TFO: early-data for client outbound via socks5 proxy
[exim.git] / src / src / ip.c
1 /*************************************************
2 * Exim - an Internet mail transport agent *
3 *************************************************/
4
5 /* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2017 */
6 /* See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. */
7
8 /* Functions for doing things with sockets. With the advent of IPv6 this has
9 got messier, so that it's worth pulling out the code into separate functions
10 that other parts of Exim can call, especially as there are now several
11 different places in the code where sockets are used. */
12
13
14 #include "exim.h"
15
16
17 /*************************************************
18 * Create a socket *
19 *************************************************/
20
21 /* Socket creation happens in a number of places so it's packaged here for
22 convenience.
23
24 Arguments:
25 type SOCK_DGRAM or SOCK_STREAM
26 af AF_INET or AF_INET6
27
28 Returns: socket number or -1 on failure
29 */
30
31 int
32 ip_socket(int type, int af)
33 {
34 int sock = socket(af, type, 0);
35 if (sock < 0)
36 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "IPv%c socket creation failed: %s",
37 (af == AF_INET6)? '6':'4', strerror(errno));
38 return sock;
39 }
40
41
42
43
44 #if HAVE_IPV6
45 /*************************************************
46 * Convert printing address to numeric *
47 *************************************************/
48
49 /* This function converts the textual form of an IP address into a numeric form
50 in an appropriate structure in an IPv6 environment. The getaddrinfo() function
51 can (apparently) handle more complicated addresses (e.g. those containing
52 scopes) than inet_pton() in some environments. We use hints to tell it that the
53 input must be a numeric address.
54
55 However, apparently some operating systems (or libraries) don't support
56 getaddrinfo(), so there is a build-time option to revert to inet_pton() (which
57 does not support scopes).
58
59 Arguments:
60 address textual form of the address
61 addr where to copy back the answer
62
63 Returns: nothing - failure provokes a panic-die
64 */
65
66 static void
67 ip_addrinfo(const uschar *address, struct sockaddr_in6 *saddr)
68 {
69 #ifdef IPV6_USE_INET_PTON
70
71 if (inet_pton(AF_INET6, CCS address, &saddr->sin6_addr) != 1)
72 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "unable to parse \"%s\" as an "
73 "IP address", address);
74 saddr->sin6_family = AF_INET6;
75
76 #else
77
78 int rc;
79 struct addrinfo hints, *res;
80 memset(&hints, 0, sizeof(hints));
81 hints.ai_family = AF_INET6;
82 hints.ai_socktype = SOCK_STREAM;
83 hints.ai_flags = AI_NUMERICHOST;
84 if ((rc = getaddrinfo(CCS address, NULL, &hints, &res)) != 0 || res == NULL)
85 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "unable to parse \"%s\" as an "
86 "IP address: %s", address,
87 (rc == 0)? "NULL result returned" : gai_strerror(rc));
88 memcpy(saddr, res->ai_addr, res->ai_addrlen);
89 freeaddrinfo(res);
90
91 #endif
92 }
93 #endif /* HAVE_IPV6 */
94
95
96 /*************************************************
97 * Bind socket to interface and port *
98 *************************************************/
99
100 int
101 ip_addr(void * sin_, int af, const uschar * address, int port)
102 {
103 union sockaddr_46 * sin = sin_;
104 memset(sin, 0, sizeof(*sin));
105
106 /* Setup code when using an IPv6 socket. The wildcard address is ":", to
107 ensure an IPv6 socket is used. */
108
109 #if HAVE_IPV6
110 if (af == AF_INET6)
111 {
112 if (address[0] == ':' && address[1] == 0)
113 {
114 sin->v6.sin6_family = AF_INET6;
115 sin->v6.sin6_addr = in6addr_any;
116 }
117 else
118 ip_addrinfo(address, &sin->v6); /* Panic-dies on error */
119 sin->v6.sin6_port = htons(port);
120 return sizeof(sin->v6);
121 }
122 else
123 #else /* HAVE_IPv6 */
124 af = af; /* Avoid compiler warning */
125 #endif /* HAVE_IPV6 */
126
127 /* Setup code when using IPv4 socket. The wildcard address is "". */
128
129 {
130 sin->v4.sin_family = AF_INET;
131 sin->v4.sin_port = htons(port);
132 sin->v4.sin_addr.s_addr = address[0] == 0
133 ? (S_ADDR_TYPE)INADDR_ANY
134 : (S_ADDR_TYPE)inet_addr(CS address);
135 return sizeof(sin->v4);
136 }
137 }
138
139
140
141 /* This function binds a socket to a local interface address and port. For a
142 wildcard IPv6 bind, the address is ":".
