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2005 */
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8/* See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. */
9
10/* Functions for interfacing with the DNS. */
11
12#include "exim.h"
13
14
15/* Function declaration needed for mutual recursion when A6 records
16are supported. */
17
18#if HAVE_IPV6
19#ifdef SUPPORT_A6
20static void dns_complete_a6(dns_address ***, dns_answer *, dns_record *,
21 int, uschar *);
22#endif
23#endif
24
25
26
27/*************************************************
28* Initialize and configure resolver *
29*************************************************/
30
31/* Initialize the resolver and the storage for holding DNS answers if this is
32the first time we have been here, and set the resolver options.
33
34Arguments:
35 qualify_single TRUE to set the RES_DEFNAMES option
36 search_parents TRUE to set the RES_DNSRCH option
37
38Returns: nothing
39*/
40
41void
42dns_init(BOOL qualify_single, BOOL search_parents)
43{
44if ((_res.options & RES_INIT) == 0)
45 {
46 DEBUG(D_resolver) _res.options |= RES_DEBUG; /* For Cygwin */
47 res_init();
48 DEBUG(D_resolver) _res.options |= RES_DEBUG;
49 }
50
51_res.options &= ~(RES_DNSRCH | RES_DEFNAMES);
52_res.options |= (qualify_single? RES_DEFNAMES : 0) |
53 (search_parents? RES_DNSRCH : 0);
54if (dns_retrans > 0) _res.retrans = dns_retrans;
55if (dns_retry > 0) _res.retry = dns_retry;
56}
57
58
59
60/*************************************************
61* Build key name for PTR records *
62*************************************************/
63
64/* This function inverts an IP address and adds the relevant domain, to produce
65a name that can be used to look up PTR records.
66
67Arguments:
68 string the IP address as a string
69 buffer a suitable buffer, long enough to hold the result
70
71Returns: nothing
72*/
73
74void
75dns_build_reverse(uschar *string, uschar *buffer)
76{
77uschar *p = string + Ustrlen(string);
78uschar *pp = buffer;
79
80/* Handle IPv4 address */
81
82#if HAVE_IPV6
83if (Ustrchr(string, ':') == NULL)
84#endif
85 {
86 int i;
87 for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
88 {
89 uschar *ppp = p;
90 while (ppp > string && ppp[-1] != '.') ppp--;
91 Ustrncpy(pp, ppp, p - ppp);
92 pp += p - ppp;
93 *pp++ = '.';
94 p = ppp - 1;
95 }
96 Ustrcpy(pp, "in-addr.arpa");
97 }
98
99/* Handle IPv6 address; convert to binary so as to fill out any
100abbreviation in the textual form. */
101
102#if HAVE_IPV6
103else
104 {
105 int i;
106 int v6[4];
107 (void)host_aton(string, v6);
108
109 /* The original specification for IPv6 reverse lookup was to invert each
110 nibble, and look in the ip6.int domain. The domain was subsequently
111 changed to ip6.arpa. */
112
113 for (i = 3; i >= 0; i--)
114 {
115 int j;
116 for (j = 0; j < 32; j += 4)
117 {
118 sprintf(CS pp, "%x.", (v6[i] >> j) & 15);
119 pp += 2;
120 }
121 }
122 Ustrcpy(pp, "ip6.arpa.");
123
124 /* Another way of doing IPv6 reverse lookups was proposed in conjunction
125 with A6 records. However, it fell out of favour when they did. The
126 alternative was to construct a binary key, and look in ip6.arpa. I tried
127 to make this code do that, but I could not make it work on Solaris 8. The
128 resolver seems to lose the initial backslash somehow. However, now that
129 this style of reverse lookup has been dropped, it doesn't matter. These
130 lines are left here purely for historical interest. */
131
132 /**************************************************
133 Ustrcpy(pp, "\\[x");
134 pp += 3;
135
136 for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
137 {
138 sprintf(pp, "%08X", v6[i]);
139 pp += 8;
140 }
141 Ustrcpy(pp, "].ip6.arpa.");
142 **************************************************/
143
144 }
145#endif
146}
147
148
149
150
151/*************************************************
152* Get next DNS record from answer block *
153*************************************************/
154
155/* Call this with reset == RESET_ANSWERS to scan the answer block, reset ==
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156RESET_AUTHORITY to scan the authority records, reset == RESET_ADDITIONAL to
157scan the additional records, and reset == RESET_NEXT to get the next record.
158The result is in static storage which must be copied if it is to be preserved.
