d84347cb1329b8c2712a240bd8692bda8fe36197
[exim.git] / src / src / host.c
1 /*************************************************
2 * Exim - an Internet mail transport agent *
3 *************************************************/
4
5 /* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2018 */
6 /* See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. */
7
8 /* Functions for finding hosts, either by gethostbyname(), gethostbyaddr(), or
9 directly via the DNS. When IPv6 is supported, getipnodebyname() and
10 getipnodebyaddr() may be used instead of gethostbyname() and gethostbyaddr(),
11 if the newer functions are available. This module also contains various other
12 functions concerned with hosts and addresses, and a random number function,
13 used for randomizing hosts with equal MXs but available for use in other parts
14 of Exim. */
15
16
17 #include "exim.h"
18
19
20 /* Static variable for preserving the list of interface addresses in case it is
21 used more than once. */
22
23 static ip_address_item *local_interface_data = NULL;
24
25
26 #ifdef USE_INET_NTOA_FIX
27 /*************************************************
28 * Replacement for broken inet_ntoa() *
29 *************************************************/
30
31 /* On IRIX systems, gcc uses a different structure passing convention to the
32 native libraries. This causes inet_ntoa() to always yield 0.0.0.0 or
33 255.255.255.255. To get round this, we provide a private version of the
34 function here. It is used only if USE_INET_NTOA_FIX is set, which should happen
35 only when gcc is in use on an IRIX system. Code send to me by J.T. Breitner,
36 with these comments:
37
38 code by Stuart Levy
39 as seen in comp.sys.sgi.admin
40
41 August 2005: Apparently this is also needed for AIX systems; USE_INET_NTOA_FIX
42 should now be set for them as well.
43
44 Arguments: sa an in_addr structure
45 Returns: pointer to static text string
46 */
47
48 char *
49 inet_ntoa(struct in_addr sa)
50 {
51 static uschar addr[20];
52 sprintf(addr, "%d.%d.%d.%d",
53 (US &sa.s_addr)[0],
54 (US &sa.s_addr)[1],
55 (US &sa.s_addr)[2],
56 (US &sa.s_addr)[3]);
57 return addr;
58 }
59 #endif
60
61
62
63 /*************************************************
64 * Random number generator *
65 *************************************************/
66
67 /* This is a simple pseudo-random number generator. It does not have to be
68 very good for the uses to which it is put. When running the regression tests,
69 start with a fixed seed.
70
71 If you need better, see vaguely_random_number() which is potentially stronger,
72 if a crypto library is available, but might end up just calling this instead.
73
74 Arguments:
75 limit: one more than the largest number required
76
77 Returns: a pseudo-random number in the range 0 to limit-1
78 */
79
80 int
81 random_number(int limit)
82 {
83 if (limit < 1)
84 return 0;
85 if (random_seed == 0)
86 {
87 if (f.running_in_test_harness) random_seed = 42; else
88 {
89 int p = (int)getpid();
90 random_seed = (int)time(NULL) ^ ((p << 16) | p);
91 }
92 }
93 random_seed = 1103515245 * random_seed + 12345;
94 return (unsigned int)(random_seed >> 16) % limit;
95 }
96
97 /*************************************************
98 * Wrappers for logging lookup times *
99 *************************************************/
100
101 /* When the 'slow_lookup_log' variable is enabled, these wrappers will
102 write to the log file all (potential) dns lookups that take more than
103 slow_lookup_log milliseconds
104 */
105
106 static void
107 log_long_lookup(const uschar * type, const uschar * data, unsigned long msec)
108 {
109 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Long %s lookup for '%s': %lu msec",
110 type, data, msec);
111 }
112
113
114 /* returns the current system epoch time in milliseconds. */
115 static unsigned long
116 get_time_in_ms()
117 {
118 struct timeval tmp_time;
119 unsigned long seconds, microseconds;
120
121 gettimeofday(&tmp_time, NULL);
122 seconds = (unsigned long) tmp_time.tv_sec;
123 microseconds = (unsigned long) tmp_time.tv_usec;
124 return seconds*1000 + microseconds/1000;
125 }
126
127
128 static int
129 dns_lookup_timerwrap(dns_answer *dnsa, const uschar *name, int type,
130 const uschar **fully_qualified_name)
131 {
132 int retval;
133 unsigned long time_msec;
134
135 if (!slow_lookup_log)
136 return dns_lookup(dnsa, name, type, fully_qualified_name);
137
138 time_msec = get_time_in_ms();
139 retval = dns_lookup(dnsa, name, type, fully_qualified_name);
140 if ((time_msec = get_time_in_ms() - time_msec) > slow_lookup_log)
141 log_long_lookup(US"name", name, time_msec);
142 return retval;
143 }
144
145
146 /*************************************************
147 * Replace gethostbyname() when testing *
148 *************************************************/
149
150 /* This function is called instead of gethostbyname(), gethostbyname2(), or
151 getipnodebyname() when running in the test harness. . It also
152 recognizes an unqualified "localhost" and forces it to the appropriate loopback
153 address. IP addresses are treated as literals. For other names, it uses the DNS
154 to find the host name. In the test harness, this means it will access only the
155 fake DNS resolver.
156
157 Arguments:
158 name the host name or a textual IP address
159 af AF_INET or AF_INET6
160 error_num where to put an error code:
161 HOST_NOT_FOUND/TRY_AGAIN/NO_RECOVERY/NO_DATA
162
163 Returns: a hostent structure or NULL for an error
164 */
165
166 static struct hostent *
167 host_fake_gethostbyname(const uschar *name, int af, int *error_num)
168 {
169 #if HAVE_IPV6
170 int alen = (af == AF_INET)? sizeof(struct in_addr):sizeof(struct in6_addr);
171 #else
172 int alen = sizeof(struct in_addr);
173 #endif
174
175 int ipa;
176 const uschar *lname = name;
177 uschar *adds;
178 uschar **alist;
179 struct hostent *yield;
180 dns_answer * dnsa = store_get_dns_answer();
181 dns_scan dnss;
182
183 DEBUG(D_host_lookup)
184 debug_printf("using host_fake_gethostbyname for %s (%s)\n", name,
185 (af == AF_INET)? "IPv4" : "IPv6");
186
187 /* Handle unqualified "localhost" */
188
189 if (Ustrcmp(name, "localhost") == 0)
190 lname = (af == AF_INET)? US"127.0.0.1" : US"::1";
191
192 /* Handle a literal IP address */
193
194 if ((ipa = string_is_ip_address(lname, NULL)) != 0)
195 {
196 if ((ipa == 4 && af == AF_INET) ||
197 (ipa == 6 && af == AF_INET6))
198 {
199 int x[4];
200 yield = store_get(sizeof(struct hostent), FALSE);
201 alist = store_get(2 * sizeof(char *), FALSE);
202 adds = store_get(alen, FALSE);
203 yield->h_name = CS name;
204 yield->h_aliases = NULL;
205 yield->h_addrtype = af;
206 yield->h_length = alen;
207 yield->h_addr_list = CSS alist;
208 *alist++ = adds;
209 for (int n = host_aton(lname, x), i = 0; i < n; i++)
210 {
211 int y = x[i];
212 *adds++ = (y >> 24) & 255;
213 *adds++ = (y >> 16) & 255;
214 *adds++ = (y >> 8) & 255;
215 *adds++ = y & 255;
216 }
217 *alist = NULL;
218 }
219
220 /* Wrong kind of literal address */
221
222 else
223 {
224 *error_num = HOST_NOT_FOUND;
225 return NULL;
226 }
227 }
228
229 /* Handle a host name */
230
231 else
232 {
233 int type = (af == AF_INET)? T_A:T_AAAA;
234 int rc = dns_lookup_timerwrap(dnsa, lname, type, NULL);
235 int count = 0;
236
237 lookup_dnssec_authenticated = NULL;
238
239 switch(rc)
240 {
241 case DNS_SUCCEED: break;
242 case DNS_NOMATCH: *error_num = HOST_NOT_FOUND; return NULL;
243 case DNS_NODATA: *error_num = NO_DATA; return NULL;
244 case DNS_AGAIN: *error_num = TRY_AGAIN; return NULL;
245 default:
246 case DNS_FAIL: *error_num = NO_RECOVERY; return NULL;
247 }
248
249 for (dns_record * rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_ANSWERS);
250 rr;
251 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT)) if (rr->type == type)
252 count++;
253
254 yield = store_get(sizeof(struct hostent), FALSE);
255 alist = store_get((count + 1) * sizeof(char *), FALSE);
256 adds = store_get(count *alen, FALSE);
257
258 yield->h_name = CS name;
259 yield->h_aliases = NULL;
260 yield->h_addrtype = af;
261 yield->h_length = alen;
262 yield->h_addr_list = CSS alist;
263
264 for (dns_record * rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_ANSWERS);
265 rr;
266 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT)) if (rr->type == type)
267 {
268 int x[4];
269 dns_address *da;
270 if (!(da = dns_address_from_rr(dnsa, rr))) break;
271 *alist++ = adds;
272 for (int n = host_aton(da->address, x), i = 0; i < n; i++)
273 {
274 int y = x[i];
275 *adds++ = (y >> 24) & 255;
276 *adds++ = (y >> 16) & 255;
277 *adds++ = (y >> 8) & 255;
278 *adds++ = y & 255;
279 }
280 }
281 *alist = NULL;
282 }
283
284 return yield;
285 }
286
287
288
289 /*************************************************
290 * Build chain of host items from list *
291 *************************************************/
292
293 /* This function builds a chain of host items from a textual list of host
294 names. It does not do any lookups. If randomize is true, the chain is build in
295 a randomized order. There may be multiple groups of independently randomized
296 hosts; they are delimited by a host name consisting of just "+".
297
298 Arguments:
299 anchor anchor for the chain
300 list text list
301 randomize TRUE for randomizing
302
303 Returns: nothing
304 */
305
306 void
307 host_build_hostlist(host_item **anchor, const uschar *list, BOOL randomize)
308 {
309 int sep = 0;
310 int fake_mx = MX_NONE; /* This value is actually -1 */
311 uschar *name;
312
313 if (!list) return;
314 if (randomize) fake_mx--; /* Start at -2 for randomizing */
315
316 *anchor = NULL;
317
318 while ((name = string_nextinlist(&list, &sep, NULL, 0)))
319 {
320 host_item *h;
321
322 if (name[0] == '+' && name[1] == 0) /* "+" delimits a randomized group */
323 { /* ignore if not randomizing */
324 if (randomize) fake_mx--;
325 continue;
326 }
327
328 h = store_get(sizeof(host_item), FALSE);
329 h->name = name;
330 h->address = NULL;
331 h->port = PORT_NONE;
332 h->mx = fake_mx;
333 h->sort_key = randomize? (-fake_mx)*1000 + random_number(1000) : 0;
334 h->status = hstatus_unknown;
335 h->why = hwhy_unknown;
336 h->last_try = 0;
337
338 if (!*anchor)
339 {
340 h->next = NULL;
341 *anchor = h;
342 }
343 else
344 {
345 host_item *hh = *anchor;
346 if (h->sort_key < hh->sort_key)
347 {
348 h->next = hh;
349 *anchor = h;
350 }
351 else
352 {
353 while (hh->next && h->sort_key >= hh->next->sort_key)
354 hh = hh->next;
355 h->next = hh->next;
356 hh->next = h;
357 }
358 }
359 }
360 }
361
362
363
364
365
366 /*************************************************
367 * Extract port from address string *
368 *************************************************/
369
370 /* In the spool file, and in the -oMa and -oMi options, a host plus port is
371 given as an IP address followed by a dot and a port number. This function
372 decodes this.
373
374 An alternative format for the -oMa and -oMi options is [ip address]:port which
375 is what Exim 4 uses for output, because it seems to becoming commonly used,
376 whereas the dot form confuses some programs/people. So we recognize that form
377 too.
378
379 Argument:
380 address points to the string; if there is a port, the '.' in the string
381 is overwritten with zero to terminate the address; if the string
382 is in the [xxx]:ppp format, the address is shifted left and the
383 brackets are removed
384
385 Returns: 0 if there is no port, else the port number. If there's a syntax
386 error, leave the incoming address alone, and return 0.
387 */
388
389 int
390 host_address_extract_port(uschar *address)
391 {
392 int port = 0;
393 uschar *endptr;
394
395 /* Handle the "bracketed with colon on the end" format */
396
397 if (*address == '[')
398 {
399 uschar *rb = address + 1;
400 while (*rb != 0 && *rb != ']') rb++;
401 if (*rb++ == 0) return 0; /* Missing ]; leave invalid address */
402 if (*rb == ':')
403 {
404 port = Ustrtol(rb + 1, &endptr, 10);
405 if (*endptr != 0) return 0; /* Invalid port; leave invalid address */
406 }
407 else if (*rb != 0) return 0; /* Bad syntax; leave invalid address */
408 memmove(address, address + 1, rb - address - 2);
409 rb[-2] = 0;
410 }
411
412 /* Handle the "dot on the end" format */
413
414 else
415 {
416 int skip = -3; /* Skip 3 dots in IPv4 addresses */
417 address--;
418 while (*(++address) != 0)
419 {
420 int ch = *address;
421 if (ch == ':') skip = 0; /* Skip 0 dots in IPv6 addresses */
422 else if (ch == '.' && skip++ >= 0) break;
423 }
424 if (*address == 0) return 0;
425 port = Ustrtol(address + 1, &endptr, 10);
426 if (*endptr != 0) return 0; /* Invalid port; leave invalid address */
427 *address = 0;
428 }
429
430 return port;
431 }
432
433
434 /*************************************************
435 * Get port from a host item's name *
436 *************************************************/
437
438 /* This function is called when finding the IP address for a host that is in a
439 list of hosts explicitly configured, such as in the manualroute router, or in a
440 fallback hosts list. We see if there is a port specification at the end of the
441 host name, and if so, remove it. A minimum length of 3 is required for the
442 original name; nothing shorter is recognized as having a port.
443
444 We test for a name ending with a sequence of digits; if preceded by colon we
445 have a port if the character before the colon is ] and the name starts with [
446 or if there are no other colons in the name (i.e. it's not an IPv6 address).
447
448 Arguments: pointer to the host item
449 Returns: a port number or PORT_NONE
450 */
451
452 int
453 host_item_get_port(host_item *h)
454 {
455 const uschar *p;
456 int port, x;
457 int len = Ustrlen(h->name);
458
459 if (len < 3 || (p = h->name + len - 1, !isdigit(*p))) return PORT_NONE;
460
461 /* Extract potential port number */
462
463 port = *p-- - '0';
464 x = 10;
465
466 while (p > h->name + 1 && isdigit(*p))
467 {
468 port += (*p-- - '0') * x;
469 x *= 10;
470 }
471
472 /* The smallest value of p at this point is h->name + 1. */
473
474 if (*p != ':') return PORT_NONE;
475
476 if (p[-1] == ']' && h->name[0] == '[')
477 h->name = string_copyn(h->name + 1, p - h->name - 2);
478 else if (Ustrchr(h->name, ':') == p)
479 h->name = string_copyn(h->name, p - h->name);
480 else return PORT_NONE;
481
482 DEBUG(D_route|D_host_lookup) debug_printf("host=%s port=%d\n", h->name, port);
483 return port;
484 }
485
486
487
488 #ifndef STAND_ALONE /* Omit when standalone testing */
489
490 /*************************************************
491 * Build sender_fullhost and sender_rcvhost *
492 *************************************************/
493
494 /* This function is called when sender_host_name and/or sender_helo_name
495 have been set. Or might have been set - for a local message read off the spool
496 they won't be. In that case, do nothing. Otherwise, set up the fullhost string
497 as follows:
498
499 (a) No sender_host_name or sender_helo_name: "[ip address]"
500 (b) Just sender_host_name: "host_name [ip address]"
501 (c) Just sender_helo_name: "(helo_name) [ip address]" unless helo is IP
502 in which case: "[ip address}"
503 (d) The two are identical: "host_name [ip address]" includes helo = IP
504 (e) The two are different: "host_name (helo_name) [ip address]"
505
506 If log_incoming_port is set, the sending host's port number is added to the IP
507 address.