143
144 Arguments:
145 sock the socket
146 af AF_INET or AF_INET6 - the socket type
147 address the IP address, in text form
148 port the IP port (host order)
149
150 Returns: the result of bind()
151 */
152
153 int
154 ip_bind(int sock, int af, uschar *address, int port)
155 {
156 union sockaddr_46 sin;
157 int s_len = ip_addr(&sin, af, address, port);
158 return bind(sock, (struct sockaddr *)&sin, s_len);
159 }
160
161
162
163 /*************************************************
164 * Connect socket to remote host *
165 *************************************************/
166
167 /* This function connects a socket to a remote address and port. The socket may
168 or may not have previously been bound to a local interface. The socket is not
169 closed, even in cases of error. It is expected that the calling function, which
170 created the socket, will be the one that closes it.
171
172 Arguments:
173 sock the socket
174 af AF_INET6 or AF_INET for the socket type
175 address the remote address, in text form
176 port the remote port
177 timeout a timeout (zero for indefinite timeout)
178 fastopen non-null iff TCP_FASTOPEN can be used; may indicate early-data to
179 be sent in SYN segment
180
181 Returns: 0 on success; -1 on failure, with errno set
182 */
183
184 int
185 ip_connect(int sock, int af, const uschar *address, int port, int timeout,
186 const blob * fastopen)
187 {
188 struct sockaddr_in s_in4;
189 struct sockaddr *s_ptr;
190 int s_len, rc, save_errno;
191
192 /* For an IPv6 address, use an IPv6 sockaddr structure. */
193
194 #if HAVE_IPV6
195 struct sockaddr_in6 s_in6;
196 if (af == AF_INET6)
197 {
198 memset(&s_in6, 0, sizeof(s_in6));
199 ip_addrinfo(address, &s_in6); /* Panic-dies on error */
200 s_in6.sin6_port = htons(port);
201 s_ptr = (struct sockaddr *)&s_in6;
202 s_len = sizeof(s_in6);
203 }
204 else
205 #else /* HAVE_IPV6 */
206 af = af; /* Avoid compiler warning */
207 #endif /* HAVE_IPV6 */
208
209 /* For an IPv4 address, use an IPv4 sockaddr structure, even on a system with
210 IPv6 support. */
211
212 {
213 memset(&s_in4, 0, sizeof(s_in4));
214 s_in4.sin_family = AF_INET;
215 s_in4.sin_port = htons(port);
216 s_in4.sin_addr.s_addr = (S_ADDR_TYPE)inet_addr(CCS address);
217 s_ptr = (struct sockaddr *)&s_in4;
218 s_len = sizeof(s_in4);
219 }
220
221 /* If no connection timeout is set, just call connect() without setting a
222 timer, thereby allowing the inbuilt OS timeout to operate. */
223
224 callout_address = string_sprintf("[%s]:%d", address, port);
225 sigalrm_seen = FALSE;
226 if (timeout > 0) alarm(timeout);
227
228 #if defined(TCP_FASTOPEN) && defined(MSG_FASTOPEN)
229 /* TCP Fast Open, if the system has a cookie from a previous call to
230 this peer, can send data in the SYN packet. The peer can send data
231 before it gets our ACK of its SYN,ACK - the latter is useful for
232 the SMTP banner. Is there any usage where the former might be?
233 We might extend the ip_connect() args for data if so. For now,
234 connect in FASTOPEN mode but with zero data.
