debian experimental exim-daemon-heavy config
[exim.git] / src / src / parse.c
CommitLineData
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1/*************************************************
2* Exim - an Internet mail transport agent *
3*************************************************/
4
f9ba5e22 5/* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2018 */
1e1ddfac 6/* Copyright (c) The Exim Maintainers 2020 */
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7/* See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. */
8
9/* Functions for parsing addresses */
10
11
12#include "exim.h"
13
14
15static uschar *last_comment_position;
16
17
18
19/* In stand-alone mode, provide a replacement for deliver_make_addr()
20and rewrite_address[_qualify]() so as to avoid having to drag in too much
21redundant apparatus. */
22
23#ifdef STAND_ALONE
24
25address_item *deliver_make_addr(uschar *address, BOOL copy)
26{
f3ebb786 27address_item *addr = store_get(sizeof(address_item), FALSE);
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28addr->next = NULL;
29addr->parent = NULL;
30addr->address = address;
31return addr;
32}
33
34uschar *rewrite_address(uschar *recipient, BOOL dummy1, BOOL dummy2, rewrite_rule
35 *dummy3, int dummy4)
36{
37return recipient;
38}
39
40uschar *rewrite_address_qualify(uschar *recipient, BOOL dummy1)
41{
42return recipient;
43}
44
45#endif
46
47
48
49
50/*************************************************
51* Find the end of an address *
52*************************************************/
53
54/* Scan over a string looking for the termination of an address at a comma,
55or end of the string. It's the source-routed addresses which cause much pain
56here. Although Exim ignores source routes, it must recognize such addresses, so
57we cannot get rid of this logic.
58
59Argument:
60 s pointer to the start of an address
61 nl_ends if TRUE, '\n' terminates an address
62
63Returns: pointer past the end of the address
64 (i.e. points to null or comma)
65*/
66
67uschar *
68parse_find_address_end(uschar *s, BOOL nl_ends)
69{
70BOOL source_routing = *s == '@';
71int no_term = source_routing? 1 : 0;
72
73while (*s != 0 && (*s != ',' || no_term > 0) && (*s != '\n' || !nl_ends))
74 {
75 /* Skip single quoted characters. Strictly these should not occur outside
76 quoted strings in RFC 822 addresses, but they can in RFC 821 addresses. Pity
77 about the lack of consistency, isn't it? */
78
79 if (*s == '\\' && s[1] != 0) s += 2;
80
81 /* Skip quoted items that are not inside brackets. Note that
82 quoted pairs are allowed inside quoted strings. */
83
84 else if (*s == '\"')
85 {
86 while (*(++s) != 0 && (*s != '\n' || !nl_ends))
87 {
88 if (*s == '\\' && s[1] != 0) s++;
89 else if (*s == '\"') { s++; break; }
90 }
91 }
92
93 /* Skip comments, which may include nested brackets, but quotes
94 are not recognized inside comments, though quoted pairs are. */
95
96 else if (*s == '(')
97 {
98 int level = 1;
99 while (*(++s) != 0 && (*s != '\n' || !nl_ends))
100 {
101 if (*s == '\\' && s[1] != 0) s++;
102 else if (*s == '(') level++;
103 else if (*s == ')' && --level <= 0) { s++; break; }
104 }
105 }
106
107 /* Non-special character; just advance. Passing the colon in a source
108 routed address means that any subsequent comma or colon may terminate unless
109 inside angle brackets. */
110
111 else
112 {
113 if (*s == '<')
114 {
115 source_routing = s[1] == '@';
116 no_term = source_routing? 2 : 1;
117 }
118 else if (*s == '>') no_term--;
119 else if (source_routing && *s == ':') no_term--;
120 s++;
121 }
122 }
123
124return s;
125}
126
127
128
129/*************************************************
130* Find last @ in an address *
131*************************************************/
132
133/* This function is used when we have something that may not qualified. If we
134know it's qualified, searching for the rightmost '@' is sufficient. Here we
135have to be a bit more clever than just a plain search, in order to handle
136unqualified local parts like "thing@thong" correctly. Since quotes may not
137legally be part of a domain name, we can give up on hitting the first quote
138when searching from the right. Now that the parsing also permits the RFC 821
139form of address, where quoted-pairs are allowed in unquoted local parts, we
140must take care to handle that too.
141
142Argument: pointer to an address, possibly unqualified
143Returns: pointer to the last @ in an address, or NULL if none
144*/
145
146uschar *
147parse_find_at(uschar *s)
148{
149uschar *t = s + Ustrlen(s);
150while (--t >= s)
151 {
152 if (*t == '@')
153 {
154 int backslash_count = 0;
155 uschar *tt = t - 1;
156 while (tt > s && *tt-- == '\\') backslash_count++;
157 if ((backslash_count & 1) == 0) return t;
158 }
159 else if (*t == '\"') return NULL;
160 }
161return NULL;
162}
163
164
165
166
167/***************************************************************************
168* In all the functions below that read a particular object type from *
169* the input, return the new value of the pointer s (the first argument), *
170* and put the object into the store pointed to by t (the second argument), *
171* adding a terminating zero. If no object is found, t will point to zero *
172* on return. *
173***************************************************************************/
174
175
176/*************************************************
177* Skip white space and comment *
178*************************************************/
179
180/* Algorithm:
181 (1) Skip spaces.
182 (2) If uschar not '(', return.
183 (3) Skip till matching ')', not counting any characters
184 escaped with '\'.
185 (4) Move past ')' and goto (1).
186
187The start of the last potential comment position is remembered to
188make it possible to ignore comments at the end of compound items.
189
190Argument: current character pointer
4c04137d 191Returns: new character pointer
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192*/
193
194static uschar *
195skip_comment(uschar *s)
196{
197last_comment_position = s;
198while (*s)
199 {
200 int c, level;
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201
202 if (Uskip_whitespace(&s) != '(') break;
059ec3d9 203 level = 1;
137ae145 204 while((c = *(++s)))
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205 {
206 if (c == '(') level++;
207 else if (c == ')') { if (--level <= 0) { s++; break; } }
208 else if (c == '\\' && s[1] != 0) s++;
209 }
210 }
211return s;
212}
213
214
215
216/*************************************************
217* Read a domain *
218*************************************************/
219
220/* A domain is a sequence of subdomains, separated by dots. See comments below
221for detailed syntax of the subdomains.
222
223If allow_domain_literals is TRUE, a "domain" may also be an IP address enclosed
224in []. Make sure the output is set to the null string if there is a syntax
225error as well as if there is no domain at all.
226
227Arguments:
228 s current character pointer
229 t where to put the domain
230 errorptr put error message here on failure (*t will be 0 on exit)
231
232Returns: new character pointer
233*/
234
235static uschar *
236read_domain(uschar *s, uschar *t, uschar **errorptr)
237{
238uschar *tt = t;
239s = skip_comment(s);
240
241/* Handle domain literals if permitted. An RFC 822 domain literal may contain
242any character except [ ] \, including linear white space, and may contain
243quoted characters. However, RFC 821 restricts literals to being dot-separated
2443-digit numbers, and we make the obvious extension for IPv6. Go for a sequence
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245of digits, dots, hex digits, and colons here; later this will be checked for
246being a syntactically valid IP address if it ever gets to a router.
059ec3d9 247
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248Allow both the formal IPv6 form, with IPV6: at the start, and the informal form
249without it, and accept IPV4: as well, 'cause someone will use it sooner or
250later. */
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251
252if (*s == '[')
253 {
254 *t++ = *s++;
255
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256 if (strncmpic(s, US"IPv6:", 5) == 0 || strncmpic(s, US"IPv4:", 5) == 0)
257 {
258 memcpy(t, s, 5);
259 t += 5;
260 s += 5;
261 }
262 while (*s == '.' || *s == ':' || isxdigit(*s)) *t++ = *s++;
263
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264 if (*s == ']') *t++ = *s++; else
265 {
266 *errorptr = US"malformed domain literal";
267 *tt = 0;
268 }
269
270 if (!allow_domain_literals)
271 {
272 *errorptr = US"domain literals not allowed";
273 *tt = 0;
274 }
275 *t = 0;
276 return skip_comment(s);
277 }
278
279/* Handle a proper domain, which is a sequence of dot-separated atoms. Remove
280trailing dots if strip_trailing_dot is set. A subdomain is an atom.
281
282An atom is a sequence of any characters except specials, space, and controls.
283The specials are ( ) < > @ , ; : \ " . [ and ]. This is the rule for RFC 822
284and its successor (RFC 2822). However, RFC 821 and its successor (RFC 2821) is
285tighter, allowing only letters, digits, and hyphens, not starting with a
286hyphen.
287
288There used to be a global flag that got set when checking addresses that came
289in over SMTP and which should therefore should be checked according to the
290stricter rule. However, it seems silly to make the distinction, because I don't
291suppose anybody ever uses local domains that are 822-compliant and not
292821-compliant. Furthermore, Exim now has additional data on the spool file line
293after an address (after "one_time" processing), and it makes use of a #
294character to delimit it. When I wrote that code, I forgot about this 822-domain
295stuff, and assumed # could never appear in a domain.
296
297So the old code is now cut out for Release 4.11 onwards, on 09-Aug-02. In a few
298years, when we are sure this isn't actually causing trouble, throw it away.
