fb74dfdcde44919d4b99c736f025186dda4de57e
[exim.git] / src / src / transport.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 /* General functions concerned with transportation, and generic options for all
9 transports. */
10
11
12 #include "exim.h"
13
14 /* Generic options for transports, all of which live inside transport_instance
15 data blocks and which therefore have the opt_public flag set. Note that there
16 are other options living inside this structure which can be set only from
17 certain transports. */
18
19 optionlist optionlist_transports[] = {
20 /* name type value */
21 { "*expand_group", opt_stringptr|opt_hidden|opt_public,
22 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, expand_gid) },
23 { "*expand_user", opt_stringptr|opt_hidden|opt_public,
24 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, expand_uid) },
25 { "*headers_rewrite_flags", opt_int|opt_public|opt_hidden,
26 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, rewrite_existflags) },
27 { "*headers_rewrite_rules", opt_void|opt_public|opt_hidden,
28 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, rewrite_rules) },
29 { "*set_group", opt_bool|opt_hidden|opt_public,
30 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, gid_set) },
31 { "*set_user", opt_bool|opt_hidden|opt_public,
32 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, uid_set) },
33 { "body_only", opt_bool|opt_public,
34 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, body_only) },
35 { "current_directory", opt_stringptr|opt_public,
36 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, current_dir) },
37 { "debug_print", opt_stringptr | opt_public,
38 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, debug_string) },
39 { "delivery_date_add", opt_bool|opt_public,
40 (void *)(offsetof(transport_instance, delivery_date_add)) },
41 { "disable_logging", opt_bool|opt_public,
42 (void *)(offsetof(transport_instance, disable_logging)) },
43 { "driver", opt_stringptr|opt_public,
44 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, driver_name) },
45 { "envelope_to_add", opt_bool|opt_public,
46 (void *)(offsetof(transport_instance, envelope_to_add)) },
47 #ifndef DISABLE_EVENT
48 { "event_action", opt_stringptr | opt_public,
49 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, event_action) },
50 #endif
51 { "group", opt_expand_gid|opt_public,
52 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, gid) },
53 { "headers_add", opt_stringptr|opt_public|opt_rep_str,
54 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, add_headers) },
55 { "headers_only", opt_bool|opt_public,
56 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, headers_only) },
57 { "headers_remove", opt_stringptr|opt_public|opt_rep_str,
58 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, remove_headers) },
59 { "headers_rewrite", opt_rewrite|opt_public,
60 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, headers_rewrite) },
61 { "home_directory", opt_stringptr|opt_public,
62 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, home_dir) },
63 { "initgroups", opt_bool|opt_public,
64 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, initgroups) },
65 { "max_parallel", opt_stringptr|opt_public,
66 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, max_parallel) },
67 { "message_size_limit", opt_stringptr|opt_public,
68 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, message_size_limit) },
69 { "rcpt_include_affixes", opt_bool|opt_public,
70 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, rcpt_include_affixes) },
71 { "retry_use_local_part", opt_bool|opt_public,
72 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, retry_use_local_part) },
73 { "return_path", opt_stringptr|opt_public,
74 (void *)(offsetof(transport_instance, return_path)) },
75 { "return_path_add", opt_bool|opt_public,
76 (void *)(offsetof(transport_instance, return_path_add)) },
77 { "shadow_condition", opt_stringptr|opt_public,
78 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, shadow_condition) },
79 { "shadow_transport", opt_stringptr|opt_public,
80 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, shadow) },
81 { "transport_filter", opt_stringptr|opt_public,
82 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, filter_command) },
83 { "transport_filter_timeout", opt_time|opt_public,
84 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, filter_timeout) },
85 { "user", opt_expand_uid|opt_public,
86 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, uid) }
87 };
88
89 int optionlist_transports_size = nelem(optionlist_transports);
90
91 #ifdef MACRO_PREDEF
92
93 # include "macro_predef.h"
94
95 void
96 options_transports(void)
97 {
98 uschar buf[64];
99
100 options_from_list(optionlist_transports, nelem(optionlist_transports), US"TRANSPORTS", NULL);
101
102 for (transport_info * ti = transports_available; ti->driver_name[0]; ti++)
103 {
104 spf(buf, sizeof(buf), US"_DRIVER_TRANSPORT_%T", ti->driver_name);
105 builtin_macro_create(buf);
106 options_from_list(ti->options, (unsigned)*ti->options_count, US"TRANSPORT", ti->driver_name);
107 }
108 }
109
110 #else /*!MACRO_PREDEF*/
111
112 /* Structure for keeping list of addresses that have been added to
113 Envelope-To:, in order to avoid duplication. */
114
115 struct aci {
116 struct aci *next;
117 address_item *ptr;
118 };
119
120
121 /* Static data for write_chunk() */
122
123 static uschar *chunk_ptr; /* chunk pointer */
124 static uschar *nl_check; /* string to look for at line start */
125 static int nl_check_length; /* length of same */
126 static uschar *nl_escape; /* string to insert */
127 static int nl_escape_length; /* length of same */
128 static int nl_partial_match; /* length matched at chunk end */
129
130
131 /*************************************************
132 * Initialize transport list *
133 *************************************************/
134
135 /* Read the transports section of the configuration file, and set up a chain of
136 transport instances according to its contents. Each transport has generic
137 options and may also have its own private options. This function is only ever
138 called when transports == NULL. We use generic code in readconf to do most of
139 the work. */
140
141 void
142 transport_init(void)
143 {
144 readconf_driver_init(US"transport",
145 (driver_instance **)(&transports), /* chain anchor */
146 (driver_info *)transports_available, /* available drivers */
147 sizeof(transport_info), /* size of info block */
148 &transport_defaults, /* default values for generic options */
149 sizeof(transport_instance), /* size of instance block */
150 optionlist_transports, /* generic options */
151 optionlist_transports_size);
152
153 /* Now scan the configured transports and check inconsistencies. A shadow
154 transport is permitted only for local transports. */
155
156 for (transport_instance * t = transports; t; t = t->next)
157 {
158 if (!t->info->local && t->shadow)
159 log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE|LOG_CONFIG,
160 "shadow transport not allowed on non-local transport %s", t->name);
161
162 if (t->body_only && t->headers_only)
163 log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE|LOG_CONFIG,
164 "%s transport: body_only and headers_only are mutually exclusive",
165 t->name);
166 }
167 }
168
169
170
171 /*************************************************
172 * Write block of data *
173 *************************************************/
174
175 /* Subroutine called by write_chunk() and at the end of the message actually
176 to write a data block. Also called directly by some transports to write
177 additional data to the file descriptor (e.g. prefix, suffix).