235 */
236
237 if (fastopen)
238 {
239 if ((rc = sendto(sock, fastopen->data, fastopen->len,
240 MSG_FASTOPEN | MSG_DONTWAIT, s_ptr, s_len)) < 0)
241 if (errno == EINPROGRESS) /* expected for nonready peer */
242 { /* queue the data */
243 if ( (rc = send(sock, fastopen->data, fastopen->len, 0)) < 0
244 && errno == EINPROGRESS) /* expected for nonready peer */
245 rc = 0;
246 }
247 else if(errno == EOPNOTSUPP)
248 {
249 DEBUG(D_transport)
250 debug_printf("Tried TCP Fast Open but apparently not enabled by sysctl\n");
251 goto legacy_connect;
252 }
253 }
254 else
255 #endif
256 {
257 legacy_connect:
258 if ((rc = connect(sock, s_ptr, s_len)) >= 0)
259 if ( fastopen && fastopen->data && fastopen->len
260 && send(sock, fastopen->data, fastopen->len, 0) < 0)
261 rc = -1;
262 }
263
264 save_errno = errno;
265 alarm(0);
266
267 /* There is a testing facility for simulating a connection timeout, as I
268 can't think of any other way of doing this. It converts a connection refused
269 into a timeout if the timeout is set to 999999. */
270
271 if (running_in_test_harness && save_errno == ECONNREFUSED && timeout == 999999)
272 {
273 rc = -1;
274 save_errno = EINTR;
275 sigalrm_seen = TRUE;
276 }
277
278 /* Success */
279
280 if (rc >= 0)
281 return 0;
282
283 /* A failure whose error code is "Interrupted system call" is in fact
284 an externally applied timeout if the signal handler has been run. */
285
286 errno = save_errno == EINTR && sigalrm_seen ? ETIMEDOUT : save_errno;
287 return -1;
288 }
289
290
291
292 /*************************************************
293 * Create connected socket to remote host *
294 *************************************************/
295
296 /* Create a socket and connect to host (name or number, ipv6 ok)
297 at one of port-range.
298
299 Arguments:
300 type SOCK_DGRAM or SOCK_STREAM
301 af AF_INET6 or AF_INET for the socket type
302 address the remote address, in text form
303 portlo,porthi the remote port range
304 timeout a timeout
305 connhost if not NULL, host_item filled in with connection details
306 errstr pointer for allocated string on error
307 XXX could add early-data support
308
309 Return:
310 socket fd, or -1 on failure (having allocated an error string)
311 */
312 int
313 ip_connectedsocket(int type, const uschar * hostname, int portlo, int porthi,
314 int timeout, host_item * connhost, uschar ** errstr)
315 {
316 int namelen, port;
317 host_item shost;
318 host_item *h;
319 int af = 0, fd, fd4 = -1, fd6 = -1;
320 blob * fastopen = tcp_fastopen_ok && type == SOCK_STREAM
321 ? &tcp_fastopen_nodata : NULL;
322
323 shost.next = NULL;
324 shost.address = NULL;
325 shost.port = portlo;
326 shost.mx = -1;
327
328 namelen = Ustrlen(hostname);
329
330 /* Anything enclosed in [] must be an IP address. */
331
332 if (hostname[0] == '[' &&
333 hostname[namelen - 1] == ']')
334 {
335 uschar * host = string_copyn(hostname+1, namelen-2);
336 if (string_is_ip_address(host, NULL) == 0)
337 {
338 *errstr = string_sprintf("malformed IP address \"%s\"", hostname);
339 return -1;
340 }
341 shost.name = shost.address = host;
342 }
343
344 /* Otherwise check for an unadorned IP address */
345
346 else if (string_is_ip_address(hostname, NULL) != 0)
347 shost.name = shost.address = string_copyn(hostname, namelen);
348
349 /* Otherwise lookup IP address(es) from the name */
350
351 else
352 {
353 shost.name = string_copyn(hostname, namelen);
354 if (host_find_byname(&shost, NULL, HOST_FIND_QUALIFY_SINGLE,
355 NULL, FALSE) != HOST_FOUND)
356 {
357 *errstr = string_sprintf("no IP address found for host %s", shost.name);
358 return -1;
359 }
360 }
361
362 /* Try to connect to the server - test each IP till one works */
363
364 for (h = &shost; h; h = h->next)
365 {
366 fd = Ustrchr(h->address, ':') != 0
367 ? fd6 < 0 ? (fd6 = ip_socket(type, af = AF_INET6)) : fd6
368 : fd4 < 0 ? (fd4 = ip_socket(type, af = AF_INET )) : fd4;
369
370 if (fd < 0)
