tidying
[exim.git] / src / src / log.c
1 /*************************************************
2 * Exim - an Internet mail transport agent *
3 *************************************************/
4
5 /* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2016 */
6 /* See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. */
7
8 /* Functions for writing log files. The code for maintaining datestamped
9 log files was originally contributed by Tony Sheen. */
10
11
12 #include "exim.h"
13
14 #define LOG_NAME_SIZE 256
15 #define MAX_SYSLOG_LEN 870
16
17 #define LOG_MODE_FILE 1
18 #define LOG_MODE_SYSLOG 2
19
20 enum { lt_main, lt_reject, lt_panic, lt_debug };
21
22 static uschar *log_names[] = { US"main", US"reject", US"panic", US"debug" };
23
24
25
26 /*************************************************
27 * Local static variables *
28 *************************************************/
29
30 static uschar mainlog_name[LOG_NAME_SIZE];
31 static uschar rejectlog_name[LOG_NAME_SIZE];
32 static uschar debuglog_name[LOG_NAME_SIZE];
33
34 static uschar *mainlog_datestamp = NULL;
35 static uschar *rejectlog_datestamp = NULL;
36
37 static int mainlogfd = -1;
38 static int rejectlogfd = -1;
39 static ino_t mainlog_inode = 0;
40 static ino_t rejectlog_inode = 0;
41
42 static uschar *panic_save_buffer = NULL;
43 static BOOL panic_recurseflag = FALSE;
44
45 static BOOL syslog_open = FALSE;
46 static BOOL path_inspected = FALSE;
47 static int logging_mode = LOG_MODE_FILE;
48 static uschar *file_path = US"";
49
50
51 /* These should be kept in-step with the private delivery error
52 number definitions in macros.h */
53
54 static const uschar * exim_errstrings[] = {
55 US"",
56 US"unknown error",
57 US"user slash",
58 US"exist race",
59 US"not regular",
60 US"not directory",
61 US"bad ugid",
62 US"bad mode",
63 US"inode changed",
64 US"lock failed",
65 US"bad address2",
66 US"forbid pipe",
67 US"forbid file",
68 US"forbid reply",
69 US"missing pipe",
70 US"missing file",
71 US"missing reply",
72 US"bad redirect",
73 US"smtp closed",
74 US"smtp format",
75 US"spool format",
76 US"not absolute",
77 US"Exim-imposed quota",
78 US"held",
79 US"Delivery filter process failure",
80 US"Delivery add/remove header failure",
81 US"Delivery write incomplete error",
82 US"Some expansion failed",
83 US"Failed to get gid",
84 US"Failed to get uid",
85 US"Unset or non-existent transport",
86 US"MBX length mismatch",
87 US"Lookup failed routing or in smtp tpt",
88 US"Can't match format in appendfile",
89 US"Creation outside home in appendfile",
90 US"Can't check a list; lookup defer",
91 US"DNS lookup defer",
92 US"Failed to start TLS session",
93 US"Mandatory TLS session not started",
94 US"Failed to chown a file",
95 US"Failed to create a pipe",
96 US"When verifying",
97 US"When required by client",
98 US"Used internally in smtp transport",
99 US"RCPT gave 4xx error",
100 US"MAIL gave 4xx error",
101 US"DATA gave 4xx error",
102 US"Negotiation failed for proxy configured host",
103 US"Authenticator 'other' failure",
104 US"target not supporting SMTPUTF8",
105 US"",
106
107 US"Not time for routing",
108 US"Not time for local delivery",
109 US"Not time for any remote host",
110 US"Local-only delivery",
111 US"Domain in queue_domains",
112 US"Transport concurrency limit",
113 };
114
115
116 /************************************************/
117 const uschar *
118 exim_errstr(int err)
119 {
120 return errno < 0 ? exim_errstrings[-err] : CUS strerror(err);
121 }
122
123 /*************************************************
124 * Write to syslog *
125 *************************************************/
126
127 /* The given string is split into sections according to length, or at embedded
128 newlines, and syslogged as a numbered sequence if it is overlong or if there is
129 more than one line. However, if we are running in the test harness, do not do
130 anything. (The test harness doesn't use syslog - for obvious reasons - but we
131 can get here if there is a failure to open the panic log.)
132
133 Arguments:
134 priority syslog priority
135 s the string to be written
136
137 Returns: nothing
138 */
139
140 static void
141 write_syslog(int priority, uschar *s)
142 {
143 int len, pass;
144 int linecount = 0;
145
146 if (running_in_test_harness) return;
147
148 if (!syslog_timestamp) s += log_timezone? 26 : 20;
149
150 len = Ustrlen(s);
151
152 #ifndef NO_OPENLOG
153 if (!syslog_open)
154 {
155 #ifdef SYSLOG_LOG_PID
156 openlog(CS syslog_processname, LOG_PID|LOG_CONS, syslog_facility);
157 #else
158 openlog(CS syslog_processname, LOG_CONS, syslog_facility);
159 #endif
160 syslog_open = TRUE;
161 }
162 #endif
163
164 /* First do a scan through the message in order to determine how many lines
165 it is going to end up as. Then rescan to output it. */
166
167 for (pass = 0; pass < 2; pass++)
168 {
169 int i;
170 int tlen;
171 uschar *ss = s;
172 for (i = 1, tlen = len; tlen > 0; i++)
173 {
174 int plen = tlen;
175 uschar *nlptr = Ustrchr(ss, '\n');
176 if (nlptr != NULL) plen = nlptr - ss;
177 #ifndef SYSLOG_LONG_LINES
178 if (plen > MAX_SYSLOG_LEN) plen = MAX_SYSLOG_LEN;
179 #endif
180 tlen -= plen;
181 if (ss[plen] == '\n') tlen--; /* chars left */
182
183 if (pass == 0) linecount++; else
184 {
185 if (linecount == 1)
186 syslog(priority, "%.*s", plen, ss);
187 else
188 syslog(priority, "[%d%c%d] %.*s", i,
189 (ss[plen] == '\n' && tlen != 0)? '\\' : '/',
190 linecount, plen, ss);
191 }
192 ss += plen;
193 if (*ss == '\n') ss++;
194 }
195 }
196 }
197
198
199
200 /*************************************************
201 * Die tidily *
202 *************************************************/
203
204 /* This is called when Exim is dying as a result of something going wrong in
205 the logging, or after a log call with LOG_PANIC_DIE set. Optionally write a
206 message to debug_file or a stderr file, if they exist. Then, if in the middle
207 of accepting a message, throw it away tidily by calling receive_bomb_out();
208 this will attempt to send an SMTP response if appropriate. Passing NULL as the
209 first argument stops it trying to run the NOTQUIT ACL (which might try further
210 logging and thus cause problems). Otherwise, try to close down an outstanding