508
509 This function also builds sender_rcvhost for use in Received: lines, whose
510 syntax is a bit different. This value also includes the RFC 1413 identity.
511 There wouldn't be two different variables if I had got all this right in the
512 first place.
513
514 Because this data may survive over more than one incoming SMTP message, it has
515 to be in permanent store. However, STARTTLS has to be forgotten and redone
516 on a multi-message conn, so this will be called once per message then. Hence
517 we use malloc, so we can free.
518
519 Arguments: none
520 Returns: nothing
521 */
522
523 void
524 host_build_sender_fullhost(void)
525 {
526 BOOL show_helo = TRUE;
527 uschar * address, * fullhost, * rcvhost;
528 rmark reset_point;
529 int len;
530
531 if (!sender_host_address) return;
532
533 reset_point = store_mark();
534
535 /* Set up address, with or without the port. After discussion, it seems that
536 the only format that doesn't cause trouble is [aaaa]:pppp. However, we can't
537 use this directly as the first item for Received: because it ain't an RFC 2822
538 domain. Sigh. */
539
540 address = string_sprintf("[%s]:%d", sender_host_address, sender_host_port);
541 if (!LOGGING(incoming_port) || sender_host_port <= 0)
542 *(Ustrrchr(address, ':')) = 0;
543
544 /* If there's no EHLO/HELO data, we can't show it. */
545
546 if (!sender_helo_name) show_helo = FALSE;
547
548 /* If HELO/EHLO was followed by an IP literal, it's messy because of two
549 features of IPv6. Firstly, there's the "IPv6:" prefix (Exim is liberal and
550 doesn't require this, for historical reasons). Secondly, IPv6 addresses may not
551 be given in canonical form, so we have to canonicalize them before comparing. As
552 it happens, the code works for both IPv4 and IPv6. */
553
554 else if (sender_helo_name[0] == '[' &&
555 sender_helo_name[(len=Ustrlen(sender_helo_name))-1] == ']')
556 {
557 int offset = 1;
558 uschar *helo_ip;
559
560 if (strncmpic(sender_helo_name + 1, US"IPv6:", 5) == 0) offset += 5;
561 if (strncmpic(sender_helo_name + 1, US"IPv4:", 5) == 0) offset += 5;
562
563 helo_ip = string_copyn(sender_helo_name + offset, len - offset - 1);
564
565 if (string_is_ip_address(helo_ip, NULL) != 0)
566 {
567 int x[4], y[4];
568 int sizex, sizey;
569 uschar ipx[48], ipy[48]; /* large enough for full IPv6 */
570
571 sizex = host_aton(helo_ip, x);
572 sizey = host_aton(sender_host_address, y);
573
574 (void)host_nmtoa(sizex, x, -1, ipx, ':');
575 (void)host_nmtoa(sizey, y, -1, ipy, ':');
576
577 if (strcmpic(ipx, ipy) == 0) show_helo = FALSE;
578 }
579 }
580
581 /* Host name is not verified */
582
583 if (!sender_host_name)
584 {
585 uschar *portptr = Ustrstr(address, "]:");
586 gstring * g;
587 int adlen; /* Sun compiler doesn't like ++ in initializers */
588
589 adlen = portptr ? (++portptr - address) : Ustrlen(address);
590 fullhost = sender_helo_name
591 ? string_sprintf("(%s) %s", sender_helo_name, address)
592 : address;
593
594 g = string_catn(NULL, address, adlen);
595
596 if (sender_ident || show_helo || portptr)
597 {
598 int firstptr;
599 g = string_catn(g, US" (", 2);
600 firstptr = g->ptr;
601
602 if (portptr)
603 g = string_append(g, 2, US"port=", portptr + 1);
604
605 if (show_helo)
606 g = string_append(g, 2,
607 firstptr == g->ptr ? US"helo=" : US" helo=", sender_helo_name);
608
609 if (sender_ident)
610 g = string_append(g, 2,
611 firstptr == g->ptr ? US"ident=" : US" ident=", sender_ident);
612
613 g = string_catn(g, US")", 1);
614 }
615
616 rcvhost = string_from_gstring(g);
617 }
618
619 /* Host name is known and verified. Unless we've already found that the HELO
620 data matches the IP address, compare it with the name. */
621
622 else
623 {
624 if (show_helo && strcmpic(sender_host_name, sender_helo_name) == 0)
625 show_helo = FALSE;
626
627 if (show_helo)
628 {
629 fullhost = string_sprintf("%s (%s) %s", sender_host_name,
630 sender_helo_name, address);
631 rcvhost = sender_ident
632 ? string_sprintf("%s\n\t(%s helo=%s ident=%s)", sender_host_name,
633 address, sender_helo_name, sender_ident)
634 : string_sprintf("%s (%s helo=%s)", sender_host_name,
635 address, sender_helo_name);
636 }
637 else
638 {
639 fullhost = string_sprintf("%s %s", sender_host_name, address);
640 rcvhost = sender_ident
641 ? string_sprintf("%s (%s ident=%s)", sender_host_name, address,
642 sender_ident)
643 : string_sprintf("%s (%s)", sender_host_name, address);
644 }
645 }
646
647 sender_fullhost = string_copy_perm(fullhost, TRUE);
648 sender_rcvhost = string_copy_perm(rcvhost, TRUE);
649
650 store_reset(reset_point);
651
652 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("sender_fullhost = %s\n", sender_fullhost);
653 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("sender_rcvhost = %s\n", sender_rcvhost);
654 }
655
656
657
658 /*************************************************
659 * Build host+ident message *
660 *************************************************/
661
662 /* Used when logging rejections and various ACL and SMTP incidents. The text
663 return depends on whether sender_fullhost and sender_ident are set or not:
664
665 no ident, no host => U=unknown
666 no ident, host set => H=sender_fullhost
667 ident set, no host => U=ident
668 ident set, host set => H=sender_fullhost U=ident
669
670 Use taint-unchecked routines on the assumption we'll never expand the results.
671
672 Arguments:
673 useflag TRUE if first item to be flagged (H= or U=); if there are two
674 items, the second is always flagged
675
676 Returns: pointer to a string in big_buffer
677 */
678
679 uschar *
680 host_and_ident(BOOL useflag)
681 {
682 if (!sender_fullhost)
683 string_format_nt(big_buffer, big_buffer_size, "%s%s", useflag ? "U=" : "",
684 sender_ident ? sender_ident : US"unknown");
685 else
686 {
687 uschar * flag = useflag ? US"H=" : US"";
688 uschar * iface = US"";
689 if (LOGGING(incoming_interface) && interface_address)
690 iface = string_sprintf(" I=[%s]:%d", interface_address, interface_port);
691 if (sender_ident)
692 string_format_nt(big_buffer, big_buffer_size, "%s%s%s U=%s",
693 flag, sender_fullhost, iface, sender_ident);
694 else
695 string_format_nt(big_buffer, big_buffer_size, "%s%s%s",
696 flag, sender_fullhost, iface);
697 }
698 return big_buffer;
699 }
700
701 #endif /* STAND_ALONE */
702
703
704
705
706 /*************************************************
707 * Build list of local interfaces *
708 *************************************************/
709
710 /* This function interprets the contents of the local_interfaces or
711 extra_local_interfaces options, and creates an ip_address_item block for each
712 item on the list. There is no special interpretation of any IP addresses; in
713 particular, 0.0.0.0 and ::0 are returned without modification. If any address
714 includes a port, it is set in the block. Otherwise the port value is set to
715 zero.
716
717 Arguments:
718 list the list
719 name the name of the option being expanded
720
721 Returns: a chain of ip_address_items, each containing to a textual
722 version of an IP address, and a port number (host order) or
723 zero if no port was given with the address
724 */
725
726 ip_address_item *
727 host_build_ifacelist(const uschar *list, uschar *name)
728 {
729 int sep = 0;
730 uschar *s;
731 ip_address_item * yield = NULL, * last = NULL, * next;
732
733 while ((s = string_nextinlist(&list, &sep, NULL, 0)))
734 {
735 int ipv;
736 int port = host_address_extract_port(s); /* Leaves just the IP address */
737
738 if (!(ipv = string_is_ip_address(s, NULL)))
739 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Malformed IP address \"%s\" in %s",
740 s, name);
741
742 /* Skip IPv6 addresses if IPv6 is disabled. */
743
744 if (disable_ipv6 && ipv == 6) continue;
745
746 /* This use of strcpy() is OK because we have checked that s is a valid IP
747 address above. The field in the ip_address_item is large enough to hold an
748 IPv6 address. */
749
750 next = store_get(sizeof(ip_address_item), FALSE);
751 next->next = NULL;
752 Ustrcpy(next->address, s);
753 next->port = port;
754 next->v6_include_v4 = FALSE;
755 next->log = NULL;
756
757 if (!yield)
758 yield = last = next;
759 else
760 {
761 last->next = next;
762 last = next;
763 }
764 }
765
766 return yield;
767 }
768
769
770
771
772
773 /*************************************************
774 * Find addresses on local interfaces *
775 *************************************************/
776
777 /* This function finds the addresses of local IP interfaces. These are used
778 when testing for routing to the local host. As the function may be called more
779 than once, the list is preserved in permanent store, pointed to by a static
780 variable, to save doing the work more than once per process.
781
782 The generic list of interfaces is obtained by calling host_build_ifacelist()
783 for local_interfaces and extra_local_interfaces. This list scanned to remove
784 duplicates (which may exist with different ports - not relevant here). If
785 either of the wildcard IP addresses (0.0.0.0 and ::0) are encountered, they are
786 replaced by the appropriate (IPv4 or IPv6) list of actual local interfaces,
787 obtained from os_find_running_interfaces().
788
789 Arguments: none
790 Returns: a chain of ip_address_items, each containing to a textual
791 version of an IP address; the port numbers are not relevant
792 */
793
794
795 /* First, a local subfunction to add an interface to a list in permanent store,
796 but only if there isn't a previous copy of that address on the list. */
797
798 static ip_address_item *
799 add_unique_interface(ip_address_item *list, ip_address_item *ipa)
800 {
801 ip_address_item *ipa2;
802 for (ipa2 = list; ipa2; ipa2 = ipa2->next)
803 if (Ustrcmp(ipa2->address, ipa->address) == 0) return list;
804 ipa2 = store_get_perm(sizeof(ip_address_item), FALSE);
805 *ipa2 = *ipa;
806 ipa2->next = list;
807 return ipa2;
808 }
809
810
811 /* This is the globally visible function */
812
813 ip_address_item *
814 host_find_interfaces(void)
815 {
816 ip_address_item *running_interfaces = NULL;
817
818 if (local_interface_data == NULL)
819 {
820 void *reset_item = store_mark();
821 ip_address_item *dlist = host_build_ifacelist(CUS local_interfaces,
822 US"local_interfaces");
823 ip_address_item *xlist = host_build_ifacelist(CUS extra_local_interfaces,
824 US"extra_local_interfaces");
825 ip_address_item *ipa;
826
827 if (!dlist) dlist = xlist;
828 else
829 {
830 for (ipa = dlist; ipa->next; ipa = ipa->next) ;
831 ipa->next = xlist;
832 }
833
834 for (ipa = dlist; ipa; ipa = ipa->next)
835 {
836 if (Ustrcmp(ipa->address, "0.0.0.0") == 0 ||
837 Ustrcmp(ipa->address, "::0") == 0)
838 {
839 BOOL ipv6 = ipa->address[0] == ':';
840 if (!running_interfaces)
841 running_interfaces = os_find_running_interfaces();
842 for (ip_address_item * ipa2 = running_interfaces; ipa2; ipa2 = ipa2->next)
843 if ((Ustrchr(ipa2->address, ':') != NULL) == ipv6)
844 local_interface_data = add_unique_interface(local_interface_data,
845 ipa2);
846 }
847 else
848 {
849 local_interface_data = add_unique_interface(local_interface_data, ipa);
850 DEBUG(D_interface)
851 {
852 debug_printf("Configured local interface: address=%s", ipa->address);
853 if (ipa->port != 0) debug_printf(" port=%d", ipa->port);
854 debug_printf("\n");
855 }
856 }
857 }
858 store_reset(reset_item);
859 }
860
861 return local_interface_data;
862 }
863
864
865
866
867
868 /*************************************************
869 * Convert network IP address to text *
870 *************************************************/
871
872 /* Given an IPv4 or IPv6 address in binary, convert it to a text
873 string and return the result in a piece of new store. The address can
874 either be given directly, or passed over in a sockaddr structure. Note
875 that this isn't the converse of host_aton() because of byte ordering
876 differences. See host_nmtoa() below.
877
878 Arguments:
879 type if < 0 then arg points to a sockaddr, else
880 either AF_INET or AF_INET6
881 arg points to a sockaddr if type is < 0, or
882 points to an IPv4 address (32 bits), or
883 points to an IPv6 address (128 bits),
884 in both cases, in network byte order
885 buffer if NULL, the result is returned in gotten store;
886 else points to a buffer to hold the answer
887 portptr points to where to put the port number, if non NULL; only
888 used when type < 0
889
890 Returns: pointer to character string
891 */
892
893 uschar *
894 host_ntoa(int type, const void *arg, uschar *buffer, int *portptr)
895 {
896 uschar *yield;
897
898 /* The new world. It is annoying that we have to fish out the address from
899 different places in the block, depending on what kind of address it is. It
900 is also a pain that inet_ntop() returns a const uschar *, whereas the IPv4
901 function inet_ntoa() returns just uschar *, and some picky compilers insist
902 on warning if one assigns a const uschar * to a uschar *. Hence the casts. */
903
904 #if HAVE_IPV6
905 uschar addr_buffer[46];
906 if (type < 0)
907 {
908 int family = ((struct sockaddr *)arg)->sa_family;
909 if (family == AF_INET6)
910 {
911 struct sockaddr_in6 *sk = (struct sockaddr_in6 *)arg;
912 yield = US inet_ntop(family, &(sk->sin6_addr), CS addr_buffer,
913 sizeof(addr_buffer));
914 if (portptr != NULL) *portptr = ntohs(sk->sin6_port);
915 }
916 else
917 {
918 struct sockaddr_in *sk = (struct sockaddr_in *)arg;
919 yield = US inet_ntop(family, &(sk->sin_addr), CS addr_buffer,
920 sizeof(addr_buffer));
921 if (portptr != NULL) *portptr = ntohs(sk->sin_port);
922 }
923 }
924 else
925 {
926 yield = US inet_ntop(type, arg, CS addr_buffer, sizeof(addr_buffer));
927 }
928
929 /* If the result is a mapped IPv4 address, show it in V4 format. */
930
931 if (Ustrncmp(yield, "::ffff:", 7) == 0) yield += 7;
932
933 #else /* HAVE_IPV6 */
934
935 /* The old world */
936
937 if (type < 0)
938 {
939 yield = US inet_ntoa(((struct sockaddr_in *)arg)->sin_addr);
940 if (portptr != NULL) *portptr = ntohs(((struct sockaddr_in *)arg)->sin_port);
941 }
942 else
943 yield = US inet_ntoa(*((struct in_addr *)arg));
944 #endif
945
946 /* If there is no buffer, put the string into some new store. */
947
948 if (!buffer) buffer = store_get(46, FALSE);
949
950 /* Callers of this function with a non-NULL buffer must ensure that it is
951 large enough to hold an IPv6 address, namely, at least 46 bytes. That's what
952 makes this use of strcpy() OK.