299
300March 2003: the story continues: There is a camp that is arguing for the use of
301UTF-8 in domain names as the way to internationalization, and other MTAs
302support this. Therefore, we now have a flag that permits the use of characters
303with values greater than 127, encoded in UTF-8, in subdomains, so that Exim can
304be used experimentally in this way. */
305
306for (;;)
307 {
308 uschar *tsave = t;
309
310/*********************
311 if (rfc821_domains)
312 {
313 if (*s != '-') while (isalnum(*s) || *s == '-') *t++ = *s++;
314 }
315 else
316 while (!mac_iscntrl_or_special(*s)) *t++ = *s++;
317*********************/
318
319 if (*s != '-')
320 {
321 /* Only letters, digits, and hyphens */
322
323 if (!allow_utf8_domains)
324 {
325 while (isalnum(*s) || *s == '-') *t++ = *s++;
326 }
327
328 /* Permit legal UTF-8 characters to be included */
329
330 else for(;;)
331 {
332 int i, d;
333 if (isalnum(*s) || *s == '-') /* legal ascii characters */
334 {
335 *t++ = *s++;
336 continue;
337 }
338 if ((*s & 0xc0) != 0xc0) break; /* not start of UTF-8 character */
339 d = *s << 2;
340 for (i = 1; i < 6; i++) /* i is the number of additional bytes */
341 {
342 if ((d & 0x80) == 0) break;
343 d <<= 1;
344 }
345 if (i == 6) goto BAD_UTF8; /* invalid UTF-8 */
346 *t++ = *s++; /* leading UTF-8 byte */
347 while (i-- > 0) /* copy and check remainder */
348 {
349 if ((*s & 0xc0) != 0x80)
350 {
351 BAD_UTF8:
352 *errorptr = US"invalid UTF-8 byte sequence";
353 *tt = 0;
354 return s;
355 }
356 *t++ = *s++;
357 }
358 } /* End of loop for UTF-8 character */
359 } /* End of subdomain */
360
361 s = skip_comment(s);
362 *t = 0;
363
364 if (t == tsave) /* empty component */
365 {
366 if (strip_trailing_dot && t > tt && *s != '.') t[-1] = 0; else
367 {
368 *errorptr = US"domain missing or malformed";
369 *tt = 0;
370 }
371 return s;
372 }
373
374 if (*s != '.') break;
375 *t++ = *s++;
376 s = skip_comment(s);
377 }
378
379return s;
380}
381
382
383
384/*************************************************
385* Read a local-part *
386*************************************************/
387
388/* A local-part is a sequence of words, separated by periods. A null word
389between dots is not strictly allowed but apparently many mailers permit it,
390so, sigh, better be compatible. Even accept a trailing dot...
391
392A <word> is either a quoted string, or an <atom>, which is a sequence
393of any characters except specials, space, and controls. The specials are
394( ) < > @ , ; : \ " . [ and ]. In RFC 822, a single quoted character, (a
395quoted-pair) is not allowed in a word. However, in RFC 821, it is permitted in
396the local part of an address. Rather than have separate parsing functions for
397the different cases, take the liberal attitude always. At least one MUA is
398happy to recognize this case; I don't know how many other programs do.
399
400Arguments:
401 s current character pointer
402 t where to put the local part
403 error where to point error text
404 allow_null TRUE if an empty local part is not an error
405
406Returns: new character pointer
407*/
408
409static uschar *
410read_local_part(uschar *s, uschar *t, uschar **error, BOOL allow_null)
411{
412uschar *tt = t;
413*error = NULL;
414for (;;)
415 {
416 int c;
417 uschar *tsave = t;
418 s = skip_comment(s);
419
420 /* Handle a quoted string */
421
422 if (*s == '\"')
423 {
424 *t++ = '\"';
db57e575 425 while ((c = *++s) && c != '\"')
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426 {
427 *t++ = c;
db57e575 428 if (c == '\\' && s[1]) *t++ = *++s;
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429 }
430 if (c == '\"')
431 {
432 s++;
433 *t++ = '\"';
434 }
435 else
436 {
437 *error = US"unmatched doublequote in local part";
438 return s;
439 }
440 }
441
442 /* Handle an atom, but allow quoted pairs within it. */
443
444 else while (!mac_iscntrl_or_special(*s) || *s == '\\')
445 {
446 c = *t++ = *s++;
db57e575 447 if (c == '\\' && *s) *t++ = *s++;
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448 }
449
450 /* Terminate the word and skip subsequent comment */
451
452 *t = 0;
453 s = skip_comment(s);
454
455 /* If we have read a null component at this point, give an error unless it is
456 terminated by a dot - an extension to RFC 822 - or if it is the first
457 component of the local part and an empty local part is permitted, in which
458 case just return normally. */
459
460 if (t == tsave && *s != '.')
461 {
462 if (t == tt && !allow_null)
463 *error = US"missing or malformed local part";
464 return s;
465 }
466
467 /* Anything other than a dot terminates the local part. Treat multiple dots
468 as a single dot, as this seems to be a common extension. */
469
470 if (*s != '.') break;
471 do { *t++ = *s++; } while (*s == '.');
472 }
473
474return s;
475}
476
477
478/*************************************************
479* Read route part of route-addr *
480*************************************************/
481
482/* The pointer is at the initial "@" on entry. Return it following the
483terminating colon. Exim no longer supports the use of source routes, but it is
484required to accept the syntax.
485
486Arguments:
487 s current character pointer
488 t where to put the route
489 errorptr where to put an error message
490
491Returns: new character pointer
492*/
493
494static uschar *
495read_route(uschar *s, uschar *t, uschar **errorptr)
496{
497BOOL commas = FALSE;
498*errorptr = NULL;
499
500while (*s == '@')
501 {
502 *t++ = '@';
503 s = read_domain(s+1, t, errorptr);
504 if (*t == 0) return s;
505 t += Ustrlen((const uschar *)t);
506 if (*s != ',') break;
507 *t++ = *s++;
508 commas = TRUE;
509 s = skip_comment(s);
510 }
511
512if (*s == ':') *t++ = *s++;
513
514/* If there is no colon, and there were no commas, the most likely error
515is in fact a missing local part in the address rather than a missing colon
516after the route. */
517
518else *errorptr = commas?
519 US"colon expected after route list" :
520 US"no local part";
521
522/* Terminate the route and return */
523
524*t = 0;
525return skip_comment(s);
526}
527
528
529
530/*************************************************
531* Read addr-spec *
532*************************************************/
533
534/* Addr-spec is local-part@domain. We make the domain optional -
535the expected terminator for the whole thing is passed to check this.
536This function is called only when we know we have a route-addr.
537
538Arguments:
539 s current character pointer
540 t where to put the addr-spec
541 term expected terminator (0 or >)
542 errorptr where to put an error message
543 domainptr set to point to the start of the domain
544
545Returns: new character pointer
546*/
547
548static uschar *
549read_addr_spec(uschar *s, uschar *t, int term, uschar **errorptr,
550 uschar **domainptr)
551{
552s = read_local_part(s, t, errorptr, FALSE);
553if (*errorptr == NULL)
059ec3d9 554 if (*s != term)
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555 if (*s != '@')
556 *errorptr = string_sprintf("\"@\" or \".\" expected after \"%s\"", t);
557 else
558 {
559 t += Ustrlen((const uschar *)t);
560 *t++ = *s++;
561 *domainptr = t;
562 s = read_domain(s, t, errorptr);
563 }
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564return s;
565}
566
567
568
569/*************************************************
570* Extract operative address *
571*************************************************/
572
573/* This function extracts an operative address from a full RFC822 mailbox and
574returns it in a piece of dynamic store. We take the easy way and get a piece
575of store the same size as the input, and then copy into it whatever is
576necessary. If we cannot find a valid address (syntax error), return NULL, and
577point the error pointer to the reason. The arguments "start" and "end" are used
578to return the offsets of the first and one past the last characters in the
579original mailbox of the address that has been extracted, to aid in re-writing.
580The argument "domain" is set to point to the first character after "@" in the
581final part of the returned address, or zero if there is no @.
582
583Exim no longer supports the use of source routed addresses (those of the form
584@domain,...:route_addr). It recognizes the syntax, but collapses such addresses
585down to their final components. Formerly, collapse_source_routes had to be set
586to achieve this effect. RFC 1123 allows collapsing with MAY, while the revision
587of RFC 821 had increased this to SHOULD, so I've gone for it, because it makes
588a lot of code elsewhere in Exim much simpler.
589
590There are some special fudges here for handling RFC 822 group address notation
591which may appear in certain headers. If the flag parse_allow_group is set
592TRUE and parse_found_group is FALSE when this function is called, an address
593which is the start of a group (i.e. preceded by a phrase and a colon) is
594recognized; the phrase is ignored and the flag parse_found_group is set. If
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595this flag is TRUE at the end of an address, and if an extraneous semicolon is
596found, it is ignored and the flag is cleared.
597
598This logic is used only when scanning through addresses in headers, either to
599fulfil the -t option, or for rewriting, or for checking header syntax. Because
600the group "state" has to be remembered between multiple calls of this function,
601the variables parse_{allow,found}_group are global. It is important to ensure
602that they are reset to FALSE at the end of scanning a header's list of
603addresses.
