Added a backwards-compatible interface to a fake DNS resolver for use by
[exim.git] / src / src / dns.c
1 /* $Cambridge: exim/src/src/dns.c,v 1.10 2005/09/13 15:40:07 ph10 Exp $ */
2
3 /*************************************************
4 * Exim - an Internet mail transport agent *
5 *************************************************/
6
7 /* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2005 */
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
16 are supported. */
17
18 #if HAVE_IPV6
19 #ifdef SUPPORT_A6
20 static void dns_complete_a6(dns_address ***, dns_answer *, dns_record *,
21 int, uschar *);
22 #endif
23 #endif
24
25
26 /*************************************************
27 * Fake DNS resolver *
28 *************************************************/
29
30 /* This function is called instead of res_search() when Exim is running in its
31 test harness. It recognizes some special domain names, and uses them to force
32 failure and retry responses (optionally with a delay). It also recognises the
33 zones test.ex and 10.in-addr.arpa, and for those it calls an external utility
34 that mock-up a nameserver, if it can find the utility. Otherwise, it passes its
35 arguments on to res_search().
36
37 Background: the original test suite required a real nameserver to carry the
38 test.ex and 10.in-addr.arpa zones, whereas the new test suit has the fake
39 server for portability. This code supports both.
40
41 Arguments:
42 name the domain name
43 type the DNS record type
44 answerptr where to put the answer
45 size size of the answer area
46
47 Returns: length of returned data, or -1 on error (h_errno set)
48 */
49
50 static int
51 fakens_search(uschar *name, int type, uschar *answerptr, int size)
52 {
53 int len = Ustrlen(name);
54 uschar *endname = name + len;
55
56 if (len >= 14 && Ustrcmp(endname - 14, "test.again.dns") == 0)
57 {
58 int delay = Uatoi(name); /* digits at the start of the name */
59 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("Return from DNS lookup of %s (%s) faked for testing\n",
60 name, dns_text_type(type));
61 if (delay > 0)
62 {
63 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("delaying %d seconds\n", delay);
64 sleep(delay);
65 }
66 h_errno = TRY_AGAIN;
67 return -1;
68 }
69
70 if (len >= 13 && Ustrcmp(endname - 13, "test.fail.dns") == 0)
71 {
72 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("Return from DNS lookup of %s (%s) faked for testing\n",
73 name, dns_text_type(type));
74 h_errno = NO_RECOVERY;
75 return -1;
76 }
77
78 if (Ustrcmp(name, "test.ex") == 0 ||
79 (len > 8 && Ustrcmp(endname - 8, ".test.ex") == 0) ||
80 (len >= 16 && Ustrcmp(endname - 16, ".10.in-addr.arpa") == 0))
81 {
82 uschar utilname[256];
83 struct stat statbuf;
84
85 (void)string_format(utilname, sizeof(utilname), "%s/../bin/fakens",
86 spool_directory);
87
88 if (stat(CS utilname, &statbuf) >= 0)
89 {
90 pid_t pid;
91 int infd, outfd, rc;
92 uschar *argv[5];
93
94 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) using fakens\n",
95 name, dns_text_type(type));
96
97 argv[0] = utilname;
98 argv[1] = spool_directory;
99 argv[2] = name;
100 argv[3] = dns_text_type(type);
101 argv[4] = NULL;
102
103 pid = child_open(argv, NULL, 0000, &infd, &outfd, FALSE);
104 if (pid < 0)
105 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "failed to run fakens: %s",
106 strerror(errno));
107
108 len = 0;
109 rc = -1;
110 while (size > 0 && (rc = read(outfd, answerptr, size)) > 0)
111 {
112 len += rc;
113 answerptr += rc;
114 size -= rc;
115 }
116
117 if (rc < 0)
118 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "read from fakens failed: %s",
119 strerror(errno));
120
121 switch(child_close(pid, 0))
122 {
123 case 0: return len;
124 case 1: h_errno = HOST_NOT_FOUND; break;
125 case 2: h_errno = TRY_AGAIN; break;
126 default:
127 case 3: h_errno = NO_RECOVERY; break;
128 case 4: h_errno = NO_DATA; break;
129 }
130 return -1;
131 }
132 }
133
134 /* Not test.ex or 10.in-addr.arpa, or fakens utility not found. */
135
136 return res_search(CS name, C_IN, type, answerptr, size);
137 }
138
139
140
141 /*************************************************
142 * Initialize and configure resolver *
143 *************************************************/
144
145 /* Initialize the resolver and the storage for holding DNS answers if this is
146 the first time we have been here, and set the resolver options.