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159
160Arguments:
161 dnsa pointer to dns answer block
162 dnss pointer to dns scan block
163 reset option specifing what portion to scan, as described above
164
165Returns: next dns record, or NULL when no more
166*/
167
168dns_record *
169dns_next_rr(dns_answer *dnsa, dns_scan *dnss, int reset)
170{
171HEADER *h = (HEADER *)dnsa->answer;
172int namelen;
173
174/* Reset the saved data when requested to, and skip to the first required RR */
175
176if (reset != RESET_NEXT)
177 {
178 dnss->rrcount = ntohs(h->qdcount);
179 dnss->aptr = dnsa->answer + sizeof(HEADER);
180
181 /* Skip over questions; failure to expand the name just gives up */
182
183 while (dnss->rrcount-- > 0)
184 {
185 namelen = dn_expand(dnsa->answer, dnsa->answer + dnsa->answerlen,
186 dnss->aptr, (DN_EXPAND_ARG4_TYPE) &(dnss->srr.name), DNS_MAXNAME);
187 if (namelen < 0) { dnss->rrcount = 0; return NULL; }
188 dnss->aptr += namelen + 4; /* skip name & type & class */
189 }
190
191 /* Get the number of answer records. */
192
193 dnss->rrcount = ntohs(h->ancount);
194
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195 /* Skip over answers if we want to look at the authority section. Also skip
196 the NS records (i.e. authority section) if wanting to look at the additional
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197 records. */
198
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199 if (reset == RESET_ADDITIONAL) dnss->rrcount += ntohs(h->nscount);
200
201 if (reset == RESET_AUTHORITY || reset == RESET_ADDITIONAL)
059ec3d9 202 {
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203 while (dnss->rrcount-- > 0)
204 {
205 namelen = dn_expand(dnsa->answer, dnsa->answer + dnsa->answerlen,
206 dnss->aptr, (DN_EXPAND_ARG4_TYPE) &(dnss->srr.name), DNS_MAXNAME);
207 if (namelen < 0) { dnss->rrcount = 0; return NULL; }
208 dnss->aptr += namelen + 8; /* skip name, type, class & TTL */
209 GETSHORT(dnss->srr.size, dnss->aptr); /* size of data portion */
210 dnss->aptr += dnss->srr.size; /* skip over it */
211 }
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212 dnss->rrcount = (reset == RESET_AUTHORITY)
213 ? ntohs(h->nscount) : ntohs(h->arcount);
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214 }
215 }
216
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217/* The variable dnss->aptr is now pointing at the next RR, and dnss->rrcount
218contains the number of RR records left. */
219
220if (dnss->rrcount-- <= 0) return NULL;
221
222/* If expanding the RR domain name fails, behave as if no more records
223(something safe). */
224
225namelen = dn_expand(dnsa->answer, dnsa->answer + dnsa->answerlen, dnss->aptr,
226 (DN_EXPAND_ARG4_TYPE) &(dnss->srr.name), DNS_MAXNAME);
227if (namelen < 0) { dnss->rrcount = 0; return NULL; }
228
229/* Move the pointer past the name and fill in the rest of the data structure
230from the following bytes. */
231
232dnss->aptr += namelen;
233GETSHORT(dnss->srr.type, dnss->aptr); /* Record type */
234dnss->aptr += 6; /* Don't want class or TTL */
235GETSHORT(dnss->srr.size, dnss->aptr); /* Size of data portion */
236dnss->srr.data = dnss->aptr; /* The record's data follows */
237dnss->aptr += dnss->srr.size; /* Advance to next RR */
238
239/* Return a pointer to the dns_record structure within the dns_answer. This is
240for convenience so that the scans can use nice-looking for loops. */
241
242return &(dnss->srr);
243}
244
245
246
247
248/*************************************************
249* Turn DNS type into text *
250*************************************************/
251
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252/* Turn the coded record type into a string for printing. All those that Exim
253uses should be included here.
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254
255Argument: record type
256Returns: pointer to string
257*/
258
259uschar *
260dns_text_type(int t)
261{
262switch(t)
263 {
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264 case T_A: return US"A";
265 case T_MX: return US"MX";
266 case T_AAAA: return US"AAAA";
267 case T_A6: return US"A6";
268 case T_TXT: return US"TXT";
269 case T_PTR: return US"PTR";
885ccd3e 270 case T_SOA: return US"SOA";
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271 case T_SRV: return US"SRV";
272 case T_NS: return US"NS";
8e669ac1 273 case T_CNAME: return US"CNAME";
33397d19 274 default: return US"?";
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275 }
276}
277
278
279
280/*************************************************
281* Cache a failed DNS lookup result *
282*************************************************/
283
284/* We cache failed lookup results so as not to experience timeouts many
285times for the same domain. We need to retain the resolver options because they
286may change. For successful lookups, we rely on resolver and/or name server
287caching.