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604
605Arguments:
606 mailbox points to the RFC822 mailbox
607 errorptr where to point an error message
608 start set to start offset in mailbox
609 end set to end offset in mailbox
610 domain set to domain offset in result, or 0 if no domain present
611 allow_null allow <> if TRUE
612
613Returns: points to the extracted address, or NULL on error
614*/
615
616#define FAILED(s) { *errorptr = s; goto PARSE_FAILED; }
617
618uschar *
619parse_extract_address(uschar *mailbox, uschar **errorptr, int *start, int *end,
620 int *domain, BOOL allow_null)
621{
f3ebb786 622uschar *yield = store_get(Ustrlen(mailbox) + 1, is_tainted(mailbox));
059ec3d9 623uschar *startptr, *endptr;
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624uschar *s = US mailbox;
625uschar *t = US yield;
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626
627*domain = 0;
628
629/* At the start of the string we expect either an addr-spec or a phrase
630preceding a <route-addr>. If groups are allowed, we might also find a phrase
631preceding a colon and an address. If we find an initial word followed by
632a dot, strict interpretation of the RFC would cause it to be taken
633as the start of an addr-spec. However, many mailers break the rules
634and use addresses of the form "a.n.other <ano@somewhere>" and so we
635allow this case. */
636
637RESTART: /* Come back here after passing a group name */
638
639s = skip_comment(s);
640startptr = s; /* In case addr-spec */
641s = read_local_part(s, t, errorptr, TRUE); /* Dot separated words */
db57e575 642if (*errorptr) goto PARSE_FAILED;
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643
644/* If the terminator is neither < nor @ then the format of the address
645must either be a bare local-part (we are now at the end), or a phrase
646followed by a route-addr (more words must follow). */
647
648if (*s != '@' && *s != '<')
649 {
650 if (*s == 0 || *s == ';')
651 {
652 if (*t == 0) FAILED(US"empty address");
653 endptr = last_comment_position;
654 goto PARSE_SUCCEEDED; /* Bare local part */
655 }
656
657 /* Expect phrase route-addr, or phrase : if groups permitted, but allow
658 dots in the phrase; complete the loop only when '<' or ':' is encountered -
659 end of string will produce a null local_part and therefore fail. We don't
660 need to keep updating t, as the phrase isn't to be kept. */
661
8768d548 662 while (*s != '<' && (!f.parse_allow_group || *s != ':'))
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663 {
664 s = read_local_part(s, t, errorptr, FALSE);
b6040544 665 if (*errorptr)
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666 {
667 *errorptr = string_sprintf("%s (expected word or \"<\")", *errorptr);
668 goto PARSE_FAILED;
669 }
670 }
671
672 if (*s == ':')
673 {
8768d548
JH
674 f.parse_found_group = TRUE;
675 f.parse_allow_group = FALSE;
059ec3d9
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676 s++;
677 goto RESTART;
678 }
679
680 /* Assert *s == '<' */
681 }
682
683/* At this point the next character is either '@' or '<'. If it is '@', only a
684single local-part has previously been read. An angle bracket signifies the
685start of an <addr-spec>. Throw away anything we have saved so far before
686processing it. Note that this is "if" rather than "else if" because it's also
687used after reading a preceding phrase.
688
689There are a lot of broken sendmails out there that put additional pairs of <>
b6040544
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690round <route-addr>s. If strip_excess_angle_brackets is set, allow a limited
691number of them, as long as they match. */
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692
693if (*s == '<')
694 {
695 uschar *domainptr = yield;
696 BOOL source_routed = FALSE;
697 int bracket_count = 1;
698
699 s++;
b6040544
JH
700 if (strip_excess_angle_brackets) while (*s == '<')
701 {
702 if(bracket_count++ > 5) FAILED(US"angle-brackets nested too deep");
703 s++;
704 }
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705
706 t = yield;
707 startptr = s;
708 s = skip_comment(s);
709
710 /* Read an optional series of routes, each of which is a domain. They
711 are separated by commas and terminated by a colon. However, we totally ignore
712 such routes (RFC 1123 says we MAY, and the revision of RFC 821 says we
713 SHOULD). */
714
715 if (*s == '@')
716 {
717 s = read_route(s, t, errorptr);
b6040544 718 if (*errorptr) goto PARSE_FAILED;
059ec3d9
PH
719 *t = 0; /* Ensure route is ignored - probably overkill */
720 source_routed = TRUE;
721 }
722
723 /* Now an addr-spec, terminated by '>'. If there is no preceding route,
724 we must allow an empty addr-spec if allow_null is TRUE, to permit the
725 address "<>" in some circumstances. A source-routed address MUST have
726 a domain in the final part. */
727
728 if (allow_null && !source_routed && *s == '>')
729 {
730 *t = 0;
731 *errorptr = NULL;
732 }
733 else
734 {
735 s = read_addr_spec(s, t, '>', errorptr, &domainptr);
b6040544 736 if (*errorptr) goto PARSE_FAILED;
059ec3d9
PH
737 *domain = domainptr - yield;
738 if (source_routed && *domain == 0)
739 FAILED(US"domain missing in source-routed address");
740 }
741
742 endptr = s;
743 if (*errorptr != NULL) goto PARSE_FAILED;
744 while (bracket_count-- > 0) if (*s++ != '>')
745 {
b6040544
JH
746 *errorptr = s[-1] == 0
747 ? US"'>' missing at end of address"
748 : string_sprintf("malformed address: %.32s may not follow %.*s",
bb07bcd3 749 s-1, (int)(s - US mailbox - 1), mailbox);
059ec3d9
PH
750 goto PARSE_FAILED;
751 }
752
753 s = skip_comment(s);
754 }
755
756/* Hitting '@' after the first local-part means we have definitely got an
757addr-spec, on a strict reading of the RFC, and the rest of the string
758should be the domain. However, for flexibility we allow for a route-address
759not enclosed in <> as well, which is indicated by an empty first local
760part preceding '@'. The source routing is, however, ignored. */
761
762else if (*t == 0)
763 {
764 uschar *domainptr = yield;
765 s = read_route(s, t, errorptr);
766 if (*errorptr != NULL) goto PARSE_FAILED;
767 *t = 0; /* Ensure route is ignored - probably overkill */
768 s = read_addr_spec(s, t, 0, errorptr, &domainptr);
769 if (*errorptr != NULL) goto PARSE_FAILED;
770 *domain = domainptr - yield;
771 endptr = last_comment_position;
772 if (*domain == 0) FAILED(US"domain missing in source-routed address");
773 }
774
775/* This is the strict case of local-part@domain. */
776
777else
778 {
779 t += Ustrlen((const uschar *)t);
780 *t++ = *s++;
781 *domain = t - yield;
782 s = read_domain(s, t, errorptr);
783 if (*t == 0) goto PARSE_FAILED;
784 endptr = last_comment_position;
785 }
786
787/* Use goto to get here from the bare local part case. Arrive by falling
788through for other cases. Endptr may have been moved over whitespace, so
789move it back past white space if necessary. */
790
791PARSE_SUCCEEDED:
792if (*s != 0)
793 {
8768d548 794 if (f.parse_found_group && *s == ';')
059ec3d9 795 {
8768d548
JH
796 f.parse_found_group = FALSE;
797 f.parse_allow_group = TRUE;
059ec3d9
PH
798 }
799 else
800 {
7ade712c 801 *errorptr = string_sprintf("malformed address: %.32s may not follow %.*s",
bb07bcd3 802 s, (int)(s - US mailbox), mailbox);
059ec3d9
PH
803 goto PARSE_FAILED;
804 }
805 }
5903c6ff 806*start = startptr - US mailbox; /* Return offsets */
059ec3d9 807while (isspace(endptr[-1])) endptr--;
5903c6ff 808*end = endptr - US mailbox;
059ec3d9
PH
809
810/* Although this code has no limitation on the length of address extracted,
811other parts of Exim may have limits, and in any case, RFC 2821 limits local
812parts to 64 and domains to 255, so we do a check here, giving an error if the
813address is ridiculously long. */
814
815if (*end - *start > ADDRESS_MAXLENGTH)
816 {
817 *errorptr = string_sprintf("address is ridiculously long: %.64s...", yield);
818 return NULL;
819 }
820
9d4319df 821return yield;
059ec3d9
PH
822
823/* Use goto (via the macro FAILED) to get to here from a variety of places.
824We might have an empty address in a group - the caller can choose to ignore
825this. We must, however, keep the flags correct. */
826
827PARSE_FAILED:
8768d548 828if (f.parse_found_group && *s == ';')
059ec3d9 829 {
8768d548
JH
830 f.parse_found_group = FALSE;
831 f.parse_allow_group = TRUE;
059ec3d9
PH
832 }
833return NULL;
834}
835
836#undef FAILED
837
838
839
840/*************************************************
841* Quote according to RFC 2047 *
842*************************************************/
843
844/* This function is used for quoting text in headers according to RFC 2047.
845If the only characters that strictly need quoting are spaces, we return the
846original string, unmodified. If a quoted string is too long for the buffer, it
847is truncated. (This shouldn't happen: this is normally handling short strings.)
848
8e669ac1
PH
849Hmmph. As always, things get perverted for other uses. This function was
850originally for the "phrase" part of addresses. Now it is being used for much
851longer texts in ACLs and via the ${rfc2047: expansion item. This means we have
14702f5b
PH
852to check for overlong "encoded-word"s and split them. November 2004.