147
148 Arguments:
149 qualify_single TRUE to set the RES_DEFNAMES option
150 search_parents TRUE to set the RES_DNSRCH option
151
152 Returns: nothing
153 */
154
155 void
156 dns_init(BOOL qualify_single, BOOL search_parents)
157 {
158 if ((_res.options & RES_INIT) == 0)
159 {
160 DEBUG(D_resolver) _res.options |= RES_DEBUG; /* For Cygwin */
161 res_init();
162 DEBUG(D_resolver) _res.options |= RES_DEBUG;
163 }
164
165 _res.options &= ~(RES_DNSRCH | RES_DEFNAMES);
166 _res.options |= (qualify_single? RES_DEFNAMES : 0) |
167 (search_parents? RES_DNSRCH : 0);
168 if (dns_retrans > 0) _res.retrans = dns_retrans;
169 if (dns_retry > 0) _res.retry = dns_retry;
170 }
171
172
173
174 /*************************************************
175 * Build key name for PTR records *
176 *************************************************/
177
178 /* This function inverts an IP address and adds the relevant domain, to produce
179 a name that can be used to look up PTR records.
180
181 Arguments:
182 string the IP address as a string
183 buffer a suitable buffer, long enough to hold the result
184
185 Returns: nothing
186 */
187
188 void
189 dns_build_reverse(uschar *string, uschar *buffer)
190 {
191 uschar *p = string + Ustrlen(string);
192 uschar *pp = buffer;
193
194 /* Handle IPv4 address */
195
196 #if HAVE_IPV6
197 if (Ustrchr(string, ':') == NULL)
198 #endif
199 {
200 int i;
201 for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
202 {
203 uschar *ppp = p;
204 while (ppp > string && ppp[-1] != '.') ppp--;
205 Ustrncpy(pp, ppp, p - ppp);
206 pp += p - ppp;
207 *pp++ = '.';
208 p = ppp - 1;
209 }
210 Ustrcpy(pp, "in-addr.arpa");
211 }
212
213 /* Handle IPv6 address; convert to binary so as to fill out any
214 abbreviation in the textual form. */
215
216 #if HAVE_IPV6
217 else
218 {
219 int i;
220 int v6[4];
221 (void)host_aton(string, v6);
222
223 /* The original specification for IPv6 reverse lookup was to invert each
224 nibble, and look in the ip6.int domain. The domain was subsequently
225 changed to ip6.arpa. */
226
227 for (i = 3; i >= 0; i--)
228 {
229 int j;
230 for (j = 0; j < 32; j += 4)
231 {
232 sprintf(CS pp, "%x.", (v6[i] >> j) & 15);
233 pp += 2;
234 }
235 }
236 Ustrcpy(pp, "ip6.arpa.");
237
238 /* Another way of doing IPv6 reverse lookups was proposed in conjunction
239 with A6 records. However, it fell out of favour when they did. The
240 alternative was to construct a binary key, and look in ip6.arpa. I tried
241 to make this code do that, but I could not make it work on Solaris 8. The
242 resolver seems to lose the initial backslash somehow. However, now that
243 this style of reverse lookup has been dropped, it doesn't matter. These
244 lines are left here purely for historical interest. */
245
246 /**************************************************
247 Ustrcpy(pp, "\\[x");
248 pp += 3;
249
250 for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
251 {
252 sprintf(pp, "%08X", v6[i]);
253 pp += 8;
254 }
255 Ustrcpy(pp, "].ip6.arpa.");
256 **************************************************/
257
258 }
259 #endif
260 }
261
262
263
264
265 /*************************************************
266 * Get next DNS record from answer block *
267 *************************************************/
268
269 /* Call this with reset == RESET_ANSWERS to scan the answer block, reset ==
270 RESET_AUTHORITY to scan the authority records, reset == RESET_ADDITIONAL to
271 scan the additional records, and reset == RESET_NEXT to get the next record.
272 The result is in static storage which must be copied if it is to be preserved.
273
274 Arguments:
275 dnsa pointer to dns answer block
276 dnss pointer to dns scan block
277 reset option specifing what portion to scan, as described above
278
279 Returns: next dns record, or NULL when no more
280 */
281
282 dns_record *
283 dns_next_rr(dns_answer *dnsa, dns_scan *dnss, int reset)
284 {
285 HEADER *h = (HEADER *)dnsa->answer;
286 int namelen;
287
288 /* Reset the saved data when requested to, and skip to the first required RR */
289
290 if (reset != RESET_NEXT)
291 {
292 dnss->rrcount = ntohs(h->qdcount);
293 dnss->aptr = dnsa->answer + sizeof(HEADER);
294
295 /* Skip over questions; failure to expand the name just gives up */
296
297 while (dnss->rrcount-- > 0)
298 {
299 namelen = dn_expand(dnsa->answer, dnsa->answer + dnsa->answerlen,
300 dnss->aptr, (DN_EXPAND_ARG4_TYPE) &(dnss->srr.name), DNS_MAXNAME);