178
179 If a transport wants data transfers to be timed, it sets a non-zero value in
180 transport_write_timeout. A non-zero transport_write_timeout causes a timer to
181 be set for each block of data written from here. If time runs out, then write()
182 fails and provokes an error return. The caller can then inspect sigalrm_seen to
183 check for a timeout.
184
185 On some systems, if a quota is exceeded during the write, the yield is the
186 number of bytes written rather than an immediate error code. This also happens
187 on some systems in other cases, for example a pipe that goes away because the
188 other end's process terminates (Linux). On other systems, (e.g. Solaris 2) you
189 get the error codes the first time.
190
191 The write() function is also interruptible; the Solaris 2.6 man page says:
192
193 If write() is interrupted by a signal before it writes any
194 data, it will return -1 with errno set to EINTR.
195
196 If write() is interrupted by a signal after it successfully
197 writes some data, it will return the number of bytes written.
198
199 To handle these cases, we want to restart the write() to output the remainder
200 of the data after a non-negative return from write(), except after a timeout.
201 In the error cases (EDQUOT, EPIPE) no bytes get written the second time, and a
202 proper error then occurs. In principle, after an interruption, the second
203 write() could suffer the same fate, but we do not want to continue for
204 evermore, so stick a maximum repetition count on the loop to act as a
205 longstop.
206
207 Arguments:
208 tctx transport context: file descriptor or string to write to
209 block block of bytes to write
210 len number of bytes to write
211 more further data expected soon
212
213 Returns: TRUE on success, FALSE on failure (with errno preserved);
214 transport_count is incremented by the number of bytes written
215 */
216
217 static BOOL
218 transport_write_block_fd(transport_ctx * tctx, uschar *block, int len, BOOL more)
219 {
220 int rc, save_errno;
221 int local_timeout = transport_write_timeout;
222 int fd = tctx->u.fd;
223
224 /* This loop is for handling incomplete writes and other retries. In most
225 normal cases, it is only ever executed once. */
226
227 for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++)
228 {
229 DEBUG(D_transport)
230 debug_printf("writing data block fd=%d size=%d timeout=%d%s\n",
231 fd, len, local_timeout, more ? " (more expected)" : "");
232
233 /* This code makes use of alarm() in order to implement the timeout. This
234 isn't a very tidy way of doing things. Using non-blocking I/O with select()
235 provides a neater approach. However, I don't know how to do this when TLS is
236 in use. */
237
238 if (transport_write_timeout <= 0) /* No timeout wanted */
239 {
240 rc =
241 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
242 tls_out.active.sock == fd ? tls_write(tls_out.active.tls_ctx, block, len, more) :
243 #endif
244 #ifdef MSG_MORE
245 more && !(tctx->options & topt_not_socket)
246 ? send(fd, block, len, MSG_MORE) :
247 #endif
248 write(fd, block, len);
249 save_errno = errno;
250 }
251
252 /* Timeout wanted. */
253
254 else
255 {
256 ALARM(local_timeout);
257
258 rc =
259 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
260 tls_out.active.sock == fd ? tls_write(tls_out.active.tls_ctx, block, len, more) :
261 #endif
262 #ifdef MSG_MORE
263 more && !(tctx->options & topt_not_socket)
264 ? send(fd, block, len, MSG_MORE) :
265 #endif
266 write(fd, block, len);
267
268 save_errno = errno;
269 local_timeout = ALARM_CLR(0);
270 if (sigalrm_seen)
271 {
272 errno = ETIMEDOUT;
273 return FALSE;
274 }
275 }
276
277 /* Hopefully, the most common case is success, so test that first. */
278
279 if (rc == len) { transport_count += len; return TRUE; }
280
281 /* A non-negative return code is an incomplete write. Try again for the rest
282 of the block. If we have exactly hit the timeout, give up. */
283
284 if (rc >= 0)
285 {
286 len -= rc;
287 block += rc;
288 transport_count += rc;
289 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("write incomplete (%d)\n", rc);
290 goto CHECK_TIMEOUT; /* A few lines below */
291 }
292
293 /* A negative return code with an EINTR error is another form of
294 incomplete write, zero bytes having been written */
295
296 if (save_errno == EINTR)
297 {
298 DEBUG(D_transport)
299 debug_printf("write interrupted before anything written\n");
300 goto CHECK_TIMEOUT; /* A few lines below */
301 }
302
303 /* A response of EAGAIN from write() is likely only in the case of writing
304 to a FIFO that is not swallowing the data as fast as Exim is writing it. */
305
306 if (save_errno == EAGAIN)
307 {
308 DEBUG(D_transport)
309 debug_printf("write temporarily locked out, waiting 1 sec\n");
310 sleep(1);
311
312 /* Before continuing to try another write, check that we haven't run out of
313 time. */
314
315 CHECK_TIMEOUT:
316 if (transport_write_timeout > 0 && local_timeout <= 0)
317 {
318 errno = ETIMEDOUT;
319 return FALSE;
320 }
321 continue;
322 }
323
324 /* Otherwise there's been an error */
325
326 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("writing error %d: %s\n", save_errno,
327 strerror(save_errno));
328 errno = save_errno;
329 return FALSE;
330 }
331
332 /* We've tried and tried and tried but still failed */
333
334 errno = ERRNO_WRITEINCOMPLETE;
335 return FALSE;
336 }
337
338
339 BOOL
340 transport_write_block(transport_ctx * tctx, uschar *block, int len, BOOL more)
341 {
342 if (!(tctx->options & topt_output_string))
343 return transport_write_block_fd(tctx, block, len, more);
344
345 /* Write to expanding-string. NOTE: not NUL-terminated */
346
347 if (!tctx->u.msg)
348 tctx->u.msg = string_get(1024);
349
350 tctx->u.msg = string_catn(tctx->u.msg, block, len);
351 return TRUE;
352 }
353
354
355
356
357 /*************************************************
358 * Write formatted string *
359 *************************************************/
360
361 /* This is called by various transports. It is a convenience function.