853
059ec3d9
PH
854Arguments:
855 string the string to quote - already checked to contain non-printing
856 chars
857 len the length of the string
858 charset the name of the character set; NULL => iso-8859-1
859 buffer the buffer to put the answer in
860 buffer_size the size of the buffer
46218253
PH
861 fold if TRUE, a newline is inserted before the separating space when
862 more than one encoded-word is generated
059ec3d9
PH
863
864Returns: pointer to the original string, if no quoting needed, or
865 pointer to buffer containing the quoted string, or
866 a pointer to "String too long" if the buffer can't even hold
867 the introduction
868*/
869
55414b25
JH
870const uschar *
871parse_quote_2047(const uschar *string, int len, uschar *charset, uschar *buffer,
46218253 872 int buffer_size, BOOL fold)
059ec3d9 873{
55414b25 874const uschar *s = string;
14702f5b
PH
875uschar *p, *t;
876int hlen;
059ec3d9 877BOOL coded = FALSE;
86ae49a6 878BOOL first_byte = FALSE;
059ec3d9 879
94759fce 880if (!charset) charset = US"iso-8859-1";
059ec3d9
PH
881
882/* We don't expect this to fail! */
883
884if (!string_format(buffer, buffer_size, "=?%s?Q?", charset))
885 return US"String too long";
886
14702f5b
PH
887hlen = Ustrlen(buffer);
888t = buffer + hlen;
889p = buffer;
890
059ec3d9
PH
891for (; len > 0; len--)
892 {
893 int ch = *s++;
14702f5b 894 if (t > buffer + buffer_size - hlen - 8) break;
8e669ac1 895
86ae49a6 896 if ((t - p > 67) && !first_byte)
14702f5b
PH
897 {
898 *t++ = '?';
899 *t++ = '=';
46218253 900 if (fold) *t++ = '\n';
14702f5b
PH
901 *t++ = ' ';
902 p = t;
903 Ustrncpy(p, buffer, hlen);
904 t += hlen;
8e669ac1
PH
905 }
906
059ec3d9
PH
907 if (ch < 33 || ch > 126 ||
908 Ustrchr("?=()<>@,;:\\\".[]_", ch) != NULL)
909 {
86ae49a6
NM
910 if (ch == ' ')
911 {
912 *t++ = '_';
913 first_byte = FALSE;
94431adb 914 }
86ae49a6 915 else
059ec3d9 916 {
5976eb99 917 t += sprintf(CS t, "=%02X", ch);
059ec3d9 918 coded = TRUE;
86ae49a6 919 first_byte = !first_byte;
059ec3d9
PH
920 }
921 }
86ae49a6 922 else { *t++ = ch; first_byte = FALSE; }
059ec3d9 923 }
8e669ac1 924
14702f5b 925*t++ = '?';
8e669ac1 926*t++ = '=';
14702f5b 927*t = 0;
8e669ac1 928
94759fce 929return coded ? buffer : string;
059ec3d9
PH
930}
931
932
933
934
935/*************************************************
936* Fix up an RFC 822 "phrase" *
937*************************************************/
938
939/* This function is called to repair any syntactic defects in the "phrase" part
940of an RFC822 address. In particular, it is applied to the user's name as read
941from the passwd file when accepting a local message, and to the data from the
942-F option.
943
944If the string contains existing quoted strings or comments containing
945freestanding quotes, then we just quote those bits that need quoting -
946otherwise it would get awfully messy and probably not look good. If not, we
947quote the whole thing if necessary. Thus
948
949 John Q. Smith => "John Q. Smith"
950 John "Jack" Smith => John "Jack" Smith
951 John "Jack" Q. Smith => John "Jack" "Q." Smith
952 John (Jack) Q. Smith => "John (Jack) Q. Smith"
953 John ("Jack") Q. Smith => John ("Jack") "Q." Smith
954but
955 John (\"Jack\") Q. Smith => "John (\"Jack\") Q. Smith"
956
957Sheesh! This is tedious code. It is a great pity that the syntax of RFC822 is
958the way it is...
959
960August 2000: Additional code added:
961
962 Previously, non-printing characters were turned into question marks, which do
963 not need to be quoted.
964
965 Now, a different tactic is used if there are any non-printing ASCII
966 characters. The encoding method from RFC 2047 is used, assuming iso-8859-1 as
967 the character set.
968
969 We *could* use this for all cases, getting rid of the messy original code,
970 but leave it for now. It would complicate simple cases like "John Q. Smith".
971
972The result is passed back in the buffer; it is usually going to be added to
973some other string. In order to be sure there is going to be no overflow,
974restrict the length of the input to 1/4 of the buffer size - this allows for
975every single character to be quoted or encoded without overflowing, and that
976wouldn't happen because of amalgamation. If the phrase is too long, return a
977fixed string.
978
979Arguments:
980 phrase an RFC822 phrase
981 len the length of the phrase
982 buffer a buffer to put the result in
983 buffer_size the size of the buffer
984
985Returns: the fixed RFC822 phrase
986*/
987
55414b25
JH
988const uschar *
989parse_fix_phrase(const uschar *phrase, int len, uschar *buffer, int buffer_size)
059ec3d9
PH
990{
991int ch, i;
992BOOL quoted = FALSE;
55414b25
JH
993const uschar *s, *end;
994uschar *t, *yield;
059ec3d9
PH
995
996while (len > 0 && isspace(*phrase)) { phrase++; len--; }
997if (len > buffer_size/4) return US"Name too long";
998
999/* See if there are any non-printing characters, and if so, use the RFC 2047
1000encoding for the whole thing. */
1001
1002for (i = 0, s = phrase; i < len; i++, s++)
1003 if ((*s < 32 && *s != '\t') || *s > 126) break;
1004
1005if (i < len) return parse_quote_2047(phrase, len, headers_charset, buffer,
46218253 1006 buffer_size, FALSE);
059ec3d9
PH
1007
1008/* No non-printers; use the RFC 822 quoting rules */
1009
1010s = phrase;
1011end = s + len;
1012yield = t = buffer + 1;
1013
1014while (s < end)
1015 {
1016 ch = *s++;
1017
1018 /* Copy over quoted strings, remembering we encountered one */
1019
1020 if (ch == '\"')
1021 {
1022 *t++ = '\"';
1023 while (s < end && (ch = *s++) != '\"')
1024 {
1025 *t++ = ch;
1026 if (ch == '\\' && s < end) *t++ = *s++;
1027 }
1028 *t++ = '\"';
1029 if (s >= end) break;
1030 quoted = TRUE;
1031 }
1032
1033 /* Copy over comments, noting if they contain freestanding quote
1034 characters */
1035
1036 else if (ch == '(')
1037 {
1038 int level = 1;
1039 *t++ = '(';
1040 while (s < end)
1041 {
1042 ch = *s++;
1043 *t++ = ch;
1044 if (ch == '(') level++;
1045 else if (ch == ')') { if (--level <= 0) break; }
1046 else if (ch == '\\' && s < end) *t++ = *s++ & 127;
1047 else if (ch == '\"') quoted = TRUE;
1048 }
1049 if (ch == 0)
1050 {
1051 while (level--) *t++ = ')';
1052 break;
1053 }
1054 }
1055
1056 /* Handle special characters that need to be quoted */
1057
1058 else if (Ustrchr(")<>@,;:\\.[]", ch) != NULL)
1059 {
1060 /* If hit previous quotes just make one quoted "word" */
1061
1062 if (quoted)
1063 {
1064 uschar *tt = t++;
1065 while (*(--tt) != ' ' && *tt != '\"' && *tt != ')') tt[1] = *tt;
1066 tt[1] = '\"';
1067 *t++ = ch;
1068 while (s < end)
1069 {
1070 ch = *s++;
1071 if (ch == ' ' || ch == '\"') { s--; break; } else *t++ = ch;
1072 }
1073 *t++ = '\"';
1074 }
1075
1076 /* Else quote the whole string so far, and the rest up to any following
1077 quotes. We must treat anything following a backslash as a literal. */
1078
1079 else
1080 {
1081 BOOL escaped = (ch == '\\');
1082 *(--yield) = '\"';
1083 *t++ = ch;
1084
1085 /* Now look for the end or a quote */
1086
1087 while (s < end)
1088 {
1089 ch = *s++;
1090
1091 /* Handle escaped pairs */
1092
1093 if (escaped)
1094 {
1095 *t++ = ch;
1096 escaped = FALSE;
1097 }
1098
1099 else if (ch == '\\')
1100 {
1101 *t++ = ch;
1102 escaped = TRUE;
1103 }
1104
1105 /* If hit subsequent quotes, insert our quote before any trailing
1106 spaces and back up to re-handle the quote in the outer loop. */
1107
1108 else if (ch == '\"')
1109 {
1110 int count = 0;
1111 while (t[-1] == ' ') { t--; count++; }
1112 *t++ = '\"';
1113 while (count-- > 0) *t++ = ' ';
1114 s--;
1115 break;
1116 }
1117
1118 /* If hit a subsequent comment, check it for unescaped quotes,
1119 and if so, end our quote before it. */
1120
1121 else if (ch == '(')
1122 {
55414b25 1123 const uschar *ss = s; /* uschar after '(' */
059ec3d9
PH
1124 int level = 1;
1125 while(ss < end)
1126 {
1127 ch = *ss++;
1128 if (ch == '(') level++;
1129 else if (ch == ')') { if (--level <= 0) break; }
1130 else if (ch == '\\' && ss+1 < end) ss++;
1131 else if (ch == '\"') { quoted = TRUE; break; }
1132 }
1133
1134 /* Comment contains unescaped quotes; end our quote before
1135 the start of the comment. */
1136
1137 if (quoted)
1138 {
1139 int count = 0;
1140 while (t[-1] == ' ') { t--; count++; }
1141 *t++ = '\"';
1142 while (count-- > 0) *t++ = ' ';
1143 break;
1144 }
1145
1146 /* Comment does not contain unescaped quotes; include it in
1147 our quote. */
1148
1149 else
1150 {
1151 if (ss >= end) ss--;
1152 *t++ = '(';
1153 Ustrncpy(t, s, ss-s);
1154 t += ss-s;
1155 s = ss;
1156 }
1157 }
1158
1159 /* Not a comment or quote; include this character in our quotes. */
1160
1161 else *t++ = ch;
1162 }
1163 }
1164
1165 /* Add a final quote if we hit the end of the string. */
1166
1167 if (s >= end) *t++ = '\"';
1168 }
1169
1170 /* Non-special character; just copy it over */
1171
1172 else *t++ = ch;
1173 }
1174
1175*t = 0;
1176return yield;
1177}
1178
1179
1180/*************************************************
1181* Extract addresses from a list *
1182*************************************************/
1183
1184/* This function is called by the redirect router to scan a string containing a
1185list of addresses separated by commas (with optional white space) or by
1186newlines, and to generate a chain of address items from them. In other words,
1187to unpick data from an alias or .forward file.
