local_scan: align local_scan.h and docs re. store_get()
[exim.git] / src / src / os.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 #ifdef STAND_ALONE
9 # include <signal.h>
10 # include <stdio.h>
11 # include <time.h>
12 #endif
13
14 #ifndef CS
15 # define CS (char *)
16 # define US (unsigned char *)
17 #endif
18
19 /* This source file contains "default" system-dependent functions which
20 provide functionality (or lack of it) in cases where the OS-specific os.c
21 file has not. Some of them are tailored by macros defined in os.h files. */
22
23
24 #ifndef OS_RESTARTING_SIGNAL
25 /*************************************************
26 * Set up restarting signal *
27 *************************************************/
28
29 /* This function has the same functionality as the ANSI C signal() function,
30 except that it arranges that, if the signal happens during a system call, the
31 system call gets restarted. (Also, it doesn't return a result.) Different
32 versions of Unix have different defaults, and different ways of setting up a
33 restarting signal handler. If the functionality is not available, the signal
34 should be set to be ignored. This function is used only for catching SIGUSR1.
35 */
36
37 void
38 os_restarting_signal(int sig, void (*handler)(int))
39 {
40 /* Many systems have the SA_RESTART sigaction for specifying that a signal
41 should restart system calls. These include SunOS5, AIX, BSDI, IRIX, FreeBSD,
42 OSF1, Linux and HP-UX 10 (but *not* HP-UX 9). */
43
44 #ifdef SA_RESTART
45 struct sigaction act;
46 act.sa_handler = handler;
47 sigemptyset(&(act.sa_mask));
48 act.sa_flags = SA_RESTART;
49 sigaction(sig, &act, NULL);
50
51 #ifdef STAND_ALONE
52 printf("Used SA_RESTART\n");
53 #endif
54
55 /* SunOS4 and Ultrix default to non-interruptable signals, with SV_INTERRUPT
56 for making them interruptable. This seems to be a dying fashion. */
57
58 #elif defined SV_INTERRUPT
59 signal(sig, handler);
60
61 #ifdef STAND_ALONE
62 printf("Used default signal()\n");
63 #endif
64
65
66 /* If neither SA_RESTART nor SV_INTERRUPT is available we don't know how to
67 set up a restarting signal, so simply suppress the facility. */
68
69 #else
70 signal(sig, SIG_IGN);
71
72 #ifdef STAND_ALONE
73 printf("Used SIG_IGN\n");
74 #endif
75
76 #endif
77 }
78
79 #endif /* OS_RESTARTING_SIGNAL */
80
81
82 #ifndef OS_NON_RESTARTING_SIGNAL
83 /*************************************************
84 * Set up non-restarting signal *
85 *************************************************/
86
87 /* This function has the same functionality as the ANSI C signal() function,
88 except that it arranges that, if the signal happens during a system call, the
89 system call gets interrupted. (Also, it doesn't return a result.) Different
90 versions of Unix have different defaults, and different ways of setting up a
91 non-restarting signal handler. For systems for which we don't know what to do,
92 just use the normal signal() function and hope for the best. */
93
94 void
95 os_non_restarting_signal(int sig, void (*handler)(int))
96 {
97 /* Many systems have the SA_RESTART sigaction for specifying that a signal
98 should restart system calls. These include SunOS5, AIX, BSDI, IRIX, FreeBSD,
99 OSF1, Linux and HP-UX 10 (but *not* HP-UX 9). */
100
101 #ifdef SA_RESTART
102 struct sigaction act;
103 act.sa_handler = handler;
104 sigemptyset(&(act.sa_mask));
105 act.sa_flags = 0;
106 sigaction(sig, &act, NULL);
107
108 #ifdef STAND_ALONE
109 printf("Used sigaction() with flags = 0\n");
110 #endif
111
112 /* SunOS4 and Ultrix default to non-interruptable signals, with SV_INTERRUPT
113 for making them interruptable. This seems to be a dying fashion. */
114
115 #elif defined SV_INTERRUPT
116 struct sigvec sv;
117 sv.sv_handler = handler;
118 sv.sv_flags = SV_INTERRUPT;
119 sv.sv_mask = -1;
120 sigvec(sig, &sv, NULL);
121
122 #ifdef STAND_ALONE
123 printf("Used sigvec() with flags = SV_INTERRUPT\n");
124 #endif
125