953 If the library returned apparently an apparently tainted string, clean it;
954 we trust IP addresses. */
955
956 string_format_nt(buffer, 46, "%s", yield);
957 return buffer;
958 }
959
960
961
962
963 /*************************************************
964 * Convert address text to binary *
965 *************************************************/
966
967 /* Given the textual form of an IP address, convert it to binary in an
968 array of ints. IPv4 addresses occupy one int; IPv6 addresses occupy 4 ints.
969 The result has the first byte in the most significant byte of the first int. In
970 other words, the result is not in network byte order, but in host byte order.
971 As a result, this is not the converse of host_ntoa(), which expects network
972 byte order. See host_nmtoa() below.
973
974 Arguments:
975 address points to the textual address, checked for syntax
976 bin points to an array of 4 ints
977
978 Returns: the number of ints used
979 */
980
981 int
982 host_aton(const uschar *address, int *bin)
983 {
984 int x[4];
985 int v4offset = 0;
986
987 /* Handle IPv6 address, which may end with an IPv4 address. It may also end
988 with a "scope", introduced by a percent sign. This code is NOT enclosed in #if
989 HAVE_IPV6 in order that IPv6 addresses are recognized even if IPv6 is not
990 supported. */
991
992 if (Ustrchr(address, ':') != NULL)
993 {
994 const uschar *p = address;
995 const uschar *component[8];
996 BOOL ipv4_ends = FALSE;
997 int ci = 0;
998 int nulloffset = 0;
999 int v6count = 8;
1000 int i;
1001
1002 /* If the address starts with a colon, it will start with two colons.
1003 Just lose the first one, which will leave a null first component. */
1004
1005 if (*p == ':') p++;
1006
1007 /* Split the address into components separated by colons. The input address
1008 is supposed to be checked for syntax. There was a case where this was
1009 overlooked; to guard against that happening again, check here and crash if
1010 there are too many components. */
1011
1012 while (*p != 0 && *p != '%')
1013 {
1014 int len = Ustrcspn(p, ":%");
1015 if (len == 0) nulloffset = ci;
1016 if (ci > 7) log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE,
1017 "Internal error: invalid IPv6 address \"%s\" passed to host_aton()",
1018 address);
1019 component[ci++] = p;
1020 p += len;
1021 if (*p == ':') p++;
1022 }
1023
1024 /* If the final component contains a dot, it is a trailing v4 address.
1025 As the syntax is known to be checked, just set up for a trailing
1026 v4 address and restrict the v6 part to 6 components. */
1027
1028 if (Ustrchr(component[ci-1], '.') != NULL)
1029 {
1030 address = component[--ci];
1031 ipv4_ends = TRUE;
1032 v4offset = 3;
1033 v6count = 6;
1034 }
1035
1036 /* If there are fewer than 6 or 8 components, we have to insert some
1037 more empty ones in the middle. */
1038
1039 if (ci < v6count)
1040 {
1041 int insert_count = v6count - ci;
1042 for (i = v6count-1; i > nulloffset + insert_count; i--)
1043 component[i] = component[i - insert_count];
1044 while (i > nulloffset) component[i--] = US"";
1045 }
1046
1047 /* Now turn the components into binary in pairs and bung them
1048 into the vector of ints. */
1049
1050 for (i = 0; i < v6count; i += 2)
1051 bin[i/2] = (Ustrtol(component[i], NULL, 16) << 16) +
1052 Ustrtol(component[i+1], NULL, 16);
1053
1054 /* If there was no terminating v4 component, we are done. */
1055
1056 if (!ipv4_ends) return 4;
1057 }
1058
1059 /* Handle IPv4 address */
1060
1061 (void)sscanf(CS address, "%d.%d.%d.%d", x, x+1, x+2, x+3);
1062 bin[v4offset] = ((uint)x[0] << 24) + (x[1] << 16) + (x[2] << 8) + x[3];
1063 return v4offset+1;
1064 }
1065
1066
1067 /*************************************************
1068 * Apply mask to an IP address *
1069 *************************************************/
1070
1071 /* Mask an address held in 1 or 4 ints, with the ms bit in the ms bit of the
1072 first int, etc.
1073
1074 Arguments:
1075 count the number of ints
1076 binary points to the ints to be masked
1077 mask the count of ms bits to leave, or -1 if no masking
1078
1079 Returns: nothing
1080 */
1081
1082 void
1083 host_mask(int count, int *binary, int mask)
1084 {
1085 if (mask < 0) mask = 99999;
1086 for (int i = 0; i < count; i++)
1087 {
1088 int wordmask;
1089 if (mask == 0) wordmask = 0;
1090 else if (mask < 32)
1091 {
1092 wordmask = (uint)(-1) << (32 - mask);
1093 mask = 0;
1094 }
1095 else
1096 {
1097 wordmask = -1;
1098 mask -= 32;
1099 }
1100 binary[i] &= wordmask;
1101 }
1102 }
1103
1104
1105
1106
1107 /*************************************************
1108 * Convert masked IP address in ints to text *
1109 *************************************************/
1110
1111 /* We can't use host_ntoa() because it assumes the binary values are in network
1112 byte order, and these are the result of host_aton(), which puts them in ints in
1113 host byte order. Also, we really want IPv6 addresses to be in a canonical
1114 format, so we output them with no abbreviation. In a number of cases we can't
1115 use the normal colon separator in them because it terminates keys in lsearch
1116 files, so we want to use dot instead. There's an argument that specifies what
1117 to use for IPv6 addresses.
1118
1119 Arguments:
1120 count 1 or 4 (number of ints)
1121 binary points to the ints
1122 mask mask value; if < 0 don't add to result
1123 buffer big enough to hold the result
1124 sep component separator character for IPv6 addresses
1125
1126 Returns: the number of characters placed in buffer, not counting
1127 the final nul.
1128 */
1129
1130 int
1131 host_nmtoa(int count, int *binary, int mask, uschar *buffer, int sep)
1132 {
1133 int j;
1134 uschar *tt = buffer;
1135
1136 if (count == 1)
1137 {
1138 j = binary[0];
1139 for (int i = 24; i >= 0; i -= 8)
1140 tt += sprintf(CS tt, "%d.", (j >> i) & 255);
1141 }
1142 else
1143 for (int i = 0; i < 4; i++)
1144 {
1145 j = binary[i];
1146 tt += sprintf(CS tt, "%04x%c%04x%c", (j >> 16) & 0xffff, sep, j & 0xffff, sep);
1147 }
1148
1149 tt--; /* lose final separator */
1150
1151 if (mask < 0)
1152 *tt = 0;
1153 else
1154 tt += sprintf(CS tt, "/%d", mask);
1155
1156 return tt - buffer;
1157 }
1158
1159
1160 /* Like host_nmtoa() but: ipv6-only, canonical output, no mask
1161
1162 Arguments:
1163 binary points to the ints
1164 buffer big enough to hold the result
1165
1166 Returns: the number of characters placed in buffer, not counting
1167 the final nul.
1168 */
1169
1170 int
1171 ipv6_nmtoa(int * binary, uschar * buffer)
1172 {
1173 int i, j, k;
1174 uschar * c = buffer;
1175 uschar * d = NULL; /* shut insufficiently "clever" compiler up */
1176
1177 for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
1178 { /* expand to text */
1179 j = binary[i];
1180 c += sprintf(CS c, "%x:%x:", (j >> 16) & 0xffff, j & 0xffff);
1181 }
1182
1183 for (c = buffer, k = -1, i = 0; i < 8; i++)
1184 { /* find longest 0-group sequence */
1185 if (*c == '0') /* must be "0:" */
1186 {
1187 uschar * s = c;
1188 j = i;
1189 while (c[2] == '0') i++, c += 2;
1190 if (i-j > k)
1191 {
1192 k = i-j; /* length of sequence */
1193 d = s; /* start of sequence */
1194 }
1195 }
1196 while (*++c != ':') ;
1197 c++;
1198 }
1199
1200 c[-1] = '\0'; /* drop trailing colon */
1201
1202 /* debug_printf("%s: D k %d <%s> <%s>\n", __FUNCTION__, k, d, d + 2*(k+1)); */
1203 if (k >= 0)
1204 { /* collapse */
1205 c = d + 2*(k+1);
1206 if (d == buffer) c--; /* need extra colon */
1207 *d++ = ':'; /* 1st 0 */
1208 while ((*d++ = *c++)) ;
1209 }
1210 else
1211 d = c;
1212
1213 return d - buffer;
1214 }
1215
1216
1217
1218 /*************************************************
1219 * Check port for tls_on_connect *
1220 *************************************************/
1221
1222 /* This function checks whether a given incoming port is configured for tls-
1223 on-connect. It is called from the daemon and from inetd handling. If the global
1224 option tls_on_connect is already set, all ports operate this way. Otherwise, we
1225 check the tls_on_connect_ports option for a list of ports.
1226
1227 Argument: a port number
1228 Returns: TRUE or FALSE
1229 */
1230
1231 BOOL
1232 host_is_tls_on_connect_port(int port)
1233 {
1234 int sep = 0;
1235 uschar buffer[32];
1236 const uschar *list = tls_in.on_connect_ports;
1237 uschar *s;
1238 uschar *end;
1239
1240 if (tls_in.on_connect) return TRUE;
1241
1242 while ((s = string_nextinlist(&list, &sep, buffer, sizeof(buffer))))
1243 if (Ustrtol(s, &end, 10) == port)
1244 return TRUE;
1245
1246 return FALSE;
1247 }
1248
1249
1250
1251 /*************************************************
1252 * Check whether host is in a network *
1253 *************************************************/
1254
1255 /* This function checks whether a given IP address matches a pattern that
1256 represents either a single host, or a network (using CIDR notation). The caller
1257 of this function must check the syntax of the arguments before calling it.
1258
1259 Arguments:
1260 host string representation of the ip-address to check
1261 net string representation of the network, with optional CIDR mask
1262 maskoffset offset to the / that introduces the mask in the key
1263 zero if there is no mask
1264
1265 Returns:
1266 TRUE the host is inside the network
1267 FALSE the host is NOT inside the network
1268 */
1269
1270 BOOL
1271 host_is_in_net(const uschar *host, const uschar *net, int maskoffset)
1272 {
1273 int address[4];
1274 int incoming[4];
1275 int mlen;
1276 int size = host_aton(net, address);
1277 int insize;
1278
1279 /* No mask => all bits to be checked */
1280
1281 if (maskoffset == 0) mlen = 99999; /* Big number */
1282 else mlen = Uatoi(net + maskoffset + 1);
1283
1284 /* Convert the incoming address to binary. */
1285
1286 insize = host_aton(host, incoming);
1287
1288 /* Convert IPv4 addresses given in IPv6 compatible mode, which represent
1289 connections from IPv4 hosts to IPv6 hosts, that is, addresses of the form
1290 ::ffff:<v4address>, to IPv4 format. */
1291
1292 if (insize == 4 && incoming[0] == 0 && incoming[1] == 0 &&
1293 incoming[2] == 0xffff)
1294 {
1295 insize = 1;
1296 incoming[0] = incoming[3];
1297 }
1298
1299 /* No match if the sizes don't agree. */
1300
1301 if (insize != size) return FALSE;
1302
1303 /* Else do the masked comparison. */
1304
1305 for (int i = 0; i < size; i++)
1306 {
1307 int mask;
1308 if (mlen == 0) mask = 0;
1309 else if (mlen < 32)
1310 {
1311 mask = (uint)(-1) << (32 - mlen);
1312 mlen = 0;
1313 }
1314 else
1315 {
1316 mask = -1;
1317 mlen -= 32;
1318 }
1319 if ((incoming[i] & mask) != (address[i] & mask)) return FALSE;
1320 }
1321
1322 return TRUE;
1323 }
1324
1325
1326
1327 /*************************************************
1328 * Scan host list for local hosts *
1329 *************************************************/
1330
1331 /* Scan through a chain of addresses and check whether any of them is the
1332 address of an interface on the local machine. If so, remove that address and
1333 any previous ones with the same MX value, and all subsequent ones (which will
1334 have greater or equal MX values) from the chain. Note: marking them as unusable
1335 is NOT the right thing to do because it causes the hosts not to be used for
1336 other domains, for which they may well be correct.
1337
1338 The hosts may be part of a longer chain; we only process those between the
1339 initial pointer and the "last" pointer.
1340
1341 There is also a list of "pseudo-local" host names which are checked against the
1342 host names. Any match causes that host item to be treated the same as one which
1343 matches a local IP address.
1344
1345 If the very first host is a local host, then all MX records had a precedence
1346 greater than or equal to that of the local host. Either there's a problem in
1347 the DNS, or an apparently remote name turned out to be an abbreviation for the
1348 local host. Give a specific return code, and let the caller decide what to do.
1349 Otherwise, give a success code if at least one host address has been found.
1350
1351 Arguments:
1352 host pointer to the first host in the chain
1353 lastptr pointer to pointer to the last host in the chain (may be updated)
1354 removed if not NULL, set TRUE if some local addresses were removed
1355 from the list
1356
1357 Returns:
1358 HOST_FOUND if there is at least one host with an IP address on the chain
1359 and an MX value less than any MX value associated with the
1360 local host
1361 HOST_FOUND_LOCAL if a local host is among the lowest-numbered MX hosts; when
1362 the host addresses were obtained from A records or
1363 gethostbyname(), the MX values are set to -1.