1188
1189The SunOS5 documentation for alias files is not very clear on the syntax; it
1190does not say that either a comma or a newline can be used for separation.
1191However, that is the way Smail does it, so we follow suit.
1192
1193If a # character is encountered in a white space position, then characters from
1194there to the next newline are skipped.
1195
1196If an unqualified address begins with '\', just skip that character. This gives
1197compatibility with Sendmail's use of \ to prevent looping. Exim has its own
1198loop prevention scheme which handles other cases too - see the code in
1199route_address().
1200
1201An "address" can be a specification of a file or a pipe; the latter may often
1202need to be quoted because it may contain spaces, but we don't want to retain
1203the quotes. Quotes may appear in normal addresses too, and should be retained.
1204We can distinguish between these cases, because in addresses, quotes are used
1205only for parts of the address, not the whole thing. Therefore, we remove quotes
1206from items when they entirely enclose them, but not otherwise.
1207
1208An "address" can also be of the form :include:pathname to include a list of
1209addresses contained in the specified file.
1210
1211Any unqualified addresses are qualified with and rewritten if necessary, via
1212the rewrite_address() function.
1213
1214Arguments:
1215 s the list of addresses (typically a complete
1216 .forward file or a list of entries in an alias file)
1217 options option bits for permitting or denying various special cases;
1218 not all bits are relevant here - some are for filter
1219 files; those we use here are:
1220 RDO_DEFER
1221 RDO_FREEZE
1222 RDO_FAIL
1223 RDO_BLACKHOLE
1224 RDO_REWRITE
1225 RDO_INCLUDE
1226 anchor where to hang the chain of newly-created addresses. This
1227 should be initialized to NULL.
1228 error where to return an error text
1229 incoming domain domain of the incoming address; used to qualify unqualified
1230 local parts preceded by \
1231 directory if NULL, no checks are done on :include: files
1232 otherwise, included file names must start with the given
1233 directory
1234 syntax_errors if not NULL, it carries on after syntax errors in addresses,
1235 building up a list of errors as error blocks chained on
1236 here.
1237
1238Returns: FF_DELIVERED addresses extracted
1239 FF_NOTDELIVERED no addresses extracted, but no errors
1240 FF_BLACKHOLE :blackhole:
1241 FF_DEFER :defer:
1242 FF_FAIL :fail:
1243 FF_INCLUDEFAIL some problem with :include:; *error set
1244 FF_ERROR other problems; *error is set
1245*/
1246
1247int
1248parse_forward_list(uschar *s, int options, address_item **anchor,
55414b25 1249 uschar **error, const uschar *incoming_domain, uschar *directory,
059ec3d9
PH
1250 error_block **syntax_errors)
1251{
1252int count = 0;
1253
1254DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("parse_forward_list: %s\n", s);
1255
1256for (;;)
1257 {
1258 int len;
1259 int special = 0;
1260 int specopt = 0;
1261 int specbit = 0;
1262 uschar *ss, *nexts;
1263 address_item *addr;
1264 BOOL inquote = FALSE;
1265
1266 for (;;)
1267 {
1268 while (isspace(*s) || *s == ',') s++;
1269 if (*s == '#') { while (*s != 0 && *s != '\n') s++; } else break;
1270 }
1271
1272 /* When we reach the end of the list, we return FF_DELIVERED if any child
1273 addresses have been generated. If nothing has been generated, there are two
1274 possibilities: either the list is really empty, or there were syntax errors
1275 that are being skipped. (If syntax errors are not being skipped, an FF_ERROR
1276 return is generated on hitting a syntax error and we don't get here.) For a
1277 truly empty list we return FF_NOTDELIVERED so that the router can decline.
1278 However, if the list is empty only because syntax errors were skipped, we
1279 return FF_DELIVERED. */
1280
7d99cba1 1281 if (!*s)
059ec3d9 1282 {
7d99cba1
JH
1283 return (count > 0 || (syntax_errors && *syntax_errors))
1284 ? FF_DELIVERED : FF_NOTDELIVERED;
059ec3d9
PH
1285
1286 /* This previous code returns FF_ERROR if nothing is generated but a
1287 syntax error has been skipped. I now think it is the wrong approach, but
1288 have left this here just in case, and for the record. */
1289
1290 #ifdef NEVER
1291 if (count > 0) return FF_DELIVERED; /* Something was generated */
1292
1293 if (syntax_errors == NULL || /* Not skipping syntax errors, or */
1294 *syntax_errors == NULL) /* we didn't actually skip any */
1295 return FF_NOTDELIVERED;
1296
1297 *error = string_sprintf("no addresses generated: syntax error in %s: %s",
1298 (*syntax_errors)->text2, (*syntax_errors)->text1);
1299 return FF_ERROR;
1300 #endif
1301
1302 }
1303
1304 /* Find the end of the next address. Quoted strings in addresses may contain
1305 escaped characters; I haven't found a proper specification of .forward or
1306 alias files that mentions the quoting properties, but it seems right to do
1307 the escaping thing in all cases, so use the function that finds the end of an
1308 address. However, don't let a quoted string extend over the end of a line. */
1309
1310 ss = parse_find_address_end(s, TRUE);
1311
1312 /* Remember where we finished, for starting the next one. */
1313
1314 nexts = ss;
1315
1316 /* Remove any trailing spaces; we know there's at least one non-space. */
1317
1318 while (isspace((ss[-1]))) ss--;
1319
1320 /* We now have s->start and ss->end of the next address. Remove quotes
1321 if they completely enclose, remembering the address started with a quote
1322 for handling pipes and files. Another round of removal of leading and
1323 trailing spaces is then required. */
1324
1325 if (*s == '\"' && ss[-1] == '\"')
1326 {
1327 s++;
1328 ss--;
1329 inquote = TRUE;
1330 while (s < ss && isspace(*s)) s++;
1331 while (ss > s && isspace((ss[-1]))) ss--;
1332 }
1333
1334 /* Set up the length of the address. */
1335
1336 len = ss - s;
1337
1338 DEBUG(D_route)
1339 {
1340 int save = s[len];
1341 s[len] = 0;
1342 debug_printf("extract item: %s\n", s);
1343 s[len] = save;
1344 }
1345
1346 /* Handle special addresses if permitted. If the address is :unknown:
1347 ignore it - this is for backward compatibility with old alias files. You
1348 don't need to use it nowadays - just generate an empty string. For :defer:,
1349 :blackhole:, or :fail: we have to set up the error message and give up right
1350 away. */
1351
1352 if (Ustrncmp(s, ":unknown:", len) == 0)
1353 {
1354 s = nexts;
1355 continue;
1356 }
1357
1358 if (Ustrncmp(s, ":defer:", 7) == 0)
1359 { special = FF_DEFER; specopt = RDO_DEFER; } /* specbit is 0 */
1360 else if (Ustrncmp(s, ":blackhole:", 11) == 0)
1361 { special = FF_BLACKHOLE; specopt = specbit = RDO_BLACKHOLE; }
1362 else if (Ustrncmp(s, ":fail:", 6) == 0)
1363 { special = FF_FAIL; specopt = RDO_FAIL; } /* specbit is 0 */
1364
1365 if (special != 0)
1366 {
1367 uschar *ss = Ustrchr(s+1, ':') + 1;
1368 if ((options & specopt) == specbit)
1369 {
1370 *error = string_sprintf("\"%.*s\" is not permitted", len, s);
1371 return FF_ERROR;
1372 }
1373 while (*ss != 0 && isspace(*ss)) ss++;
1374 while (s[len] != 0 && s[len] != '\n') len++;
1375 s[len] = 0;
1376 *error = string_copy(ss);
1377 return special;
1378 }
1379
1380 /* If the address is of the form :include:pathname, read the file, and call
1381 this function recursively to extract the addresses from it. If directory is
1382 NULL, do no checks. Otherwise, insist that the file name starts with the
1383 given directory and is a regular file. */
1384
1385 if (Ustrncmp(s, ":include:", 9) == 0)
1386 {
1387 uschar *filebuf;
1388 uschar filename[256];
1389 uschar *t = s+9;
1390 int flen = len - 9;
1391 int frc;
1392 struct stat statbuf;
1393 address_item *last;
1394 FILE *f;
1395
1396 while (flen > 0 && isspace(*t)) { t++; flen--; }
1397
1398 if (flen <= 0)
1399 {
f3ebb786 1400 *error = US"file name missing after :include:";
059ec3d9
PH
1401 return FF_ERROR;
1402 }
1403
1404 if (flen > 255)
1405 {
1406 *error = string_sprintf("included file name \"%s\" is too long", t);
1407 return FF_ERROR;
1408 }
1409
1410 Ustrncpy(filename, t, flen);
1411 filename[flen] = 0;
1412
1413 /* Insist on absolute path */
1414
7d99cba1 1415 if (filename[0] != '/')
059ec3d9
PH
1416 {
1417 *error = string_sprintf("included file \"%s\" is not an absolute path",
1418 filename);
1419 return FF_ERROR;
1420 }
1421
1422 /* Check if include is permitted */
1423
7d99cba1 1424 if (options & RDO_INCLUDE)
059ec3d9
PH
1425 {
1426 *error = US"included files not permitted";
1427 return FF_ERROR;
1428 }
1429
7d99cba1
JH
1430 if (is_tainted(filename))
1431 {
1432 *error = string_sprintf("Tainted name '%s' for included file not permitted\n",
1433 filename);
1434 return FF_ERROR;
1435 }
1436
059ec3d9
PH
1437 /* Check file name if required */
1438
10c50704 1439 if (directory)
059ec3d9
PH
1440 {
1441 int len = Ustrlen(directory);
1442 uschar *p = filename + len;
1443
1444 if (Ustrncmp(filename, directory, len) != 0 || *p != '/')
1445 {
1446 *error = string_sprintf("included file %s is not in directory %s",
1447 filename, directory);
1448 return FF_ERROR;
1449 }
1450
10c50704
JH
1451#ifdef EXIM_HAVE_OPENAT
1452 /* It is necessary to check that every component inside the directory
1453 is NOT a symbolic link, in order to keep the file inside the directory.