126 /* If neither SA_RESTART nor SV_INTERRUPT is available we don't know how to
127 set up a restarting signal, so just use the standard signal() function. */
128
129 #else
130 signal(sig, handler);
131
132 #ifdef STAND_ALONE
133 printf("Used default signal()\n");
134 #endif
135
136 #endif
137 }
138
139 #endif /* OS_NON_RESTARTING_SIGNAL */
140
141
142
143 #ifdef STRERROR_FROM_ERRLIST
144 /*************************************************
145 * Provide strerror() for non-ANSI libraries *
146 *************************************************/
147
148 /* Some old-fashioned systems still around (e.g. SunOS4) don't have strerror()
149 in their libraries, but can provide the same facility by this simple
150 alternative function. */
151
152 char *
153 strerror(int n)
154 {
155 if (n < 0 || n >= sys_nerr) return "unknown error number";
156 return sys_errlist[n];
157 }
158 #endif /* STRERROR_FROM_ERRLIST */
159
160
161
162 #ifndef OS_STRSIGNAL
163 /*************************************************
164 * Provide strsignal() for systems without *
165 *************************************************/
166
167 /* Some systems have strsignal() to turn signal numbers into names; others
168 may have other means of doing this. This function is used for those systems
169 that have nothing. It provides a basic translation for the common standard
170 signal numbers. I've been extra cautious with the ifdef's here. Probably more
171 than is necessary... */
172
173 const char *
174 os_strsignal(const int n)
175 {
176 switch (n)
177 {
178 #ifdef SIGHUP
179 case SIGHUP: return "hangup";
180 #endif
181
182 #ifdef SIGINT
183 case SIGINT: return "interrupt";
184 #endif
185
186 #ifdef SIGQUIT
187 case SIGQUIT: return "quit";
188 #endif
189
190 #ifdef SIGILL
191 case SIGILL: return "illegal instruction";
192 #endif
193
194 #ifdef SIGTRAP
195 case SIGTRAP: return "trace trap";
196 #endif
197
198 #ifdef SIGABRT
199 case SIGABRT: return "abort";
200 #endif
201
202 #ifdef SIGEMT
203 case SIGEMT: return "EMT instruction";
204 #endif
205
206 #ifdef SIGFPE
207 case SIGFPE: return "arithmetic exception";
208 #endif
209
210 #ifdef SIGKILL
211 case SIGKILL: return "killed";
212 #endif
213
214 #ifdef SIGBUS
215 case SIGBUS: return "bus error";
216 #endif
217
218 #ifdef SIGSEGV
219 case SIGSEGV: return "segmentation fault";
220 #endif
221
222 #ifdef SIGSYS
223 case SIGSYS: return "bad system call";
224 #endif
225
226 #ifdef SIGPIPE
227 case SIGPIPE: return "broken pipe";
228 #endif
229
230 #ifdef SIGALRM
231 case SIGALRM: return "alarm";
232 #endif
233
234 #ifdef SIGTERM
235 case SIGTERM: return "terminated";
236 #endif
237
238 #ifdef SIGUSR1
239 case SIGUSR1: return "user signal 1";
240 #endif
241
242 #ifdef SIGUSR2
243 case SIGUSR2: return "user signal 2";
244 #endif
245
246 #ifdef SIGCHLD
247 case SIGCHLD: return "child stop or exit";
248 #endif
249
250 #ifdef SIGPWR
251 case SIGPWR: return "power fail/restart";
252 #endif
253
254 #ifdef SIGURG
255 case SIGURG: return "urgent condition on I/O channel";
256 #endif
257
258 #ifdef SIGSTOP
259 case SIGSTOP: return "stop";
260 #endif
261
262 #ifdef SIGTSTP
263 case SIGTSTP: return "stop from tty";
264 #endif
265
266 #ifdef SIGXCPU
267 case SIGXCPU: return "exceeded CPU limit";
268 #endif
269
270 #ifdef SIGXFSZ
271 case SIGXFSZ: return "exceeded file size limit";
272 #endif
273
274 default: return "unrecognized signal number";
275 }
276 }
277 #endif /* OS_STRSIGNAL */
278
279
280
281 #ifndef OS_STREXIT
282 /*************************************************
283 * Provide strexit() for systems without *
284 *************************************************/
285
286 /* Actually, I don't know of any system that has a strexit() function to turn
287 exit codes into text, but this function is implemented this way so that if any
288 OS does have such a thing, it could be used instead of this build-in one. */
289
290 const char *
291 os_strexit(const int n)
292 {
293 switch (n)
294 {
295 /* On systems without sysexits.h we can assume only those exit codes