301 if (namelen < 0) { dnss->rrcount = 0; return NULL; }
302 dnss->aptr += namelen + 4; /* skip name & type & class */
303 }
304
305 /* Get the number of answer records. */
306
307 dnss->rrcount = ntohs(h->ancount);
308
309 /* Skip over answers if we want to look at the authority section. Also skip
310 the NS records (i.e. authority section) if wanting to look at the additional
311 records. */
312
313 if (reset == RESET_ADDITIONAL) dnss->rrcount += ntohs(h->nscount);
314
315 if (reset == RESET_AUTHORITY || reset == RESET_ADDITIONAL)
316 {
317 while (dnss->rrcount-- > 0)
318 {
319 namelen = dn_expand(dnsa->answer, dnsa->answer + dnsa->answerlen,
320 dnss->aptr, (DN_EXPAND_ARG4_TYPE) &(dnss->srr.name), DNS_MAXNAME);
321 if (namelen < 0) { dnss->rrcount = 0; return NULL; }
322 dnss->aptr += namelen + 8; /* skip name, type, class & TTL */
323 GETSHORT(dnss->srr.size, dnss->aptr); /* size of data portion */
324 dnss->aptr += dnss->srr.size; /* skip over it */
325 }
326 dnss->rrcount = (reset == RESET_AUTHORITY)
327 ? ntohs(h->nscount) : ntohs(h->arcount);
328 }
329 }
330
331 /* The variable dnss->aptr is now pointing at the next RR, and dnss->rrcount
332 contains the number of RR records left. */
333
334 if (dnss->rrcount-- <= 0) return NULL;
335
336 /* If expanding the RR domain name fails, behave as if no more records
337 (something safe). */
338
339 namelen = dn_expand(dnsa->answer, dnsa->answer + dnsa->answerlen, dnss->aptr,
340 (DN_EXPAND_ARG4_TYPE) &(dnss->srr.name), DNS_MAXNAME);
341 if (namelen < 0) { dnss->rrcount = 0; return NULL; }
342
343 /* Move the pointer past the name and fill in the rest of the data structure
344 from the following bytes. */
345
346 dnss->aptr += namelen;
347 GETSHORT(dnss->srr.type, dnss->aptr); /* Record type */
348 dnss->aptr += 6; /* Don't want class or TTL */
349 GETSHORT(dnss->srr.size, dnss->aptr); /* Size of data portion */
350 dnss->srr.data = dnss->aptr; /* The record's data follows */
351 dnss->aptr += dnss->srr.size; /* Advance to next RR */
352
353 /* Return a pointer to the dns_record structure within the dns_answer. This is
354 for convenience so that the scans can use nice-looking for loops. */
355
356 return &(dnss->srr);
357 }
358
359
360
361
362 /*************************************************
363 * Turn DNS type into text *
364 *************************************************/
365
366 /* Turn the coded record type into a string for printing. All those that Exim
367 uses should be included here.
368
369 Argument: record type
370 Returns: pointer to string
371 */
372
373 uschar *
374 dns_text_type(int t)
375 {
376 switch(t)
377 {
378 case T_A: return US"A";
379 case T_MX: return US"MX";
380 case T_AAAA: return US"AAAA";
381 case T_A6: return US"A6";
382 case T_TXT: return US"TXT";
383 case T_PTR: return US"PTR";
384 case T_SOA: return US"SOA";
385 case T_SRV: return US"SRV";
386 case T_NS: return US"NS";
387 case T_CNAME: return US"CNAME";
388 default: return US"?";
389 }
390 }
391
392
393
394 /*************************************************
395 * Cache a failed DNS lookup result *
396 *************************************************/
397
398 /* We cache failed lookup results so as not to experience timeouts many
399 times for the same domain. We need to retain the resolver options because they
400 may change. For successful lookups, we rely on resolver and/or name server
401 caching.
402
403 Arguments:
404 name the domain name
405 type the lookup type
406 rc the return code
407
408 Returns: the return code
409 */
410
411 static int
412 dns_return(uschar *name, int type, int rc)
413 {
414 tree_node *node = store_get_perm(sizeof(tree_node) + 290);
415 sprintf(CS node->name, "%.255s-%s-%lx", name, dns_text_type(type),
416 _res.options);
417 node->data.val = rc;
418 (void)tree_insertnode(&tree_dns_fails, node);
419 return rc;
420 }
421
422
423
424 /*************************************************
425 * Do basic DNS lookup *
426 *************************************************/
427
428 /* Call the resolver to look up the given domain name, using the given type,
429 and check the result. The error code TRY_AGAIN is documented as meaning "non-
430 Authoritive Host not found, or SERVERFAIL". Sometimes there are badly set
431 up nameservers that produce this error continually, so there is the option of
432 providing a list of domains for which this is treated as a non-existent
433 host.