371 {
372 *errstr = string_sprintf("failed to create socket: %s", strerror(errno));
373 goto bad;
374 }
375
376 for(port = portlo; port <= porthi; port++)
377 if (ip_connect(fd, af, h->address, port, timeout, fastopen) == 0)
378 {
379 if (fd != fd6) close(fd6);
380 if (fd != fd4) close(fd4);
381 if (connhost)
382 {
383 h->port = port;
384 *connhost = *h;
385 connhost->next = NULL;
386 }
387 return fd;
388 }
389 }
390
391 *errstr = string_sprintf("failed to connect to any address for %s: %s",
392 hostname, strerror(errno));
393
394 bad:
395 close(fd4); close(fd6); return -1;
396 }
397
398
399 int
400 ip_tcpsocket(const uschar * hostport, uschar ** errstr, int tmo)
401 {
402 int scan;
403 uschar hostname[256];
404 unsigned int portlow, porthigh;
405
406 /* extract host and port part */
407 scan = sscanf(CS hostport, "%255s %u-%u", hostname, &portlow, &porthigh);
408 if (scan != 3)
409 {
410 if (scan != 2)
411 {
412 *errstr = string_sprintf("invalid socket '%s'", hostport);
413 return -1;
414 }
415 porthigh = portlow;
416 }
417
418 return ip_connectedsocket(SOCK_STREAM, hostname, portlow, porthigh,
419 tmo, NULL, errstr);
420 }
421
422 int
423 ip_unixsocket(const uschar * path, uschar ** errstr)
424 {
425 int sock;
426 struct sockaddr_un server;
427
428 if ((sock = socket(AF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0)) < 0)
429 {
430 *errstr = US"can't open UNIX socket.";
431 return -1;
432 }
433
434 callout_address = string_copy(path);
435 server.sun_family = AF_UNIX;
436 Ustrncpy(server.sun_path, path, sizeof(server.sun_path)-1);
437 server.sun_path[sizeof(server.sun_path)-1] = '\0';
438 if (connect(sock, (struct sockaddr *) &server, sizeof(server)) < 0)
439 {
440 int err = errno;
441 (void)close(sock);
442 *errstr = string_sprintf("unable to connect to UNIX socket (%s): %s",
443 path, strerror(err));
444 return -1;
445 }
446 return sock;
447 }
448
449 int
450 ip_streamsocket(const uschar * spec, uschar ** errstr, int tmo)
451 {
452 return *spec == '/'
453 ? ip_unixsocket(spec, errstr) : ip_tcpsocket(spec, errstr, tmo);
454 }
455
456 /*************************************************
457 * Set keepalive on a socket *
458 *************************************************/
459
460 /* Can be called for both incoming and outgoing sockets.
461
462 Arguments:
463 sock the socket
464 address the remote host address, for failure logging
465 torf true for outgoing connection, false for incoming
466
467 Returns: nothing
468 */
469
470 void
471 ip_keepalive(int sock, const uschar *address, BOOL torf)
472 {
473 int fodder = 1;
474 if (setsockopt(sock, SOL_SOCKET, SO_KEEPALIVE,
475 US (&fodder), sizeof(fodder)) != 0)
476 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "setsockopt(SO_KEEPALIVE) on connection %s %s "
477 "failed: %s", torf? "to":"from", address, strerror(errno));
478 }
479
480
481
482 /*************************************************
483 * Receive from a socket with timeout *
484 *************************************************/
485
486 /*
487 Arguments:
488 fd the file descriptor
489 timeout the timeout, seconds
490 Returns: TRUE => ready for i/o
491 FALSE => timed out, or other error
492 */
493 BOOL
494 fd_ready(int fd, int timeout)
495 {
496 fd_set select_inset;
497 time_t start_recv = time(NULL);
498 int time_left = timeout;
499 int rc;
500
501 if (time_left <= 0)
502 {
503 errno = ETIMEDOUT;
504 return FALSE;
505 }
506 /* Wait until the socket is ready */
507
508 do
509 {
510 struct timeval tv = { .tv_sec = time_left, .tv_usec = 0 };
511 FD_ZERO (&select_inset);
512 FD_SET (fd, &select_inset);
513
514 /*DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("waiting for data on fd\n");*/
515 rc = select(fd + 1, (SELECT_ARG2_TYPE *)&select_inset, NULL, NULL, &tv);
516
517 /* If some interrupt arrived, just retry. We presume this to be rare,
518 but it can happen (e.g. the SIGUSR1 signal sent by exiwhat causes
519 select() to exit).