288
289Arguments:
290 name the domain name
291 type the lookup type
292 rc the return code
293
294Returns: the return code
295*/
296
297static int
298dns_return(uschar *name, int type, int rc)
299{
300tree_node *node = store_get_perm(sizeof(tree_node) + 290);
301sprintf(CS node->name, "%.255s-%s-%lx", name, dns_text_type(type),
302 _res.options);
303node->data.val = rc;
304(void)tree_insertnode(&tree_dns_fails, node);
305return rc;
306}
307
308
309
310/*************************************************
311* Do basic DNS lookup *
312*************************************************/
313
314/* Call the resolver to look up the given domain name, using the given type,
315and check the result. The error code TRY_AGAIN is documented as meaning "non-
316Authoritive Host not found, or SERVERFAIL". Sometimes there are badly set
317up nameservers that produce this error continually, so there is the option of
318providing a list of domains for which this is treated as a non-existent
319host.
320
321Arguments:
322 dnsa pointer to dns_answer structure
323 name name to look up
324 type type of DNS record required (T_A, T_MX, etc)
325
326Returns: DNS_SUCCEED successful lookup
327 DNS_NOMATCH name not found (NXDOMAIN)
328 or name contains illegal characters (if checking)
329 DNS_NODATA domain exists, but no data for this type (NODATA)
330 DNS_AGAIN soft failure, try again later
331 DNS_FAIL DNS failure
332*/
333
334int
335dns_basic_lookup(dns_answer *dnsa, uschar *name, int type)
336{
337#ifndef STAND_ALONE
338int rc;
339uschar *save;
340#endif
341
342tree_node *previous;
343uschar node_name[290];
344
345/* DNS lookup failures of any kind are cached in a tree. This is mainly so that
346a timeout on one domain doesn't happen time and time again for messages that
347have many addresses in the same domain. We rely on the resolver and name server
348caching for successful lookups. */
349
350sprintf(CS node_name, "%.255s-%s-%lx", name, dns_text_type(type),
351 _res.options);
352previous = tree_search(tree_dns_fails, node_name);
353if (previous != NULL)
354 {
355 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %.255s-%s: using cached value %s\n",
356 name, dns_text_type(type),
357 (previous->data.val == DNS_NOMATCH)? "DNS_NOMATCH" :
358 (previous->data.val == DNS_NODATA)? "DNS_NODATA" :
359 (previous->data.val == DNS_AGAIN)? "DNS_AGAIN" :
360 (previous->data.val == DNS_FAIL)? "DNS_FAIL" : "??");
361 return previous->data.val;
362 }
363
364/* If we are running in the test harness, recognize a couple of special
365names that always give error returns. This makes it straightforward to
366test the handling of DNS errors. */
367
368if (running_in_test_harness)
369 {
370 uschar *endname = name + Ustrlen(name);
371 if (Ustrcmp(endname - 14, "test.again.dns") == 0)
372 {
373 int delay = Uatoi(name); /* digits at the start of the name */
374 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("Real DNS lookup of %s (%s) bypassed for testing\n",
375 name, dns_text_type(type));
376 if (delay > 0)
377 {
378 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("delaying %d seconds\n", delay);
379 sleep(delay);
380 }
381 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("returning DNS_AGAIN\n");
382 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_AGAIN);
383 }
384 if (Ustrcmp(endname - 13, "test.fail.dns") == 0)
385 {
386 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("Real DNS lookup of %s (%s) bypassed for testing\n",
387 name, dns_text_type(type));
388 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("returning DNS_FAIL\n");
389 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_FAIL);
390 }
391 }
392
393/* If configured, check the hygene of the name passed to lookup. Otherwise,
394although DNS lookups may give REFUSED at the lower level, some resolvers
395turn this into TRY_AGAIN, which is silly. Give a NOMATCH return, since such
396domains cannot be in the DNS. The check is now done by a regular expression;
397give it space for substring storage to save it having to get its own if the
398regex has substrings that are used - the default uses a conditional.
399
400This test is omitted for PTR records. These occur only in calls from the dnsdb
401lookup, which constructs the names itself, so they should be OK. Besides,
402bitstring labels don't conform to normal name syntax. (But the aren't used any
403more.)