434
435 Arguments:
436 dnsa pointer to dns_answer structure
437 name name to look up
438 type type of DNS record required (T_A, T_MX, etc)
439
440 Returns: DNS_SUCCEED successful lookup
441 DNS_NOMATCH name not found (NXDOMAIN)
442 or name contains illegal characters (if checking)
443 DNS_NODATA domain exists, but no data for this type (NODATA)
444 DNS_AGAIN soft failure, try again later
445 DNS_FAIL DNS failure
446 */
447
448 int
449 dns_basic_lookup(dns_answer *dnsa, uschar *name, int type)
450 {
451 int rc = -1;
452 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
453 uschar *save;
454 #endif
455
456 tree_node *previous;
457 uschar node_name[290];
458
459 /* DNS lookup failures of any kind are cached in a tree. This is mainly so that
460 a timeout on one domain doesn't happen time and time again for messages that
461 have many addresses in the same domain. We rely on the resolver and name server
462 caching for successful lookups. */
463
464 sprintf(CS node_name, "%.255s-%s-%lx", name, dns_text_type(type),
465 _res.options);
466 previous = tree_search(tree_dns_fails, node_name);
467 if (previous != NULL)
468 {
469 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %.255s-%s: using cached value %s\n",
470 name, dns_text_type(type),
471 (previous->data.val == DNS_NOMATCH)? "DNS_NOMATCH" :
472 (previous->data.val == DNS_NODATA)? "DNS_NODATA" :
473 (previous->data.val == DNS_AGAIN)? "DNS_AGAIN" :
474 (previous->data.val == DNS_FAIL)? "DNS_FAIL" : "??");
475 return previous->data.val;
476 }
477
478 /* If configured, check the hygene of the name passed to lookup. Otherwise,
479 although DNS lookups may give REFUSED at the lower level, some resolvers
480 turn this into TRY_AGAIN, which is silly. Give a NOMATCH return, since such
481 domains cannot be in the DNS. The check is now done by a regular expression;
482 give it space for substring storage to save it having to get its own if the
483 regex has substrings that are used - the default uses a conditional.
484
485 This test is omitted for PTR records. These occur only in calls from the dnsdb
486 lookup, which constructs the names itself, so they should be OK. Besides,
487 bitstring labels don't conform to normal name syntax. (But the aren't used any
488 more.)
489
490 For SRV records, we omit the initial _smtp._tcp. components at the start. */
491
492 #ifndef STAND_ALONE /* Omit this for stand-alone tests */
493
494 if (check_dns_names_pattern[0] != 0 && type != T_PTR)
495 {
496 uschar *checkname = name;
497 int ovector[3*(EXPAND_MAXN+1)];
498
499 if (regex_check_dns_names == NULL)
500 regex_check_dns_names =
501 regex_must_compile(check_dns_names_pattern, FALSE, TRUE);
502
503 /* For an SRV lookup, skip over the first two components (the service and
504 protocol names, which both start with an underscore). */
505
506 if (type == T_SRV)
507 {
508 while (*checkname++ != '.');
509 while (*checkname++ != '.');
510 }
511
512 if (pcre_exec(regex_check_dns_names, NULL, CS checkname, Ustrlen(checkname),
513 0, PCRE_EOPT, ovector, sizeof(ovector)/sizeof(int)) < 0)
514 {
515 DEBUG(D_dns)
516 debug_printf("DNS name syntax check failed: %s (%s)\n", name,
517 dns_text_type(type));
518 host_find_failed_syntax = TRUE;
519 return DNS_NOMATCH;
520 }
521 }
522
523 #endif /* STAND_ALONE */
524
525 /* Call the resolver; for an overlong response, res_search() will return the
526 number of bytes the message would need, so we need to check for this case. The
527 effect is to truncate overlong data.
528
529 If we are running in the test harness, instead of calling the normal resolver
530 (res_search), we call fakens_search(), which recognizes certain special
531 domains, and interfaces to a fake nameserver for certain special zones. */
532
533 if (running_in_test_harness)
534 dnsa->answerlen = fakens_search(name, type, dnsa->answer, MAXPACKET);
535 else
536 dnsa->answerlen = res_search(CS name, C_IN, type, dnsa->answer, MAXPACKET);
537
538 if (dnsa->answerlen > MAXPACKET) dnsa->answerlen = MAXPACKET;
539
540 if (dnsa->answerlen < 0) switch (h_errno)
541 {
542 case HOST_NOT_FOUND:
543 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) gave HOST_NOT_FOUND\n"
544 "returning DNS_NOMATCH\n", name, dns_text_type(type));
545 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_NOMATCH);
546
547 case TRY_AGAIN:
548 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) gave TRY_AGAIN\n",
549 name, dns_text_type(type));
550
551 /* Cut this out for various test programs */
552 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
553 save = deliver_domain;
554 deliver_domain = name; /* set $domain */
555 rc = match_isinlist(name, &dns_again_means_nonexist, 0, NULL, NULL,
556 MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL);
557 deliver_domain = save;
558 if (rc != OK)
559 {
560 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("returning DNS_AGAIN\n");
561 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_AGAIN);
562 }
563 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("%s is in dns_again_means_nonexist: returning "
564 "DNS_NOMATCH\n", name);
565 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_NOMATCH);
566
567 #else /* For stand-alone tests */
568 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_AGAIN);
569 #endif
570
571 case NO_RECOVERY:
572 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) gave NO_RECOVERY\n"
573 "returning DNS_FAIL\n", name, dns_text_type(type));
574 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_FAIL);
575
576 case NO_DATA:
577 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) gave NO_DATA\n"
578 "returning DNS_NODATA\n", name, dns_text_type(type));
579 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_NODATA);
580
581 default:
582 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) gave unknown DNS error %d\n"
583 "returning DNS_FAIL\n", name, dns_text_type(type), h_errno);
584 return dns_return(name, type, DNS_FAIL);
585 }
586
587 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("DNS lookup of %s (%s) succeeded\n",
588 name, dns_text_type(type));
589
590 return DNS_SUCCEED;
591 }
592
593
594
595
596 /************************************************
597 * Do a DNS lookup and handle CNAMES *
598 ************************************************/
599
600 /* Look up the given domain name, using the given type. Follow CNAMEs if
601 necessary, but only so many times. There aren't supposed to be CNAME chains in
602 the DNS, but you are supposed to cope with them if you find them.