520
521 Aug 2004: Somebody set up a cron job that ran exiwhat every 2 minutes, making
522 the interrupt not at all rare. Since the timeout is typically more than 2
523 minutes, the effect was to block the timeout completely. To prevent this
524 happening again, we do an explicit time test and adjust the timeout
525 accordingly */
526
527 if (rc < 0 && errno == EINTR)
528 {
529 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("EINTR while waiting for socket data\n");
530
531 /* Watch out, 'continue' jumps to the condition, not to the loops top */
532 time_left = timeout - (time(NULL) - start_recv);
533 if (time_left > 0) continue;
534 }
535
536 if (rc <= 0)
537 {
538 errno = ETIMEDOUT;
539 return FALSE;
540 }
541
542 /* Checking the FD_ISSET is not enough, if we're interrupted, the
543 select_inset may still contain the 'input'. */
544 }
545 while (rc < 0 || !FD_ISSET(fd, &select_inset));
546 return TRUE;
547 }
548
549 /* The timeout is implemented using select(), and we loop to cover select()
550 getting interrupted, and the possibility of select() returning with a positive
551 result but no ready descriptor. Is this in fact possible?
552
553 Arguments:
554 sock the socket
555 buffer to read into
556 bufsize the buffer size
557 timeout the timeout
558
559 Returns: > 0 => that much data read
560 <= 0 on error or EOF; errno set - zero for EOF
561 */
562
563 int
564 ip_recv(int sock, uschar *buffer, int buffsize, int timeout)
565 {
566 int rc;
567
568 if (!fd_ready(sock, timeout))
569 return -1;
570
571 /* The socket is ready, read from it (via TLS if it's active). On EOF (i.e.
572 close down of the connection), set errno to zero; otherwise leave it alone. */
573
574 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
575 if (tls_out.active == sock)
576 rc = tls_read(FALSE, buffer, buffsize);
577 else if (tls_in.active == sock)
578 rc = tls_read(TRUE, buffer, buffsize);
579 else
580 #endif
581 rc = recv(sock, buffer, buffsize, 0);
582
583 if (rc > 0) return rc;
584 if (rc == 0) errno = 0;
585 return -1;
586 }
587
588
589
590
591 /*************************************************
592 * Lookup address family of potential socket *
593 *************************************************/
594
595 /* Given a file-descriptor, check to see if it's a socket and, if so,
596 return the address family; detects IPv4 vs IPv6. If not a socket then
597 return -1.
598
599 The value 0 is typically AF_UNSPEC, which should not be seen on a connected
600 fd. If the return is -1, the errno will be from getsockname(); probably
601 ENOTSOCK or ECONNRESET.
602
603 Arguments: socket-or-not fd
604 Returns: address family or -1
605 */
606
607 int
608 ip_get_address_family(int fd)
609 {
610 struct sockaddr_storage ss;
611 socklen_t sslen = sizeof(ss);
612
613 if (getsockname(fd, (struct sockaddr *) &ss, &sslen) < 0)
614 return -1;
615
616 return (int) ss.ss_family;
617 }
618
619
620
621
622 /*************************************************
623 * Lookup DSCP settings for a socket *
624 *************************************************/
625
626 struct dscp_name_tableentry {
627 const uschar *name;
628 int value;
629 };
630 /* Keep both of these tables sorted! */
631 static struct dscp_name_tableentry dscp_table[] = {
632 #ifdef IPTOS_DSCP_AF11
633 { CUS"af11", IPTOS_DSCP_AF11 },
634 { CUS"af12", IPTOS_DSCP_AF12 },
635 { CUS"af13", IPTOS_DSCP_AF13 },
636 { CUS"af21", IPTOS_DSCP_AF21 },
637 { CUS"af22", IPTOS_DSCP_AF22 },
638 { CUS"af23", IPTOS_DSCP_AF23 },
639 { CUS"af31", IPTOS_DSCP_AF31 },
640 { CUS"af32", IPTOS_DSCP_AF32 },
641 { CUS"af33", IPTOS_DSCP_AF33 },
642 { CUS"af41", IPTOS_DSCP_AF41 },
643 { CUS"af42", IPTOS_DSCP_AF42 },
644 { CUS"af43", IPTOS_DSCP_AF43 },
645 { CUS"ef", IPTOS_DSCP_EF },
646 #endif
647 #ifdef IPTOS_LOWCOST
648 { CUS"lowcost", IPTOS_LOWCOST },
649 #endif
650 { CUS"lowdelay", IPTOS_LOWDELAY },
651 #ifdef IPTOS_MINCOST
652 { CUS"mincost", IPTOS_MINCOST },
653 #endif
654 { CUS"reliability", IPTOS_RELIABILITY },
655 { CUS"throughput", IPTOS_THROUGHPUT }
656 };
657 static int dscp_table_size =
658 sizeof(dscp_table) / sizeof(struct dscp_name_tableentry);
659
660 /* DSCP values change by protocol family, and so do the options used for
661 setsockopt(); this utility does all the lookups. It takes an unexpanded
662 option string, expands it, strips off affix whitespace, then checks if it's
663 a number. If all of what's left is a number, then that's how the option will
664 be parsed and success/failure is a range check. If it's not all a number,
665 then it must be a supported keyword.