404
405For SRV records, we omit the initial _smtp._tcp. components at the start. */
406
407#ifndef STAND_ALONE /* Omit this for stand-alone tests */
408
409if (check_dns_names_pattern[0] != 0 && type != T_PTR)
410 {
411 uschar *checkname = name;
412 int ovector[3*(EXPAND_MAXN+1)];
413
414 if (regex_check_dns_names == NULL)
415 regex_check_dns_names =
416 regex_must_compile(check_dns_names_pattern, FALSE, TRUE);
417
418 /* For an SRV lookup, skip over the first two components (the service and
419 protocol names, which both start with an underscore). */
420
421 if (type == T_SRV)
422 {
423 while (*checkname++ != '.');
424 while (*checkname++ != '.');
425 }
426
427 if (pcre_exec(regex_check_dns_names, NULL, CS checkname, Ustrlen(checkname),
428 0, PCRE_EOPT, ovector, sizeof(ovector)/sizeof(int)) < 0)
429 {
430 DEBUG(D_dns)
431 debug_printf("DNS name syntax check failed: %s (%s)\n", name,
432 dns_text_type(type));
433 host_find_failed_syntax = TRUE;
434 return DNS_NOMATCH;
435 }
436 }
437
438#endif /* STAND_ALONE */
439
440/* Call the resolver; for an overlong response, res_search() will return the
441number of bytes the message would need, so we need to check for this case.
442The effect is to truncate overlong data. */
443
444dnsa->answerlen = res_search(CS name, C_IN, type, dnsa->answer, MAXPACKET);
445if (dnsa->answerlen > MAXPACKET) dnsa->answerlen = MAXPACKET;
446
447if (dnsa->answerlen < 0) switch (h_errno)
448 {
449 case HOST_NOT_FOUND:
450 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) gave HOST_NOT_FOUND\n"
451 "returning DNS_NOMATCH\n", name, dns_text_type(type));
452 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_NOMATCH);
453
454 case TRY_AGAIN:
455 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) gave TRY_AGAIN\n",
456 name, dns_text_type(type));
457
458 /* Cut this out for various test programs */
459 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
460 save = deliver_domain;
461 deliver_domain = name; /* set $domain */
462 rc = match_isinlist(name, &dns_again_means_nonexist, 0, NULL, NULL,
463 MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL);
464 deliver_domain = save;
465 if (rc != OK)
466 {
467 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("returning DNS_AGAIN\n");
468 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_AGAIN);
469 }
470 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("%s is in dns_again_means_nonexist: returning "
471 "DNS_NOMATCH\n", name);
472 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_NOMATCH);
473
474 #else /* For stand-alone tests */
475 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_AGAIN);
476 #endif
477
478 case NO_RECOVERY:
479 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) gave NO_RECOVERY\n"
480 "returning DNS_FAIL\n", name, dns_text_type(type));
481 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_FAIL);
482
483 case NO_DATA:
484 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) gave NO_DATA\n"
485 "returning DNS_NODATA\n", name, dns_text_type(type));
486 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_NODATA);
487
488 default:
489 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) gave unknown DNS error %d\n"
490 "returning DNS_FAIL\n", name, dns_text_type(type), h_errno);
491 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_FAIL);
492 }
493
494DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) succeeded\n",
495 name, dns_text_type(type));
496
497return DNS_SUCCEED;
498}
499
500
501
502
503/************************************************
504* Do a DNS lookup and handle CNAMES *
505************************************************/
506
507/* Look up the given domain name, using the given type. Follow CNAMEs if
508necessary, but only so many times. There aren't supposed to be CNAME chains in
509the DNS, but you are supposed to cope with them if you find them.
510
511The assumption is made that if the resolver gives back records of the
512requested type *and* a CNAME, we don't need to make another call to look up
513the CNAME. I can't see how it could return only some of the right records. If
514it's done a CNAME lookup in the past, it will have all of them; if not, it
515won't return any.
516
517If fully_qualified_name is not NULL, set it to point to the full name
518returned by the resolver, if this is different to what it is given, unless
519the returned name starts with "*" as some nameservers seem to be returning
520wildcards in this form.