1364 HOST_FIND_FAILED if no valid hosts with set IP addresses were found
1365 */
1366
1367 int
1368 host_scan_for_local_hosts(host_item *host, host_item **lastptr, BOOL *removed)
1369 {
1370 int yield = HOST_FIND_FAILED;
1371 host_item *last = *lastptr;
1372 host_item *prev = NULL;
1373 host_item *h;
1374
1375 if (removed != NULL) *removed = FALSE;
1376
1377 if (local_interface_data == NULL) local_interface_data = host_find_interfaces();
1378
1379 for (h = host; h != last->next; h = h->next)
1380 {
1381 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
1382 if (hosts_treat_as_local != NULL)
1383 {
1384 int rc;
1385 const uschar *save = deliver_domain;
1386 deliver_domain = h->name; /* set $domain */
1387 rc = match_isinlist(string_copylc(h->name), CUSS &hosts_treat_as_local, 0,
1388 &domainlist_anchor, NULL, MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL);
1389 deliver_domain = save;
1390 if (rc == OK) goto FOUND_LOCAL;
1391 }
1392 #endif
1393
1394 /* It seems that on many operating systems, 0.0.0.0 is treated as a synonym
1395 for 127.0.0.1 and refers to the local host. We therefore force it always to
1396 be treated as local. */
1397
1398 if (h->address != NULL)
1399 {
1400 if (Ustrcmp(h->address, "0.0.0.0") == 0) goto FOUND_LOCAL;
1401 for (ip_address_item * ip = local_interface_data; ip; ip = ip->next)
1402 if (Ustrcmp(h->address, ip->address) == 0) goto FOUND_LOCAL;
1403 yield = HOST_FOUND; /* At least one remote address has been found */
1404 }
1405
1406 /* Update prev to point to the last host item before any that have
1407 the same MX value as the one we have just considered. */
1408
1409 if (h->next == NULL || h->next->mx != h->mx) prev = h;
1410 }
1411
1412 return yield; /* No local hosts found: return HOST_FOUND or HOST_FIND_FAILED */
1413
1414 /* A host whose IP address matches a local IP address, or whose name matches
1415 something in hosts_treat_as_local has been found. */
1416
1417 FOUND_LOCAL:
1418
1419 if (prev == NULL)
1420 {
1421 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf((h->mx >= 0)?
1422 "local host has lowest MX\n" :
1423 "local host found for non-MX address\n");
1424 return HOST_FOUND_LOCAL;
1425 }
1426
1427 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup)
1428 {
1429 debug_printf("local host in host list - removed hosts:\n");
1430 for (h = prev->next; h != last->next; h = h->next)
1431 debug_printf(" %s %s %d\n", h->name, h->address, h->mx);
1432 }
1433
1434 if (removed != NULL) *removed = TRUE;
1435 prev->next = last->next;
1436 *lastptr = prev;
1437 return yield;
1438 }
1439
1440
1441
1442
1443 /*************************************************
1444 * Remove duplicate IPs in host list *
1445 *************************************************/
1446
1447 /* You would think that administrators could set up their DNS records so that
1448 one ended up with a list of unique IP addresses after looking up A or MX
1449 records, but apparently duplication is common. So we scan such lists and
1450 remove the later duplicates. Note that we may get lists in which some host
1451 addresses are not set.
1452
1453 Arguments:
1454 host pointer to the first host in the chain
1455 lastptr pointer to pointer to the last host in the chain (may be updated)
1456
1457 Returns: nothing
1458 */
1459
1460 static void
1461 host_remove_duplicates(host_item *host, host_item **lastptr)
1462 {
1463 while (host != *lastptr)
1464 {
1465 if (host->address != NULL)
1466 {
1467 host_item *h = host;
1468 while (h != *lastptr)
1469 {
1470 if (h->next->address != NULL &&
1471 Ustrcmp(h->next->address, host->address) == 0)
1472 {
1473 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("duplicate IP address %s (MX=%d) "
1474 "removed\n", host->address, h->next->mx);
1475 if (h->next == *lastptr) *lastptr = h;
1476 h->next = h->next->next;
1477 }
1478 else h = h->next;
1479 }
1480 }
1481 /* If the last item was removed, host may have become == *lastptr */
1482 if (host != *lastptr) host = host->next;
1483 }
1484 }
1485
1486
1487
1488
1489 /*************************************************
1490 * Find sender host name by gethostbyaddr() *
1491 *************************************************/
1492
1493 /* This used to be the only way it was done, but it turns out that not all
1494 systems give aliases for calls to gethostbyaddr() - or one of the modern
1495 equivalents like getipnodebyaddr(). Fortunately, multiple PTR records are rare,
1496 but they can still exist. This function is now used only when a DNS lookup of
1497 the IP address fails, in order to give access to /etc/hosts.
1498
1499 Arguments: none
1500 Returns: OK, DEFER, FAIL
1501 */
1502
1503 static int
1504 host_name_lookup_byaddr(void)
1505 {
1506 int len;
1507 uschar *s, *t;
1508 struct hostent *hosts;
1509 struct in_addr addr;
1510 unsigned long time_msec = 0; /* init to quieten dumb static analysis */
1511
1512 if (slow_lookup_log) time_msec = get_time_in_ms();
1513
1514 /* Lookup on IPv6 system */
1515
1516 #if HAVE_IPV6
1517 if (Ustrchr(sender_host_address, ':') != NULL)
1518 {
1519 struct in6_addr addr6;
1520 if (inet_pton(AF_INET6, CS sender_host_address, &addr6) != 1)
1521 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "unable to parse \"%s\" as an "
1522 "IPv6 address", sender_host_address);
1523 #if HAVE_GETIPNODEBYADDR
1524 hosts = getipnodebyaddr(CS &addr6, sizeof(addr6), AF_INET6, &h_errno);
1525 #else
1526 hosts = gethostbyaddr(CS &addr6, sizeof(addr6), AF_INET6);
1527 #endif
1528 }
1529 else
1530 {
1531 if (inet_pton(AF_INET, CS sender_host_address, &addr) != 1)
1532 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "unable to parse \"%s\" as an "
1533 "IPv4 address", sender_host_address);
1534 #if HAVE_GETIPNODEBYADDR
1535 hosts = getipnodebyaddr(CS &addr, sizeof(addr), AF_INET, &h_errno);
1536 #else
1537 hosts = gethostbyaddr(CS &addr, sizeof(addr), AF_INET);
1538 #endif
1539 }
1540
1541 /* Do lookup on IPv4 system */
1542
1543 #else
1544 addr.s_addr = (S_ADDR_TYPE)inet_addr(CS sender_host_address);
1545 hosts = gethostbyaddr(CS(&addr), sizeof(addr), AF_INET);
1546 #endif
1547
1548 if ( slow_lookup_log
1549 && (time_msec = get_time_in_ms() - time_msec) > slow_lookup_log
1550 )
1551 log_long_lookup(US"name", sender_host_address, time_msec);
1552
1553 /* Failed to look up the host. */
1554
1555 if (!hosts)
1556 {
1557 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("IP address lookup failed: h_errno=%d\n",
1558 h_errno);
1559 return (h_errno == TRY_AGAIN || h_errno == NO_RECOVERY) ? DEFER : FAIL;
1560 }
1561
1562 /* It seems there are some records in the DNS that yield an empty name. We
1563 treat this as non-existent. In some operating systems, this is returned as an
1564 empty string; in others as a single dot. */
1565
1566 if (!hosts->h_name || !hosts->h_name[0] || hosts->h_name[0] == '.')
1567 {
1568 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("IP address lookup yielded an empty name: "
1569 "treated as non-existent host name\n");
1570 return FAIL;
1571 }
1572
1573 /* Copy and lowercase the name, which is in static storage in many systems.
1574 Put it in permanent memory. */
1575
1576 {
1577 int old_pool = store_pool;
1578 store_pool = POOL_TAINT_PERM; /* names are tainted */
1579
1580 sender_host_name = string_copylc(US hosts->h_name);
1581
1582 /* If the host has aliases, build a copy of the alias list */
1583
1584 if (hosts->h_aliases)
1585 {
1586 int count = 1;
1587 uschar **ptr;
1588
1589 for (uschar ** aliases = USS hosts->h_aliases; *aliases; aliases++) count++;
1590 store_pool = POOL_PERM;
1591 ptr = sender_host_aliases = store_get(count * sizeof(uschar *), FALSE);
1592 store_pool = POOL_TAINT_PERM;
1593
1594 for (uschar ** aliases = USS hosts->h_aliases; *aliases; aliases++)
1595 *ptr++ = string_copylc(*aliases);
1596 *ptr = NULL;
1597 }
1598 store_pool = old_pool;
1599 }
1600
1601 return OK;
1602 }
1603
1604
1605
1606 /*************************************************
1607 * Find host name for incoming call *
1608 *************************************************/
1609
1610 /* Put the name in permanent store, pointed to by sender_host_name. We also set
1611 up a list of alias names, pointed to by sender_host_alias. The list is
1612 NULL-terminated. The incoming address is in sender_host_address, either in
1613 dotted-quad form for IPv4 or in colon-separated form for IPv6.
1614
1615 This function does a thorough check that the names it finds point back to the
1616 incoming IP address. Any that do not are discarded. Note that this is relied on
1617 by the ACL reverse_host_lookup check.
1618
1619 On some systems, get{host,ipnode}byaddr() appears to do this internally, but
1620 this it not universally true. Also, for release 4.30, this function was changed
1621 to do a direct DNS lookup first, by default[1], because it turns out that that
1622 is the only guaranteed way to find all the aliases on some systems. My
1623 experiments indicate that Solaris gethostbyaddr() gives the aliases for but
1624 Linux does not.
1625
1626 [1] The actual order is controlled by the host_lookup_order option.
1627
1628 Arguments: none
1629 Returns: OK on success, the answer being placed in the global variable
1630 sender_host_name, with any aliases in a list hung off
1631 sender_host_aliases
1632 FAIL if no host name can be found
1633 DEFER if a temporary error was encountered
1634
1635 The variable host_lookup_msg is set to an empty string on success, or to a
1636 reason for the failure otherwise, in a form suitable for tagging onto an error
1637 message, and also host_lookup_failed is set TRUE if the lookup failed. If there
1638 was a defer, host_lookup_deferred is set TRUE.
1639
1640 Any dynamically constructed string for host_lookup_msg must be in permanent
1641 store, because it might be used for several incoming messages on the same SMTP
1642 connection. */
1643
1644 int
1645 host_name_lookup(void)
1646 {
1647 int old_pool, rc;
1648 int sep = 0;
1649 uschar *save_hostname;
1650 uschar **aliases;
1651 uschar buffer[256];
1652 uschar *ordername;
1653 const uschar *list = host_lookup_order;
1654 dns_answer * dnsa = store_get_dns_answer();
1655 dns_scan dnss;
1656
1657 sender_host_dnssec = host_lookup_deferred = host_lookup_failed = FALSE;
1658
1659 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup)
1660 debug_printf("looking up host name for %s\n", sender_host_address);
1661
1662 /* For testing the case when a lookup does not complete, we have a special
1663 reserved IP address. */
1664
1665 if (f.running_in_test_harness &&
1666 Ustrcmp(sender_host_address, "99.99.99.99") == 0)
1667 {
1668 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup)
1669 debug_printf("Test harness: host name lookup returns DEFER\n");
1670 host_lookup_deferred = TRUE;
1671 return DEFER;
1672 }
1673
1674 /* Do lookups directly in the DNS or via gethostbyaddr() (or equivalent), in
1675 the order specified by the host_lookup_order option. */
1676
1677 while ((ordername = string_nextinlist(&list, &sep, buffer, sizeof(buffer))))
1678 {
1679 if (strcmpic(ordername, US"bydns") == 0)
1680 {
1681 dns_init(FALSE, FALSE, FALSE); /* dnssec ctrl by dns_dnssec_ok glbl */
1682 dns_build_reverse(sender_host_address, buffer);
1683 rc = dns_lookup_timerwrap(dnsa, buffer, T_PTR, NULL);
1684
1685 /* The first record we come across is used for the name; others are
1686 considered to be aliases. We have to scan twice, in order to find out the
1687 number of aliases. However, if all the names are empty, we will behave as
1688 if failure. (PTR records that yield empty names have been encountered in
1689 the DNS.) */
1690
1691 if (rc == DNS_SUCCEED)
1692 {
1693 uschar **aptr = NULL;
1694 int ssize = 264;
1695 int count = 0;
1696 int old_pool = store_pool;
1697
1698 sender_host_dnssec = dns_is_secure(dnsa);
1699 DEBUG(D_dns)
1700 debug_printf("Reverse DNS security status: %s\n",
1701 sender_host_dnssec ? "DNSSEC verified (AD)" : "unverified");
1702
1703 store_pool = POOL_PERM; /* Save names in permanent storage */
1704
1705 for (dns_record * rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_ANSWERS);
1706 rr;
1707 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT)) if (rr->type == T_PTR)
1708 count++;
1709
1710 /* Get store for the list of aliases. For compatibility with
1711 gethostbyaddr, we make an empty list if there are none. */
1712
1713 aptr = sender_host_aliases = store_get(count * sizeof(uschar *), FALSE);
1714
1715 /* Re-scan and extract the names */
1716
1717 for (dns_record * rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_ANSWERS);
1718 rr;
1719 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT)) if (rr->type == T_PTR)
1720 {
1721 uschar * s = store_get(ssize, TRUE); /* names are tainted */
1722
1723 /* If an overlong response was received, the data will have been
1724 truncated and dn_expand may fail. */
1725
1726 if (dn_expand(dnsa->answer, dnsa->answer + dnsa->answerlen,
1727 US (rr->data), (DN_EXPAND_ARG4_TYPE)(s), ssize) < 0)
1728 {
1729 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "host name alias list truncated for %s",
1730 sender_host_address);
1731 break;
1732 }
1733
1734 store_release_above(s + Ustrlen(s) + 1);
1735 if (!s[0])
1736 {
1737 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("IP address lookup yielded an "
1738 "empty name: treated as non-existent host name\n");
1739 continue;
1740 }
1741 if (!sender_host_name) sender_host_name = s;
1742 else *aptr++ = s;
1743 while (*s) { *s = tolower(*s); s++; }
1744 }
1745
1746 *aptr = NULL; /* End of alias list */
1747 store_pool = old_pool; /* Reset store pool */
1748
1749 /* If we've found a name, break out of the "order" loop */
1750
1751 if (sender_host_name) break;
1752 }
1753
1754 /* If the DNS lookup deferred, we must also defer. */
1755
1756 if (rc == DNS_AGAIN)
1757 {
1758 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup)
1759 debug_printf("IP address PTR lookup gave temporary error\n");
1760 host_lookup_deferred = TRUE;
1761 return DEFER;
1762 }
1763 }
1764
1765 /* Do a lookup using gethostbyaddr() - or equivalent */
1766
1767 else if (strcmpic(ordername, US"byaddr") == 0)
1768 {
1769 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup)
1770 debug_printf("IP address lookup using gethostbyaddr()\n");
1771 rc = host_name_lookup_byaddr();
1772 if (rc == DEFER)
1773 {
1774 host_lookup_deferred = TRUE;
1775 return rc; /* Can't carry on */
1776 }
1777 if (rc == OK) break; /* Found a name */
1778 }
1779 } /* Loop for bydns/byaddr scanning */
1780
1781 /* If we have failed to find a name, return FAIL and log when required.
1782 NB host_lookup_msg must be in permanent store. */
1783
1784 if (!sender_host_name)
1785 {
1786 if (host_checking || !f.log_testing_mode)
1787 log_write(L_host_lookup_failed, LOG_MAIN, "no host name found for IP "
1788 "address %s", sender_host_address);
1789 host_lookup_msg = US" (failed to find host name from IP address)";
1790 host_lookup_failed = TRUE;
1791 return FAIL;
1792 }
1793
1794 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup)
1795 {
1796 uschar **aliases = sender_host_aliases;
1797 debug_printf("IP address lookup yielded \"%s\"\n", sender_host_name);
1798 while (*aliases != NULL) debug_printf(" alias \"%s\"\n", *aliases++);
1799 }
1800
1801 /* We need to verify that a forward lookup on the name we found does indeed
1802 correspond to the address. This is for security: in principle a malefactor who
1803 happened to own a reverse zone could set it to point to any names at all.