211 SMTP call tidily.
212
213 Arguments:
214 s1 Error message to write to debug_file and/or stderr and syslog
215 s2 Error message for any SMTP call that is in progress
216 Returns: The function does not return
217 */
218
219 static void
220 die(uschar *s1, uschar *s2)
221 {
222 if (s1 != NULL)
223 {
224 write_syslog(LOG_CRIT, s1);
225 if (debug_file != NULL) debug_printf("%s\n", s1);
226 if (log_stderr != NULL && log_stderr != debug_file)
227 fprintf(log_stderr, "%s\n", s1);
228 }
229 if (receive_call_bombout) receive_bomb_out(NULL, s2); /* does not return */
230 if (smtp_input) smtp_closedown(s2);
231 exim_exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
232 }
233
234
235
236 /*************************************************
237 * Create a log file *
238 *************************************************/
239
240 /* This function is called to create and open a log file. It may be called in a
241 subprocess when the original process is root.
242
243 Arguments:
244 name the file name
245
246 The file name has been build in a working buffer, so it is permissible to
247 overwrite it temporarily if it is necessary to create the directory.
248
249 Returns: a file descriptor, or < 0 on failure (errno set)
250 */
251
252 int
253 log_create(uschar *name)
254 {
255 int fd = Uopen(name, O_CREAT|O_APPEND|O_WRONLY, LOG_MODE);
256
257 /* If creation failed, attempt to build a log directory in case that is the
258 problem. */
259
260 if (fd < 0 && errno == ENOENT)
261 {
262 BOOL created;
263 uschar *lastslash = Ustrrchr(name, '/');
264 *lastslash = 0;
265 created = directory_make(NULL, name, LOG_DIRECTORY_MODE, FALSE);
266 DEBUG(D_any) debug_printf("%s log directory %s\n",
267 created? "created" : "failed to create", name);
268 *lastslash = '/';
269 if (created) fd = Uopen(name, O_CREAT|O_APPEND|O_WRONLY, LOG_MODE);
270 }
271
272 return fd;
273 }
274
275
276
277 /*************************************************
278 * Create a log file as the exim user *
279 *************************************************/
280
281 /* This function is called when we are root to spawn an exim:exim subprocess
282 in which we can create a log file. It must be signal-safe since it is called
283 by the usr1_handler().
284
285 Arguments:
286 name the file name
287
288 Returns: a file descriptor, or < 0 on failure (errno set)
289 */
290
291 int
292 log_create_as_exim(uschar *name)
293 {
294 pid_t pid = fork();
295 int status = 1;
296 int fd = -1;
297
298 /* In the subprocess, change uid/gid and do the creation. Return 0 from the
299 subprocess on success. If we don't check for setuid failures, then the file
300 can be created as root, so vulnerabilities which cause setuid to fail mean
301 that the Exim user can use symlinks to cause a file to be opened/created as
302 root. We always open for append, so can't nuke existing content but it would
303 still be Rather Bad. */
304
305 if (pid == 0)
306 {
307 if (setgid(exim_gid) < 0)
308 die(US"exim: setgid for log-file creation failed, aborting",
309 US"Unexpected log failure, please try later");
310 if (setuid(exim_uid) < 0)
311 die(US"exim: setuid for log-file creation failed, aborting",
312 US"Unexpected log failure, please try later");
313 _exit((log_create(name) < 0)? 1 : 0);
314 }
315
316 /* If we created a subprocess, wait for it. If it succeeded, try the open. */
317
318 while (pid > 0 && waitpid(pid, &status, 0) != pid);
319 if (status == 0) fd = Uopen(name, O_APPEND|O_WRONLY, LOG_MODE);
320
321 /* If we failed to create a subprocess, we are in a bad way. We return
322 with fd still < 0, and errno set, letting the caller handle the error. */
323
324 return fd;
325 }
326
327
328
329
330 /*************************************************
331 * Open a log file *
332 *************************************************/
333
334 /* This function opens one of a number of logs, creating the log directory if
335 it does not exist. This may be called recursively on failure, in order to open
336 the panic log.
337
338 The directory is in the static variable file_path. This is static so that it
339 the work of sorting out the path is done just once per Exim process.
340
341 Exim is normally configured to avoid running as root wherever possible, the log
342 files must be owned by the non-privileged exim user. To ensure this, first try
343 an open without O_CREAT - most of the time this will succeed. If it fails, try
344 to create the file; if running as root, this must be done in a subprocess to
345 avoid races.
346
347 Arguments:
348 fd where to return the resulting file descriptor
349 type lt_main, lt_reject, lt_panic, or lt_debug
350 tag optional tag to include in the name (only hooked up for debug)
351
352 Returns: nothing
353 */
354
355 static void
356 open_log(int *fd, int type, uschar *tag)
357 {
358 uid_t euid;
359 BOOL ok, ok2;
360 uschar buffer[LOG_NAME_SIZE];
361
362 /* The names of the log files are controlled by file_path. The panic log is
363 written to the same directory as the main and reject logs, but its name does
364 not have a datestamp. The use of datestamps is indicated by %D/%M in file_path.