521
522Arguments:
523 dnsa pointer to dns_answer structure
524 name domain name to look up
525 type DNS record type (T_A, T_MX, etc)
526 fully_qualified_name if not NULL, return the returned name here if its
527 contents are different (i.e. it must be preset)
528
529Returns: DNS_SUCCEED successful lookup
530 DNS_NOMATCH name not found
531 DNS_NODATA no data found
532 DNS_AGAIN soft failure, try again later
533 DNS_FAIL DNS failure
534*/
535
536int
537dns_lookup(dns_answer *dnsa, uschar *name, int type, uschar **fully_qualified_name)
538{
539int i;
540uschar *orig_name = name;
541
542/* Loop to follow CNAME chains so far, but no further... */
543
544for (i = 0; i < 10; i++)
545 {
546 uschar data[256];
547 dns_record *rr, cname_rr, type_rr;
548 dns_scan dnss;
549 int datalen, rc;
550
551 /* DNS lookup failures get passed straight back. */
552
553 if ((rc = dns_basic_lookup(dnsa, name, type)) != DNS_SUCCEED) return rc;
554
555 /* We should have either records of the required type, or a CNAME record,
556 or both. We need to know whether both exist for getting the fully qualified
557 name, but avoid scanning more than necessary. Note that we must copy the
558 contents of any rr blocks returned by dns_next_rr() as they use the same
559 area in the dnsa block. */
560
561 cname_rr.data = type_rr.data = NULL;
562 for (rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_ANSWERS);
563 rr != NULL;
564 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT))
565 {
566 if (rr->type == type)
567 {
568 if (type_rr.data == NULL) type_rr = *rr;
569 if (cname_rr.data != NULL) break;
570 }
571 else if (rr->type == T_CNAME) cname_rr = *rr;
572 }
573
574 /* If a CNAME was found, take the fully qualified name from it; otherwise
575 from the first data record, if present. For testing, there is a magic name
576 that gets its casing adjusted, because my resolver doesn't seem to pass back
577 upper case letters in domain names. */
578
579 if (fully_qualified_name != NULL)
580 {
581 if (cname_rr.data != NULL)
582 {
583 if (Ustrcmp(cname_rr.name, *fully_qualified_name) != 0 &&
584 cname_rr.name[0] != '*')
585 *fully_qualified_name = string_copy_dnsdomain(cname_rr.name);
586 }
587 else if (type_rr.data != NULL)
588 {
589 if (running_in_test_harness &&
590 Ustrcmp(type_rr.name, "uppercase.test.ex") == 0)
591 *fully_qualified_name = US"UpperCase.test.ex";
592 else
593 {
594 if (Ustrcmp(type_rr.name, *fully_qualified_name) != 0 &&
595 type_rr.name[0] != '*')
596 *fully_qualified_name = string_copy_dnsdomain(type_rr.name);
597 }
598 }
599 }
600
601 /* If any data records of the correct type were found, we are done. */
602
603 if (type_rr.data != NULL) return DNS_SUCCEED;
604
605 /* If there are no data records, we need to re-scan the DNS using the
606 domain given in the CNAME record, which should exist (otherwise we should
607 have had a failure from dns_lookup). However code against the possibility of
608 its not existing. */
609
610 if (cname_rr.data == NULL) return DNS_FAIL;
611 datalen = dn_expand(dnsa->answer, dnsa->answer + dnsa->answerlen,
612 cname_rr.data, (DN_EXPAND_ARG4_TYPE)data, 256);
613 if (datalen < 0) return DNS_FAIL;
614 name = data;
615 } /* Loop back to do another lookup */
616
617/*Control reaches here after 10 times round the CNAME loop. Something isn't
618right... */
619
620log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "CNAME loop for %s encountered", orig_name);
621return DNS_FAIL;
622}
623
624
625
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626
627
628
629/************************************************
630* Do a DNS lookup and handle virtual types *
631************************************************/
632
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633/* This function handles some invented "lookup types" that synthesize feature
634not available in the basic types. The special types all have negative values.
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635Positive type values are passed straight on to dns_lookup().