1804
1805 This code was present in versions of Exim before 3.20. At that point I took it
1806 out because I thought that gethostbyaddr() did the check anyway. It turns out
1807 that this isn't always the case, so it's coming back in at 4.01. This version
1808 is actually better, because it also checks aliases.
1809
1810 The code was made more robust at release 4.21. Prior to that, it accepted all
1811 the names if any of them had the correct IP address. Now the code checks all
1812 the names, and accepts only those that have the correct IP address. */
1813
1814 save_hostname = sender_host_name; /* Save for error messages */
1815 aliases = sender_host_aliases;
1816 for (uschar * hname = sender_host_name; hname; hname = *aliases++)
1817 {
1818 int rc;
1819 BOOL ok = FALSE;
1820 host_item h = { .next = NULL, .name = hname, .mx = MX_NONE, .address = NULL };
1821 dnssec_domains d =
1822 { .request = sender_host_dnssec ? US"*" : NULL, .require = NULL };
1823
1824 if ( (rc = host_find_bydns(&h, NULL, HOST_FIND_BY_A | HOST_FIND_BY_AAAA,
1825 NULL, NULL, NULL, &d, NULL, NULL)) == HOST_FOUND
1826 || rc == HOST_FOUND_LOCAL
1827 )
1828 {
1829 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("checking addresses for %s\n", hname);
1830
1831 /* If the forward lookup was not secure we cancel the is-secure variable */
1832
1833 DEBUG(D_dns) debug_printf("Forward DNS security status: %s\n",
1834 h.dnssec == DS_YES ? "DNSSEC verified (AD)" : "unverified");
1835 if (h.dnssec != DS_YES) sender_host_dnssec = FALSE;
1836
1837 for (host_item * hh = &h; hh; hh = hh->next)
1838 if (host_is_in_net(hh->address, sender_host_address, 0))
1839 {
1840 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf(" %s OK\n", hh->address);
1841 ok = TRUE;
1842 break;
1843 }
1844 else
1845 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf(" %s\n", hh->address);
1846
1847 if (!ok) HDEBUG(D_host_lookup)
1848 debug_printf("no IP address for %s matched %s\n", hname,
1849 sender_host_address);
1850 }
1851 else if (rc == HOST_FIND_AGAIN)
1852 {
1853 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("temporary error for host name lookup\n");
1854 host_lookup_deferred = TRUE;
1855 sender_host_name = NULL;
1856 return DEFER;
1857 }
1858 else
1859 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("no IP addresses found for %s\n", hname);
1860
1861 /* If this name is no good, and it's the sender name, set it null pro tem;
1862 if it's an alias, just remove it from the list. */
1863
1864 if (!ok)
1865 {
1866 if (hname == sender_host_name) sender_host_name = NULL; else
1867 {
1868 uschar **a; /* Don't amalgamate - some */
1869 a = --aliases; /* compilers grumble */
1870 while (*a != NULL) { *a = a[1]; a++; }
1871 }
1872 }
1873 }
1874
1875 /* If sender_host_name == NULL, it means we didn't like the name. Replace
1876 it with the first alias, if there is one. */
1877
1878 if (sender_host_name == NULL && *sender_host_aliases != NULL)
1879 sender_host_name = *sender_host_aliases++;
1880
1881 /* If we now have a main name, all is well. */
1882
1883 if (sender_host_name != NULL) return OK;
1884
1885 /* We have failed to find an address that matches. */
1886
1887 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup)
1888 debug_printf("%s does not match any IP address for %s\n",
1889 sender_host_address, save_hostname);
1890
1891 /* This message must be in permanent store */
1892
1893 old_pool = store_pool;
1894 store_pool = POOL_PERM;
1895 host_lookup_msg = string_sprintf(" (%s does not match any IP address for %s)",
1896 sender_host_address, save_hostname);
1897 store_pool = old_pool;
1898 host_lookup_failed = TRUE;
1899 return FAIL;
1900 }
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905 /*************************************************
1906 * Find IP address(es) for host by name *
1907 *************************************************/
1908
1909 /* The input is a host_item structure with the name filled in and the address
1910 field set to NULL. We use gethostbyname() or getipnodebyname() or
1911 gethostbyname2(), as appropriate. Of course, these functions may use the DNS,
1912 but they do not do MX processing. It appears, however, that in some systems the
1913 current setting of resolver options is used when one of these functions calls
1914 the resolver. For this reason, we call dns_init() at the start, with arguments
1915 influenced by bits in "flags", just as we do for host_find_bydns().
1916
1917 The second argument provides a host list (usually an IP list) of hosts to
1918 ignore. This makes it possible to ignore IPv6 link-local addresses or loopback
1919 addresses in unreasonable places.
1920
1921 The lookup may result in a change of name. For compatibility with the dns
1922 lookup, return this via fully_qualified_name as well as updating the host item.
1923 The lookup may also yield more than one IP address, in which case chain on
1924 subsequent host_item structures.
1925
1926 Arguments:
1927 host a host item with the name and MX filled in;
1928 the address is to be filled in;
1929 multiple IP addresses cause other host items to be
1930 chained on.
1931 ignore_target_hosts a list of hosts to ignore
1932 flags HOST_FIND_QUALIFY_SINGLE ) passed to
1933 HOST_FIND_SEARCH_PARENTS ) dns_init()
1934 fully_qualified_name if not NULL, set to point to host name for
1935 compatibility with host_find_bydns
1936 local_host_check TRUE if a check for the local host is wanted
1937
1938 Returns: HOST_FIND_FAILED Failed to find the host or domain
1939 HOST_FIND_AGAIN Try again later
1940 HOST_FOUND Host found - data filled in
1941 HOST_FOUND_LOCAL Host found and is the local host
1942 */
1943
1944 int
1945 host_find_byname(host_item *host, const uschar *ignore_target_hosts, int flags,
1946 const uschar **fully_qualified_name, BOOL local_host_check)
1947 {
1948 int yield, times;
1949 host_item *last = NULL;
1950 BOOL temp_error = FALSE;
1951 #if HAVE_IPV6
1952 int af;
1953 #endif
1954
1955 /* Make sure DNS options are set as required. This appears to be necessary in
1956 some circumstances when the get..byname() function actually calls the DNS. */
1957
1958 dns_init((flags & HOST_FIND_QUALIFY_SINGLE) != 0,
1959 (flags & HOST_FIND_SEARCH_PARENTS) != 0,
1960 FALSE); /* Cannot retrieve dnssec status so do not request */
1961
1962 /* In an IPv6 world, unless IPv6 has been disabled, we need to scan for both
1963 kinds of address, so go round the loop twice. Note that we have ensured that
1964 AF_INET6 is defined even in an IPv4 world, which makes for slightly tidier
1965 code. However, if dns_ipv4_lookup matches the domain, we also just do IPv4
1966 lookups here (except when testing standalone). */
1967
1968 #if HAVE_IPV6
1969 #ifdef STAND_ALONE
1970 if (disable_ipv6)
1971 #else
1972 if (disable_ipv6 ||
1973 (dns_ipv4_lookup != NULL &&
1974 match_isinlist(host->name, CUSS &dns_ipv4_lookup, 0, NULL, NULL,
1975 MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL) == OK))
1976 #endif
1977
1978 { af = AF_INET; times = 1; }
1979 else
1980 { af = AF_INET6; times = 2; }
1981
1982 /* No IPv6 support */
1983
1984 #else /* HAVE_IPV6 */
1985 times = 1;
1986 #endif /* HAVE_IPV6 */
1987
1988 /* Initialize the flag that gets set for DNS syntax check errors, so that the
1989 interface to this function can be similar to host_find_bydns. */
1990
1991 f.host_find_failed_syntax = FALSE;
1992
1993 /* Loop to look up both kinds of address in an IPv6 world */
1994
1995 for (int i = 1; i <= times;
1996 #if HAVE_IPV6
1997 af = AF_INET, /* If 2 passes, IPv4 on the second */
1998 #endif
1999 i++)
2000 {
2001 BOOL ipv4_addr;
2002 int error_num = 0;
2003 struct hostent *hostdata;
2004 unsigned long time_msec = 0; /* compiler quietening */
2005
2006 #ifdef STAND_ALONE
2007 printf("Looking up: %s\n", host->name);
2008 #endif
2009
2010 if (slow_lookup_log) time_msec = get_time_in_ms();
2011
2012 #if HAVE_IPV6
2013 if (f.running_in_test_harness)
2014 hostdata = host_fake_gethostbyname(host->name, af, &error_num);
2015 else
2016 {
2017 #if HAVE_GETIPNODEBYNAME
2018 hostdata = getipnodebyname(CS host->name, af, 0, &error_num);
2019 #else
2020 hostdata = gethostbyname2(CS host->name, af);
2021 error_num = h_errno;
2022 #endif
2023 }
2024
2025 #else /* not HAVE_IPV6 */
2026 if (f.running_in_test_harness)
2027 hostdata = host_fake_gethostbyname(host->name, AF_INET, &error_num);
2028 else
2029 {
2030 hostdata = gethostbyname(CS host->name);
2031 error_num = h_errno;
2032 }
2033 #endif /* HAVE_IPV6 */
2034
2035 if ( slow_lookup_log
2036 && (time_msec = get_time_in_ms() - time_msec) > slow_lookup_log)
2037 log_long_lookup(US"name", host->name, time_msec);
2038
2039 if (hostdata == NULL)
2040 {
2041 uschar *error;
2042 switch (error_num)
2043 {
2044 case HOST_NOT_FOUND: error = US"HOST_NOT_FOUND"; break;
2045 case TRY_AGAIN: error = US"TRY_AGAIN"; break;
2046 case NO_RECOVERY: error = US"NO_RECOVERY"; break;
2047 case NO_DATA: error = US"NO_DATA"; break;
2048 #if NO_DATA != NO_ADDRESS
2049 case NO_ADDRESS: error = US"NO_ADDRESS"; break;
2050 #endif
2051 default: error = US"?"; break;
2052 }
2053
2054 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("%s returned %d (%s)\n",
2055 #if HAVE_IPV6
2056 #if HAVE_GETIPNODEBYNAME
2057 (af == AF_INET6)? "getipnodebyname(af=inet6)" : "getipnodebyname(af=inet)",
2058 #else
2059 (af == AF_INET6)? "gethostbyname2(af=inet6)" : "gethostbyname2(af=inet)",
2060 #endif
2061 #else
2062 "gethostbyname",
2063 #endif
2064 error_num, error);
2065
2066 if (error_num == TRY_AGAIN || error_num == NO_RECOVERY) temp_error = TRUE;
2067 continue;
2068 }
2069 if ((hostdata->h_addr_list)[0] == NULL) continue;
2070
2071 /* Replace the name with the fully qualified one if necessary, and fill in
2072 the fully_qualified_name pointer. */
2073
2074 if (hostdata->h_name[0] != 0 &&
2075 Ustrcmp(host->name, hostdata->h_name) != 0)
2076 host->name = string_copy_dnsdomain(US hostdata->h_name);
2077 if (fully_qualified_name != NULL) *fully_qualified_name = host->name;
2078
2079 /* Get the list of addresses. IPv4 and IPv6 addresses can be distinguished
2080 by their different lengths. Scan the list, ignoring any that are to be
2081 ignored, and build a chain from the rest. */
2082
2083 ipv4_addr = hostdata->h_length == sizeof(struct in_addr);
2084
2085 for (uschar ** addrlist = USS hostdata->h_addr_list; *addrlist; addrlist++)
2086 {
2087 uschar *text_address =
2088 host_ntoa(ipv4_addr? AF_INET:AF_INET6, *addrlist, NULL, NULL);
2089
2090 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
2091 if (ignore_target_hosts != NULL &&
2092 verify_check_this_host(&ignore_target_hosts, NULL, host->name,
2093 text_address, NULL) == OK)
2094 {
2095 DEBUG(D_host_lookup)
2096 debug_printf("ignored host %s [%s]\n", host->name, text_address);
2097 continue;
2098 }
2099 #endif
2100
2101 /* If this is the first address, last == NULL and we put the data in the
2102 original block. */
2103
2104 if (last == NULL)
2105 {
2106 host->address = text_address;
2107 host->port = PORT_NONE;
2108 host->status = hstatus_unknown;
2109 host->why = hwhy_unknown;
2110 host->dnssec = DS_UNK;
2111 last = host;
2112 }
2113
2114 /* Else add further host item blocks for any other addresses, keeping
2115 the order. */
2116
2117 else
2118 {
2119 host_item *next = store_get(sizeof(host_item), FALSE);
2120 next->name = host->name;
2121 next->mx = host->mx;
2122 next->address = text_address;
2123 next->port = PORT_NONE;
2124 next->status = hstatus_unknown;
2125 next->why = hwhy_unknown;
2126 next->dnssec = DS_UNK;
2127 next->last_try = 0;
2128 next->next = last->next;
2129 last->next = next;
2130 last = next;
2131 }
2132 }
2133 }
2134
2135 /* If no hosts were found, the address field in the original host block will be
2136 NULL. If temp_error is set, at least one of the lookups gave a temporary error,
2137 so we pass that back. */
2138
2139 if (host->address == NULL)
2140 {
2141 uschar *msg =
2142 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
2143 (message_id[0] == 0 && smtp_in != NULL)?
2144 string_sprintf("no IP address found for host %s (during %s)", host->name,
2145 smtp_get_connection_info()) :
2146 #endif
2147 string_sprintf("no IP address found for host %s", host->name);
2148
2149 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("%s\n", msg);
2150 if (temp_error) goto RETURN_AGAIN;
2151 if (host_checking || !f.log_testing_mode)
2152 log_write(L_host_lookup_failed, LOG_MAIN, "%s", msg);
2153 return HOST_FIND_FAILED;
2154 }
2155
2156 /* Remove any duplicate IP addresses, then check to see if this is the local
2157 host if required. */
2158
2159 host_remove_duplicates(host, &last);
2160 yield = local_host_check?
2161 host_scan_for_local_hosts(host, &last, NULL) : HOST_FOUND;
2162
2163 HDEBUG(D_host_lookup)
2164 {
2165 if (fully_qualified_name)
2166 debug_printf("fully qualified name = %s\n", *fully_qualified_name);
2167 debug_printf("%s looked up these IP addresses:\n",
2168 #if HAVE_IPV6
2169 #if HAVE_GETIPNODEBYNAME
2170 "getipnodebyname"
2171 #else
2172 "gethostbyname2"
2173 #endif
2174 #else
2175 "gethostbyname"
2176 #endif
2177 );
2178 for (const host_item * h = host; h != last->next; h = h->next)
2179 debug_printf(" name=%s address=%s\n", h->name,
2180 h->address ? h->address : US"<null>");
2181 }
2182
2183 /* Return the found status. */
2184
2185 return yield;
2186
2187 /* Handle the case when there is a temporary error. If the name matches
2188 dns_again_means_nonexist, return permanent rather than temporary failure. */
2189
2190 RETURN_AGAIN:
2191 {
2192 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
2193 int rc;
2194 const uschar *save = deliver_domain;
2195 deliver_domain = host->name; /* set $domain */
2196 rc = match_isinlist(host->name, CUSS &dns_again_means_nonexist, 0, NULL, NULL,
2197 MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL);
2198 deliver_domain = save;
2199 if (rc == OK)
2200 {
2201 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("%s is in dns_again_means_nonexist: "
2202 "returning HOST_FIND_FAILED\n", host->name);
2203 return HOST_FIND_FAILED;
2204 }
2205 #endif
2206 return HOST_FIND_AGAIN;
2207 }
2208 }
2209
2210
2211
2212 /*************************************************
2213 * Fill in a host address from the DNS *
2214 *************************************************/
2215
2216 /* Given a host item, with its name, port and mx fields set, and its address
2217 field set to NULL, fill in its IP address from the DNS. If it is multi-homed,
2218 create additional host items for the additional addresses, copying all the
2219 other fields, and randomizing the order.