603
604 The assumption is made that if the resolver gives back records of the
605 requested type *and* a CNAME, we don't need to make another call to look up
606 the CNAME. I can't see how it could return only some of the right records. If
607 it's done a CNAME lookup in the past, it will have all of them; if not, it
608 won't return any.
609
610 If fully_qualified_name is not NULL, set it to point to the full name
611 returned by the resolver, if this is different to what it is given, unless
612 the returned name starts with "*" as some nameservers seem to be returning
613 wildcards in this form.
614
615 Arguments:
616 dnsa pointer to dns_answer structure
617 name domain name to look up
618 type DNS record type (T_A, T_MX, etc)
619 fully_qualified_name if not NULL, return the returned name here if its
620 contents are different (i.e. it must be preset)
621
622 Returns: DNS_SUCCEED successful lookup
623 DNS_NOMATCH name not found
624 DNS_NODATA no data found
625 DNS_AGAIN soft failure, try again later
626 DNS_FAIL DNS failure
627 */
628
629 int
630 dns_lookup(dns_answer *dnsa, uschar *name, int type, uschar **fully_qualified_name)
631 {
632 int i;
633 uschar *orig_name = name;
634
635 /* Loop to follow CNAME chains so far, but no further... */
636
637 for (i = 0; i < 10; i++)
638 {
639 uschar data[256];
640 dns_record *rr, cname_rr, type_rr;
641 dns_scan dnss;
642 int datalen, rc;
643
644 /* DNS lookup failures get passed straight back. */
645
646 if ((rc = dns_basic_lookup(dnsa, name, type)) != DNS_SUCCEED) return rc;
647
648 /* We should have either records of the required type, or a CNAME record,
649 or both. We need to know whether both exist for getting the fully qualified
650 name, but avoid scanning more than necessary. Note that we must copy the
651 contents of any rr blocks returned by dns_next_rr() as they use the same
652 area in the dnsa block. */
653
654 cname_rr.data = type_rr.data = NULL;
655 for (rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_ANSWERS);
656 rr != NULL;
657 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT))
658 {
659 if (rr->type == type)
660 {
661 if (type_rr.data == NULL) type_rr = *rr;
662 if (cname_rr.data != NULL) break;
663 }
664 else if (rr->type == T_CNAME) cname_rr = *rr;
665 }
666
667 /* If a CNAME was found, take the fully qualified name from it; otherwise
668 from the first data record, if present. For testing, there is a magic name
669 that gets its casing adjusted, because my resolver doesn't seem to pass back
670 upper case letters in domain names. */
671
672 if (fully_qualified_name != NULL)
673 {
674 if (cname_rr.data != NULL)
675 {
676 if (Ustrcmp(cname_rr.name, *fully_qualified_name) != 0 &&
677 cname_rr.name[0] != '*')
678 *fully_qualified_name = string_copy_dnsdomain(cname_rr.name);
679 }
680 else if (type_rr.data != NULL)
681 {
682 if (running_in_test_harness &&
683 Ustrcmp(type_rr.name, "uppercase.test.ex") == 0)
684 *fully_qualified_name = US"UpperCase.test.ex";
685 else
686 {
687 if (Ustrcmp(type_rr.name, *fully_qualified_name) != 0 &&
688 type_rr.name[0] != '*')
689 *fully_qualified_name = string_copy_dnsdomain(type_rr.name);
690 }
691 }
692 }
693
694 /* If any data records of the correct type were found, we are done. */
695
696 if (type_rr.data != NULL) return DNS_SUCCEED;
697
698 /* If there are no data records, we need to re-scan the DNS using the
699 domain given in the CNAME record, which should exist (otherwise we should
700 have had a failure from dns_lookup). However code against the possibility of
701 its not existing. */
702
703 if (cname_rr.data == NULL) return DNS_FAIL;
704 datalen = dn_expand(dnsa->answer, dnsa->answer + dnsa->answerlen,
705 cname_rr.data, (DN_EXPAND_ARG4_TYPE)data, 256);
706 if (datalen < 0) return DNS_FAIL;
707 name = data;
708 } /* Loop back to do another lookup */
709
710 /*Control reaches here after 10 times round the CNAME loop. Something isn't
711 right... */
712
713 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "CNAME loop for %s encountered", orig_name);
714 return DNS_FAIL;
715 }
716
717
718
719
720
721
722 /************************************************
723 * Do a DNS lookup and handle virtual types *
724 ************************************************/
725
726 /* This function handles some invented "lookup types" that synthesize feature
727 not available in the basic types. The special types all have negative values.