1454 This is mighty tedious. We open the directory and openat every component,
1455 with a flag that fails symlinks. */
1456
1457 {
9e21ce8f 1458 int fd = exim_open2(CS directory, O_RDONLY);
10c50704
JH
1459 if (fd < 0)
1460 {
1461 *error = string_sprintf("failed to open directory %s", directory);
1462 return FF_ERROR;
1463 }
1464 while (*p)
1465 {
1466 uschar temp;
1467 int fd2;
1468 uschar * q = p;
1469
1470 while (*++p && *p != '/') ;
1471 temp = *p;
1472 *p = '\0';
1473
9e21ce8f 1474 fd2 = exim_openat(fd, CS q, O_RDONLY|O_NOFOLLOW);
ad6f5499
JH
1475 close(fd);
1476 *p = temp;
1477 if (fd2 < 0)
10c50704
JH
1478 {
1479 *error = string_sprintf("failed to open %s (component of included "
1480 "file); could be symbolic link", filename);
1481 return FF_ERROR;
1482 }
10c50704 1483 fd = fd2;
10c50704
JH
1484 }
1485 f = fdopen(fd, "rb");
1486 }
1487#else
059ec3d9
PH
1488 /* It is necessary to check that every component inside the directory
1489 is NOT a symbolic link, in order to keep the file inside the directory.
1490 This is mighty tedious. It is also not totally foolproof in that it
1491 leaves the possibility of a race attack, but I don't know how to do
1492 any better. */
1493
10c50704 1494 while (*p)
059ec3d9
PH
1495 {
1496 int temp;
10c50704 1497 while (*++p && *p != '/');
059ec3d9
PH
1498 temp = *p;
1499 *p = 0;
1500 if (Ulstat(filename, &statbuf) != 0)
1501 {
1502 *error = string_sprintf("failed to stat %s (component of included "
1503 "file)", filename);
1504 *p = temp;
1505 return FF_ERROR;
1506 }
1507
1508 *p = temp;
1509
1510 if ((statbuf.st_mode & S_IFMT) == S_IFLNK)
1511 {
1512 *error = string_sprintf("included file %s in the %s directory "
1513 "involves a symbolic link", filename, directory);
1514 return FF_ERROR;
1515 }
1516 }
10c50704 1517#endif
059ec3d9
PH
1518 }
1519
10c50704
JH
1520#ifdef EXIM_HAVE_OPENAT
1521 else
1522#endif
1523 /* Open and stat the file */
1524 f = Ufopen(filename, "rb");
059ec3d9 1525
10c50704 1526 if (!f)
059ec3d9
PH
1527 {
1528 *error = string_open_failed(errno, "included file %s", filename);
1529 return FF_INCLUDEFAIL;
1530 }
1531
1532 if (fstat(fileno(f), &statbuf) != 0)
1533 {
1534 *error = string_sprintf("failed to stat included file %s: %s",
1535 filename, strerror(errno));
f1e894f3 1536 (void)fclose(f);
059ec3d9
PH
1537 return FF_INCLUDEFAIL;
1538 }
1539
1540 /* If directory was checked, double check that we opened a regular file */
1541
10c50704 1542 if (directory && (statbuf.st_mode & S_IFMT) != S_IFREG)
059ec3d9
PH
1543 {
1544 *error = string_sprintf("included file %s is not a regular file in "
1545 "the %s directory", filename, directory);
1546 return FF_ERROR;
1547 }
1548
1549 /* Get a buffer and read the contents */
1550
1551 if (statbuf.st_size > MAX_INCLUDE_SIZE)
1552 {
1553 *error = string_sprintf("included file %s is too big (max %d)",
1554 filename, MAX_INCLUDE_SIZE);
1555 return FF_ERROR;
1556 }
1557
f3ebb786 1558 filebuf = store_get(statbuf.st_size + 1, is_tainted(filename));
059ec3d9
PH
1559 if (fread(filebuf, 1, statbuf.st_size, f) != statbuf.st_size)
1560 {
1561 *error = string_sprintf("error while reading included file %s: %s",
1562 filename, strerror(errno));
f1e894f3 1563 (void)fclose(f);
059ec3d9
PH
1564 return FF_ERROR;
1565 }
1566 filebuf[statbuf.st_size] = 0;
f1e894f3 1567 (void)fclose(f);
059ec3d9
PH
1568
1569 addr = NULL;
1570 frc = parse_forward_list(filebuf, options, &addr,
1571 error, incoming_domain, directory, syntax_errors);
1572 if (frc != FF_DELIVERED && frc != FF_NOTDELIVERED) return frc;
1573
10c50704 1574 if (addr)
059ec3d9 1575 {
10c50704 1576 for (last = addr; last->next; last = last->next) count++;
059ec3d9
PH
1577 last->next = *anchor;
1578 *anchor = addr;
1579 count++;
1580 }
1581 }
1582
1583 /* Else (not :include:) ensure address is syntactically correct and fully
1584 qualified if not a pipe or a file, removing a leading \ if present on an
1585 unqualified address. For pipes and files we must handle quoting. It's
1586 not quite clear exactly what to do for partially quoted things, but the
1587 common case of having the whole thing in quotes is straightforward. If this
1588 was the case, inquote will have been set TRUE above and the quotes removed.
1589
1590 There is a possible ambiguity over addresses whose local parts start with
1591 a vertical bar or a slash, and the latter do in fact occur, thanks to X.400.
1592 Consider a .forward file that contains the line
1593
1594 /X=xxx/Y=xxx/OU=xxx/@some.gate.way
1595
1596 Is this a file or an X.400 address? Does it make any difference if it is in
1597 quotes? On the grounds that file names of this type are rare, Exim treats
1598 something that parses as an RFC 822 address and has a domain as an address
1599 rather than a file or a pipe. This is also how an address such as the above
1600 would be treated if it came in from outside. */
1601
1602 else
1603 {
1604 int start, end, domain;
1605 uschar *recipient = NULL;
1606 int save = s[len];
1607 s[len] = 0;
1608
1609 /* If it starts with \ and the rest of it parses as a valid mail address
1610 without a domain, carry on with that address, but qualify it with the
1611 incoming domain. Otherwise arrange for the address to fall through,
1612 causing an error message on the re-parse. */
1613
1614 if (*s == '\\')
1615 {
1616 recipient =
1617 parse_extract_address(s+1, error, &start, &end, &domain, FALSE);
5fcc791a
JH
1618 if (recipient)
1619 recipient = domain != 0 ? NULL :
059ec3d9
PH
1620 string_sprintf("%s@%s", recipient, incoming_domain);
1621 }
1622
1623 /* Try parsing the item as an address. */
1624
5fcc791a 1625 if (!recipient) recipient =
059ec3d9
PH
1626 parse_extract_address(s, error, &start, &end, &domain, FALSE);
1627
1628 /* If item starts with / or | and is not a valid address, or there
1629 is no domain, treat it as a file or pipe. If it was a quoted item,
1630 remove the quoting occurrences of \ within it. */
1631
1632 if ((*s == '|' || *s == '/') && (recipient == NULL || domain == 0))
1633 {
f3ebb786 1634 uschar *t = store_get(Ustrlen(s) + 1, is_tainted(s));
059ec3d9
PH
1635 uschar *p = t;
1636 uschar *q = s;
1637 while (*q != 0)
1638 {
1639 if (inquote)
1640 {
1641 *p++ = (*q == '\\')? *(++q) : *q;
1642 q++;
1643 }
1644 else *p++ = *q++;
1645 }
1646 *p = 0;
1647 addr = deliver_make_addr(t, TRUE);
1648 setflag(addr, af_pfr); /* indicates pipe/file/reply */
1649 if (*s != '|') setflag(addr, af_file); /* indicates file */
1650 }
1651
1652 /* Item must be an address. Complain if not, else qualify, rewrite and set
1653 up the control block. It appears that people are in the habit of using
1654 empty addresses but with comments as a way of putting comments into
1655 alias and forward files. Therefore, ignore the error "empty address".
1656 Mailing lists might want to tolerate syntax errors; there is therefore
1657 an option to do so. */
1658
1659 else
1660 {
1661 if (recipient == NULL)
1662 {
1663 if (Ustrcmp(*error, "empty address") == 0)
1664 {
1665 *error = NULL;
1666 s[len] = save;
1667 s = nexts;
1668 continue;
1669 }
1670
1671 if (syntax_errors != NULL)
1672 {
f3ebb786 1673 error_block *e = store_get(sizeof(error_block), FALSE);
059ec3d9
PH
1674 error_block *last = *syntax_errors;
1675 if (last == NULL) *syntax_errors = e; else
1676 {
1677 while (last->next != NULL) last = last->next;
1678 last->next = e;
1679 }
1680 e->next = NULL;
1681 e->text1 = *error;
1682 e->text2 = string_copy(s);
1683 s[len] = save;
1684 s = nexts;
1685 continue;
1686 }
1687 else
1688 {
1689 *error = string_sprintf("%s in \"%s\"", *error, s);
1690 s[len] = save; /* _after_ using it for *error */
1691 return FF_ERROR;
1692 }
1693 }
1694
1695 /* Address was successfully parsed. Rewrite, and then make an address
1696 block. */
1697
1698 recipient = ((options & RDO_REWRITE) != 0)?