2220
2221 On IPv6 systems, AAAA records are sought first, then A records.
2222
2223 The host name may be changed if the DNS returns a different name - e.g. fully
2224 qualified or changed via CNAME. If fully_qualified_name is not NULL, dns_lookup
2225 ensures that it points to the fully qualified name. However, this is the fully
2226 qualified version of the original name; if a CNAME is involved, the actual
2227 canonical host name may be different again, and so we get it directly from the
2228 relevant RR. Note that we do NOT change the mx field of the host item in this
2229 function as it may be called to set the addresses of hosts taken from MX
2230 records.
2231
2232 Arguments:
2233 host points to the host item we're filling in
2234 lastptr points to pointer to last host item in a chain of
2235 host items (may be updated if host is last and gets
2236 extended because multihomed)
2237 ignore_target_hosts list of hosts to ignore
2238 allow_ip if TRUE, recognize an IP address and return it
2239 fully_qualified_name if not NULL, return fully qualified name here if
2240 the contents are different (i.e. it must be preset
2241 to something)
2242 dnssec_request if TRUE request the AD bit
2243 dnssec_require if TRUE require the AD bit
2244 whichrrs select ipv4, ipv6 results
2245
2246 Returns: HOST_FIND_FAILED couldn't find A record
2247 HOST_FIND_AGAIN try again later
2248 HOST_FIND_SECURITY dnssec required but not acheived
2249 HOST_FOUND found AAAA and/or A record(s)
2250 HOST_IGNORED found, but all IPs ignored
2251 */
2252
2253 static int
2254 set_address_from_dns(host_item *host, host_item **lastptr,
2255 const uschar *ignore_target_hosts, BOOL allow_ip,
2256 const uschar **fully_qualified_name,
2257 BOOL dnssec_request, BOOL dnssec_require, int whichrrs)
2258 {
2259 host_item *thishostlast = NULL; /* Indicates not yet filled in anything */
2260 BOOL v6_find_again = FALSE;
2261 BOOL dnssec_fail = FALSE;
2262 int i;
2263
2264 /* If allow_ip is set, a name which is an IP address returns that value
2265 as its address. This is used for MX records when allow_mx_to_ip is set, for
2266 those sites that feel they have to flaunt the RFC rules. */
2267
2268 if (allow_ip && string_is_ip_address(host->name, NULL) != 0)
2269 {
2270 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
2271 if ( ignore_target_hosts
2272 && verify_check_this_host(&ignore_target_hosts, NULL, host->name,
2273 host->name, NULL) == OK)
2274 return HOST_IGNORED;
2275 #endif
2276
2277 host->address = host->name;
2278 return HOST_FOUND;
2279 }
2280
2281 /* On an IPv6 system, unless IPv6 is disabled, go round the loop up to twice,
2282 looking for AAAA records the first time. However, unless doing standalone
2283 testing, we force an IPv4 lookup if the domain matches dns_ipv4_lookup global.
2284 On an IPv4 system, go round the loop once only, looking only for A records. */
2285
2286 #if HAVE_IPV6
2287 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
2288 if ( disable_ipv6
2289 || !(whichrrs & HOST_FIND_BY_AAAA)
2290 || (dns_ipv4_lookup
2291 && match_isinlist(host->name, CUSS &dns_ipv4_lookup, 0, NULL, NULL,
2292 MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL) == OK)
2293 )
2294 i = 0; /* look up A records only */
2295 else
2296 #endif /* STAND_ALONE */
2297
2298 i = 1; /* look up AAAA and A records */
2299
2300 /* The IPv4 world */
2301
2302 #else /* HAVE_IPV6 */
2303 i = 0; /* look up A records only */
2304 #endif /* HAVE_IPV6 */
2305
2306 for (; i >= 0; i--)
2307 {
2308 static int types[] = { T_A, T_AAAA };
2309 int type = types[i];
2310 int randoffset = i == (whichrrs & HOST_FIND_IPV4_FIRST ? 1 : 0)
2311 ? 500 : 0; /* Ensures v6/4 sort order */
2312 dns_answer * dnsa = store_get_dns_answer();
2313 dns_scan dnss;
2314
2315 int rc = dns_lookup_timerwrap(dnsa, host->name, type, fully_qualified_name);
2316 lookup_dnssec_authenticated = !dnssec_request ? NULL
2317 : dns_is_secure(dnsa) ? US"yes" : US"no";
2318
2319 DEBUG(D_dns)
2320 if ( (dnssec_request || dnssec_require)
2321 && !dns_is_secure(dnsa)
2322 && dns_is_aa(dnsa)
2323 )
2324 debug_printf("DNS lookup of %.256s (A/AAAA) requested AD, but got AA\n", host->name);
2325
2326 /* We want to return HOST_FIND_AGAIN if one of the A or AAAA lookups
2327 fails or times out, but not if another one succeeds. (In the early
2328 IPv6 days there are name servers that always fail on AAAA, but are happy
2329 to give out an A record. We want to proceed with that A record.) */
2330
2331 if (rc != DNS_SUCCEED)
2332 {
2333 if (i == 0) /* Just tried for an A record, i.e. end of loop */
2334 {
2335 if (host->address != NULL) return HOST_FOUND; /* AAAA was found */
2336 if (rc == DNS_AGAIN || rc == DNS_FAIL || v6_find_again)
2337 return HOST_FIND_AGAIN;
2338 return HOST_FIND_FAILED; /* DNS_NOMATCH or DNS_NODATA */
2339 }
2340
2341 /* Tried for an AAAA record: remember if this was a temporary
2342 error, and look for the next record type. */
2343
2344 if (rc != DNS_NOMATCH && rc != DNS_NODATA) v6_find_again = TRUE;
2345 continue;
2346 }
2347
2348 if (dnssec_request)
2349 {
2350 if (dns_is_secure(dnsa))
2351 {
2352 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("%s A DNSSEC\n", host->name);
2353 if (host->dnssec == DS_UNK) /* set in host_find_bydns() */
2354 host->dnssec = DS_YES;
2355 }
2356 else
2357 {
2358 if (dnssec_require)
2359 {
2360 dnssec_fail = TRUE;
2361 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("dnssec fail on %s for %.256s",
2362 i>0 ? "AAAA" : "A", host->name);
2363 continue;
2364 }
2365 if (host->dnssec == DS_YES) /* set in host_find_bydns() */
2366 {
2367 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("%s A cancel DNSSEC\n", host->name);
2368 host->dnssec = DS_NO;
2369 lookup_dnssec_authenticated = US"no";
2370 }
2371 }
2372 }
2373
2374 /* Lookup succeeded: fill in the given host item with the first non-ignored
2375 address found; create additional items for any others. A single A6 record
2376 may generate more than one address. The lookup had a chance to update the
2377 fqdn; we do not want any later times round the loop to do so. */
2378
2379 fully_qualified_name = NULL;
2380
2381 for (dns_record * rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_ANSWERS);
2382 rr;
2383 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT)) if (rr->type == type)
2384 {
2385 dns_address * da = dns_address_from_rr(dnsa, rr);
2386
2387 DEBUG(D_host_lookup)
2388 if (!da) debug_printf("no addresses extracted from A6 RR for %s\n",
2389 host->name);
2390
2391 /* This loop runs only once for A and AAAA records, but may run
2392 several times for an A6 record that generated multiple addresses. */
2393
2394 for (; da; da = da->next)
2395 {
2396 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
2397 if (ignore_target_hosts != NULL &&
2398 verify_check_this_host(&ignore_target_hosts, NULL,
2399 host->name, da->address, NULL) == OK)
2400 {
2401 DEBUG(D_host_lookup)
2402 debug_printf("ignored host %s [%s]\n", host->name, da->address);
2403 continue;
2404 }
2405 #endif
2406
2407 /* If this is the first address, stick it in the given host block,
2408 and change the name if the returned RR has a different name. */
2409
2410 if (thishostlast == NULL)
2411 {
2412 if (strcmpic(host->name, rr->name) != 0)
2413 host->name = string_copy_dnsdomain(rr->name);
2414 host->address = da->address;
2415 host->sort_key = host->mx * 1000 + random_number(500) + randoffset;
2416 host->status = hstatus_unknown;
2417 host->why = hwhy_unknown;
2418 thishostlast = host;
2419 }
2420
2421 /* Not the first address. Check for, and ignore, duplicates. Then
2422 insert in the chain at a random point. */
2423
2424 else
2425 {
2426 int new_sort_key;
2427 host_item *next;
2428
2429 /* End of our local chain is specified by "thishostlast". */
2430
2431 for (next = host;; next = next->next)
2432 {
2433 if (Ustrcmp(CS da->address, next->address) == 0) break;
2434 if (next == thishostlast) { next = NULL; break; }
2435 }
2436 if (next != NULL) continue; /* With loop for next address */
2437
2438 /* Not a duplicate */
2439
2440 new_sort_key = host->mx * 1000 + random_number(500) + randoffset;
2441 next = store_get(sizeof(host_item), FALSE);
2442
2443 /* New address goes first: insert the new block after the first one
2444 (so as not to disturb the original pointer) but put the new address
2445 in the original block. */
2446
2447 if (new_sort_key < host->sort_key)
2448 {
2449 *next = *host; /* Copies port */
2450 host->next = next;
2451 host->address = da->address;
2452 host->sort_key = new_sort_key;
2453 if (thishostlast == host) thishostlast = next; /* Local last */
2454 if (*lastptr == host) *lastptr = next; /* Global last */
2455 }
2456
2457 /* Otherwise scan down the addresses for this host to find the
2458 one to insert after. */
2459
2460 else
2461 {
2462 host_item *h = host;
2463 while (h != thishostlast)
2464 {
2465 if (new_sort_key < h->next->sort_key) break;
2466 h = h->next;
2467 }
2468 *next = *h; /* Copies port */
2469 h->next = next;
2470 next->address = da->address;
2471 next->sort_key = new_sort_key;
2472 if (h == thishostlast) thishostlast = next; /* Local last */
2473 if (h == *lastptr) *lastptr = next; /* Global last */
2474 }
2475 }
2476 }
2477 }
2478 }
2479
2480 /* Control gets here only if the second lookup (the A record) succeeded.
2481 However, the address may not be filled in if it was ignored. */
2482
2483 return host->address
2484 ? HOST_FOUND
2485 : dnssec_fail
2486 ? HOST_FIND_SECURITY
2487 : HOST_IGNORED;
2488 }
2489
2490
2491
2492
2493 /*************************************************
2494 * Find IP addresses and host names via DNS *
2495 *************************************************/
2496
2497 /* The input is a host_item structure with the name field filled in and the
2498 address field set to NULL. This may be in a chain of other host items. The
2499 lookup may result in more than one IP address, in which case we must created
2500 new host blocks for the additional addresses, and insert them into the chain.
2501 The original name may not be fully qualified. Use the fully_qualified_name
2502 argument to return the official name, as returned by the resolver.
2503
2504 Arguments:
2505 host point to initial host item
2506 ignore_target_hosts a list of hosts to ignore
2507 whichrrs flags indicating which RRs to look for:
2508 HOST_FIND_BY_SRV => look for SRV
2509 HOST_FIND_BY_MX => look for MX
2510 HOST_FIND_BY_A => look for A
2511 HOST_FIND_BY_AAAA => look for AAAA
2512 also flags indicating how the lookup is done
2513 HOST_FIND_QUALIFY_SINGLE ) passed to the
2514 HOST_FIND_SEARCH_PARENTS ) resolver
2515 HOST_FIND_IPV4_FIRST => reverse usual result ordering
2516 HOST_FIND_IPV4_ONLY => MX results elide ipv6
2517 srv_service when SRV used, the service name
2518 srv_fail_domains DNS errors for these domains => assume nonexist
2519 mx_fail_domains DNS errors for these domains => assume nonexist
2520 dnssec_d.request => make dnssec request: domainlist
2521 dnssec_d.require => ditto and nonexist failures
2522 fully_qualified_name if not NULL, return fully-qualified name
2523 removed set TRUE if local host was removed from the list
2524
2525 Returns: HOST_FIND_FAILED Failed to find the host or domain;
2526 if there was a syntax error,
2527 host_find_failed_syntax is set.