362
363 Arguments:
364 fd file descriptor
365 format string format
366 ... arguments for format
367
368 Returns: the yield of transport_write_block()
369 */
370
371 BOOL
372 transport_write_string(int fd, const char *format, ...)
373 {
374 transport_ctx tctx = {{0}};
375 gstring gs = { .size = big_buffer_size, .ptr = 0, .s = big_buffer };
376 va_list ap;
377
378 va_start(ap, format);
379 if (!string_vformat(&gs, FALSE, format, ap))
380 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "overlong formatted string in transport");
381 va_end(ap);
382 tctx.u.fd = fd;
383 return transport_write_block(&tctx, gs.s, gs.ptr, FALSE);
384 }
385
386
387
388
389 void
390 transport_write_reset(int options)
391 {
392 if (!(options & topt_continuation)) chunk_ptr = deliver_out_buffer;
393 nl_partial_match = -1;
394 nl_check_length = nl_escape_length = 0;
395 }
396
397
398
399 /*************************************************
400 * Write character chunk *
401 *************************************************/
402
403 /* Subroutine used by transport_write_message() to scan character chunks for
404 newlines and act appropriately. The object is to minimise the number of writes.
405 The output byte stream is buffered up in deliver_out_buffer, which is written
406 only when it gets full, thus minimizing write operations and TCP packets.
407
408 Static data is used to handle the case when the last character of the previous
409 chunk was NL, or matched part of the data that has to be escaped.
410
411 Arguments:
412 tctx transport context - processing to be done during output,
413 and file descriptor to write to
414 chunk pointer to data to write
415 len length of data to write
416
417 In addition, the static nl_xxx variables must be set as required.
418
419 Returns: TRUE on success, FALSE on failure (with errno preserved)
420 */
421
422 BOOL
423 write_chunk(transport_ctx * tctx, uschar *chunk, int len)
424 {
425 uschar *start = chunk;
426 uschar *end = chunk + len;
427 int mlen = DELIVER_OUT_BUFFER_SIZE - nl_escape_length - 2;
428
429 /* The assumption is made that the check string will never stretch over move
430 than one chunk since the only time there are partial matches is when copying
431 the body in large buffers. There is always enough room in the buffer for an
432 escape string, since the loop below ensures this for each character it
433 processes, and it won't have stuck in the escape string if it left a partial
434 match. */
435
436 if (nl_partial_match >= 0)
437 {
438 if (nl_check_length > 0 && len >= nl_check_length &&
439 Ustrncmp(start, nl_check + nl_partial_match,
440 nl_check_length - nl_partial_match) == 0)
441 {
442 Ustrncpy(chunk_ptr, nl_escape, nl_escape_length);
443 chunk_ptr += nl_escape_length;
444 start += nl_check_length - nl_partial_match;
445 }
446
447 /* The partial match was a false one. Insert the characters carried over
448 from the previous chunk. */
449
450 else if (nl_partial_match > 0)
451 {
452 Ustrncpy(chunk_ptr, nl_check, nl_partial_match);
453 chunk_ptr += nl_partial_match;
454 }
455
456 nl_partial_match = -1;
457 }
458
459 /* Now process the characters in the chunk. Whenever we hit a newline we check
460 for possible escaping. The code for the non-NL route should be as fast as
461 possible. */
462
463 for (uschar * ptr = start; ptr < end; ptr++)
464 {
465 int ch, len;
466
467 /* Flush the buffer if it has reached the threshold - we want to leave enough
468 room for the next uschar, plus a possible extra CR for an LF, plus the escape
469 string. */
470
471 if ((len = chunk_ptr - deliver_out_buffer) > mlen)
472 {
473 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("flushing headers buffer\n");
474
475 /* If CHUNKING, prefix with BDAT (size) NON-LAST. Also, reap responses
476 from previous SMTP commands. */
477
478 if (tctx->options & topt_use_bdat && tctx->chunk_cb)
479 {
480 if ( tctx->chunk_cb(tctx, (unsigned)len, 0) != OK
481 || !transport_write_block(tctx, deliver_out_buffer, len, FALSE)
482 || tctx->chunk_cb(tctx, 0, tc_reap_prev) != OK
483 )
484 return FALSE;
485 }
486 else
487 if (!transport_write_block(tctx, deliver_out_buffer, len, FALSE))
488 return FALSE;
489 chunk_ptr = deliver_out_buffer;
490 }
491
492 /* Remove CR before NL if required */
493
494 if ( *ptr == '\r' && ptr[1] == '\n'
495 && !(tctx->options & topt_use_crlf)
496 && f.spool_file_wireformat
497 )
498 ptr++;
499
500 if ((ch = *ptr) == '\n')
501 {
502 int left = end - ptr - 1; /* count of chars left after NL */
503
504 /* Insert CR before NL if required */
505
506 if (tctx->options & topt_use_crlf && !f.spool_file_wireformat)
507 *chunk_ptr++ = '\r';
508 *chunk_ptr++ = '\n';
509 transport_newlines++;
510
511 /* The check_string test (formerly "from hack") replaces the specific
512 string at the start of a line with an escape string (e.g. "From " becomes
513 ">From " or "." becomes "..". It is a case-sensitive test. The length
514 check above ensures there is always enough room to insert this string. */
515
516 if (nl_check_length > 0)
517 {
518 if (left >= nl_check_length &&
519 Ustrncmp(ptr+1, nl_check, nl_check_length) == 0)
520 {
521 Ustrncpy(chunk_ptr, nl_escape, nl_escape_length);
522 chunk_ptr += nl_escape_length;
523 ptr += nl_check_length;
524 }
525
526 /* Handle the case when there isn't enough left to match the whole
527 check string, but there may be a partial match. We remember how many
528 characters matched, and finish processing this chunk. */
529
530 else if (left <= 0) nl_partial_match = 0;
531
532 else if (Ustrncmp(ptr+1, nl_check, left) == 0)
533 {
534 nl_partial_match = left;
535 ptr = end;
536 }
537 }
538 }
539
540 /* Not a NL character */
541
542 else *chunk_ptr++ = ch;
543 }
544
545 return TRUE;
546 }
547
548
549
550
551 /*************************************************
552 * Generate address for RCPT TO *
553 *************************************************/
554
555 /* This function puts together an address for RCPT to, using the caseful
556 version of the local part and the caseful version of the domain. If there is no
557 prefix or suffix, or if affixes are to be retained, we can just use the
558 original address. Otherwise, if there is a prefix but no suffix we can use a
559 pointer into the original address. If there is a suffix, however, we have to
560 build a new string.