296 that are given a default value in exim.h. */
297
298 #ifndef NO_SYSEXITS
299 case EX_USAGE: return "(could mean usage or syntax error)";
300 case EX_DATAERR: return "(could mean error in input data)";
301 case EX_NOINPUT: return "(could mean input data missing)";
302 case EX_NOUSER: return "(could mean user nonexistent)";
303 case EX_NOHOST: return "(could mean host nonexistent)";
304 case EX_SOFTWARE: return "(could mean internal software error)";
305 case EX_OSERR: return "(could mean internal operating system error)";
306 case EX_OSFILE: return "(could mean system file missing)";
307 case EX_IOERR: return "(could mean input/output error)";
308 case EX_PROTOCOL: return "(could mean protocol error)";
309 case EX_NOPERM: return "(could mean permission denied)";
310 #endif
311
312 case EX_EXECFAILED: return "(could mean unable to exec or command does not exist)";
313 case EX_UNAVAILABLE: return "(could mean service or program unavailable)";
314 case EX_CANTCREAT: return "(could mean can't create output file)";
315 case EX_TEMPFAIL: return "(could mean temporary error)";
316 case EX_CONFIG: return "(could mean configuration error)";
317 default: return "";
318 }
319 }
320 #endif /* OS_STREXIT */
321
322
323
324
325 /***********************************************************
326 * Load average function *
327 ***********************************************************/
328
329 /* Although every Unix seems to have a different way of getting the load
330 average, a number of them have things in common. Some common variants are
331 provided below, but if an OS has unique requirements it can be handled in
332 a specific os.c file. What is required is a function called os_getloadavg
333 which takes no arguments and passes back the load average * 1000 as an int,
334 or -1 if no data is available. */
335
336
337 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
338 /* If the OS has got a BSD getloadavg() function, life is very easy. */
339
340 #if !defined(OS_LOAD_AVERAGE) && defined(HAVE_BSD_GETLOADAVG)
341 #define OS_LOAD_AVERAGE
342
343 int
344 os_getloadavg(void)
345 {
346 double avg;
347 int loads = getloadavg (&avg, 1);
348 if (loads != 1) return -1;
349 return (int)(avg * 1000.0);
350 }
351 #endif
352 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
353
354
355
356 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
357 /* Only SunOS5 has the kstat functions as far as I know, but put the code
358 here as there is the -hal variant, and other systems might follow this road one
359 day. */
360
361 #if !defined(OS_LOAD_AVERAGE) && defined(HAVE_KSTAT)
362 #define OS_LOAD_AVERAGE
363
364 #include <kstat.h>
365
366 int
367 os_getloadavg(void)
368 {
369 int avg;
370 kstat_ctl_t *kc;
371 kstat_t *ksp;
372 kstat_named_t *kn;
373
374 if ((kc = kstat_open()) == NULL ||
375 (ksp = kstat_lookup(kc, LOAD_AVG_KSTAT_MODULE, 0, LOAD_AVG_KSTAT))
376 == NULL ||
377 kstat_read(kc, ksp, NULL) < 0 ||
378 (kn = kstat_data_lookup(ksp, LOAD_AVG_SYMBOL)) == NULL)
379 return -1;
380
381 avg = (int)(((double)(kn->LOAD_AVG_FIELD)/FSCALE) * 1000.0);
382
383 kstat_close(kc);
384 return avg;
385 }
386
387 #endif
388 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
389
390
391
392 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
393 /* Handle OS where a kernel symbol has to be read from /dev/kmem */
394
395 #if !defined(OS_LOAD_AVERAGE) && defined(HAVE_DEV_KMEM)
396 #define OS_LOAD_AVERAGE
397
398 #include <nlist.h>
399
400 static int avg_kd = -1;
401 static long avg_offset;
402
403 int
404 os_getloadavg(void)
405 {
406 LOAD_AVG_TYPE avg;
407
408 if (avg_kd < 0)
409 {
410 struct nlist nl[2];
411 nl[0].n_name = LOAD_AVG_SYMBOL;
412 nl[1].n_name = "";
413 nlist (KERNEL_PATH, nl);
414 avg_offset = (long)nl[0].n_value;
415 avg_kd = open ("/dev/kmem", 0);
416 if (avg_kd < 0) return -1;
417 (void) fcntl(avg_kd, F_SETFD, FD_CLOEXEC);
418 }
419
420 if (lseek (avg_kd, avg_offset, 0) == -1L