728 Positive type values are passed straight on to dns_lookup().
729
730 Arguments:
731 dnsa pointer to dns_answer structure
732 name domain name to look up
733 type DNS record type (T_A, T_MX, etc or a "special")
734 fully_qualified_name if not NULL, return the returned name here if its
735 contents are different (i.e. it must be preset)
736
737 Returns: DNS_SUCCEED successful lookup
738 DNS_NOMATCH name not found
739 DNS_NODATA no data found
740 DNS_AGAIN soft failure, try again later
741 DNS_FAIL DNS failure
742 */
743
744 int
745 dns_special_lookup(dns_answer *dnsa, uschar *name, int type,
746 uschar **fully_qualified_name)
747 {
748 if (type >= 0) return dns_lookup(dnsa, name, type, fully_qualified_name);
749
750 /* The "mx hosts only" type doesn't require any special action here */
751
752 if (type == T_MXH) return dns_lookup(dnsa, name, T_MX, fully_qualified_name);
753
754 /* Find nameservers for the domain or the nearest enclosing zone, excluding the
755 root servers. */
756
757 if (type == T_ZNS)
758 {
759 uschar *d = name;
760 while (d != 0)
761 {
762 int rc = dns_lookup(dnsa, d, T_NS, fully_qualified_name);
763 if (rc != DNS_NOMATCH && rc != DNS_NODATA) return rc;
764 while (*d != 0 && *d != '.') d++;
765 if (*d++ == 0) break;
766 }
767 return DNS_NOMATCH;
768 }
769
770 /* Try to look up the Client SMTP Authorization SRV record for the name. If
771 there isn't one, search from the top downwards for a CSA record in a parent
772 domain, which might be making assertions about subdomains. If we find a record
773 we set fully_qualified_name to whichever lookup succeeded, so that the caller
774 can tell whether to look at the explicit authorization field or the subdomain
775 assertion field. */
776
777 if (type == T_CSA)
778 {
779 uschar *srvname, *namesuff, *tld, *p;
780 int priority, weight, port;
781 int limit, rc, i;
782 BOOL ipv6;
783 dns_record *rr;
784 dns_scan dnss;
785
786 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("CSA lookup of %s\n", name);
787
788 srvname = string_sprintf("_client._smtp.%s", name);
789 rc = dns_lookup(dnsa, srvname, T_SRV, NULL);
790 if (rc == DNS_SUCCEED || rc == DNS_AGAIN)
791 {
792 if (rc == DNS_SUCCEED) *fully_qualified_name = name;
793 return rc;
794 }
795
796 /* Search for CSA subdomain assertion SRV records from the top downwards,
797 starting with the 2nd level domain. This order maximizes cache-friendliness.
798 We skip the top level domains to avoid loading their nameservers and because
799 we know they'll never have CSA SRV records. */
800
801 namesuff = Ustrrchr(name, '.');
802 if (namesuff == NULL) return DNS_NOMATCH;
803 tld = namesuff + 1;
804 ipv6 = FALSE;
805 limit = dns_csa_search_limit;
806
807 /* Use more appropriate search parameters if we are in the reverse DNS. */
808
809 if (strcmpic(namesuff, US".arpa") == 0)
810 {
811 if (namesuff - 8 > name && strcmpic(namesuff - 8, US".in-addr.arpa") == 0)
812 {
813 namesuff -= 8;
814 tld = namesuff + 1;
815 limit = 3;
816 }
817 else if (namesuff - 4 > name && strcmpic(namesuff - 4, US".ip6.arpa") == 0)
818 {
819 namesuff -= 4;
820 tld = namesuff + 1;
821 ipv6 = TRUE;
822 limit = 3;
823 }
824 }
825
826 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("CSA TLD %s\n", tld);
827
828 /* Do not perform the search if the top level or 2nd level domains do not
829 exist. This is quite common, and when it occurs all the search queries would
830 go to the root or TLD name servers, which is not friendly. So we check the
831 AUTHORITY section; if it contains the root's SOA record or the TLD's SOA then
832 the TLD or the 2LD (respectively) doesn't exist and we can skip the search.