561
562 Arguments:
563 addr the address item
564 include_affixes TRUE if affixes are to be included
565
566 Returns: a string
567 */
568
569 uschar *
570 transport_rcpt_address(address_item *addr, BOOL include_affixes)
571 {
572 uschar *at;
573 int plen, slen;
574
575 if (include_affixes)
576 {
577 setflag(addr, af_include_affixes); /* Affects logged => line */
578 return addr->address;
579 }
580
581 if (addr->suffix == NULL)
582 {
583 if (addr->prefix == NULL) return addr->address;
584 return addr->address + Ustrlen(addr->prefix);
585 }
586
587 at = Ustrrchr(addr->address, '@');
588 plen = (addr->prefix == NULL)? 0 : Ustrlen(addr->prefix);
589 slen = Ustrlen(addr->suffix);
590
591 return string_sprintf("%.*s@%s", (int)(at - addr->address - plen - slen),
592 addr->address + plen, at + 1);
593 }
594
595
596 /*************************************************
597 * Output Envelope-To: address & scan duplicates *
598 *************************************************/
599
600 /* This function is called from internal_transport_write_message() below, when
601 generating an Envelope-To: header line. It checks for duplicates of the given
602 address and its ancestors. When one is found, this function calls itself
603 recursively, to output the envelope address of the duplicate.
604
605 We want to avoid duplication in the list, which can arise for example when
606 A->B,C and then both B and C alias to D. This can also happen when there are
607 unseen drivers in use. So a list of addresses that have been output is kept in
608 the plist variable.
609
610 It is also possible to have loops in the address ancestry/duplication graph,
611 for example if there are two top level addresses A and B and we have A->B,C and
612 B->A. To break the loop, we use a list of processed addresses in the dlist
613 variable.
614
615 After handling duplication, this function outputs the progenitor of the given
616 address.
617
618 Arguments:
619 p the address we are interested in
620 pplist address of anchor of the list of addresses not to output
621 pdlist address of anchor of the list of processed addresses
622 first TRUE if this is the first address; set it FALSE afterwards
623 tctx transport context - processing to be done during output
624 and the file descriptor to write to
625
626 Returns: FALSE if writing failed
627 */
628
629 static BOOL
630 write_env_to(address_item *p, struct aci **pplist, struct aci **pdlist,
631 BOOL *first, transport_ctx * tctx)
632 {
633 address_item *pp;
634 struct aci *ppp;
635
636 /* Do nothing if we have already handled this address. If not, remember it
637 so that we don't handle it again. */
638
639 for (ppp = *pdlist; ppp; ppp = ppp->next) if (p == ppp->ptr) return TRUE;
640
641 ppp = store_get(sizeof(struct aci));
642 ppp->next = *pdlist;
643 *pdlist = ppp;
644 ppp->ptr = p;
645
646 /* Now scan up the ancestry, checking for duplicates at each generation. */
647
648 for (pp = p;; pp = pp->parent)
649 {
650 address_item *dup;
651 for (dup = addr_duplicate; dup; dup = dup->next)
652 if (dup->dupof == pp) /* a dup of our address */
653 if (!write_env_to(dup, pplist, pdlist, first, tctx))
654 return FALSE;
655 if (!pp->parent) break;
656 }
657
658 /* Check to see if we have already output the progenitor. */
659
660 for (ppp = *pplist; ppp; ppp = ppp->next) if (pp == ppp->ptr) break;
661 if (ppp) return TRUE;
662
663 /* Remember what we have output, and output it. */
664
665 ppp = store_get(sizeof(struct aci));
666 ppp->next = *pplist;
667 *pplist = ppp;
668 ppp->ptr = pp;
669
670 if (!*first && !write_chunk(tctx, US",\n ", 3)) return FALSE;
671 *first = FALSE;
672 return write_chunk(tctx, pp->address, Ustrlen(pp->address));
673 }
674
675
676
677
678 /* Add/remove/rewrite headers, and send them plus the empty-line separator.
679
680 Globals:
681 header_list
682
683 Arguments:
684 addr (chain of) addresses (for extra headers), or NULL;
685 only the first address is used
686 tctx transport context
687 sendfn function for output (transport or verify)
688
689 Returns: TRUE on success; FALSE on failure.
690 */
691 BOOL
692 transport_headers_send(transport_ctx * tctx,
693 BOOL (*sendfn)(transport_ctx * tctx, uschar * s, int len))
694 {
695 const uschar *list;
696 transport_instance * tblock = tctx ? tctx->tblock : NULL;
697 address_item * addr = tctx ? tctx->addr : NULL;
698
699 /* Then the message's headers. Don't write any that are flagged as "old";
700 that means they were rewritten, or are a record of envelope rewriting, or
701 were removed (e.g. Bcc). If remove_headers is not null, skip any headers that
702 match any entries therein. It is a colon-sep list; expand the items
703 separately and squash any empty ones.
704 Then check addr->prop.remove_headers too, provided that addr is not NULL. */
705
706 for (header_line * h = header_list; h; h = h->next) if (h->type != htype_old)
707 {
708 BOOL include_header = TRUE;
709
710 list = tblock ? tblock->remove_headers : NULL;
711 for (int i = 0; i < 2; i++) /* For remove_headers && addr->prop.remove_headers */
712 {
713 if (list)
714 {
715 int sep = ':'; /* This is specified as a colon-separated list */
716 uschar *s, *ss;
717 while ((s = string_nextinlist(&list, &sep, NULL, 0)))
718 {
719 int len;
720
721 if (i == 0)
722 if (!(s = expand_string(s)) && !f.expand_string_forcedfail)
723 {
724 errno = ERRNO_CHHEADER_FAIL;
725 return FALSE;
726 }
727 len = s ? Ustrlen(s) : 0;
728 if (strncmpic(h->text, s, len) != 0) continue;
729 ss = h->text + len;
730 while (*ss == ' ' || *ss == '\t') ss++;
731 if (*ss == ':') break;
732 }
733 if (s) { include_header = FALSE; break; }
734 }
735 if (addr) list = addr->prop.remove_headers;
736 }
737
738 /* If this header is to be output, try to rewrite it if there are rewriting
739 rules. */
740
741 if (include_header)
742 {
743 if (tblock && tblock->rewrite_rules)
744 {
745 void *reset_point = store_get(0);
746 header_line *hh;
747
748 if ((hh = rewrite_header(h, NULL, NULL, tblock->rewrite_rules,
749 tblock->rewrite_existflags, FALSE)))
750 {
751 if (!sendfn(tctx, hh->text, hh->slen)) return FALSE;
752 store_reset(reset_point);
753 continue; /* With the next header line */
754 }
755 }
756
757 /* Either no rewriting rules, or it didn't get rewritten */
758
759 if (!sendfn(tctx, h->text, h->slen)) return FALSE;
760 }
761
762 /* Header removed */
763
764 else
765 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("removed header line:\n%s---\n", h->text);
766 }
767
768 /* Add on any address-specific headers. If there are multiple addresses,
769 they will all have the same headers in order to be batched. The headers
770 are chained in reverse order of adding (so several addresses from the
771 same alias might share some of them) but we want to output them in the
772 opposite order. This is a bit tedious, but there shouldn't be very many
773 of them. We just walk the list twice, reversing the pointers each time,
774 but on the second time, write out the items.