421 || read (avg_kd, CS (&avg), sizeof (avg)) != sizeof(avg))
422 return -1;
423
424 return (int)(((double)avg/FSCALE)*1000.0);
425 }
426
427 #endif
428 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
429
430
431
432 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
433 /* If nothing is known about this OS, then the load average facility is
434 not available. */
435
436 #ifndef OS_LOAD_AVERAGE
437
438 int
439 os_getloadavg(void)
440 {
441 return -1;
442 }
443
444 #endif
445
446 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
447
448
449
450 #if !defined FIND_RUNNING_INTERFACES
451 /*************************************************
452 * Find all the running network interfaces *
453 *************************************************/
454
455 /* Finding all the running interfaces is something that has os-dependent
456 tweaks, even in the IPv4 case, and it gets worse for IPv6, which is why this
457 code is now in the os-dependent source file. There is a common function which
458 works on most OS (except IRIX) for IPv4 interfaces, and, with some variations
459 controlled by macros, on at least one OS for IPv6 and IPv4 interfaces. On Linux
460 with IPv6, the common function is used for the IPv4 interfaces and additional
461 code used for IPv6. Consequently, the real function is called
462 os_common_find_running_interfaces() so that it can be called from the Linux
463 function. On non-Linux systems, the macro for os_find_running_interfaces just
464 calls the common function; on Linux it calls the Linux function.
465
466 This function finds the addresses of all the running interfaces on the machine.
467 A chain of blocks containing the textual form of the addresses is returned.
468
469 getifaddrs() provides a sane consistent way to query this on modern OSs,
470 otherwise fall back to a maze of twisty ioctl() calls
471
472 Arguments: none
473 Returns: a chain of ip_address_items, each pointing to a textual
474 version of an IP address, with the port field set to zero
475 */
476
477
478 #ifndef NO_FIND_INTERFACES
479
480 #ifdef HAVE_GETIFADDRS
481
482 #include <ifaddrs.h>
483
484 ip_address_item *
485 os_common_find_running_interfaces(void)
486 {
487 struct ifaddrs *ifalist = NULL;
488 ip_address_item *yield = NULL;
489 ip_address_item *last = NULL;
490 ip_address_item *next;
491
492 if (getifaddrs(&ifalist) != 0)
493 log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Unable to call getifaddrs: %d %s",
494 errno, strerror(errno));
495
496 for (struct ifaddrs * ifa = ifalist; ifa; ifa = ifa->ifa_next)
497 {
498 if (ifa->ifa_addr->sa_family != AF_INET
499 #if HAVE_IPV6
500 && ifa->ifa_addr->sa_family != AF_INET6
501 #endif /* HAVE_IPV6 */
502 )
503 continue;
504
505 if ( !(ifa->ifa_flags & IFF_UP) ) /* Only want 'UP' interfaces */
506 continue;
507
508 /* Create a data block for the address, fill in the data, and put it on the
509 chain. */
510
511 next = store_get(sizeof(ip_address_item), FALSE);
512 next->next = NULL;
513 next->port = 0;
514 (void)host_ntoa(-1, ifa->ifa_addr, next->address, NULL);
515
516 if (yield == NULL)
517 yield = last = next;
518 else
519 {
520 last->next = next;
521 last = next;
522 }
523
524 DEBUG(D_interface) debug_printf("Actual local interface address is %s (%s)\n",
525 last->address, ifa->ifa_name);
526 }
527
528 /* free the list of addresses, and return the chain of data blocks. */
529
530 freeifaddrs (ifalist);
531 return yield;
532 }
533
534 #else /* HAVE_GETIFADDRS */
535
536 /*
537 Problems:
538
539 (1) Solaris 2 has the SIOGIFNUM call to get the number of interfaces, but
540 other OS (including Solaris 1) appear not to. So just screw in a largeish
541 fixed number, defined by MAX_INTERFACES. This is in the config.h file and
542 can be changed in Local/Makefile. Unfortunately, the www addressing scheme
543 means that some hosts have a very large number of virtual interfaces. Such
544 hosts are recommended to set local_interfaces to avoid problems with this.