365 When opening the panic log, if %D or %M is present, we remove the datestamp
366 from the generated name; if it is at the start, remove a following
367 non-alphanumeric character as well; otherwise, remove a preceding
368 non-alphanumeric character. This is definitely kludgy, but it sort of does what
369 people want, I hope. */
370
371 ok = string_format(buffer, sizeof(buffer), CS file_path, log_names[type]);
372
373 /* Save the name of the mainlog for rollover processing. Without a datestamp,
374 it gets statted to see if it has been cycled. With a datestamp, the datestamp
375 will be compared. The static slot for saving it is the same size as buffer,
376 and the text has been checked above to fit, so this use of strcpy() is OK. */
377
378 if (type == lt_main)
379 {
380 Ustrcpy(mainlog_name, buffer);
381 mainlog_datestamp = mainlog_name + string_datestamp_offset;
382 }
383
384 /* Ditto for the reject log */
385
386 else if (type == lt_reject)
387 {
388 Ustrcpy(rejectlog_name, buffer);
389 rejectlog_datestamp = rejectlog_name + string_datestamp_offset;
390 }
391
392 /* and deal with the debug log (which keeps the datestamp, but does not
393 update it) */
394
395 else if (type == lt_debug)
396 {
397 Ustrcpy(debuglog_name, buffer);
398 if (tag)
399 {
400 /* this won't change the offset of the datestamp */
401 ok2 = string_format(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "%s%s",
402 debuglog_name, tag);
403 if (ok2)
404 Ustrcpy(debuglog_name, buffer);
405 }
406 }
407
408 /* Remove any datestamp if this is the panic log. This is rare, so there's no
409 need to optimize getting the datestamp length. We remove one non-alphanumeric
410 char afterwards if at the start, otherwise one before. */
411
412 else if (string_datestamp_offset >= 0)
413 {
414 uschar *from = buffer + string_datestamp_offset;
415 uschar *to = from + string_datestamp_length;
416 if (from == buffer || from[-1] == '/')
417 {
418 if (!isalnum(*to)) to++;
419 }
420 else
421 {
422 if (!isalnum(from[-1])) from--;
423 }
424
425 /* This strcpy is ok, because we know that to is a substring of from. */
426
427 Ustrcpy(from, to);
428 }
429
430 /* If the file name is too long, it is an unrecoverable disaster */
431
432 if (!ok)
433 {
434 die(US"exim: log file path too long: aborting",
435 US"Logging failure; please try later");
436 }
437
438 /* We now have the file name. Try to open an existing file. After a successful
439 open, arrange for automatic closure on exec(), and then return. */
440
441 *fd = Uopen(buffer, O_APPEND|O_WRONLY, LOG_MODE);
442
443 if (*fd >= 0)
444 {
445 (void)fcntl(*fd, F_SETFD, fcntl(*fd, F_GETFD) | FD_CLOEXEC);
446 return;
447 }
448
449 /* Open was not successful: try creating the file. If this is a root process,
450 we must do the creating in a subprocess set to exim:exim in order to ensure
451 that the file is created with the right ownership. Otherwise, there can be a
452 race if another Exim process is trying to write to the log at the same time.
453 The use of SIGUSR1 by the exiwhat utility can provoke a lot of simultaneous
454 writing. */
455
456 euid = geteuid();
457
458 /* If we are already running as the Exim user (even if that user is root),
459 we can go ahead and create in the current process. */
460
461 if (euid == exim_uid) *fd = log_create(buffer);
462
463 /* Otherwise, if we are root, do the creation in an exim:exim subprocess. If we
464 are neither exim nor root, creation is not attempted. */
465
466 else if (euid == root_uid) *fd = log_create_as_exim(buffer);
467
468 /* If we now have an open file, set the close-on-exec flag and return. */
469
470 if (*fd >= 0)
471 {
472 (void)fcntl(*fd, F_SETFD, fcntl(*fd, F_GETFD) | FD_CLOEXEC);
473 return;
474 }
475
476 /* Creation failed. There are some circumstances in which we get here when
477 the effective uid is not root or exim, which is the problem. (For example, a
478 non-setuid binary with log_arguments set, called in certain ways.) Rather than
479 just bombing out, force the log to stderr and carry on if stderr is available.
480 */
481
482 if (euid != root_uid && euid != exim_uid && log_stderr != NULL)
483 {
484 *fd = fileno(log_stderr);
485 return;
486 }
487
488 /* Otherwise this is a disaster. This call is deliberately ONLY to the panic
489 log. If possible, save a copy of the original line that was being logged. If we
490 are recursing (can't open the panic log either), the pointer will already be
491 set. */
492
493 if (!panic_save_buffer)
494 if ((panic_save_buffer = US malloc(LOG_BUFFER_SIZE)))
495 memcpy(panic_save_buffer, log_buffer, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE);
496
497 log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Cannot open %s log file \"%s\": %s: "
498 "euid=%d egid=%d", log_names[type], buffer, strerror(errno), euid, getegid());
499 /* Never returns */
500 }
501
502
503 static void
504 unlink_log(int type)
505 {
506 if (type == lt_debug) unlink(CS debuglog_name);
507 }
508
509
510
511 /*************************************************
512 * Add configuration file info to log line *
513 *************************************************/
514
515 /* This is put in a function because it's needed twice (once for debugging,
516 once for real).
517
518 Arguments:
519 ptr pointer to the end of the line we are building
520 flags log flags
521
522 Returns: updated pointer
523 */
524
525 static uschar *
526 log_config_info(uschar *ptr, int flags)
527 {
528 Ustrcpy(ptr, "Exim configuration error");
529 ptr += 24;
530
531 if ((flags & (LOG_CONFIG_FOR & ~LOG_CONFIG)) != 0)
532 {
533 Ustrcpy(ptr, " for ");
534 return ptr + 5;
535 }
536
537 if ((flags & (LOG_CONFIG_IN & ~LOG_CONFIG)) != 0)
538 {
539 sprintf(CS ptr, " in line %d of %s", config_lineno, config_filename);
540 while (*ptr) ptr++;
541 }
542
543 Ustrcpy(ptr, ":\n ");
544 return ptr + 4;
545 }
546
547
548 /*************************************************
549 * A write() operation failed *
550 *************************************************/
551
552 /* This function is called when write() fails on anything other than the panic
553 log, which can happen if a disk gets full or a file gets too large or whatever.
554 We try to save the relevant message in the panic_save buffer before crashing
555 out.