2528 HOST_FIND_AGAIN Could not resolve at this time
2529 HOST_FIND_SECURITY dnsssec required but not acheived
2530 HOST_FOUND Host found
2531 HOST_FOUND_LOCAL The lowest MX record points to this
2532 machine, if MX records were found, or
2533 an A record that was found contains
2534 an address of the local host
2535 */
2536
2537 int
2538 host_find_bydns(host_item *host, const uschar *ignore_target_hosts, int whichrrs,
2539 uschar *srv_service, uschar *srv_fail_domains, uschar *mx_fail_domains,
2540 const dnssec_domains *dnssec_d,
2541 const uschar **fully_qualified_name, BOOL *removed)
2542 {
2543 host_item *h, *last;
2544 int rc = DNS_FAIL;
2545 int ind_type = 0;
2546 int yield;
2547 dns_answer * dnsa = store_get_dns_answer();
2548 dns_scan dnss;
2549 BOOL dnssec_require = dnssec_d
2550 && match_isinlist(host->name, CUSS &dnssec_d->require,
2551 0, NULL, NULL, MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL) == OK;
2552 BOOL dnssec_request = dnssec_require
2553 || ( dnssec_d
2554 && match_isinlist(host->name, CUSS &dnssec_d->request,
2555 0, NULL, NULL, MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL) == OK);
2556 dnssec_status_t dnssec;
2557
2558 /* Set the default fully qualified name to the incoming name, initialize the
2559 resolver if necessary, set up the relevant options, and initialize the flag
2560 that gets set for DNS syntax check errors. */
2561
2562 if (fully_qualified_name != NULL) *fully_qualified_name = host->name;
2563 dns_init((whichrrs & HOST_FIND_QUALIFY_SINGLE) != 0,
2564 (whichrrs & HOST_FIND_SEARCH_PARENTS) != 0,
2565 dnssec_request);
2566 f.host_find_failed_syntax = FALSE;
2567
2568 /* First, if requested, look for SRV records. The service name is given; we
2569 assume TCP protocol. DNS domain names are constrained to a maximum of 256
2570 characters, so the code below should be safe. */
2571
2572 if (whichrrs & HOST_FIND_BY_SRV)
2573 {
2574 gstring * g;
2575 uschar * temp_fully_qualified_name;
2576 int prefix_length;
2577
2578 g = string_fmt_append(NULL, "_%s._tcp.%n%.256s",
2579 srv_service, &prefix_length, host->name);
2580 temp_fully_qualified_name = string_from_gstring(g);
2581 ind_type = T_SRV;
2582
2583 /* Search for SRV records. If the fully qualified name is different to
2584 the input name, pass back the new original domain, without the prepended
2585 magic. */
2586
2587 dnssec = DS_UNK;
2588 lookup_dnssec_authenticated = NULL;
2589 rc = dns_lookup_timerwrap(dnsa, temp_fully_qualified_name, ind_type,
2590 CUSS &temp_fully_qualified_name);
2591
2592 DEBUG(D_dns)
2593 if ((dnssec_request || dnssec_require)
2594 && !dns_is_secure(dnsa)
2595 && dns_is_aa(dnsa))
2596 debug_printf("DNS lookup of %.256s (SRV) requested AD, but got AA\n", host->name);
2597
2598 if (dnssec_request)
2599 {
2600 if (dns_is_secure(dnsa))
2601 { dnssec = DS_YES; lookup_dnssec_authenticated = US"yes"; }
2602 else
2603 { dnssec = DS_NO; lookup_dnssec_authenticated = US"no"; }
2604 }
2605
2606 if (temp_fully_qualified_name != g->s && fully_qualified_name != NULL)
2607 *fully_qualified_name = temp_fully_qualified_name + prefix_length;
2608
2609 /* On DNS failures, we give the "try again" error unless the domain is
2610 listed as one for which we continue. */
2611
2612 if (rc == DNS_SUCCEED && dnssec_require && !dns_is_secure(dnsa))
2613 {
2614 log_write(L_host_lookup_failed, LOG_MAIN,
2615 "dnssec fail on SRV for %.256s", host->name);
2616 rc = DNS_FAIL;
2617 }
2618 if (rc == DNS_FAIL || rc == DNS_AGAIN)
2619 {
2620 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
2621 if (match_isinlist(host->name, CUSS &srv_fail_domains, 0, NULL, NULL,
2622 MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL) != OK)
2623 #endif
2624 { yield = HOST_FIND_AGAIN; goto out; }
2625 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("DNS_%s treated as DNS_NODATA "
2626 "(domain in srv_fail_domains)\n", (rc == DNS_FAIL)? "FAIL":"AGAIN");
2627 }
2628 }
2629
2630 /* If we did not find any SRV records, search the DNS for MX records, if
2631 requested to do so. If the result is DNS_NOMATCH, it means there is no such
2632 domain, and there's no point in going on to look for address records with the
2633 same domain. The result will be DNS_NODATA if the domain exists but has no MX
2634 records. On DNS failures, we give the "try again" error unless the domain is
2635 listed as one for which we continue. */
2636
2637 if (rc != DNS_SUCCEED && whichrrs & HOST_FIND_BY_MX)
2638 {
2639 ind_type = T_MX;
2640 dnssec = DS_UNK;
2641 lookup_dnssec_authenticated = NULL;
2642 rc = dns_lookup_timerwrap(dnsa, host->name, ind_type, fully_qualified_name);
2643
2644 DEBUG(D_dns)
2645 if ( (dnssec_request || dnssec_require)
2646 && !dns_is_secure(dnsa)
2647 && dns_is_aa(dnsa))
2648 debug_printf("DNS lookup of %.256s (MX) requested AD, but got AA\n", host->name);
2649
2650 if (dnssec_request)
2651 if (dns_is_secure(dnsa))
2652 {
2653 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("%s MX DNSSEC\n", host->name);
2654 dnssec = DS_YES; lookup_dnssec_authenticated = US"yes";
2655 }
2656 else
2657 {
2658 dnssec = DS_NO; lookup_dnssec_authenticated = US"no";
2659 }
2660
2661 switch (rc)
2662 {
2663 case DNS_NOMATCH:
2664 yield = HOST_FIND_FAILED; goto out;
2665
2666 case DNS_SUCCEED:
2667 if (!dnssec_require || dns_is_secure(dnsa))
2668 break;
2669 DEBUG(D_host_lookup)
2670 debug_printf("dnssec fail on MX for %.256s", host->name);
2671 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
2672 if (match_isinlist(host->name, CUSS &mx_fail_domains, 0, NULL, NULL,
2673 MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL) != OK)
2674 { yield = HOST_FIND_SECURITY; goto out; }
2675 #endif
2676 rc = DNS_FAIL;
2677 /*FALLTHROUGH*/
2678
2679 case DNS_FAIL:
2680 case DNS_AGAIN:
2681 #ifndef STAND_ALONE
2682 if (match_isinlist(host->name, CUSS &mx_fail_domains, 0, NULL, NULL,
2683 MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL) != OK)
2684 #endif
2685 { yield = HOST_FIND_AGAIN; goto out; }
2686 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("DNS_%s treated as DNS_NODATA "
2687 "(domain in mx_fail_domains)\n", (rc == DNS_FAIL)? "FAIL":"AGAIN");
2688 break;
2689 }
2690 }
2691
2692 /* If we haven't found anything yet, and we are requested to do so, try for an
2693 A or AAAA record. If we find it (or them) check to see that it isn't the local
2694 host. */
2695
2696 if (rc != DNS_SUCCEED)
2697 {
2698 if (!(whichrrs & (HOST_FIND_BY_A | HOST_FIND_BY_AAAA)))
2699 {
2700 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("Address records are not being sought\n");
2701 yield = HOST_FIND_FAILED;
2702 goto out;
2703 }
2704
2705 last = host; /* End of local chainlet */
2706 host->mx = MX_NONE;
2707 host->port = PORT_NONE;
2708 host->dnssec = DS_UNK;
2709 lookup_dnssec_authenticated = NULL;
2710 rc = set_address_from_dns(host, &last, ignore_target_hosts, FALSE,
2711 fully_qualified_name, dnssec_request, dnssec_require, whichrrs);
2712
2713 /* If one or more address records have been found, check that none of them
2714 are local. Since we know the host items all have their IP addresses
2715 inserted, host_scan_for_local_hosts() can only return HOST_FOUND or
2716 HOST_FOUND_LOCAL. We do not need to scan for duplicate IP addresses here,
2717 because set_address_from_dns() removes them. */
2718
2719 if (rc == HOST_FOUND)
2720 rc = host_scan_for_local_hosts(host, &last, removed);
2721 else
2722 if (rc == HOST_IGNORED) rc = HOST_FIND_FAILED; /* No special action */
2723
2724 DEBUG(D_host_lookup)
2725 if (host->address)
2726 {
2727 if (fully_qualified_name)
2728 debug_printf("fully qualified name = %s\n", *fully_qualified_name);
2729 for (host_item * h = host; h != last->next; h = h->next)
2730 debug_printf("%s %s mx=%d sort=%d %s\n", h->name,
2731 h->address ? h->address : US"<null>", h->mx, h->sort_key,
2732 h->status >= hstatus_unusable ? US"*" : US"");
2733 }
2734
2735 yield = rc;
2736 goto out;
2737 }
2738
2739 /* We have found one or more MX or SRV records. Sort them according to
2740 precedence. Put the data for the first one into the existing host block, and
2741 insert new host_item blocks into the chain for the remainder. For equal
2742 precedences one is supposed to randomize the order. To make this happen, the
2743 sorting is actually done on the MX value * 1000 + a random number. This is put
2744 into a host field called sort_key.
2745
2746 In the case of hosts with both IPv6 and IPv4 addresses, we want to choose the
2747 IPv6 address in preference. At this stage, we don't know what kind of address
2748 the host has. We choose a random number < 500; if later we find an A record
2749 first, we add 500 to the random number. Then for any other address records, we
2750 use random numbers in the range 0-499 for AAAA records and 500-999 for A
2751 records.
2752
2753 At this point we remove any duplicates that point to the same host, retaining
2754 only the one with the lowest precedence. We cannot yet check for precedence
2755 greater than that of the local host, because that test cannot be properly done
2756 until the addresses have been found - an MX record may point to a name for this
2757 host which is not the primary hostname. */
2758
2759 last = NULL; /* Indicates that not even the first item is filled yet */
2760
2761 for (dns_record * rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_ANSWERS);
2762 rr;
2763 rr = dns_next_rr(dnsa, &dnss, RESET_NEXT)) if (rr->type == ind_type)
2764 {
2765 int precedence, weight;
2766 int port = PORT_NONE;
2767 const uschar * s = rr->data; /* MUST be unsigned for GETSHORT */
2768 uschar data[256];
2769
2770 GETSHORT(precedence, s); /* Pointer s is advanced */
2771
2772 /* For MX records, we use a random "weight" which causes multiple records of
2773 the same precedence to sort randomly. */
2774
2775 if (ind_type == T_MX)
2776 weight = random_number(500);
2777 else
2778 {
2779 /* SRV records are specified with a port and a weight. The weight is used
2780 in a special algorithm. However, to start with, we just use it to order the
2781 records of equal priority (precedence). */
2782 GETSHORT(weight, s);
2783 GETSHORT(port, s);
2784 }
2785
2786 /* Get the name of the host pointed to. */
2787
2788 (void)dn_expand(dnsa->answer, dnsa->answer + dnsa->answerlen, s,
2789 (DN_EXPAND_ARG4_TYPE)data, sizeof(data));
2790
2791 /* Check that we haven't already got this host on the chain; if we have,
2792 keep only the lower precedence. This situation shouldn't occur, but you
2793 never know what junk might get into the DNS (and this case has been seen on
2794 more than one occasion). */
2795
2796 if (last) /* This is not the first record */
2797 {
2798 host_item *prev = NULL;
2799
2800 for (h = host; h != last->next; prev = h, h = h->next)
2801 if (strcmpic(h->name, data) == 0)
2802 {
2803 DEBUG(D_host_lookup)
2804 debug_printf("discarded duplicate host %s (MX=%d)\n", data,
2805 precedence > h->mx ? precedence : h->mx);
2806 if (precedence >= h->mx) goto NEXT_MX_RR; /* Skip greater precedence */
2807 if (h == host) /* Override first item */
2808 {
2809 h->mx = precedence;
2810 host->sort_key = precedence * 1000 + weight;
2811 goto NEXT_MX_RR;
2812 }
2813
2814 /* Unwanted host item is not the first in the chain, so we can get
2815 get rid of it by cutting it out. */
2816
2817 prev->next = h->next;
2818 if (h == last) last = prev;
2819 break;
2820 }
2821 }
2822
2823 /* If this is the first MX or SRV record, put the data into the existing host
2824 block. Otherwise, add a new block in the correct place; if it has to be
2825 before the first block, copy the first block's data to a new second block. */
2826
2827 if (!last)
2828 {
2829 host->name = string_copy_dnsdomain(data);
2830 host->address = NULL;
2831 host->port = port;
2832 host->mx = precedence;
2833 host->sort_key = precedence * 1000 + weight;
2834 host->status = hstatus_unknown;
2835 host->why = hwhy_unknown;
2836 host->dnssec = dnssec;
2837 last = host;
2838 }
2839 else
2840
2841 /* Make a new host item and seek the correct insertion place */
2842 {
2843 int sort_key = precedence * 1000 + weight;
2844 host_item *next = store_get(sizeof(host_item), FALSE);
2845 next->name = string_copy_dnsdomain(data);
2846 next->address = NULL;
2847 next->port = port;
2848 next->mx = precedence;
2849 next->sort_key = sort_key;
2850 next->status = hstatus_unknown;
2851 next->why = hwhy_unknown;
2852 next->dnssec = dnssec;
2853 next->last_try = 0;
2854
2855 /* Handle the case when we have to insert before the first item. */
2856
2857 if (sort_key < host->sort_key)
2858 {
2859 host_item htemp;
2860 htemp = *host;
2861 *host = *next;
2862 *next = htemp;
2863 host->next = next;
2864 if (last == host) last = next;
2865 }
2866 else
2867
2868 /* Else scan down the items we have inserted as part of this exercise;
2869 don't go further. */
2870 {
2871 for (h = host; h != last; h = h->next)
2872 if (sort_key < h->next->sort_key)
2873 {
2874 next->next = h->next;
2875 h->next = next;
2876 break;
2877 }
2878
2879 /* Join on after the last host item that's part of this
2880 processing if we haven't stopped sooner. */
2881
2882 if (h == last)
2883 {
2884 next->next = last->next;
2885 last->next = next;
2886 last = next;
2887 }
2888 }
2889 }
2890
2891 NEXT_MX_RR: continue;
2892 }
2893
2894 if (!last) /* No rr of correct type; give up */
2895 {
2896 yield = HOST_FIND_FAILED;
2897 goto out;
2898 }
2899
2900 /* If the list of hosts was obtained from SRV records, there are two things to
2901 do. First, if there is only one host, and it's name is ".", it means there is
2902 no SMTP service at this domain. Otherwise, we have to sort the hosts of equal
2903 priority according to their weights, using an algorithm that is defined in RFC
2904 2782. The hosts are currently sorted by priority and weight. For each priority
2905 group we have to pick off one host and put it first, and then repeat for any
2906 remaining in the same priority group. */
2907
2908 if (ind_type == T_SRV)
2909 {
2910 host_item ** pptr;
2911
2912 if (host == last && host->name[0] == 0)
2913 {
2914 DEBUG(D_host_lookup) debug_printf("the single SRV record is \".\"\n");
2915 yield = HOST_FIND_FAILED;
2916 goto out;
2917 }
2918
2919 DEBUG(D_host_lookup)
2920 {
2921 debug_printf("original ordering of hosts from SRV records:\n");
2922 for (h = host; h != last->next; h = h->next)
2923 debug_printf(" %s P=%d W=%d\n", h->name, h->mx, h->sort_key % 1000);
2924 }
2925
2926 for (pptr = &host, h = host; h != last; pptr = &h->next, h = h->next)
2927 {
2928 int sum = 0;
2929 host_item *hh;
2930
2931 /* Find the last following host that has the same precedence. At the same
2932 time, compute the sum of the weights and the running totals. These can be
2933 stored in the sort_key field. */
2934
2935 for (hh = h; hh != last; hh = hh->next)
2936 {
2937 int weight = hh->sort_key % 1000; /* was precedence * 1000 + weight */
2938 sum += weight;
2939 hh->sort_key = sum;
2940 if (hh->mx != hh->next->mx) break;
2941 }
2942
2943 /* If there's more than one host at this precedence (priority), we need to
2944 pick one to go first. */
2945
2946 if (hh != h)
2947 {
2948 host_item *hhh;
2949 host_item **ppptr;
2950 int randomizer = random_number(sum + 1);
2951
2952 for (ppptr = pptr, hhh = h;
2953 hhh != hh;
2954 ppptr = &hhh->next, hhh = hhh->next)
2955 if (hhh->sort_key >= randomizer)
2956 break;
2957
2958 /* hhh now points to the host that should go first; ppptr points to the
2959 place that points to it. Unfortunately, if the start of the minilist is
2960 the start of the entire list, we can't just swap the items over, because
2961 we must not change the value of host, since it is passed in from outside.