545
546 (2) If the standard code is run on IRIX, it does not return any alias
547 interfaces. There is special purpose code for that operating system, which
548 uses the sysctl() function. The code is in OS/os.c-IRIX, and this code isn't
549 used on that OS.
550
551 (3) Some experimental/developing OS (e.g. GNU/Hurd) do not have any means
552 of finding the interfaces. If NO_FIND_INTERFACES is set, a fudge-up is used
553 instead.
554
555 (4) Some operating systems set the IP address in what SIOCGIFCONF returns;
556 others do not, and require SIOCGIFADDR to be called to get it. For most of
557 the former, calling the latter does no harm, but it causes grief on Linux and
558 BSD systems in the case of IP aliasing, so a means of cutting it out is
559 provided.
560 */
561
562 /* If there is IPv6 support, and SIOCGLIFCONF is defined, define macros to
563 use these new, longer versions of the old IPv4 interfaces. Otherwise, define
564 the macros to use the historical versions. */
565
566 #if HAVE_IPV6 && defined SIOCGLIFCONF
567 #define V_ifconf lifconf
568 #define V_ifreq lifreq
569 #define V_GIFADDR SIOCGLIFADDR
570 #define V_GIFCONF SIOCGLIFCONF
571 #define V_GIFFLAGS SIOCGLIFFLAGS
572 #define V_ifc_buf lifc_buf
573 #define V_ifc_family lifc_family
574 #define V_ifc_flags lifc_flags
575 #define V_ifc_len lifc_len
576 #define V_ifr_addr lifr_addr
577 #define V_ifr_flags lifr_flags
578 #define V_ifr_name lifr_name
579 #define V_FAMILY_QUERY AF_UNSPEC
580 #define V_family ss_family
581 #else
582 #define V_ifconf ifconf
583 #define V_ifreq ifreq
584 #define V_GIFADDR SIOCGIFADDR
585 #define V_GIFCONF SIOCGIFCONF
586 #define V_GIFFLAGS SIOCGIFFLAGS
587 #define V_ifc_buf ifc_buf
588 #define V_ifc_family ifc_family
589 #define V_ifc_flags ifc_flags
590 #define V_ifc_len ifc_len
591 #define V_ifr_addr ifr_addr
592 #define V_ifr_flags ifr_flags
593 #define V_ifr_name ifr_name
594 #define V_family sa_family
595 #endif
596
597 /* In all cases of IPv6 support, use an IPv6 socket. Otherwise (at least on
598 Solaris 8) the call to read the flags doesn't work for IPv6 interfaces. If
599 we find we can't actually make an IPv6 socket, the code will revert to trying
600 an IPv4 socket. */
601
602 #if HAVE_IPV6
603 #define FAMILY AF_INET6
604 #else
605 #define FAMILY AF_INET
606 #endif
607
608 /* OK, after all that preliminary stuff, here's the code. */
609
610 ip_address_item *
611 os_common_find_running_interfaces(void)
612 {
613 struct V_ifconf ifc;
614 struct V_ifreq ifreq;
615 int vs;
616 ip_address_item *yield = NULL;
617 ip_address_item *last = NULL;
618 ip_address_item *next;
619 char buf[MAX_INTERFACES*sizeof(struct V_ifreq)];
620 struct sockaddr *addrp;
621 size_t len = 0;
622 char addrbuf[512];
623