775
776 Headers added to an address by a router are guaranteed to end with a newline.
777 */
778
779 if (addr)
780 {
781 header_line *hprev = addr->prop.extra_headers;
782 header_line *hnext, * h;
783 for (int i = 0; i < 2; i++)
784 for (h = hprev, hprev = NULL; h; h = hnext)
785 {
786 hnext = h->next;
787 h->next = hprev;
788 hprev = h;
789 if (i == 1)
790 {
791 if (!sendfn(tctx, h->text, h->slen)) return FALSE;
792 DEBUG(D_transport)
793 debug_printf("added header line(s):\n%s---\n", h->text);
794 }
795 }
796 }
797
798 /* If a string containing additional headers exists it is a newline-sep
799 list. Expand each item and write out the result. This is done last so that
800 if it (deliberately or accidentally) isn't in header format, it won't mess
801 up any other headers. An empty string or a forced expansion failure are
802 noops. An added header string from a transport may not end with a newline;
803 add one if it does not. */
804
805 if (tblock && (list = CUS tblock->add_headers))
806 {
807 int sep = '\n';
808 uschar * s;
809
810 while ((s = string_nextinlist(&list, &sep, NULL, 0)))
811 if ((s = expand_string(s)))
812 {
813 int len = Ustrlen(s);
814 if (len > 0)
815 {
816 if (!sendfn(tctx, s, len)) return FALSE;
817 if (s[len-1] != '\n' && !sendfn(tctx, US"\n", 1))
818 return FALSE;
819 DEBUG(D_transport)
820 {
821 debug_printf("added header line:\n%s", s);
822 if (s[len-1] != '\n') debug_printf("\n");
823 debug_printf("---\n");
824 }
825 }
826 }
827 else if (!f.expand_string_forcedfail)
828 { errno = ERRNO_CHHEADER_FAIL; return FALSE; }
829 }
830
831 /* Separate headers from body with a blank line */
832
833 return sendfn(tctx, US"\n", 1);
834 }
835
836
837 /*************************************************
838 * Write the message *
839 *************************************************/
840
841 /* This function writes the message to the given file descriptor. The headers
842 are in the in-store data structure, and the rest of the message is in the open
843 file descriptor deliver_datafile. Make sure we start it at the beginning.
844
845 . If add_return_path is TRUE, a "return-path:" header is added to the message,
846 containing the envelope sender's address.
847
848 . If add_envelope_to is TRUE, a "envelope-to:" header is added to the message,
849 giving the top-level envelope address that caused this delivery to happen.
850
851 . If add_delivery_date is TRUE, a "delivery-date:" header is added to the
852 message. It gives the time and date that delivery took place.
853
854 . If check_string is not null, the start of each line is checked for that
855 string. If it is found, it is replaced by escape_string. This used to be
856 the "from hack" for files, and "smtp_dots" for escaping SMTP dots.
857
858 . If use_crlf is true, newlines are turned into CRLF (SMTP output).
859
860 The yield is TRUE if all went well, and FALSE if not. Exit *immediately* after
861 any writing or reading error, leaving the code in errno intact. Error exits
862 can include timeouts for certain transports, which are requested by setting
863 transport_write_timeout non-zero.
864
865 Arguments:
866 tctx
867 (fd, msg) Either and fd, to write the message to,
868 or a string: if null write message to allocated space
869 otherwire take content as headers.
870 addr (chain of) addresses (for extra headers), or NULL;
871 only the first address is used
872 tblock optional transport instance block (NULL signifies NULL/0):
873 add_headers a string containing one or more headers to add; it is
874 expanded, and must be in correct RFC 822 format as
875 it is transmitted verbatim; NULL => no additions,
876 and so does empty string or forced expansion fail
877 remove_headers a colon-separated list of headers to remove, or NULL
878 rewrite_rules chain of header rewriting rules
879 rewrite_existflags flags for the rewriting rules
880 options bit-wise options:
881 add_return_path if TRUE, add a "return-path" header
882 add_envelope_to if TRUE, add a "envelope-to" header
883 add_delivery_date if TRUE, add a "delivery-date" header
884 use_crlf if TRUE, turn NL into CR LF
885 end_dot if TRUE, send a terminating "." line at the end
886 no_headers if TRUE, omit the headers
887 no_body if TRUE, omit the body
888 check_string a string to check for at the start of lines, or NULL
889 escape_string a string to insert in front of any check string
890 size_limit if > 0, this is a limit to the size of message written;
891 it is used when returning messages to their senders,
892 and is approximate rather than exact, owing to chunk
893 buffering
894
895 Returns: TRUE on success; FALSE (with errno) on failure.
896 In addition, the global variable transport_count
897 is incremented by the number of bytes written.