833 If the TLD and the 2LD exist but the explicit CSA record lookup failed, then
834 the AUTHORITY SOA will be the 2LD's or a subdomain thereof. */
835
836 if (rc == DNS_NOMATCH)
837 {
838 /* This is really gross. The successful return value from res_search() is
839 the packet length, which is stored in dnsa->answerlen. If we get a
840 negative DNS reply then res_search() returns -1, which causes the bounds
841 checks for name decompression to fail when it is treated as a packet
842 length, which in turn causes the authority search to fail. The correct
843 packet length has been lost inside libresolv, so we have to guess a
844 replacement value. (The only way to fix this properly would be to
845 re-implement res_search() and res_query() so that they don't muddle their
846 success and packet length return values.) For added safety we only reset
847 the packet length if the packet header looks plausible. */
848
849 HEADER *h = (HEADER *)dnsa->answer;
850 if (h->qr == 1 && h->opcode == QUERY && h->tc == 0
851 && (h->rcode == NOERROR || h->rcode == NXDOMAIN)
852 && ntohs(h->qdcount) == 1 && ntohs(h->ancount) == 0
853 && ntohs(h->nscount) >= 1)
854 dnsa->answerlen = MAXPACKET;
855
856 for (rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_AUTHORITY);
857 rr != NULL;
858 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT))
859 if (rr->type != T_SOA) continue;
860 else if (strcmpic(rr->name, US"") == 0 ||
861 strcmpic(rr->name, tld) == 0) return DNS_NOMATCH;
862 else break;
863 }
864
865 for (i = 0; i < limit; i++)
866 {
867 if (ipv6)
868 {
869 /* Scan through the IPv6 reverse DNS in chunks of 16 bits worth of IP
870 address, i.e. 4 hex chars and 4 dots, i.e. 8 chars. */
871 namesuff -= 8;
872 if (namesuff <= name) return DNS_NOMATCH;
873 }
874 else
875 /* Find the start of the preceding domain name label. */
876 do
877 if (--namesuff <= name) return DNS_NOMATCH;
878 while (*namesuff != '.');
879
880 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("CSA parent search at %s\n", namesuff + 1);
881
882 srvname = string_sprintf("_client._smtp.%s", namesuff + 1);
883 rc = dns_lookup(dnsa, srvname, T_SRV, NULL);
884 if (rc == DNS_AGAIN) return rc;
885 if (rc != DNS_SUCCEED) continue;
886
887 /* Check that the SRV record we have found is worth returning. We don't
888 just return the first one we find, because some lower level SRV record
889 might make stricter assertions than its parent domain. */
890
891 for (rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_ANSWERS);
892 rr != NULL;
893 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT))
894 {
895 if (rr->type != T_SRV) continue;
896
897 /* Extract the numerical SRV fields (p is incremented) */
898 p = rr->data;
899 GETSHORT(priority, p);
900 GETSHORT(weight, p);
901 GETSHORT(port, p);
902
903 /* Check the CSA version number */
904 if (priority != 1) continue;
905
906 /* If it's making an interesting assertion, return this response. */
907 if (port & 1)
908 {
909 *fully_qualified_name = namesuff + 1;
910 return DNS_SUCCEED;
911 }
912 }
913 }
914 return DNS_NOMATCH;
915 }
916
917 /* Control should never reach here */
918
919 return DNS_FAIL;
920 }
921
922
923
924 /* Support for A6 records has been commented out since they were demoted to
925 experimental status at IETF 51. */
926
927 #if HAVE_IPV6 && defined(SUPPORT_A6)
928
929 /*************************************************
930 * Search DNS block for prefix RRs *
931 *************************************************/
932
933 /* Called from dns_complete_a6() to search an additional section or a main
934 answer section for required prefix records to complete an IPv6 address obtained
935 from an A6 record. For each prefix record, a recursive call to dns_complete_a6
936 is made, with a new copy of the address so far.
937
938 Arguments:
939 dnsa the DNS answer block
940 which RESET_ADDITIONAL or RESET_ANSWERS
941 name name of prefix record
942 yptrptr pointer to the pointer that points to where to hang the next
943 dns_address structure
944 bits number of bits we have already got
945 bitvec the bits we have already got
946
947 Returns: TRUE if any records were found
948 */
949
950 static BOOL
951 dns_find_prefix(dns_answer *dnsa, int which, uschar *name, dns_address
952 ***yptrptr, int bits, uschar *bitvec)
953 {
954 BOOL yield = FALSE;
955 dns_record *rr;
956 dns_scan dnss;
957
958 for (rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, which);
959 rr != NULL;
960 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT))
961 {
962 uschar cbitvec[16];
963 if (rr->type != T_A6 || strcmpic(rr->name, name) != 0) continue;
964 yield = TRUE;
965 memcpy(cbitvec, bitvec, sizeof(cbitvec));
966 dns_complete_a6(yptrptr, dnsa, rr, bits, cbitvec);
967 }
968
969 return yield;
970 }
971
972
973
974 /*************************************************
975 * Follow chains of A6 records *
976 *************************************************/
977
978 /* A6 records may be incomplete, with pointers to other records containing more
979 bits of the address. There can be a tree structure, leading to a number of
980 addresses originating from a single initial A6 record.
981
982 Arguments:
983 yptrptr pointer to the pointer that points to where to hang the next
984 dns_address structure
985 dnsa the current DNS answer block
986 rr the RR we have at present
987 bits number of bits we have already got
988 bitvec the bits we have already got
989
990 Returns: nothing
991 */
992
993 static void
994 dns_complete_a6(dns_address ***yptrptr, dns_answer *dnsa, dns_record *rr,
995 int bits, uschar *bitvec)
996 {
997 static uschar bitmask[] = { 0xff, 0xfe, 0xfc, 0xf8, 0xf0, 0xe0, 0xc0, 0x80 };
998 uschar *p = (uschar *)(rr->data);
999 int prefix_len, suffix_len;
1000 int i, j, k;
1001 uschar *chainptr;
1002 uschar chain[264];
1003 dns_answer cdnsa;
1004
1005 /* The prefix length is the first byte. It defines the prefix which is missing
1006 from the data in this record as a number of bits. Zero means this is the end of
1007 a chain. The suffix is the data in this record; only sufficient bytes to hold
1008 it are supplied. There may be zero bytes. We have to ignore trailing bits that
1009 we have already obtained from earlier RRs in the chain. */
1010
1011 prefix_len = *p++; /* bits */
1012 suffix_len = (128 - prefix_len + 7)/8; /* bytes */
1013
1014 /* If the prefix in this record is greater than the prefix in the previous
1015 record in the chain, we have to ignore the record (RFC 2874). */
1016
1017 if (prefix_len > 128 - bits) return;
1018
1019 /* In this little loop, the number of bits up to and including the current byte
1020 is held in k. If we have none of the bits in this byte, we can just or it into
1021 the current data. If we have all of the bits in this byte, we skip it.