624 /* We have to create a socket in order to do ioctls on it to find out
625 what we want to know. */
626
627 if ((vs = socket(FAMILY, SOCK_DGRAM, 0)) < 0)
628 {
629 #if HAVE_IPV6
630 DEBUG(D_interface)
631 debug_printf("Unable to create IPv6 socket to find interface addresses:\n "
632 "error %d %s\nTrying for an IPv4 socket\n", errno, strerror(errno));
633 vs = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0);
634 if (vs < 0)
635 #endif
636 log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Unable to create IPv4 socket to find interface "
637 "addresses: %d %s", errno, strerror(errno));
638 }
639
640 /* Get the interface configuration. Some additional data is required when the
641 new structures are in use. */
642
643 ifc.V_ifc_len = sizeof(buf);
644 ifc.V_ifc_buf = buf;
645
646 #ifdef V_FAMILY_QUERY
647 ifc.V_ifc_family = V_FAMILY_QUERY;
648 ifc.V_ifc_flags = 0;
649 #endif
650
651 if (ioctl(vs, V_GIFCONF, CS &ifc) < 0)
652 log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Unable to get interface configuration: %d %s",
653 errno, strerror(errno));
654
655 /* If the buffer is big enough, the ioctl sets the value of ifc.V_ifc_len to
656 the amount actually used. If the buffer isn't big enough, at least on some
657 operating systems, ifc.V_ifc_len still gets set to correspond to the total
658 number of interfaces, even though they don't all fit in the buffer. */
659
660 if (ifc.V_ifc_len > sizeof(buf))
661 {
662 ifc.V_ifc_len = sizeof(buf);
663 DEBUG(D_interface)
664 debug_printf("more than %d interfaces found: remainder not used\n"
665 "(set MAX_INTERFACES in Local/Makefile and rebuild if you want more)\n",
666 MAX_INTERFACES);
667 }
668
669 /* For each interface, check it is an IP interface, get its flags, and see if
670 it is up; if not, skip.
671
672 BSD systems differ from others in what SIOCGIFCONF returns. Other systems
673 return a vector of ifreq structures whose size is as defined by the structure.
674 BSD systems allow sockaddrs to be longer than their sizeof, which in turn makes
675 the ifreq structures longer than their sizeof. The code below has its origins
676 in amd and ifconfig; it uses the sa_len field of each sockaddr to determine
677 each item's length.
678
679 This is complicated by the fact that, at least on BSD systems, the data in the
680 buffer is not guaranteed to be aligned. Thus, we must first copy the basic
681 struct to some aligned memory before looking at the field in the fixed part to
682 find its length, and then recopy the correct length. */
683
684 for (char * cp = buf; cp < buf + ifc.V_ifc_len; cp += len)
685 {
686 memcpy(CS &ifreq, cp, sizeof(ifreq));
687
688 #ifndef HAVE_SA_LEN
689 len = sizeof(struct V_ifreq);
690
691 #else
692 len = ((ifreq.ifr_addr.sa_len > sizeof(ifreq.ifr_addr))?