2962 One day, this could perhaps be changed.
2963
2964 The special case is fudged by putting the new item *second* in the chain,
2965 and then transferring the data between the first and second items. We
2966 can't just swap the first and the chosen item, because that would mean
2967 that an item with zero weight might no longer be first. */
2968
2969 if (hhh != h)
2970 {
2971 *ppptr = hhh->next; /* Cuts it out of the chain */
2972
2973 if (h == host)
2974 {
2975 host_item temp = *h;
2976 *h = *hhh;
2977 *hhh = temp;
2978 hhh->next = temp.next;
2979 h->next = hhh;
2980 }
2981 else
2982 {
2983 hhh->next = h; /* The rest of the chain follows it */
2984 *pptr = hhh; /* It takes the place of h */
2985 h = hhh; /* It's now the start of this minilist */
2986 }
2987 }
2988 }
2989
2990 /* A host has been chosen to be first at this priority and h now points
2991 to this host. There may be others at the same priority, or others at a
2992 different priority. Before we leave this host, we need to put back a sort
2993 key of the traditional MX kind, in case this host is multihomed, because
2994 the sort key is used for ordering the multiple IP addresses. We do not need
2995 to ensure that these new sort keys actually reflect the order of the hosts,
2996 however. */
2997
2998 h->sort_key = h->mx * 1000 + random_number(500);
2999 } /* Move on to the next host */
3000 }
3001
3002 /* Now we have to find IP addresses for all the hosts. We have ensured above
3003 that the names in all the host items are unique. Before release 4.61 we used to
3004 process records from the additional section in the DNS packet that returned the
3005 MX or SRV records. However, a DNS name server is free to drop any resource
3006 records from the additional section. In theory, this has always been a
3007 potential problem, but it is exacerbated by the advent of IPv6. If a host had
3008 several IPv4 addresses and some were not in the additional section, at least
3009 Exim would try the others. However, if a host had both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses
3010 and all the IPv4 (say) addresses were absent, Exim would try only for a IPv6
3011 connection, and never try an IPv4 address. When there was only IPv4
3012 connectivity, this was a disaster that did in practice occur.
3013
3014 So, from release 4.61 onwards, we always search for A and AAAA records
3015 explicitly. The names shouldn't point to CNAMES, but we use the general lookup
3016 function that handles them, just in case. If any lookup gives a soft error,
3017 change the default yield.
3018
3019 For these DNS lookups, we must disable qualify_single and search_parents;
3020 otherwise invalid host names obtained from MX or SRV records can cause trouble
3021 if they happen to match something local. */
3022
3023 yield = HOST_FIND_FAILED; /* Default yield */
3024 dns_init(FALSE, FALSE, /* Disable qualify_single and search_parents */
3025 dnssec_request || dnssec_require);
3026
3027 for (h = host; h != last->next; h = h->next)
3028 {
3029 if (h->address) continue; /* Inserted by a multihomed host */
3030
3031 rc = set_address_from_dns(h, &last, ignore_target_hosts, allow_mx_to_ip,
3032 NULL, dnssec_request, dnssec_require,
3033 whichrrs & HOST_FIND_IPV4_ONLY
3034 ? HOST_FIND_BY_A : HOST_FIND_BY_A | HOST_FIND_BY_AAAA);
3035 if (rc != HOST_FOUND)
3036 {
3037 h->status = hstatus_unusable;
3038 switch (rc)
3039 {
3040 case HOST_FIND_AGAIN: yield = rc; h->why = hwhy_deferred; break;
3041 case HOST_FIND_SECURITY: yield = rc; h->why = hwhy_insecure; break;
3042 case HOST_IGNORED: h->why = hwhy_ignored; break;
3043 default: h->why = hwhy_failed; break;
3044 }
3045 }
3046 }
3047
3048 /* Scan the list for any hosts that are marked unusable because they have
3049 been explicitly ignored, and remove them from the list, as if they did not
3050 exist. If we end up with just a single, ignored host, flatten its fields as if
3051 nothing was found. */
3052
3053 if (ignore_target_hosts)
3054 {
3055 host_item *prev = NULL;
3056 for (h = host; h != last->next; h = h->next)
3057 {
3058 REDO:
3059 if (h->why != hwhy_ignored) /* Non ignored host, just continue */
3060 prev = h;
3061 else if (prev == NULL) /* First host is ignored */
3062 {
3063 if (h != last) /* First is not last */
3064 {
3065 if (h->next == last) last = h; /* Overwrite it with next */
3066 *h = *(h->next); /* and reprocess it. */
3067 goto REDO; /* C should have redo, like Perl */
3068 }
3069 }
3070 else /* Ignored host is not first - */
3071 { /* cut it out */
3072 prev->next = h->next;
3073 if (h == last) last = prev;
3074 }
3075 }
3076
3077 if (host->why == hwhy_ignored) host->address = NULL;
3078 }
3079
3080 /* There is still one complication in the case of IPv6. Although the code above
3081 arranges that IPv6 addresses take precedence over IPv4 addresses for multihomed
3082 hosts, it doesn't do this for addresses that apply to different hosts with the
3083 same MX precedence, because the sorting on MX precedence happens first. So we
3084 have to make another pass to check for this case. We ensure that, within a
3085 single MX preference value, IPv6 addresses come first. This can separate the
3086 addresses of a multihomed host, but that should not matter. */
3087
3088 #if HAVE_IPV6
3089 if (h != last && !disable_ipv6) for (h = host; h != last; h = h->next)
3090 {
3091 host_item temp;
3092 host_item *next = h->next;
3093
3094 if ( h->mx != next->mx /* If next is different MX */
3095 || !h->address /* OR this one is unset */
3096 )
3097 continue; /* move on to next */
3098
3099 if ( whichrrs & HOST_FIND_IPV4_FIRST
3100 ? !Ustrchr(h->address, ':') /* OR this one is IPv4 */
3101 || next->address
3102 && Ustrchr(next->address, ':') /* OR next is IPv6 */
3103
3104 : Ustrchr(h->address, ':') /* OR this one is IPv6 */
3105 || next->address
3106 && !Ustrchr(next->address, ':') /* OR next is IPv4 */
3107 )
3108 continue; /* move on to next */
3109
3110 temp = *h; /* otherwise, swap */
3111 temp.next = next->next;
3112 *h = *next;
3113 h->next = next;
3114 *next = temp;
3115 }
3116 #endif
3117
3118 /* Remove any duplicate IP addresses and then scan the list of hosts for any
3119 whose IP addresses are on the local host. If any are found, all hosts with the
3120 same or higher MX values are removed. However, if the local host has the lowest
3121 numbered MX, then HOST_FOUND_LOCAL is returned. Otherwise, if at least one host
3122 with an IP address is on the list, HOST_FOUND is returned. Otherwise,
3123 HOST_FIND_FAILED is returned, but in this case do not update the yield, as it
3124 might have been set to HOST_FIND_AGAIN just above here. If not, it will already
3125 be HOST_FIND_FAILED. */
3126
3127 host_remove_duplicates(host, &last);
3128 rc = host_scan_for_local_hosts(host, &last, removed);
3129 if (rc != HOST_FIND_FAILED) yield = rc;
3130
3131 DEBUG(D_host_lookup)
3132 {
3133 if (fully_qualified_name)
3134 debug_printf("fully qualified name = %s\n", *fully_qualified_name);
3135 debug_printf("host_find_bydns yield = %s (%d); returned hosts:\n",
3136 yield == HOST_FOUND ? "HOST_FOUND" :
3137 yield == HOST_FOUND_LOCAL ? "HOST_FOUND_LOCAL" :
3138 yield == HOST_FIND_SECURITY ? "HOST_FIND_SECURITY" :
3139 yield == HOST_FIND_AGAIN ? "HOST_FIND_AGAIN" :
3140 yield == HOST_FIND_FAILED ? "HOST_FIND_FAILED" : "?",
3141 yield);
3142 for (h = host; h != last->next; h = h->next)
3143 {
3144 debug_printf(" %s %s MX=%d %s", h->name,
3145 !h->address ? US"<null>" : h->address, h->mx,
3146 h->dnssec == DS_YES ? US"DNSSEC " : US"");
3147 if (h->port != PORT_NONE) debug_printf("port=%d ", h->port);
3148 if (h->status >= hstatus_unusable) debug_printf("*");
3149 debug_printf("\n");
3150 }
3151 }
3152
3153 out:
3154
3155 dns_init(FALSE, FALSE, FALSE); /* clear the dnssec bit for getaddrbyname */
3156 return yield;
3157 }
3158
3159 /*************************************************
3160 **************************************************
3161 * Stand-alone test program *
3162 **************************************************
3163 *************************************************/
3164
3165 #ifdef STAND_ALONE
3166
3167 int main(int argc, char **cargv)
3168 {
3169 host_item h;
3170 int whichrrs = HOST_FIND_BY_MX | HOST_FIND_BY_A | HOST_FIND_BY_AAAA;
3171 BOOL byname = FALSE;
3172 BOOL qualify_single = TRUE;
3173 BOOL search_parents = FALSE;
3174 BOOL request_dnssec = FALSE;
3175 BOOL require_dnssec = FALSE;
3176 uschar **argv = USS cargv;
3177 uschar buffer[256];
3178
3179 disable_ipv6 = FALSE;
3180 primary_hostname = US"";
3181 store_pool = POOL_MAIN;
3182 debug_selector = D_host_lookup|D_interface;
3183 debug_file = stdout;
3184 debug_fd = fileno(debug_file);
3185
3186 printf("Exim stand-alone host functions test\n");
3187
3188 host_find_interfaces();
3189 debug_selector = D_host_lookup | D_dns;
3190
3191 if (argc > 1) primary_hostname = argv[1];
3192
3193 /* So that debug level changes can be done first */
3194
3195 dns_init(qualify_single, search_parents, FALSE);
3196
3197 printf("Testing host lookup\n");
3198 printf("> ");
3199 while (Ufgets(buffer, 256, stdin) != NULL)
3200 {
3201 int rc;
3202 int len = Ustrlen(buffer);
3203 uschar *fully_qualified_name;
3204
3205 while (len > 0 && isspace(buffer[len-1])) len--;
3206 buffer[len] = 0;
3207
3208 if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "q") == 0) break;
3209
3210 if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "byname") == 0) byname = TRUE;
3211 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "no_byname") == 0) byname = FALSE;
3212 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "a_only") == 0) whichrrs = HOST_FIND_BY_A | HOST_FIND_BY_AAAA;
3213 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "mx_only") == 0) whichrrs = HOST_FIND_BY_MX;
3214 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "srv_only") == 0) whichrrs = HOST_FIND_BY_SRV;
3215 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "srv+a") == 0)
3216 whichrrs = HOST_FIND_BY_SRV | HOST_FIND_BY_A | HOST_FIND_BY_AAAA;
3217 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "srv+mx") == 0)
3218 whichrrs = HOST_FIND_BY_SRV | HOST_FIND_BY_MX;
3219 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "srv+mx+a") == 0)
3220 whichrrs = HOST_FIND_BY_SRV | HOST_FIND_BY_MX | HOST_FIND_BY_A | HOST_FIND_BY_AAAA;
3221 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "qualify_single") == 0) qualify_single = TRUE;
3222 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "no_qualify_single") == 0) qualify_single = FALSE;
3223 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "search_parents") == 0) search_parents = TRUE;
3224 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "no_search_parents") == 0) search_parents = FALSE;
3225 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "request_dnssec") == 0) request_dnssec = TRUE;
3226 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "no_request_dnssec") == 0) request_dnssec = FALSE;
3227 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "require_dnssec") == 0) require_dnssec = TRUE;
3228 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "no_require_dnssec") == 0) require_dnssec = FALSE;
3229 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "test_harness") == 0)
3230 f.running_in_test_harness = !f.running_in_test_harness;
3231 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "ipv6") == 0) disable_ipv6 = !disable_ipv6;
3232 else if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "res_debug") == 0)
3233 {
3234 _res.options ^= RES_DEBUG;
3235 }
3236 else if (Ustrncmp(buffer, "retrans", 7) == 0)
3237 {
3238 (void)sscanf(CS(buffer+8), "%d", &dns_retrans);
3239 _res.retrans = dns_retrans;
3240 }
3241 else if (Ustrncmp(buffer, "retry", 5) == 0)
3242 {
3243 (void)sscanf(CS(buffer+6), "%d", &dns_retry);
3244 _res.retry = dns_retry;
3245 }
3246 else
3247 {
3248 int flags = whichrrs;
3249 dnssec_domains d;
3250
3251 h.name = buffer;
3252 h.next = NULL;
3253 h.mx = MX_NONE;
3254 h.port = PORT_NONE;
3255 h.status = hstatus_unknown;
3256 h.why = hwhy_unknown;
3257 h.address = NULL;
3258
3259 if (qualify_single) flags |= HOST_FIND_QUALIFY_SINGLE;
3260 if (search_parents) flags |= HOST_FIND_SEARCH_PARENTS;
3261
3262 d.request = request_dnssec ? &h.name : NULL;
3263 d.require = require_dnssec ? &h.name : NULL;
3264
3265 rc = byname
3266 ? host_find_byname(&h, NULL, flags, &fully_qualified_name, TRUE)
3267 : host_find_bydns(&h, NULL, flags, US"smtp", NULL, NULL,
3268 &d, &fully_qualified_name, NULL);
3269
3270 switch (rc)
3271 {
3272 case HOST_FIND_FAILED: printf("Failed\n"); break;
3273 case HOST_FIND_AGAIN: printf("Again\n"); break;
3274 case HOST_FIND_SECURITY: printf("Security\n"); break;
3275 case HOST_FOUND_LOCAL: printf("Local\n"); break;
3276 }
3277 }
3278
3279 printf("\n> ");
3280 }
3281
3282 printf("Testing host_aton\n");
3283 printf("> ");
3284 while (Ufgets(buffer, 256, stdin) != NULL)
3285 {
3286 int x[4];
3287 int len = Ustrlen(buffer);
3288
3289 while (len > 0 && isspace(buffer[len-1])) len--;
3290 buffer[len] = 0;
3291
3292 if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "q") == 0) break;
3293
3294 len = host_aton(buffer, x);
3295 printf("length = %d ", len);
3296 for (int i = 0; i < len; i++)
3297 {
3298 printf("%04x ", (x[i] >> 16) & 0xffff);
3299 printf("%04x ", x[i] & 0xffff);
3300 }
3301 printf("\n> ");
3302 }
3303
3304 printf("\n");
3305
3306 printf("Testing host_name_lookup\n");
3307 printf("> ");
3308 while (Ufgets(buffer, 256, stdin) != NULL)
3309 {
3310 int len = Ustrlen(buffer);
3311 while (len > 0 && isspace(buffer[len-1])) len--;
3312 buffer[len] = 0;
3313 if (Ustrcmp(buffer, "q") == 0) break;
3314 sender_host_address = buffer;
3315 sender_host_name = NULL;
3316 sender_host_aliases = NULL;
3317 host_lookup_msg = US"";
3318 host_lookup_failed = FALSE;
3319 if (host_name_lookup() == FAIL) /* Debug causes printing */
3320 printf("Lookup failed:%s\n", host_lookup_msg);
3321 printf("\n> ");
3322 }
3323
3324 printf("\n");
3325
3326 return 0;
3327 }
3328 #endif /* STAND_ALONE */
3329
3330 /* vi: aw ai sw=2
3331 */
3332 /* End of host.c */