636
637Arguments:
638 dnsa pointer to dns_answer structure
639 name domain name to look up
640 type DNS record type (T_A, T_MX, etc or a "special")
641 fully_qualified_name if not NULL, return the returned name here if its
642 contents are different (i.e. it must be preset)
643
644Returns: DNS_SUCCEED successful lookup
645 DNS_NOMATCH name not found
646 DNS_NODATA no data found
647 DNS_AGAIN soft failure, try again later
648 DNS_FAIL DNS failure
649*/
650
651int
8e669ac1 652dns_special_lookup(dns_answer *dnsa, uschar *name, int type,
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653 uschar **fully_qualified_name)
654{
655if (type >= 0) return dns_lookup(dnsa, name, type, fully_qualified_name);
656
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657/* The "mx hosts only" type doesn't require any special action here */
658
659if (type == T_MXH) return dns_lookup(dnsa, name, T_MX, fully_qualified_name);
660
8e669ac1 661/* Find nameservers for the domain or the nearest enclosing zone, excluding the
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662root servers. */
663
664if (type == T_ZNS)
665 {
666 uschar *d = name;
667 while (d != 0)
668 {
669 int rc = dns_lookup(dnsa, d, T_NS, fully_qualified_name);
670 if (rc != DNS_NOMATCH && rc != DNS_NODATA) return rc;
671 while (*d != 0 && *d != '.') d++;
8e669ac1 672 if (*d++ == 0) break;
33397d19 673 }
8e669ac1
PH
674 return DNS_NOMATCH;
675 }
33397d19 676
e5a9dba6
PH
677/* Try to look up the Client SMTP Authorization SRV record for the name. If
678there isn't one, search from the top downwards for a CSA record in a parent
679domain, which might be making assertions about subdomains. If we find a record
680we set fully_qualified_name to whichever lookup succeeded, so that the caller
681can tell whether to look at the explicit authorization field or the subdomain
682assertion field. */
683
684if (type == T_CSA)
685 {
686 uschar *srvname, *namesuff, *tld, *p;
687 int priority, weight, port;
688 int limit, rc, i;
689 BOOL ipv6;
690 dns_record *rr;
691 dns_scan dnss;
692
693 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("CSA lookup of %s\n", name);
694
695 srvname = string_sprintf("_client._smtp.%s", name);
696 rc = dns_lookup(dnsa, srvname, T_SRV, NULL);
697 if (rc == DNS_SUCCEED || rc == DNS_AGAIN)
698 {
699 if (rc == DNS_SUCCEED) *fully_qualified_name = name;
700 return rc;
701 }
702
703 /* Search for CSA subdomain assertion SRV records from the top downwards,
704 starting with the 2nd level domain. This order maximizes cache-friendliness.
705 We skip the top level domains to avoid loading their nameservers and because
706 we know they'll never have CSA SRV records. */
707
708 namesuff = Ustrrchr(name, '.');
709 if (namesuff == NULL) return DNS_NOMATCH;
710 tld = namesuff + 1;
711 ipv6 = FALSE;
712 limit = dns_csa_search_limit;
713
714 /* Use more appropriate search parameters if we are in the reverse DNS. */
715
716 if (strcmpic(namesuff, US".arpa") == 0)
717 {
718 if (namesuff - 8 > name && strcmpic(namesuff - 8, US".in-addr.arpa") == 0)
719 {
720 namesuff -= 8;
721 tld = namesuff + 1;
722 limit = 3;
723 }
724 else if (namesuff - 4 > name && strcmpic(namesuff - 4, US".ip6.arpa") == 0)
725 {
726 namesuff -= 4;
727 tld = namesuff + 1;
728 ipv6 = TRUE;
729 limit = 3;
730 }
731 }
732
733 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("CSA TLD %s\n", tld);
734
735 /* Do not perform the search if the top level or 2nd level domains do not
736 exist. This is quite common, and when it occurs all the search queries would
737 go to the root or TLD name servers, which is not friendly. So we check the
738 AUTHORITY section; if it contains the root's SOA record or the TLD's SOA then
739 the TLD or the 2LD (respectively) doesn't exist and we can skip the search.
740 If the TLD and the 2LD exist but the explicit CSA record lookup failed, then
741 the AUTHORITY SOA will be the 2LD's or a subdomain thereof. */
742
743 if (rc == DNS_NOMATCH)
744 {
745 /* This is really gross. The successful return value from res_search() is
746 the packet length, which is stored in dnsa->answerlen. If we get a
747 negative DNS reply then res_search() returns -1, which causes the bounds
748 checks for name decompression to fail when it is treated as a packet
749 length, which in turn causes the authority search to fail. The correct
750 packet length has been lost inside libresolv, so we have to guess a
751 replacement value. (The only way to fix this properly would be to
752 re-implement res_search() and res_query() so that they don't muddle their
753 success and packet length return values.) For added safety we only reset
754 the packet length if the packet header looks plausible. */
755
756 HEADER *h = (HEADER *)dnsa->answer;
757 if (h->qr == 1 && h->opcode == QUERY && h->tc == 0
758 && (h->rcode == NOERROR || h->rcode == NXDOMAIN)
759 && ntohs(h->qdcount) == 1 && ntohs(h->ancount) == 0
760 && ntohs(h->nscount) >= 1)
761 dnsa->answerlen = MAXPACKET;
762
763 for (rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_AUTHORITY);
764 rr != NULL;
765 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT))
766 if (rr->type != T_SOA) continue;
767 else if (strcmpic(rr->name, US"") == 0 ||
768 strcmpic(rr->name, tld) == 0) return DNS_NOMATCH;