666
667 Arguments:
668 dscp_name a string, so far unvalidated
669 af address_family in use
670 level setsockopt level to use
671 optname setsockopt name to use
672 dscp_value value for dscp_name
673
674 Returns: TRUE if okay to setsockopt(), else FALSE
675
676 *level and *optname may be set even if FALSE is returned
677 */
678
679 BOOL
680 dscp_lookup(const uschar *dscp_name, int af,
681 int *level, int *optname, int *dscp_value)
682 {
683 uschar *dscp_lookup, *p;
684 int first, last;
685 long rawlong;
686
687 if (af == AF_INET)
688 {
689 *level = IPPROTO_IP;
690 *optname = IP_TOS;
691 }
692 #if HAVE_IPV6 && defined(IPV6_TCLASS)
693 else if (af == AF_INET6)
694 {
695 *level = IPPROTO_IPV6;
696 *optname = IPV6_TCLASS;
697 }
698 #endif
699 else
700 {
701 DEBUG(D_transport)
702 debug_printf("Unhandled address family %d in dscp_lookup()\n", af);
703 return FALSE;
704 }
705 if (!dscp_name)
706 {
707 DEBUG(D_transport)
708 debug_printf("[empty DSCP]\n");
709 return FALSE;
710 }
711 dscp_lookup = expand_string(US dscp_name);
712 if (dscp_lookup == NULL || *dscp_lookup == '\0')
713 return FALSE;
714
715 p = dscp_lookup + Ustrlen(dscp_lookup) - 1;
716 while (isspace(*p)) *p-- = '\0';
717 while (isspace(*dscp_lookup) && dscp_lookup < p) dscp_lookup++;
718 if (*dscp_lookup == '\0')
719 return FALSE;
720
721 rawlong = Ustrtol(dscp_lookup, &p, 0);
722 if (p != dscp_lookup && *p == '\0')
723 {
724 /* We have six bits available, which will end up shifted to fit in 0xFC mask.
725 RFC 2597 defines the values unshifted. */
726 if (rawlong < 0 || rawlong > 0x3F)
727 {
728 DEBUG(D_transport)
729 debug_printf("DSCP value %ld out of range, ignored.\n", rawlong);
730 return FALSE;
731 }
732 *dscp_value = rawlong << 2;
733 return TRUE;
734 }
735
736 first = 0;
737 last = dscp_table_size;
738 while (last > first)
739 {
740 int middle = (first + last)/2;
741 int c = Ustrcmp(dscp_lookup, dscp_table[middle].name);
742 if (c == 0)
743 {
744 *dscp_value = dscp_table[middle].value;
745 return TRUE;
746 }
747 else if (c > 0)
748 first = middle + 1;
749 else
750 last = middle;
751 }
752 return FALSE;
753 }
754
755 void
756 dscp_list_to_stream(FILE *stream)
757 {
758 int i;
759 for (i=0; i < dscp_table_size; ++i)
760 fprintf(stream, "%s\n", dscp_table[i].name);
761 }
762
763
764 /* End of ip.c */
765 /* vi: aw ai sw=2
766 */