556
557 The potential invoker should probably not call us for EINTR -1 writes. But
558 otherwise, short writes are bad as we don't do non-blocking writes to fds
559 subject to flow control. (If we do, that's new and the logic of this should
560 be reconsidered).
561
562 Arguments:
563 name the name of the log being written
564 length the string length being written
565 rc the return value from write()
566
567 Returns: does not return
568 */
569
570 static void
571 log_write_failed(uschar *name, int length, int rc)
572 {
573 int save_errno = errno;
574
575 if (!panic_save_buffer)
576 if ((panic_save_buffer = US malloc(LOG_BUFFER_SIZE)))
577 memcpy(panic_save_buffer, log_buffer, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE);
578
579 log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE, "failed to write to %s: length=%d result=%d "
580 "errno=%d (%s)", name, length, rc, save_errno,
581 (save_errno == 0)? "write incomplete" : strerror(save_errno));
582 /* Never returns */
583 }
584
585
586
587 /*************************************************
588 * Write to an fd, retrying after signals *
589 *************************************************/
590
591 /* Basic write to fd for logs, handling EINTR.
592
593 Arguments:
594 fd the fd to write to
595 buf the string to write
596 length the string length being written
597
598 Returns:
599 length actually written, persisting an errno from write()
600 */
601 ssize_t
602 write_to_fd_buf(int fd, const uschar *buf, size_t length)
603 {
604 ssize_t wrote;
605 size_t total_written = 0;
606 const uschar *p = buf;
607 size_t left = length;
608
609 while (1)
610 {
611 wrote = write(fd, p, left);
612 if (wrote == (ssize_t)-1)
613 {
614 if (errno == EINTR) continue;
615 return wrote;
616 }
617 total_written += wrote;
618 if (wrote == left)
619 break;
620 else
621 {
622 p += wrote;
623 left -= wrote;
624 }
625 }
626 return total_written;
627 }
628
629
630
631 static void
632 set_file_path(void)
633 {
634 int sep = ':'; /* Fixed separator - outside use */
635 uschar *t;
636 const uschar *tt = US LOG_FILE_PATH;
637 while ((t = string_nextinlist(&tt, &sep, log_buffer, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE)))
638 {
639 if (Ustrcmp(t, "syslog") == 0 || t[0] == 0) continue;
640 file_path = string_copy(t);
641 break;
642 }
643 }
644
645
646
647 /*************************************************
648 * Write message to log file *
649 *************************************************/
650
651 /* Exim can be configured to log to local files, or use syslog, or both. This
652 is controlled by the setting of log_file_path. The following cases are
653 recognized:
654
655 log_file_path = "" write files in the spool/log directory
656 log_file_path = "xxx" write files in the xxx directory
657 log_file_path = "syslog" write to syslog
658 log_file_path = "syslog : xxx" write to syslog and to files (any order)
659
660 The message always gets '\n' added on the end of it, since more than one
661 process may be writing to the log at once and we don't want intermingling to
662 happen in the middle of lines. To be absolutely sure of this we write the data
663 into a private buffer and then put it out in a single write() call.
664
665 The flags determine which log(s) the message is written to, or for syslogging,
666 which priority to use, and in the case of the panic log, whether the process
667 should die afterwards.
668
669 The variable really_exim is TRUE only when exim is running in privileged state
670 (i.e. not with a changed configuration or with testing options such as -brw).
671 If it is not, don't try to write to the log because permission will probably be
672 denied.
673
674 Avoid actually writing to the logs when exim is called with -bv or -bt to
675 test an address, but take other actions, such as panicing.
676
677 In Exim proper, the buffer for building the message is got at start-up, so that
678 nothing gets done if it can't be got. However, some functions that are also
679 used in utilities occasionally obey log_write calls in error situations, and it
680 is simplest to put a single malloc() here rather than put one in each utility.
681 Malloc is used directly because the store functions may call log_write().
682
683 If a message_id exists, we include it after the timestamp.
684
685 Arguments:
686 selector write to main log or LOG_INFO only if this value is zero, or if
687 its bit is set in log_selector[0]
688 flags each bit indicates some independent action:
689 LOG_SENDER add raw sender to the message
690 LOG_RECIPIENTS add raw recipients list to message
691 LOG_CONFIG add "Exim configuration error"
692 LOG_CONFIG_FOR add " for " instead of ":\n "
693 LOG_CONFIG_IN add " in line x[ of file y]"
694 LOG_MAIN write to main log or syslog LOG_INFO
695 LOG_REJECT write to reject log or syslog LOG_NOTICE
696 LOG_PANIC write to panic log or syslog LOG_ALERT
697 LOG_PANIC_DIE write to panic log or LOG_ALERT and then crash
698 format a printf() format
699 ... arguments for format
700
701 Returns: nothing
702 */
703
704 void
705 log_write(unsigned int selector, int flags, const char *format, ...)