769 else break;
770 }
771
772 for (i = 0; i < limit; i++)
773 {
774 if (ipv6)
775 {
776 /* Scan through the IPv6 reverse DNS in chunks of 16 bits worth of IP
777 address, i.e. 4 hex chars and 4 dots, i.e. 8 chars. */
778 namesuff -= 8;
779 if (namesuff <= name) return DNS_NOMATCH;
780 }
781 else
782 /* Find the start of the preceding domain name label. */
783 do
784 if (--namesuff <= name) return DNS_NOMATCH;
785 while (*namesuff != '.');
786
787 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("CSA parent search at %s\n", namesuff + 1);
788
789 srvname = string_sprintf("_client._smtp.%s", namesuff + 1);
790 rc = dns_lookup(dnsa, srvname, T_SRV, NULL);
791 if (rc == DNS_AGAIN) return rc;
792 if (rc != DNS_SUCCEED) continue;
793
794 /* Check that the SRV record we have found is worth returning. We don't
795 just return the first one we find, because some lower level SRV record
796 might make stricter assertions than its parent domain. */
797
798 for (rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_ANSWERS);
799 rr != NULL;
800 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT))
801 {
802 if (rr->type != T_SRV) continue;
803
804 /* Extract the numerical SRV fields (p is incremented) */
805 p = rr->data;
806 GETSHORT(priority, p);
807 GETSHORT(weight, p);
808 GETSHORT(port, p);
809
810 /* Check the CSA version number */
811 if (priority != 1) continue;
812
813 /* If it's making an interesting assertion, return this response. */
814 if (port & 1)
815 {
816 *fully_qualified_name = namesuff + 1;
817 return DNS_SUCCEED;
818 }
819 }
820 }
821 return DNS_NOMATCH;
822 }
823
33397d19
PH
824/* Control should never reach here */
825
826return DNS_FAIL;
827}
828
829
830
059ec3d9
PH
831/* Support for A6 records has been commented out since they were demoted to
832experimental status at IETF 51. */
833
834#if HAVE_IPV6 && defined(SUPPORT_A6)
835
836/*************************************************
837* Search DNS block for prefix RRs *
838*************************************************/
839
840/* Called from dns_complete_a6() to search an additional section or a main
841answer section for required prefix records to complete an IPv6 address obtained
842from an A6 record. For each prefix record, a recursive call to dns_complete_a6
843is made, with a new copy of the address so far.
844
845Arguments:
846 dnsa the DNS answer block
847 which RESET_ADDITIONAL or RESET_ANSWERS
848 name name of prefix record
849 yptrptr pointer to the pointer that points to where to hang the next
850 dns_address structure
851 bits number of bits we have already got
852 bitvec the bits we have already got
853
854Returns: TRUE if any records were found
855*/
856
857static BOOL
858dns_find_prefix(dns_answer *dnsa, int which, uschar *name, dns_address
859 ***yptrptr, int bits, uschar *bitvec)
860{
861BOOL yield = FALSE;
862dns_record *rr;
863dns_scan dnss;
864
865for (rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, which);
866 rr != NULL;
867 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT))
868 {
869 uschar cbitvec[16];
870 if (rr->type != T_A6 || strcmpic(rr->name, name) != 0) continue;
871 yield = TRUE;
872 memcpy(cbitvec, bitvec, sizeof(cbitvec));
873 dns_complete_a6(yptrptr, dnsa, rr, bits, cbitvec);
874 }
875
876return yield;
877}
878
879
880
881/*************************************************
882* Follow chains of A6 records *
883*************************************************/
884
885/* A6 records may be incomplete, with pointers to other records containing more
886bits of the address. There can be a tree structure, leading to a number of
887addresses originating from a single initial A6 record.
888
889Arguments:
890 yptrptr pointer to the pointer that points to where to hang the next
891 dns_address structure
892 dnsa the current DNS answer block
893 rr the RR we have at present
894 bits number of bits we have already got
895 bitvec the bits we have already got
896
897Returns: nothing
898*/
899
900static void
901dns_complete_a6(dns_address ***yptrptr, dns_answer *dnsa, dns_record *rr,
902 int bits, uschar *bitvec)
903{
904static uschar bitmask[] = { 0xff, 0xfe, 0xfc, 0xf8, 0xf0, 0xe0, 0xc0, 0x80 };
905uschar *p = (uschar *)(rr->data);
906int prefix_len, suffix_len;
907int i, j, k;
908uschar *chainptr;
909uschar chain[264];
910dns_answer cdnsa;
911
912/* The prefix length is the first byte. It defines the prefix which is missing
913from the data in this record as a number of bits. Zero means this is the end of
914a chain. The suffix is the data in this record; only sufficient bytes to hold
915it are supplied. There may be zero bytes. We have to ignore trailing bits that
916we have already obtained from earlier RRs in the chain. */
917
918prefix_len = *p++; /* bits */
919suffix_len = (128 - prefix_len + 7)/8; /* bytes */
920
921/* If the prefix in this record is greater than the prefix in the previous
922record in the chain, we have to ignore the record (RFC 2874). */
923
924if (prefix_len > 128 - bits) return;
925
926/* In this little loop, the number of bits up to and including the current byte
927is held in k. If we have none of the bits in this byte, we can just or it into
928the current data. If we have all of the bits in this byte, we skip it.