1699 rewrite_address(recipient, TRUE, FALSE, global_rewrite_rules,
1700 rewrite_existflags) :
1701 rewrite_address_qualify(recipient, TRUE);
1702 addr = deliver_make_addr(recipient, TRUE); /* TRUE => copy recipient */
1703 }
1704
1705 /* Restore the final character in the original data, and add to the
1706 output chain. */
1707
1708 s[len] = save;
1709 addr->next = *anchor;
1710 *anchor = addr;
1711 count++;
1712 }
1713
1714 /* Advance pointer for the next address */
1715
1716 s = nexts;
1717 }
1718}
1719
1720
30dba1e6
PH
1721/*************************************************
1722* Extract a Message-ID *
1723*************************************************/
1724
1725/* This function is used to extract message ids from In-Reply-To: and
1726References: header lines.
1727
1728Arguments:
1729 str pointer to the start of the message-id
1730 yield put pointer to the message id (in dynamic memory) here
1731 error put error message here on failure
1732
1733Returns: points after the processed message-id or NULL on error
1734*/
1735
1736uschar *
1737parse_message_id(uschar *str, uschar **yield, uschar **error)
1738{
1739uschar *domain = NULL;
1740uschar *id;
f3ebb786 1741rmark reset_point;
30dba1e6
PH
1742
1743str = skip_comment(str);
1744if (*str != '<')
1745 {
1746 *error = US"Missing '<' before message-id";
1747 return NULL;
1748 }
1749
1750/* Getting a block the size of the input string will definitely be sufficient
1751for the answer, but it may also be very long if we are processing a header
1752line. Therefore, take care to release unwanted store afterwards. */
1753
f3ebb786
JH
1754reset_point = store_mark();
1755id = *yield = store_get(Ustrlen(str) + 1, is_tainted(str));
30dba1e6
PH
1756*id++ = *str++;
1757
1758str = read_addr_spec(str, id, '>', error, &domain);
1759
f3ebb786 1760if (!*error)
30dba1e6
PH
1761 {
1762 if (*str != '>') *error = US"Missing '>' after message-id";
1763 else if (domain == NULL) *error = US"domain missing in message-id";
1764 }
1765
f3ebb786 1766if (*error)
30dba1e6 1767 {
f3ebb786 1768 store_reset(reset_point);
30dba1e6
PH
1769 return NULL;
1770 }
1771
f3ebb786 1772while (*id) id++;
30dba1e6
PH
1773*id++ = *str++;
1774*id++ = 0;
f3ebb786 1775store_release_above(id);
30dba1e6
PH
1776
1777str = skip_comment(str);
1778return str;
63ac05ee
MH
1779}
1780
1781
1782/*************************************************
1783* Parse a fixed digit number *
1784*************************************************/
1785
1786/* Parse a string containing an ASCII encoded fixed digits number
1787
1788Arguments:
1789 str pointer to the start of the ASCII encoded number
1790 n pointer to the resulting value
1791 digits number of required digits
1792
1793Returns: points after the processed date or NULL on error
1794*/
1795
1796static uschar *
1797parse_number(uschar *str, int *n, int digits)
1798{
1799 *n=0;
1800 while (digits--)
1801 {
1802 if (*str<'0' || *str>'9') return NULL;
1803 *n=10*(*n)+(*str++-'0');
1804 }
1805 return str;
1806}
1807
1808
1809/*************************************************
1810* Parse a RFC 2822 day of week *
1811*************************************************/
1812
1813/* Parse the day of the week from a RFC 2822 date, but do not
1814 decode it, because it is only for humans.
1815
1816Arguments:
1817 str pointer to the start of the day of the week
1818
1819Returns: points after the parsed day or NULL on error
1820*/
1821
1822static uschar *
1823parse_day_of_week(uschar *str)
1824{
1825/*
1826day-of-week = ([FWS] day-name) / obs-day-of-week
1827
1828day-name = "Mon" / "Tue" / "Wed" / "Thu" /
1829 "Fri" / "Sat" / "Sun"
1830
1831obs-day-of-week = [CFWS] day-name [CFWS]
1832*/
1833
5ca6d115 1834static const uschar *day_name[7]={ US"mon", US"tue", US"wed", US"thu", US"fri", US"sat", US"sun" };
63ac05ee
MH
1835int i;
1836uschar day[4];
1837
1838str=skip_comment(str);
1839for (i=0; i<3; ++i)
1840 {
1841 if ((day[i]=tolower(*str))=='\0') return NULL;
1842 ++str;
1843 }
1844day[3]='\0';
5ca6d115 1845for (i=0; i<7; ++i) if (Ustrcmp(day,day_name[i])==0) break;
63ac05ee
MH
1846if (i==7) return NULL;
1847str=skip_comment(str);
1848return str;
1849}
1850
1851
1852/*************************************************
1853* Parse a RFC 2822 date *
1854*************************************************/
1855
1856/* Parse the date part of a RFC 2822 date-time, extracting the
1857 day, month and year.
1858
1859Arguments:
1860 str pointer to the start of the date
1861 d pointer to the resulting day
1862 m pointer to the resulting month
1863 y pointer to the resulting year
1864
1865Returns: points after the processed date or NULL on error
1866*/
1867
1868static uschar *
1869parse_date(uschar *str, int *d, int *m, int *y)
1870{
1871/*
1872date = day month year
1873
1874year = 4*DIGIT / obs-year
1875
1876obs-year = [CFWS] 2*DIGIT [CFWS]
1877
1878month = (FWS month-name FWS) / obs-month
1879
1880month-name = "Jan" / "Feb" / "Mar" / "Apr" /
1881 "May" / "Jun" / "Jul" / "Aug" /
1882 "Sep" / "Oct" / "Nov" / "Dec"
1883
1884obs-month = CFWS month-name CFWS
1885
1886day = ([FWS] 1*2DIGIT) / obs-day
1887
1888obs-day = [CFWS] 1*2DIGIT [CFWS]
1889*/
1890
1891uschar *c,*n;
5ca6d115 1892static const uschar *month_name[]={ US"jan", US"feb", US"mar", US"apr", US"may", US"jun", US"jul", US"aug", US"sep", US"oct", US"nov", US"dec" };
63ac05ee
MH
1893int i;
1894uschar month[4];
1895
1896str=skip_comment(str);
1897if ((str=parse_number(str,d,1))==NULL) return NULL;
1898if (*str>='0' && *str<='9') *d=10*(*d)+(*str++-'0');
1899c=skip_comment(str);
1900if (c==str) return NULL;
1901else str=c;
1902for (i=0; i<3; ++i) if ((month[i]=tolower(*(str+i)))=='\0') return NULL;
1903month[3]='\0';
1904for (i=0; i<12; ++i) if (Ustrcmp(month,month_name[i])==0) break;
1905if (i==12) return NULL;
1906str+=3;
1907*m=i;
1908c=skip_comment(str);
1909if (c==str) return NULL;
1910else str=c;
1911if ((n=parse_number(str,y,4)))
1912 {
1913 str=n;
1914 if (*y<1900) return NULL;
1915 *y=*y-1900;
1916 }
1917else if ((n=parse_number(str,y,2)))
1918 {
1919 str=skip_comment(n);
1920 while (*(str-1)==' ' || *(str-1)=='\t') --str; /* match last FWS later */
1921 if (*y<50) *y+=100;
1922 }
1923else return NULL;
1924return str;
1925}
1926
1927
1928/*************************************************
1929* Parse a RFC 2822 Time *
1930*************************************************/
1931
1932/* Parse the time part of a RFC 2822 date-time, extracting the
1933 hour, minute, second and timezone.