898 */
899
900 static BOOL
901 internal_transport_write_message(transport_ctx * tctx, int size_limit)
902 {
903 int len, size = 0;
904
905 /* Initialize pointer in output buffer. */
906
907 transport_write_reset(tctx->options);
908
909 /* Set up the data for start-of-line data checking and escaping */
910
911 if (tctx->check_string && tctx->escape_string)
912 {
913 nl_check = tctx->check_string;
914 nl_check_length = Ustrlen(nl_check);
915 nl_escape = tctx->escape_string;
916 nl_escape_length = Ustrlen(nl_escape);
917 }
918
919 /* Whether the escaping mechanism is applied to headers or not is controlled by
920 an option (set for SMTP, not otherwise). Negate the length if not wanted till
921 after the headers. */
922
923 if (!(tctx->options & topt_escape_headers))
924 nl_check_length = -nl_check_length;
925
926 /* Write the headers if required, including any that have to be added. If there
927 are header rewriting rules, apply them. The datasource is not the -D spoolfile
928 so temporarily hide the global that adjusts for its format. */
929
930 if (!(tctx->options & topt_no_headers))
931 {
932 BOOL save_wireformat = f.spool_file_wireformat;
933 f.spool_file_wireformat = FALSE;
934
935 /* Add return-path: if requested. */
936
937 if (tctx->options & topt_add_return_path)
938 {
939 uschar buffer[ADDRESS_MAXLENGTH + 20];
940 int n = sprintf(CS buffer, "Return-path: <%.*s>\n", ADDRESS_MAXLENGTH,
941 return_path);
942 if (!write_chunk(tctx, buffer, n)) goto bad;
943 }
944
945 /* Add envelope-to: if requested */
946
947 if (tctx->options & topt_add_envelope_to)
948 {
949 BOOL first = TRUE;
950 struct aci *plist = NULL;
951 struct aci *dlist = NULL;
952 void *reset_point = store_get(0);
953
954 if (!write_chunk(tctx, US"Envelope-to: ", 13)) goto bad;
955
956 /* Pick up from all the addresses. The plist and dlist variables are
957 anchors for lists of addresses already handled; they have to be defined at
958 this level because write_env_to() calls itself recursively. */
959
960 for (address_item * p = tctx->addr; p; p = p->next)
961 if (!write_env_to(p, &plist, &dlist, &first, tctx))
962 goto bad;
963
964 /* Add a final newline and reset the store used for tracking duplicates */
965
966 if (!write_chunk(tctx, US"\n", 1)) goto bad;
967 store_reset(reset_point);
968 }
969
970 /* Add delivery-date: if requested. */
971
972 if (tctx->options & topt_add_delivery_date)
973 {
974 uschar * s = tod_stamp(tod_full);
975
976 if ( !write_chunk(tctx, US"Delivery-date: ", 15)
977 || !write_chunk(tctx, s, Ustrlen(s))
978 || !write_chunk(tctx, US"\n", 1)) goto bad;
979 }
980
981 /* Then the message's headers. Don't write any that are flagged as "old";
982 that means they were rewritten, or are a record of envelope rewriting, or
983 were removed (e.g. Bcc). If remove_headers is not null, skip any headers that
984 match any entries therein. Then check addr->prop.remove_headers too, provided that
985 addr is not NULL. */
986
987 if (!transport_headers_send(tctx, &write_chunk))
988 {
989 bad:
990 f.spool_file_wireformat = save_wireformat;
991 return FALSE;
992 }
993
994 f.spool_file_wireformat = save_wireformat;
995 }
996
997 /* When doing RFC3030 CHUNKING output, work out how much data would be in a
998 last-BDAT, consisting of the current write_chunk() output buffer fill
999 (optimally, all of the headers - but it does not matter if we already had to
1000 flush that buffer with non-last BDAT prependix) plus the amount of body data
1001 (as expanded for CRLF lines). Then create and write BDAT(s), and ensure
1002 that further use of write_chunk() will not prepend BDATs.
1003 The first BDAT written will also first flush any outstanding MAIL and RCPT
1004 commands which were buffered thans to PIPELINING.
1005 Commands go out (using a send()) from a different buffer to data (using a
1006 write()). They might not end up in the same TCP segment, which is
1007 suboptimal. */
1008
1009 if (tctx->options & topt_use_bdat)
1010 {
1011 off_t fsize;
1012 int hsize;
1013
1014 if ((hsize = chunk_ptr - deliver_out_buffer) < 0)
1015 hsize = 0;
1016 if (!(tctx->options & topt_no_body))
1017 {
1018 if ((fsize = lseek(deliver_datafile, 0, SEEK_END)) < 0) return FALSE;
1019 fsize -= SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET;
1020 if (size_limit > 0 && fsize > size_limit)
1021 fsize = size_limit;
1022 size = hsize + fsize;
1023 if (tctx->options & topt_use_crlf && !f.spool_file_wireformat)
1024 size += body_linecount; /* account for CRLF-expansion */
1025
1026 /* With topt_use_bdat we never do dot-stuffing; no need to
1027 account for any expansion due to that. */
1028 }
1029
1030 /* If the message is large, emit first a non-LAST chunk with just the
1031 headers, and reap the command responses. This lets us error out early
1032 on RCPT rejects rather than sending megabytes of data. Include headers
1033 on the assumption they are cheap enough and some clever implementations
1034 might errorcheck them too, on-the-fly, and reject that chunk. */
1035
1036 if (size > DELIVER_OUT_BUFFER_SIZE && hsize > 0)
1037 {
1038 DEBUG(D_transport)
1039 debug_printf("sending small initial BDAT; hsize=%d\n", hsize);
1040 if ( tctx->chunk_cb(tctx, hsize, 0) != OK
1041 || !transport_write_block(tctx, deliver_out_buffer, hsize, FALSE)
1042 || tctx->chunk_cb(tctx, 0, tc_reap_prev) != OK
1043 )
1044 return FALSE;
1045 chunk_ptr = deliver_out_buffer;
1046 size -= hsize;
1047 }
1048
1049 /* Emit a LAST datachunk command, and unmark the context for further
1050 BDAT commands. */
1051
1052 if (tctx->chunk_cb(tctx, size, tc_chunk_last) != OK)
1053 return FALSE;
1054 tctx->options &= ~topt_use_bdat;
1055 }
1056
1057 /* If the body is required, ensure that the data for check strings (formerly
1058 the "from hack") is enabled by negating the length if necessary. (It will be
1059 negative in cases where it isn't to apply to the headers). Then ensure the body
1060 is positioned at the start of its file (following the message id), then write
1061 it, applying the size limit if required. */
1062
1063 /* If we have a wireformat -D file (CRNL lines, non-dotstuffed, no ending dot)
1064 and we want to send a body without dotstuffing or ending-dot, in-clear,
1065 then we can just dump it using sendfile.