693 ifreq.ifr_addr.sa_len : sizeof(ifreq.ifr_addr)) +
694 sizeof(ifreq.V_ifr_name);
695 if (len > sizeof(addrbuf))
696 log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Address for %s interface is absurdly long",
697 ifreq.V_ifr_name);
698
699 #endif
700
701 /* If not an IP interface, skip */
702
703 if (ifreq.V_ifr_addr.V_family != AF_INET
704 #if HAVE_IPV6
705 && ifreq.V_ifr_addr.V_family != AF_INET6
706 #endif
707 ) continue;
708
709 /* Get the interface flags, and if the interface is down, continue. Formerly,
710 we treated the inability to get the flags as a panic-die error. However, it
711 seems that on some OS (Solaris 9 being the case noted), it is possible to
712 have an interface in this list for which this call fails because the
713 interface hasn't been "plumbed" to any protocol (IPv4 or IPv6). Therefore,
714 we now just treat this case as "down" as well. */
715
716 if (ioctl(vs, V_GIFFLAGS, CS &ifreq) < 0)
717 {
718 continue;
719 /*************
720 log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Unable to get flags for %s interface: %d %s",
721 ifreq.V_ifr_name, errno, strerror(errno));
722 *************/
723 }
724 if ((ifreq.V_ifr_flags & IFF_UP) == 0) continue;
725
726 /* On some operating systems we have to get the IP address of the interface
727 by another call. On others, it's already there, but we must copy the full
728 length because we only copied the basic length above, and anyway,
729 GIFFLAGS may have wrecked the data. */
730
731 #ifndef SIOCGIFCONF_GIVES_ADDR
732 if (ioctl(vs, V_GIFADDR, CS &ifreq) < 0)
733 log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Unable to get IP address for %s interface: "
734 "%d %s", ifreq.V_ifr_name, errno, strerror(errno));
735 addrp = &ifreq.V_ifr_addr;
736
737 #else
738 memcpy(addrbuf, cp + offsetof(struct V_ifreq, V_ifr_addr),
739 len - sizeof(ifreq.V_ifr_name));
740 addrp = (struct sockaddr *)addrbuf;
741 #endif
742
743 /* Create a data block for the address, fill in the data, and put it on the
744 chain. */
745
746 next = store_get(sizeof(ip_address_item), FALSE);
747 next->next = NULL;
748 next->port = 0;
749 (void)host_ntoa(-1, addrp, next->address, NULL);
750
751 if (yield == NULL) yield = last = next; else
752 {
753 last->next = next;
754 last = next;
755 }
756
757 DEBUG(D_interface) debug_printf("Actual local interface address is %s (%s)\n",
758 last->address, ifreq.V_ifr_name);
759 }
760
761 /* Close the socket, and return the chain of data blocks. */
762
763 (void)close(vs);
764 return yield;
765 }
766
767 #endif /* HAVE_GETIFADDRS */
768
769 #else /* NO_FIND_INTERFACES */
770
771 /* Some experimental or developing OS (e.g. GNU/Hurd) do not have the ioctls,
772 and there is no other way to get a list of the (IP addresses of) local
773 interfaces. We just return the loopback address(es). */
774
775 ip_address_item *
776 os_common_find_running_interfaces(void)
777 {
778 ip_address_item *yield = store_get(sizeof(address_item), FALSE);
779 yield->address = US"127.0.0.1";
780 yield->port = 0;
781 yield->next = NULL;
782
783 #if HAVE_IPV6
784 yield->next = store_get(sizeof(address_item), FALSE);
785 yield->next->address = US"::1";
786 yield->next->port = 0;
787 yield->next->next = NULL;
788 #endif
789
790 DEBUG(D_interface) debug_printf("Unable to find local interface addresses "
791 "on this OS: returning loopback address(es)\n");
792 return yield;
793 }
794
795 #endif /* NO_FIND_INTERFACES */
796 #endif /* FIND_RUNNING_INTERFACES */
797
798
799
800
801 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
802
803 /***********************************************************
804 * DNS Resolver Base Finder *
805 ***********************************************************/
806
807 /* We need to be able to set options for the system resolver(5), historically
808 made available as _res. At least one OS (NetBSD) now no longer provides this
809 directly, instead making you call a function per thread to get a handle.
810 Other OSs handle thread-safe resolver differently, in ways which fail if the
811 programmer creates their own structs. */
812
813 #if !defined(OS_GET_DNS_RESOLVER_RES) && !defined(COMPILE_UTILITY)
814
815 #include <resolv.h>
816
817 /* confirmed that res_state is typedef'd as a struct* on BSD and Linux, will
818 find out how unportable it is on other OSes, but most resolver implementations
819 should be descended from ISC's bind.
820
821 Linux and BSD do:
822 define _res (*__res_state())
823 identically. We just can't rely on __foo functions. It's surprising that use
824 of _res has been as portable as it has, for so long.