706 {
707 uschar *ptr;
708 int length;
709 int paniclogfd;
710 ssize_t written_len;
711 va_list ap;
712
713 /* If panic_recurseflag is set, we have failed to open the panic log. This is
714 the ultimate disaster. First try to write the message to a debug file and/or
715 stderr and also to syslog. If panic_save_buffer is not NULL, it contains the
716 original log line that caused the problem. Afterwards, expire. */
717
718 if (panic_recurseflag)
719 {
720 uschar *extra = (panic_save_buffer == NULL)? US"" : panic_save_buffer;
721 if (debug_file != NULL) debug_printf("%s%s", extra, log_buffer);
722 if (log_stderr != NULL && log_stderr != debug_file)
723 fprintf(log_stderr, "%s%s", extra, log_buffer);
724 if (*extra != 0) write_syslog(LOG_CRIT, extra);
725 write_syslog(LOG_CRIT, log_buffer);
726 die(US"exim: could not open panic log - aborting: see message(s) above",
727 US"Unexpected log failure, please try later");
728 }
729
730 /* Ensure we have a buffer (see comment above); this should never be obeyed
731 when running Exim proper, only when running utilities. */
732
733 if (!log_buffer)
734 if (!(log_buffer = US malloc(LOG_BUFFER_SIZE)))
735 {
736 fprintf(stderr, "exim: failed to get store for log buffer\n");
737 exim_exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
738 }
739
740 /* If we haven't already done so, inspect the setting of log_file_path to
741 determine whether to log to files and/or to syslog. Bits in logging_mode
742 control this, and for file logging, the path must end up in file_path. This
743 variable must be in permanent store because it may be required again later in
744 the process. */
745
746 if (!path_inspected)
747 {
748 BOOL multiple = FALSE;
749 int old_pool = store_pool;
750
751 store_pool = POOL_PERM;
752
753 /* If nothing has been set, don't waste effort... the default values for the
754 statics are file_path="" and logging_mode = LOG_MODE_FILE. */
755
756 if (*log_file_path)
757 {
758 int sep = ':'; /* Fixed separator - outside use */
759 uschar *s;
760 const uschar *ss = log_file_path;
761 logging_mode = 0;
762 while ((s = string_nextinlist(&ss, &sep, log_buffer, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE)))
763 {
764 if (Ustrcmp(s, "syslog") == 0)
765 logging_mode |= LOG_MODE_SYSLOG;
766 else if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_FILE) != 0) multiple = TRUE;
767 else
768 {
769 logging_mode |= LOG_MODE_FILE;
770
771 /* If a non-empty path is given, use it */
772
773 if (*s)
774 file_path = string_copy(s);
775
776 /* If the path is empty, we want to use the first non-empty, non-
777 syslog item in LOG_FILE_PATH, if there is one, since the value of
778 log_file_path may have been set at runtime. If there is no such item,
779 use the ultimate default in the spool directory. */
780
781 else
782 set_file_path(); /* Empty item in log_file_path */
783 } /* First non-syslog item in log_file_path */
784 } /* Scan of log_file_path */
785 }
786
787 /* If no modes have been selected, it is a major disaster */
788
789 if (logging_mode == 0)
790 die(US"Neither syslog nor file logging set in log_file_path",
791 US"Unexpected logging failure");
792
793 /* Set up the ultimate default if necessary. Then revert to the old store
794 pool, and record that we've sorted out the path. */
795
796 if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_FILE) != 0 && file_path[0] == 0)
797 file_path = string_sprintf("%s/log/%%slog", spool_directory);
798 store_pool = old_pool;
799 path_inspected = TRUE;
800
801 /* If more than one file path was given, log a complaint. This recursive call
802 should work since we have now set up the routing. */
803
804 if (multiple)
805 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC,
806 "More than one path given in log_file_path: using %s", file_path);
807 }
808
809 /* If debugging, show all log entries, but don't show headers. Do it all
810 in one go so that it doesn't get split when multi-processing. */
811
812 DEBUG(D_any|D_v)
813 {
814 int i;
815 ptr = log_buffer;
816
817 Ustrcpy(ptr, "LOG:");
818 ptr += 4;
819
820 /* Show the selector that was passed into the call. */
821
822 for (i = 0; i < log_options_count; i++)
823 {
824 unsigned int bitnum = log_options[i].bit;
825 if (bitnum < BITWORDSIZE && selector == BIT(bitnum))
826 {
827 *ptr++ = ' ';
828 Ustrcpy(ptr, log_options[i].name);
829 while (*ptr) ptr++;
830 }
831 }
832
833 sprintf(CS ptr, "%s%s%s%s\n ",
834 ((flags & LOG_MAIN) != 0)? " MAIN" : "",
835 ((flags & LOG_PANIC) != 0)? " PANIC" : "",
836 ((flags & LOG_PANIC_DIE) == LOG_PANIC_DIE)? " DIE" : "",
837 ((flags & LOG_REJECT) != 0)? " REJECT" : "");
838
839 while(*ptr) ptr++;
840 if ((flags & LOG_CONFIG) != 0) ptr = log_config_info(ptr, flags);
841
842 va_start(ap, format);
843 if (!string_vformat(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer)-1, format, ap))
844 Ustrcpy(ptr, "**** log string overflowed log buffer ****");
845 va_end(ap);
846
847 while(*ptr) ptr++;
848 Ustrcat(ptr, "\n");
849 debug_printf("%s", log_buffer);
850 }
851
852 /* If no log file is specified, we are in a mess. */
853
854 if ((flags & (LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC|LOG_REJECT)) == 0)
855 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "log_write called with no log "
856 "flags set");
857
858 /* There are some weird circumstances in which logging is disabled. */
859
860 if (disable_logging)
861 {
862 DEBUG(D_any) debug_printf("log writing disabled\n");
863 return;
864 }
865
866 /* Handle disabled reject log */
867
868 if (!write_rejectlog) flags &= ~LOG_REJECT;
869
870 /* Create the main message in the log buffer. Do not include the message id
871 when called by a utility. */
872
873 ptr = log_buffer;
874 sprintf(CS ptr, "%s ", tod_stamp(tod_log));
875 while(*ptr) ptr++;
876
877 if (LOGGING(pid))
878 {
879 sprintf(CS ptr, "[%d] ", (int)getpid());
880 while (*ptr) ptr++;
881 }
882
883 if (really_exim && message_id[0] != 0)
884 {
885 sprintf(CS ptr, "%s ", message_id);
886 while(*ptr) ptr++;
887 }
888
889 if ((flags & LOG_CONFIG) != 0) ptr = log_config_info(ptr, flags);
890
891 va_start(ap, format);
892 if (!string_vformat(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer)-1, format, ap))
893 Ustrcpy(ptr, "**** log string overflowed log buffer ****\n");
894 while(*ptr) ptr++;
895 va_end(ap);
896
897 /* Add the raw, unrewritten, sender to the message if required. This is done
898 this way because it kind of fits with LOG_RECIPIENTS. */
899
900 if ((flags & LOG_SENDER) != 0 &&
901 ptr < log_buffer + LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - 10 - Ustrlen(raw_sender))
902 {
903 sprintf(CS ptr, " from <%s>", raw_sender);
904 while (*ptr) ptr++;
905 }
906
907 /* Add list of recipients to the message if required; the raw list,
908 before rewriting, was saved in raw_recipients. There may be none, if an ACL
909 discarded them all. */
910
911 if ((flags & LOG_RECIPIENTS) != 0 && ptr < log_buffer + LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - 6 &&
912 raw_recipients_count > 0)
913 {
914 int i;
915 sprintf(CS ptr, " for");
916 while (*ptr) ptr++;
917 for (i = 0; i < raw_recipients_count; i++)
918 {
919 uschar *s = raw_recipients[i];
920 if (log_buffer + LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - ptr < Ustrlen(s) + 3) break;
921 sprintf(CS ptr, " %s", s);
922 while (*ptr) ptr++;
923 }
924 }
925
926 sprintf(CS ptr, "\n");
927 while(*ptr) ptr++;
928 length = ptr - log_buffer;
929
930 /* Handle loggable errors when running a utility, or when address testing.