1066 This should get used for CHUNKING output and also for writing the -K file for
1067 dkim signing, when we had CHUNKING input. */
1068
1069 #ifdef OS_SENDFILE
1070 if ( f.spool_file_wireformat
1071 && !(tctx->options & (topt_no_body | topt_end_dot))
1072 && !nl_check_length
1073 && tls_out.active.sock != tctx->u.fd
1074 )
1075 {
1076 ssize_t copied = 0;
1077 off_t offset = SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET;
1078
1079 /* Write out any header data in the buffer */
1080
1081 if ((len = chunk_ptr - deliver_out_buffer) > 0)
1082 {
1083 if (!transport_write_block(tctx, deliver_out_buffer, len, TRUE))
1084 return FALSE;
1085 size -= len;
1086 }
1087
1088 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("using sendfile for body\n");
1089
1090 while(size > 0)
1091 {
1092 if ((copied = os_sendfile(tctx->u.fd, deliver_datafile, &offset, size)) <= 0) break;
1093 size -= copied;
1094 }
1095 return copied >= 0;
1096 }
1097 #else
1098 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("cannot use sendfile for body: no support\n");
1099 #endif
1100
1101 DEBUG(D_transport)
1102 if (!(tctx->options & topt_no_body))
1103 debug_printf("cannot use sendfile for body: %s\n",
1104 !f.spool_file_wireformat ? "spoolfile not wireformat"
1105 : tctx->options & topt_end_dot ? "terminating dot wanted"
1106 : nl_check_length ? "dot- or From-stuffing wanted"
1107 : "TLS output wanted");
1108
1109 if (!(tctx->options & topt_no_body))
1110 {
1111 unsigned long size = size_limit > 0 ? size_limit : ULONG_MAX;
1112
1113 nl_check_length = abs(nl_check_length);
1114 nl_partial_match = 0;
1115 if (lseek(deliver_datafile, SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET, SEEK_SET) < 0)
1116 return FALSE;
1117 while ( (len = MIN(DELIVER_IN_BUFFER_SIZE, size)) > 0
1118 && (len = read(deliver_datafile, deliver_in_buffer, len)) > 0)
1119 {
1120 if (!write_chunk(tctx, deliver_in_buffer, len))
1121 return FALSE;
1122 size -= len;
1123 }
1124
1125 /* A read error on the body will have left len == -1 and errno set. */
1126
1127 if (len != 0) return FALSE;
1128 }
1129
1130 /* Finished with the check string, and spool-format consideration */
1131
1132 nl_check_length = nl_escape_length = 0;
1133 f.spool_file_wireformat = FALSE;
1134
1135 /* If requested, add a terminating "." line (SMTP output). */
1136
1137 if (tctx->options & topt_end_dot && !write_chunk(tctx, US".\n", 2))
1138 return FALSE;
1139
1140 /* Write out any remaining data in the buffer before returning. */
1141
1142 return (len = chunk_ptr - deliver_out_buffer) <= 0 ||
1143 transport_write_block(tctx, deliver_out_buffer, len, FALSE);
1144 }
1145
1146
1147
1148
1149 /*************************************************
1150 * External interface to write the message *
1151 *************************************************/
1152
1153 /* If there is no filtering required, call the internal function above to do
1154 the real work, passing over all the arguments from this function. Otherwise,
1155 set up a filtering process, fork another process to call the internal function
1156 to write to the filter, and in this process just suck from the filter and write
1157 down the fd in the transport context. At the end, tidy up the pipes and the
1158 processes.
1159
1160 Arguments: as for internal_transport_write_message() above
1161
1162 Returns: TRUE on success; FALSE (with errno) for any failure
1163 transport_count is incremented by the number of bytes written
1164 */
1165
1166 BOOL
1167 transport_write_message(transport_ctx * tctx, int size_limit)
1168 {
1169 BOOL last_filter_was_NL = TRUE;
1170 BOOL save_spool_file_wireformat = f.spool_file_wireformat;
1171 int rc, len, yield, fd_read, fd_write, save_errno;
1172 int pfd[2] = {-1, -1};
1173 pid_t filter_pid, write_pid;
1174
1175 f.transport_filter_timed_out = FALSE;
1176
1177 /* If there is no filter command set up, call the internal function that does
1178 the actual work, passing it the incoming fd, and return its result. */
1179
1180 if ( !transport_filter_argv
1181 || !*transport_filter_argv
1182 || !**transport_filter_argv
1183 )
1184 return internal_transport_write_message(tctx, size_limit);
1185
1186 /* Otherwise the message must be written to a filter process and read back
1187 before being written to the incoming fd. First set up the special processing to
1188 be done during the copying. */
1189
1190 nl_partial_match = -1;
1191
1192 if (tctx->check_string && tctx->escape_string)
1193 {
1194 nl_check = tctx->check_string;
1195 nl_check_length = Ustrlen(nl_check);
1196 nl_escape = tctx->escape_string;
1197 nl_escape_length = Ustrlen(nl_escape);
1198 }
1199 else nl_check_length = nl_escape_length = 0;
1200
1201 /* Start up a subprocess to run the command. Ensure that our main fd will
1202 be closed when the subprocess execs, but remove the flag afterwards.
1203 (Otherwise, if this is a TCP/IP socket, it can't get passed on to another
1204 process to deliver another message.) We get back stdin/stdout file descriptors.