1934
1935Arguments:
1936 str pointer to the start of the time
1937 h pointer to the resulting hour
1938 m pointer to the resulting minute
1939 s pointer to the resulting second
1940 z pointer to the resulting timezone (offset in seconds)
1941
1942Returns: points after the processed time or NULL on error
1943*/
1944
1945static uschar *
1946parse_time(uschar *str, int *h, int *m, int *s, int *z)
1947{
1948/*
1949time = time-of-day FWS zone
1950
1951time-of-day = hour ":" minute [ ":" second ]
1952
1953hour = 2DIGIT / obs-hour
1954
1955obs-hour = [CFWS] 2DIGIT [CFWS]
1956
1957minute = 2DIGIT / obs-minute
1958
1959obs-minute = [CFWS] 2DIGIT [CFWS]
1960
1961second = 2DIGIT / obs-second
1962
1963obs-second = [CFWS] 2DIGIT [CFWS]
1964
1965zone = (( "+" / "-" ) 4DIGIT) / obs-zone
1966
1967obs-zone = "UT" / "GMT" / ; Universal Time
1968 ; North American UT
1969 ; offsets
1970 "EST" / "EDT" / ; Eastern: - 5/ - 4
1971 "CST" / "CDT" / ; Central: - 6/ - 5
1972 "MST" / "MDT" / ; Mountain: - 7/ - 6
1973 "PST" / "PDT" / ; Pacific: - 8/ - 7
1974
1975 %d65-73 / ; Military zones - "A"
1976 %d75-90 / ; through "I" and "K"
1977 %d97-105 / ; through "Z", both
1978 %d107-122 ; upper and lower case
1979*/
1980
1981uschar *c;
1982
1983str=skip_comment(str);
1984if ((str=parse_number(str,h,2))==NULL) return NULL;
1985str=skip_comment(str);
1986if (*str!=':') return NULL;
1987++str;
1988str=skip_comment(str);
1989if ((str=parse_number(str,m,2))==NULL) return NULL;
1990c=skip_comment(str);
1991if (*str==':')
1992 {
1993 ++str;
1994 str=skip_comment(str);
1995 if ((str=parse_number(str,s,2))==NULL) return NULL;
1996 c=skip_comment(str);
1997 }
1998if (c==str) return NULL;
1999else str=c;
2000if (*str=='+' || *str=='-')
2001 {
2002 int neg;
2003
2004 neg=(*str=='-');
2005 ++str;
2006 if ((str=parse_number(str,z,4))==NULL) return NULL;
2007 *z=(*z/100)*3600+(*z%100)*60;
2008 if (neg) *z=-*z;
2009 }
2010else
2011 {
2012 char zone[5];
2013 struct { const char *name; int off; } zone_name[10]=
2014 { {"gmt",0}, {"ut",0}, {"est",-5}, {"edt",-4}, {"cst",-6}, {"cdt",-5}, {"mst",-7}, {"mdt",-6}, {"pst",-8}, {"pdt",-7}};
2015 int i,j;
2016
2017 for (i=0; i<4; ++i)
2018 {
2019 zone[i]=tolower(*(str+i));
2020 if (zone[i]<'a' || zone[i]>'z') break;
2021 }
2022 zone[i]='\0';
2023 for (j=0; j<10 && strcmp(zone,zone_name[j].name); ++j);
2024 /* Besides zones named in the grammar, RFC 2822 says other alphabetic */
2025 /* time zones should be treated as unknown offsets. */
2026 if (j<10)
2027 {
2028 *z=zone_name[j].off*3600;
2029 str+=i;
2030 }
2031 else if (zone[0]<'a' || zone[1]>'z') return 0;
2032 else
2033 {
2034 while ((*str>='a' && *str<='z') || (*str>='A' && *str<='Z')) ++str;
2035 *z=0;
2036 }
2037 }
2038return str;
2039}
2040
2041
2042/*************************************************
2043* Parse a RFC 2822 date-time *
2044*************************************************/
2045
2046/* Parse a RFC 2822 date-time and return it in seconds since the epoch.
2047
2048Arguments:
2049 str pointer to the start of the date-time
2050 t pointer to the parsed time
2051
2052Returns: points after the processed date-time or NULL on error
2053*/
2054
2055uschar *
2056parse_date_time(uschar *str, time_t *t)
2057{
2058/*
2059date-time = [ day-of-week "," ] date FWS time [CFWS]
2060*/
2061
2062struct tm tm;
2063int zone;
2064extern char **environ;
2065char **old_environ;
2066static char gmt0[]="TZ=GMT0";
2067static char *gmt_env[]={ gmt0, (char*)0 };
ed2a4866 2068uschar *try;
63ac05ee 2069
ed2a4866 2070if ((try=parse_day_of_week(str)))
63ac05ee 2071 {
ed2a4866 2072 str=try;
63ac05ee
MH
2073 if (*str!=',') return 0;
2074 ++str;
2075 }
2076if ((str=parse_date(str,&tm.tm_mday,&tm.tm_mon,&tm.tm_year))==NULL) return NULL;
2077if (*str!=' ' && *str!='\t') return NULL;
2078while (*str==' ' || *str=='\t') ++str;
2079if ((str=parse_time(str,&tm.tm_hour,&tm.tm_min,&tm.tm_sec,&zone))==NULL) return NULL;
2080tm.tm_isdst=0;
2081old_environ=environ;
2082environ=gmt_env;
2083*t=mktime(&tm);
2084environ=old_environ;
2085if (*t==-1) return NULL;
2086*t-=zone;
2087str=skip_comment(str);
2088return str;
30dba1e6
PH
2089}
2090
2091
2092
2093
059ec3d9
PH
2094/*************************************************
2095**************************************************
2096* Stand-alone test program *
2097**************************************************
2098*************************************************/
2099
2100#if defined STAND_ALONE
2101int main(void)
2102{
2103int start, end, domain;
2104uschar buffer[1024];
2105uschar outbuff[1024];
2106
2107big_buffer = store_malloc(big_buffer_size);
2108
2109/* strip_trailing_dot = TRUE; */
2110allow_domain_literals = TRUE;
2111
2112printf("Testing parse_fix_phrase\n");
2113
2114while (Ufgets(buffer, sizeof(buffer), stdin) != NULL)
2115 {
2116 buffer[Ustrlen(buffer)-1] = 0;
2117 if (buffer[0] == 0) break;
2118 printf("%s\n", CS parse_fix_phrase(buffer, Ustrlen(buffer), outbuff,
2119 sizeof(outbuff)));
2120 }
2121
2122printf("Testing parse_extract_address without group syntax and without UTF-8\n");
2123
2124while (Ufgets(buffer, sizeof(buffer), stdin) != NULL)
2125 {
2126 uschar *out;
2127 uschar *errmess;
2128 buffer[Ustrlen(buffer) - 1] = 0;
2129 if (buffer[0] == 0) break;
2130 out = parse_extract_address(buffer, &errmess, &start, &end, &domain, FALSE);
5fcc791a
JH
2131 if (!out)
2132 printf("*** bad address: %s\n", errmess);
2133 else
059ec3d9
PH
2134 {
2135 uschar extract[1024];
2136 Ustrncpy(extract, buffer+start, end-start);
2137 extract[end-start] = 0;
2138 printf("%s %d %d %d \"%s\"\n", out, start, end, domain, extract);
2139 }
2140 }
2141
2142printf("Testing parse_extract_address without group syntax but with UTF-8\n");
2143
2144allow_utf8_domains = TRUE;
2145while (Ufgets(buffer, sizeof(buffer), stdin) != NULL)
2146 {
2147 uschar *out;
2148 uschar *errmess;
2149 buffer[Ustrlen(buffer) - 1] = 0;
2150 if (buffer[0] == 0) break;
2151 out = parse_extract_address(buffer, &errmess, &start, &end, &domain, FALSE);
5fcc791a
JH
2152 if (!out)
2153 printf("*** bad address: %s\n", errmess);
2154 else
059ec3d9
PH
2155 {
2156 uschar extract[1024];
2157 Ustrncpy(extract, buffer+start, end-start);
2158 extract[end-start] = 0;
2159 printf("%s %d %d %d \"%s\"\n", out, start, end, domain, extract);
2160 }
2161 }
2162allow_utf8_domains = FALSE;
2163
2164printf("Testing parse_extract_address with group syntax\n");
2165
8768d548 2166f.parse_allow_group = TRUE;
059ec3d9
PH
2167while (Ufgets(buffer, sizeof(buffer), stdin) != NULL)
2168 {
2169 uschar *out;
2170 uschar *errmess;
2171 uschar *s;
2172 buffer[Ustrlen(buffer) - 1] = 0;
2173 if (buffer[0] == 0) break;
2174 s = buffer;
5fcc791a 2175 while (*s)
059ec3d9
PH
2176 {
2177 uschar *ss = parse_find_address_end(s, FALSE);
2178 int terminator = *ss;
2179 *ss = 0;
2180 out = parse_extract_address(buffer, &errmess, &start, &end, &domain, FALSE);
2181 *ss = terminator;
2182
5fcc791a
JH
2183 if (!out)
2184 printf("*** bad address: %s\n", errmess);
2185 else
059ec3d9
PH
2186 {
2187 uschar extract[1024];
2188 Ustrncpy(extract, buffer+start, end-start);
2189 extract[end-start] = 0;
2190 printf("%s %d %d %d \"%s\"\n", out, start, end, domain, extract);
2191 }
2192
2193 s = ss + (terminator? 1:0);
137ae145 2194 Uskip_whitespace(&s);
059ec3d9
PH
2195 }
2196 }
2197
2198printf("Testing parse_find_at\n");
2199
2200while (Ufgets(buffer, sizeof(buffer), stdin) != NULL)
2201 {
2202 uschar *s;
2203 buffer[Ustrlen(buffer)-1] = 0;
2204 if (buffer[0] == 0) break;
2205 s = parse_find_at(buffer);
2206 if (s == NULL) printf("no @ found\n");
2207 else printf("offset = %d\n", s - buffer);
2208 }
2209
2210printf("Testing parse_extract_addresses\n");
2211
2212while (Ufgets(buffer, sizeof(buffer), stdin) != NULL)
2213 {
2214 uschar *errmess;
2215 int extracted;
2216 address_item *anchor = NULL;
2217 buffer[Ustrlen(buffer) - 1] = 0;
2218 if (buffer[0] == 0) break;
2219 if ((extracted = parse_forward_list(buffer, -1, &anchor,
2220 &errmess, US"incoming.domain", NULL, NULL)) == FF_DELIVERED)
2221 {
2222 while (anchor != NULL)
2223 {
2224 address_item *addr = anchor;
2225 anchor = anchor->next;
2226 printf("%d %s\n", testflag(addr, af_pfr), addr->address);
2227 }
2228 }
2229 else printf("Failed: %d %s\n", extracted, errmess);
2230 }
2231
30dba1e6
PH
2232printf("Testing parse_message_id\n");
2233
2234while (Ufgets(buffer, sizeof(buffer), stdin) != NULL)
2235 {
2236 uschar *s, *t, *errmess;
2237 buffer[Ustrlen(buffer) - 1] = 0;
2238 if (buffer[0] == 0) break;
2239 s = buffer;
2240 while (*s != 0)
2241 {
2242 s = parse_message_id(s, &t, &errmess);
2243 if (errmess != NULL)
2244 {
2245 printf("Failed: %s\n", errmess);
2246 break;
2247 }
2248 printf("%s\n", t);
2249 }
2250 }
2251
059ec3d9
PH
2252return 0;
2253}
2254
2255#endif
2256
2257/* End of parse.c */