1022 Otherwise, some masking has to be done. */
1023
1024 for (i = suffix_len - 1, j = 15, k = 8; i >= 0; i--)
1025 {
1026 int required = k - bits;
1027 if (required >= 8) bitvec[j] |= p[i];
1028 else if (required > 0) bitvec[j] |= p[i] & bitmask[required];
1029 j--; /* I tried putting these in the "for" statement, but gcc muttered */
1030 k += 8; /* about computed values not being used. */
1031 }
1032
1033 /* If the prefix_length is zero, we are at the end of a chain. Build a
1034 dns_address item with the current data, hang it onto the end of the chain,
1035 adjust the hanging pointer, and we are done. */
1036
1037 if (prefix_len == 0)
1038 {
1039 dns_address *new = store_get(sizeof(dns_address) + 50);
1040 inet_ntop(AF_INET6, bitvec, CS new->address, 50);
1041 new->next = NULL;
1042 **yptrptr = new;
1043 *yptrptr = &(new->next);
1044 return;
1045 }
1046
1047 /* Prefix length is not zero. Reset the number of bits that we have collected
1048 so far, and extract the chain name. */
1049
1050 bits = 128 - prefix_len;
1051 p += suffix_len;
1052
1053 chainptr = chain;
1054 while ((i = *p++) != 0)
1055 {
1056 if (chainptr != chain) *chainptr++ = '.';
1057 memcpy(chainptr, p, i);
1058 chainptr += i;
1059 p += i;
1060 }
1061 *chainptr = 0;
1062 chainptr = chain;
1063
1064 /* Now scan the current DNS response record to see if the additional section
1065 contains the records we want. This processing can be cut out for testing
1066 purposes. */
1067
1068 if (dns_find_prefix(dnsa, RESET_ADDITIONAL, chainptr, yptrptr, bits, bitvec))
1069 return;
1070
1071 /* No chain records were found in the current DNS response block. Do a new DNS
1072 lookup to try to find these records. This opens up the possibility of DNS
1073 failures. We ignore them at this point; if all branches of the tree fail, there
1074 will be no addresses at the end. */
1075
1076 if (dns_lookup(&cdnsa, chainptr, T_A6, NULL) == DNS_SUCCEED)
1077 (void)dns_find_prefix(&cdnsa, RESET_ANSWERS, chainptr, yptrptr, bits, bitvec);
1078 }
1079 #endif /* HAVE_IPV6 && defined(SUPPORT_A6) */
1080
1081
1082
1083
1084 /*************************************************
1085 * Get address(es) from DNS record *
1086 *************************************************/
1087
1088 /* The record type is either T_A for an IPv4 address or T_AAAA (or T_A6 when
1089 supported) for an IPv6 address. In the A6 case, there may be several addresses,
1090 generated by following chains. A recursive function does all the hard work. A6
1091 records now look like passing into history, so the code is only included when
1092 explicitly asked for.
1093
1094 Argument:
1095 dnsa the DNS answer block
1096 rr the RR
1097
1098 Returns: pointer a chain of dns_address items
1099 */
1100
1101 dns_address *
1102 dns_address_from_rr(dns_answer *dnsa, dns_record *rr)
1103 {
1104 dns_address *yield = NULL;
1105
1106 #if HAVE_IPV6 && defined(SUPPORT_A6)
1107 dns_address **yieldptr = &yield;
1108 uschar bitvec[16];
1109 #else
1110 dnsa = dnsa; /* Stop picky compilers warning */
1111 #endif
1112
1113 if (rr->type == T_A)
1114 {
1115 uschar *p = (uschar *)(rr->data);
1116 yield = store_get(sizeof(dns_address) + 20);
1117 (void)sprintf(CS yield->address, "%d.%d.%d.%d", p[0], p[1], p[2], p[3]);
1118 yield->next = NULL;
1119 }
1120
1121 #if HAVE_IPV6
1122
1123 #ifdef SUPPORT_A6
1124 else if (rr->type == T_A6)
1125 {
1126 memset(bitvec, 0, sizeof(bitvec));
1127 dns_complete_a6(&yieldptr, dnsa, rr, 0, bitvec);
1128 }
1129 #endif /* SUPPORT_A6 */
1130
1131 else
1132 {
1133 yield = store_get(sizeof(dns_address) + 50);
1134 inet_ntop(AF_INET6, (uschar *)(rr->data), CS yield->address, 50);
1135 yield->next = NULL;
1136 }
1137 #endif /* HAVE_IPV6 */
1138
1139 return yield;
1140 }
1141
1142 /* End of dns.c */