929Otherwise, some masking has to be done. */
930
931for (i = suffix_len - 1, j = 15, k = 8; i >= 0; i--)
932 {
933 int required = k - bits;
934 if (required >= 8) bitvec[j] |= p[i];
935 else if (required > 0) bitvec[j] |= p[i] & bitmask[required];
936 j--; /* I tried putting these in the "for" statement, but gcc muttered */
937 k += 8; /* about computed values not being used. */
938 }
939
940/* If the prefix_length is zero, we are at the end of a chain. Build a
941dns_address item with the current data, hang it onto the end of the chain,
942adjust the hanging pointer, and we are done. */
943
944if (prefix_len == 0)
945 {
946 dns_address *new = store_get(sizeof(dns_address) + 50);
947 inet_ntop(AF_INET6, bitvec, CS new->address, 50);
948 new->next = NULL;
949 **yptrptr = new;
950 *yptrptr = &(new->next);
951 return;
952 }
953
954/* Prefix length is not zero. Reset the number of bits that we have collected
955so far, and extract the chain name. */
956
957bits = 128 - prefix_len;
958p += suffix_len;
959
960chainptr = chain;
961while ((i = *p++) != 0)
962 {
963 if (chainptr != chain) *chainptr++ = '.';
964 memcpy(chainptr, p, i);
965 chainptr += i;
966 p += i;
967 }
968*chainptr = 0;
969chainptr = chain;
970
971/* Now scan the current DNS response record to see if the additional section
972contains the records we want. This processing can be cut out for testing
973purposes. */
974
975if (dns_find_prefix(dnsa, RESET_ADDITIONAL, chainptr, yptrptr, bits, bitvec))
976 return;
977
978/* No chain records were found in the current DNS response block. Do a new DNS
979lookup to try to find these records. This opens up the possibility of DNS
980failures. We ignore them at this point; if all branches of the tree fail, there
981will be no addresses at the end. */
982
983if (dns_lookup(&cdnsa, chainptr, T_A6, NULL) == DNS_SUCCEED)
984 (void)dns_find_prefix(&cdnsa, RESET_ANSWERS, chainptr, yptrptr, bits, bitvec);
985}
986#endif /* HAVE_IPV6 && defined(SUPPORT_A6) */
987
988
989
990
991/*************************************************
992* Get address(es) from DNS record *
993*************************************************/
994
995/* The record type is either T_A for an IPv4 address or T_AAAA (or T_A6 when
996supported) for an IPv6 address. In the A6 case, there may be several addresses,
997generated by following chains. A recursive function does all the hard work. A6
998records now look like passing into history, so the code is only included when
999explicitly asked for.
1000
1001Argument:
1002 dnsa the DNS answer block
1003 rr the RR
1004
1005Returns: pointer a chain of dns_address items
1006*/
1007
1008dns_address *
1009dns_address_from_rr(dns_answer *dnsa, dns_record *rr)
1010{
1011dns_address *yield = NULL;
1012
1013#if HAVE_IPV6 && defined(SUPPORT_A6)
1014dns_address **yieldptr = &yield;
1015uschar bitvec[16];
1016#else
1017dnsa = dnsa; /* Stop picky compilers warning */
1018#endif
1019
1020if (rr->type == T_A)
1021 {
1022 uschar *p = (uschar *)(rr->data);
1023 yield = store_get(sizeof(dns_address) + 20);
1024 (void)sprintf(CS yield->address, "%d.%d.%d.%d", p[0], p[1], p[2], p[3]);
1025 yield->next = NULL;
1026 }
1027
1028#if HAVE_IPV6
1029
1030#ifdef SUPPORT_A6
1031else if (rr->type == T_A6)
1032 {
1033 memset(bitvec, 0, sizeof(bitvec));
1034 dns_complete_a6(&yieldptr, dnsa, rr, 0, bitvec);
1035 }
1036#endif /* SUPPORT_A6 */
1037
1038else
1039 {
1040 yield = store_get(sizeof(dns_address) + 50);
1041 inet_ntop(AF_INET6, (uschar *)(rr->data), CS yield->address, 50);
1042 yield->next = NULL;
1043 }
1044#endif /* HAVE_IPV6 */
1045
1046return yield;
1047}
1048
1049/* End of dns.c */