931 Write to log_stderr unless debugging (when it will already have been written),
932 or unless there is no log_stderr (expn called from daemon, for example). */
933
934 if (!really_exim || log_testing_mode)
935 {
936 if (debug_selector == 0 && log_stderr != NULL &&
937 (selector == 0 || (selector & log_selector[0]) != 0))
938 {
939 if (host_checking)
940 fprintf(log_stderr, "LOG: %s", CS(log_buffer + 20)); /* no timestamp */
941 else
942 fprintf(log_stderr, "%s", CS log_buffer);
943 }
944 if ((flags & LOG_PANIC_DIE) == LOG_PANIC_DIE) exim_exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
945 return;
946 }
947
948 /* Handle the main log. We know that either syslog or file logging (or both) is
949 set up. A real file gets left open during reception or delivery once it has
950 been opened, but we don't want to keep on writing to it for too long after it
951 has been renamed. Therefore, do a stat() and see if the inode has changed, and
952 if so, re-open. */
953
954 if ((flags & LOG_MAIN) != 0 &&
955 (selector == 0 || (selector & log_selector[0]) != 0))
956 {
957 if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_SYSLOG) != 0 &&
958 (syslog_duplication || (flags & (LOG_REJECT|LOG_PANIC)) == 0))
959 write_syslog(LOG_INFO, log_buffer);
960
961 if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_FILE) != 0)
962 {
963 struct stat statbuf;
964
965 /* Check for a change to the mainlog file name when datestamping is in
966 operation. This happens at midnight, at which point we want to roll over
967 the file. Closing it has the desired effect. */
968
969 if (mainlog_datestamp != NULL)
970 {
971 uschar *nowstamp = tod_stamp(string_datestamp_type);
972 if (Ustrncmp (mainlog_datestamp, nowstamp, Ustrlen(nowstamp)) != 0)
973 {
974 (void)close(mainlogfd); /* Close the file */
975 mainlogfd = -1; /* Clear the file descriptor */
976 mainlog_inode = 0; /* Unset the inode */
977 mainlog_datestamp = NULL; /* Clear the datestamp */
978 }
979 }
980
981 /* Otherwise, we want to check whether the file has been renamed by a
982 cycling script. This could be "if else", but for safety's sake, leave it as
983 "if" so that renaming the log starts a new file even when datestamping is
984 happening. */
985
986 if (mainlogfd >= 0)
987 {
988 if (Ustat(mainlog_name, &statbuf) < 0 || statbuf.st_ino != mainlog_inode)
989 {
990 (void)close(mainlogfd);
991 mainlogfd = -1;
992 mainlog_inode = 0;
993 }
994 }
995
996 /* If the log is closed, open it. Then write the line. */
997
998 if (mainlogfd < 0)
999 {
1000 open_log(&mainlogfd, lt_main, NULL); /* No return on error */
1001 if (fstat(mainlogfd, &statbuf) >= 0) mainlog_inode = statbuf.st_ino;
1002 }
1003
1004 /* Failing to write to the log is disastrous */
1005
1006 written_len = write_to_fd_buf(mainlogfd, log_buffer, length);
1007 if (written_len != length)
1008 {
1009 log_write_failed(US"main log", length, written_len);
1010 /* That function does not return */
1011 }
1012 }
1013 }
1014
1015 /* Handle the log for rejected messages. This can be globally disabled, in
1016 which case the flags are altered above. If there are any header lines (i.e. if
1017 the rejection is happening after the DATA phase), log the recipients and the
1018 headers. */
1019
1020 if ((flags & LOG_REJECT) != 0)
1021 {
1022 header_line *h;
1023
1024 if (header_list != NULL && LOGGING(rejected_header))
1025 {
1026 if (recipients_count > 0)
1027 {
1028 int i;
1029
1030 /* List the sender */
1031
1032 string_format(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer),
1033 "Envelope-from: <%s>\n", sender_address);
1034 while (*ptr) ptr++;
1035
1036 /* List up to 5 recipients */
1037
1038 string_format(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer),
1039 "Envelope-to: <%s>\n", recipients_list[0].address);
1040 while (*ptr) ptr++;
1041
1042 for (i = 1; i < recipients_count && i < 5; i++)
1043 {
1044 string_format(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer), " <%s>\n",
1045 recipients_list[i].address);
1046 while (*ptr) ptr++;
1047 }
1048
1049 if (i < recipients_count)
1050 {
1051 (void)string_format(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer),
1052 " ...\n");
1053 while (*ptr) ptr++;
1054 }
1055 }
1056
1057 /* A header with a NULL text is an unfilled in Received: header */
1058
1059 for (h = header_list; h != NULL; h = h->next)
1060 {
1061 BOOL fitted;
1062 if (h->text == NULL) continue;
1063 fitted = string_format(ptr, LOG_BUFFER_SIZE - (ptr-log_buffer),
1064 "%c %s", h->type, h->text);
1065 while(*ptr) ptr++;
1066 if (!fitted) /* Buffer is full; truncate */
1067 {
1068 ptr -= 100; /* For message and separator */
1069 if (ptr[-1] == '\n') ptr--;
1070 Ustrcpy(ptr, "\n*** truncated ***\n");
1071 while (*ptr) ptr++;
1072 break;
1073 }
1074 }
1075
1076 length = ptr - log_buffer;
1077 }
1078
1079 /* Write to syslog or to a log file */
1080
1081 if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_SYSLOG) != 0 &&
1082 (syslog_duplication || (flags & LOG_PANIC) == 0))
1083 write_syslog(LOG_NOTICE, log_buffer);
1084
1085 /* Check for a change to the rejectlog file name when datestamping is in
1086 operation. This happens at midnight, at which point we want to roll over
1087 the file. Closing it has the desired effect. */