825
826 So, since _res works everywhere, and everything can decode the struct, I'm
827 going to gamble that res_state is a typedef everywhere and use that as the
828 return type.
829 */
830
831 res_state
832 os_get_dns_resolver_res(void)
833 {
834 return &_res;
835 }
836
837 #endif /* OS_GET_DNS_RESOLVER_RES */
838
839 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
840
841 /***********************************************************
842 * unsetenv() *
843 ***********************************************************/
844
845 /* Most modern systems define int unsetenv(const char*),
846 * some don't. */
847
848 #if !defined(OS_UNSETENV)
849 int
850 os_unsetenv(const unsigned char * name)
851 {
852 return unsetenv(CS name);
853 }
854 #endif
855
856 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
857
858 /***********************************************************
859 * getcwd() *
860 ***********************************************************/
861
862 /* Glibc allows getcwd(NULL, 0) to do auto-allocation. Some systems
863 do auto-allocation, but need the size of the buffer, and others
864 may not even do this. If the OS supports getcwd(NULL, 0) we'll use
865 this, for all other systems we provide our own getcwd() */
866
867 #if !defined(OS_GETCWD)
868 unsigned char *
869 os_getcwd(unsigned char * buffer, size_t size)
870 {
871 return US getcwd(CS buffer, size);
872 }
873 #else
874 #ifndef PATH_MAX
875 # define PATH_MAX 4096
876 #endif
877 unsigned char *
878 os_getcwd(unsigned char * buffer, size_t size)
879 {
880 char * b = CS buffer;
881
882 if (!size) size = PATH_MAX;
883 if (!b && !(b = malloc(size))) return NULL;
884 if (!(b = getcwd(b, size))) return NULL;
885 return buffer ? buffer : realloc(b, strlen(b) + 1);
886 }
887 #endif
888
889 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
890
891
892
893
894 /*************************************************
895 **************************************************
896 * Stand-alone test program *
897 **************************************************
898 *************************************************/
899
900
901 #ifdef STAND_ALONE
902
903 #ifdef CLOCKS_PER_SEC
904 #define REAL_CLOCK_TICK CLOCKS_PER_SEC
905 #else
906 #ifdef CLK_TCK
907 #define REAL_CLOCK_TICK CLK_TCK
908 #else
909 #define REAL_CLOCK_TICK 1000000 /* SunOS4 */
910 #endif
911 #endif
912
913
914 int main(int argc, char **argv)
915 {
916 char buffer[128];
917 int fd = fileno(stdin);
918 int rc;
919
920 printf("Testing restarting signal; wait for handler message, then type a line\n");
921 strcpy(buffer, "*** default ***\n");
922 os_restarting_signal(SIGALRM, sigalrm_handler);
923 ALARM(2);
924 if ((rc = read(fd, buffer, sizeof(buffer))) < 0)
925 printf("No data read\n");
926 else
927 {
928 buffer[rc] = 0;
929 printf("Read: %s", buffer);
930 }
931 ALARM_CLR(0);
932
933 printf("Testing non-restarting signal; should read no data after handler message\n");
934 strcpy(buffer, "*** default ***\n");
935 os_non_restarting_signal(SIGALRM, sigalrm_handler);
936 ALARM(2);
937 if ((rc = read(fd, buffer, sizeof(buffer))) < 0)
938 printf("No data read\n");
939 else
940 {
941 buffer[rc] = 0;
942 printf("Read: %s", buffer);
943 }
944 ALARM_CLR(0);
945
946 printf("Testing load averages (last test - ^C to kill)\n");
947 for (;;)
948 {
949 int avg;
950 clock_t used;
951 clock_t before = clock();
952 avg = os_getloadavg();
953 used = clock() - before;
954 printf("cpu time = %.2f ", (double)used/REAL_CLOCK_TICK);
955 if (avg < 0)
956 {
957 printf("load average not available\n");
958 break;
959 }
960 printf("load average = %.2f\n", (double)avg/1000.0);
961 sleep(2);
962 }
963 return 0;
964 }
965
966 #endif
967
968 /* End of os.c */