1088
1089 if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_FILE) != 0)
1090 {
1091 struct stat statbuf;
1092
1093 if (rejectlog_datestamp != NULL)
1094 {
1095 uschar *nowstamp = tod_stamp(string_datestamp_type);
1096 if (Ustrncmp (rejectlog_datestamp, nowstamp, Ustrlen(nowstamp)) != 0)
1097 {
1098 (void)close(rejectlogfd); /* Close the file */
1099 rejectlogfd = -1; /* Clear the file descriptor */
1100 rejectlog_inode = 0; /* Unset the inode */
1101 rejectlog_datestamp = NULL; /* Clear the datestamp */
1102 }
1103 }
1104
1105 /* Otherwise, we want to check whether the file has been renamed by a
1106 cycling script. This could be "if else", but for safety's sake, leave it as
1107 "if" so that renaming the log starts a new file even when datestamping is
1108 happening. */
1109
1110 if (rejectlogfd >= 0)
1111 {
1112 if (Ustat(rejectlog_name, &statbuf) < 0 ||
1113 statbuf.st_ino != rejectlog_inode)
1114 {
1115 (void)close(rejectlogfd);
1116 rejectlogfd = -1;
1117 rejectlog_inode = 0;
1118 }
1119 }
1120
1121 /* Open the file if necessary, and write the data */
1122
1123 if (rejectlogfd < 0)
1124 {
1125 open_log(&rejectlogfd, lt_reject, NULL); /* No return on error */
1126 if (fstat(rejectlogfd, &statbuf) >= 0) rejectlog_inode = statbuf.st_ino;
1127 }
1128
1129 written_len = write_to_fd_buf(rejectlogfd, log_buffer, length);
1130 if (written_len != length)
1131 {
1132 log_write_failed(US"reject log", length, written_len);
1133 /* That function does not return */
1134 }
1135 }
1136 }
1137
1138
1139 /* Handle the panic log, which is not kept open like the others. If it fails to
1140 open, there will be a recursive call to log_write(). We detect this above and
1141 attempt to write to the system log as a last-ditch try at telling somebody. In
1142 all cases except mua_wrapper, try to write to log_stderr. */
1143
1144 if ((flags & LOG_PANIC) != 0)
1145 {
1146 if (log_stderr != NULL && log_stderr != debug_file && !mua_wrapper)
1147 fprintf(log_stderr, "%s", CS log_buffer);
1148
1149 if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_SYSLOG) != 0)
1150 {
1151 write_syslog(LOG_ALERT, log_buffer);
1152 }
1153
1154 /* If this panic logging was caused by a failure to open the main log,
1155 the original log line is in panic_save_buffer. Make an attempt to write it. */
1156
1157 if ((logging_mode & LOG_MODE_FILE) != 0)
1158 {
1159 panic_recurseflag = TRUE;
1160 open_log(&paniclogfd, lt_panic, NULL); /* Won't return on failure */
1161 panic_recurseflag = FALSE;
1162
1163 if (panic_save_buffer != NULL)
1164 {
1165 int i = write(paniclogfd, panic_save_buffer, Ustrlen(panic_save_buffer));
1166 i = i; /* compiler quietening */
1167 }
1168
1169 written_len = write_to_fd_buf(paniclogfd, log_buffer, length);
1170 if (written_len != length)
1171 {
1172 int save_errno = errno;
1173 write_syslog(LOG_CRIT, log_buffer);
1174 sprintf(CS log_buffer, "write failed on panic log: length=%d result=%d "
1175 "errno=%d (%s)", length, (int)written_len, save_errno, strerror(save_errno));
1176 write_syslog(LOG_CRIT, log_buffer);
1177 flags |= LOG_PANIC_DIE;
1178 }
1179
1180 (void)close(paniclogfd);
1181 }
1182
1183 /* Give up if the DIE flag is set */
1184
1185 if ((flags & LOG_PANIC_DIE) != LOG_PANIC)
1186 die(NULL, US"Unexpected failure, please try later");
1187 }
1188 }
1189
1190
1191
1192 /*************************************************
1193 * Close any open log files *
1194 *************************************************/
1195
1196 void
1197 log_close_all(void)
1198 {
1199 if (mainlogfd >= 0)
1200 { (void)close(mainlogfd); mainlogfd = -1; }
1201 if (rejectlogfd >= 0)
1202 { (void)close(rejectlogfd); rejectlogfd = -1; }
1203 closelog();
1204 syslog_open = FALSE;
1205 }
1206
1207
1208
1209 /*************************************************
1210 * Multi-bit set or clear *
1211 *************************************************/
1212
1213 /* These functions take a list of bit indexes (terminated by -1) and
1214 clear or set the corresponding bits in the selector.
1215
1216 Arguments:
1217 selector address of the bit string
1218 selsize number of words in the bit string
1219 bits list of bits to set
1220 */
1221
1222 void
1223 bits_clear(unsigned int *selector, size_t selsize, int *bits)
1224 {
1225 for(; *bits != -1; ++bits)
1226 BIT_CLEAR(selector, selsize, *bits);
1227 }
1228
1229 void
1230 bits_set(unsigned int *selector, size_t selsize, int *bits)
1231 {
1232 for(; *bits != -1; ++bits)
1233 BIT_SET(selector, selsize, *bits);
1234 }
1235
1236
1237
1238 /*************************************************
1239 * Decode bit settings for log/debug *
1240 *************************************************/
1241
1242 /* This function decodes a string containing bit settings in the form of +name
1243 and/or -name sequences, and sets/unsets bits in a bit string accordingly. It
1244 also recognizes a numeric setting of the form =<number>, but this is not
1245 intended for user use. It's an easy way for Exim to pass the debug settings
1246 when it is re-exec'ed.
1247
1248 The option table is a list of names and bit indexes. The index -1
1249 means "set all bits, except for those listed in notall". The notall
1250 list is terminated by -1.
1251
1252 The action taken for bad values varies depending upon why we're here.
1253 For log messages, or if the debugging is triggered from config, then we write
1254 to the log on the way out. For debug setting triggered from the command-line,
1255 we treat it as an unknown option: error message to stderr and die.
1256
1257 Arguments:
1258 selector address of the bit string
1259 selsize number of words in the bit string
1260 notall list of bits to exclude from "all"
1261 string the configured string
1262 options the table of option names
1263 count size of table
1264 which "log" or "debug"
1265 flags DEBUG_FROM_CONFIG
1266
1267 Returns: nothing on success - bomb out on failure
1268 */
1269
1270 void
1271 decode_bits(unsigned int *selector, size_t selsize, int *notall,
1272 uschar *string, bit_table *options, int count, uschar *which, int flags)
1273 {
1274 uschar *errmsg;
1275 if (string == NULL) return;
1276
1277 if (*string == '=')
1278 {
1279 char *end; /* Not uschar */
1280 memset(selector, 0, sizeof(*selector)*selsize);
1281 *selector = strtoul(CS string+1, &end, 0);
1282 if (*end == 0) return;
1283 errmsg = string_sprintf("malformed numeric %s_selector setting: %s", which,
1284 string);
1285 goto ERROR_RETURN;
1286 }
1287
1288 /* Handle symbolic setting */
1289
1290 else for(;;)
1291 {
1292 BOOL adding;
1293 uschar *s;
1294 int len;
1295 bit_table *start, *end;
1296
1297 while (isspace(*string)) string++;
1298 if (*string == 0) return;
1299
1300 if (*string != '+' && *string != '-')
1301 {
1302 errmsg = string_sprintf("malformed %s_selector setting: "
1303 "+ or - expected but found \"%s\"", which, string);
1304 goto ERROR_RETURN;
1305 }
1306
1307 adding = *string++ == '+';
1308 s = string;
1309 while (isalnum(*string) || *string == '_') string++;
1310 len = string - s;
1311
1312 start = options;
1313 end = options + count;
1314
1315 while (start < end)
1316 {
1317 bit_table *middle = start + (end - start)/2;
1318 int c = Ustrncmp(s, middle->name, len);
1319 if (c == 0)
1320 {
1321 if (middle->name[len] != 0) c = -1; else
1322 {
1323 unsigned int bit = middle->bit;
1324
1325 if (bit == -1)
1326 {
1327 if (adding)
1328 {
1329 memset(selector, -1, sizeof(*selector)*selsize);
1330 bits_clear(selector, selsize, notall);
1331 }
1332 else
1333 memset(selector, 0, sizeof(*selector)*selsize);
1334 }
1335 else if (adding)
1336 BIT_SET(selector, selsize, bit);
1337 else
1338 BIT_CLEAR(selector, selsize, bit);
1339
1340 break; /* Out of loop to match selector name */
1341 }
1342 }
1343 if (c < 0) end = middle; else start = middle + 1;
1344 } /* Loop to match selector name */
1345
1346 if (start >= end)
1347 {
1348 errmsg = string_sprintf("unknown %s_selector setting: %c%.*s", which,
1349 adding? '+' : '-', len, s);
1350 goto ERROR_RETURN;
1351 }
1352 } /* Loop for selector names */
1353
1354 /* Handle disasters */
1355
1356 ERROR_RETURN:
1357 if (Ustrcmp(which, "debug") == 0)
1358 {
1359 if (flags & DEBUG_FROM_CONFIG)
1360 {
1361 log_write(0, LOG_CONFIG|LOG_PANIC, "%s", errmsg);
1362 return;
1363 }
1364 fprintf(stderr, "exim: %s\n", errmsg);
1365 exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
1366 }
1367 else log_write(0, LOG_CONFIG|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "%s", errmsg);
1368 }
1369
1370
1371
1372 /*************************************************
1373 * Activate a debug logfile (late) *
1374 *************************************************/
1375
1376 /* Normally, debugging is activated from the command-line; it may be useful
1377 within the configuration to activate debugging later, based on certain
1378 conditions. If debugging is already in progress, we return early, no action
1379 taken (besides debug-logging that we wanted debug-logging).
1380
1381 Failures in options are not fatal but will result in paniclog entries for the
1382 misconfiguration.
1383
1384 The first use of this is in ACL logic, "control = debug/tag=foo/opts=+expand"
1385 which can be combined with conditions, etc, to activate extra logging only
1386 for certain sources. The second use is inetd wait mode debug preservation. */
1387
1388 void
1389 debug_logging_activate(uschar *tag_name, uschar *opts)
1390 {
1391 int fd = -1;
1392
1393 if (debug_file)
1394 {
1395 debug_printf("DEBUGGING ACTIVATED FROM WITHIN CONFIG.\n"
1396 "DEBUG: Tag=\"%s\" opts=\"%s\"\n", tag_name, opts ? opts : US"");
1397 return;
1398 }
1399
1400 if (tag_name != NULL && (Ustrchr(tag_name, '/') != NULL))
1401 {
1402 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "debug tag may not contain a '/' in: %s",
1403 tag_name);
1404 return;
1405 }
1406
1407 debug_selector = D_default;
1408 if (opts)
1409 decode_bits(&debug_selector, 1, debug_notall, opts,
1410 debug_options, debug_options_count, US"debug", DEBUG_FROM_CONFIG);
1411
1412 /* When activating from a transport process we may never have logged at all
1413 resulting in certain setup not having been done. Hack this for now so we
1414 do not segfault; note that nondefault log locations will not work */
1415
1416 if (!*file_path) set_file_path();
1417
1418 open_log(&fd, lt_debug, tag_name);
1419
1420 if (fd != -1)
1421 debug_file = fdopen(fd, "w");
1422 else
1423 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "unable to open debug log");
1424 }
1425
1426
1427 void
1428 debug_logging_stop(void)
1429 {
1430 if (!debug_file || !debuglog_name[0]) return;
1431
1432 debug_selector = 0;
1433 fclose(debug_file);
1434 debug_file = NULL;
1435 unlink_log(lt_debug);
1436 }
1437
1438
1439 /* End of log.c */