1205 If the process creation failed, give an error return. */
1206
1207 fd_read = -1;
1208 fd_write = -1;
1209 save_errno = 0;
1210 yield = FALSE;
1211 write_pid = (pid_t)(-1);
1212
1213 {
1214 int bits = fcntl(tctx->u.fd, F_GETFD);
1215 (void)fcntl(tctx->u.fd, F_SETFD, bits | FD_CLOEXEC);
1216 filter_pid = child_open(USS transport_filter_argv, NULL, 077,
1217 &fd_write, &fd_read, FALSE);
1218 (void)fcntl(tctx->u.fd, F_SETFD, bits & ~FD_CLOEXEC);
1219 }
1220 if (filter_pid < 0) goto TIDY_UP; /* errno set */
1221
1222 DEBUG(D_transport)
1223 debug_printf("process %d running as transport filter: fd_write=%d fd_read=%d\n",
1224 (int)filter_pid, fd_write, fd_read);
1225
1226 /* Fork subprocess to write the message to the filter, and return the result
1227 via a(nother) pipe. While writing to the filter, we do not do the CRLF,
1228 smtp dots, or check string processing. */
1229
1230 if (pipe(pfd) != 0) goto TIDY_UP; /* errno set */
1231 if ((write_pid = fork()) == 0)
1232 {
1233 BOOL rc;
1234 (void)close(fd_read);
1235 (void)close(pfd[pipe_read]);
1236 nl_check_length = nl_escape_length = 0;
1237
1238 tctx->u.fd = fd_write;
1239 tctx->check_string = tctx->escape_string = NULL;
1240 tctx->options &= ~(topt_use_crlf | topt_end_dot | topt_use_bdat);
1241
1242 rc = internal_transport_write_message(tctx, size_limit);
1243
1244 save_errno = errno;
1245 if ( write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&rc, sizeof(BOOL))
1246 != sizeof(BOOL)
1247 || write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&save_errno, sizeof(int))
1248 != sizeof(int)
1249 || write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&tctx->addr->more_errno, sizeof(int))
1250 != sizeof(int)
1251 || write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&tctx->addr->delivery_usec, sizeof(int))
1252 != sizeof(int)
1253 )
1254 rc = FALSE; /* compiler quietening */
1255 _exit(0);
1256 }
1257 save_errno = errno;
1258
1259 /* Parent process: close our copy of the writing subprocess' pipes. */
1260
1261 (void)close(pfd[pipe_write]);
1262 (void)close(fd_write);
1263 fd_write = -1;
1264
1265 /* Writing process creation failed */
1266
1267 if (write_pid < 0)
1268 {
1269 errno = save_errno; /* restore */
1270 goto TIDY_UP;
1271 }
1272
1273 /* When testing, let the subprocess get going */
1274
1275 if (f.running_in_test_harness) millisleep(250);
1276
1277 DEBUG(D_transport)
1278 debug_printf("process %d writing to transport filter\n", (int)write_pid);
1279
1280 /* Copy the message from the filter to the output fd. A read error leaves len
1281 == -1 and errno set. We need to apply a timeout to the read, to cope with
1282 the case when the filter gets stuck, but it can be quite a long one. The
1283 default is 5m, but this is now configurable. */
1284
1285 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("copying from the filter\n");
1286
1287 /* Copy the output of the filter, remembering if the last character was NL. If
1288 no data is returned, that counts as "ended with NL" (default setting of the
1289 variable is TRUE). The output should always be unix-format as we converted
1290 any wireformat source on writing input to the filter. */
1291
1292 f.spool_file_wireformat = FALSE;
1293 chunk_ptr = deliver_out_buffer;
1294
1295 for (;;)
1296 {
1297 sigalrm_seen = FALSE;
1298 ALARM(transport_filter_timeout);
1299 len = read(fd_read, deliver_in_buffer, DELIVER_IN_BUFFER_SIZE);
1300 ALARM_CLR(0);
1301 if (sigalrm_seen)
1302 {
1303 errno = ETIMEDOUT;
1304 f.transport_filter_timed_out = TRUE;
1305 goto TIDY_UP;
1306 }
1307
1308 /* If the read was successful, write the block down the original fd,
1309 remembering whether it ends in \n or not. */
1310
1311 if (len > 0)
1312 {
1313 if (!write_chunk(tctx, deliver_in_buffer, len)) goto TIDY_UP;
1314 last_filter_was_NL = (deliver_in_buffer[len-1] == '\n');
1315 }
1316
1317 /* Otherwise, break the loop. If we have hit EOF, set yield = TRUE. */
1318
1319 else
1320 {
1321 if (len == 0) yield = TRUE;
1322 break;
1323 }
1324 }
1325
1326 /* Tidying up code. If yield = FALSE there has been an error and errno is set
1327 to something. Ensure the pipes are all closed and the processes are removed. If
1328 there has been an error, kill the processes before waiting for them, just to be
1329 sure. Also apply a paranoia timeout. */
1330
1331 TIDY_UP:
1332 f.spool_file_wireformat = save_spool_file_wireformat;
1333 save_errno = errno;
1334
1335 (void)close(fd_read);
1336 if (fd_write > 0) (void)close(fd_write);
1337
1338 if (!yield)
1339 {
1340 if (filter_pid > 0) kill(filter_pid, SIGKILL);
1341 if (write_pid > 0) kill(write_pid, SIGKILL);
1342 }
1343
1344 /* Wait for the filter process to complete. */
1345
1346 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("waiting for filter process\n");
1347 if (filter_pid > 0 && (rc = child_close(filter_pid, 30)) != 0 && yield)
1348 {
1349 yield = FALSE;
1350 save_errno = ERRNO_FILTER_FAIL;
1351 tctx->addr->more_errno = rc;
1352 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("filter process returned %d\n", rc);
1353 }
1354
1355 /* Wait for the writing process to complete. If it ends successfully,
1356 read the results from its pipe, provided we haven't already had a filter
1357 process failure. */
1358
1359 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("waiting for writing process\n");
1360 if (write_pid > 0)
1361 {
1362 rc = child_close(write_pid, 30);
1363 if (yield)
1364 if (rc == 0)
1365 {
1366 BOOL ok;
1367 if (read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&ok, sizeof(BOOL)) != sizeof(BOOL))
1368 {
1369 DEBUG(D_transport)
1370 debug_printf("pipe read from writing process: %s\n", strerror(errno));
1371 save_errno = ERRNO_FILTER_FAIL;
1372 yield = FALSE;
1373 }
1374 else if (!ok)
1375 {
1376 int dummy = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&save_errno, sizeof(int));
1377 dummy = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&tctx->addr->more_errno, sizeof(int));
1378 dummy = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&tctx->addr->delivery_usec, sizeof(int));
1379 dummy = dummy; /* compiler quietening */
1380 yield = FALSE;
1381 }
1382 }
1383 else
1384 {
1385 yield = FALSE;
1386 save_errno = ERRNO_FILTER_FAIL;
1387 tctx->addr->more_errno = rc;
1388 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("writing process returned %d\n", rc);
1389 }
1390 }
1391 (void)close(pfd[pipe_read]);
1392
1393 /* If there have been no problems we can now add the terminating "." if this is
1394 SMTP output, turning off escaping beforehand. If the last character from the
1395 filter was not NL, insert a NL to make the SMTP protocol work. */
1396
1397 if (yield)
1398 {
1399 nl_check_length = nl_escape_length = 0;
1400 f.spool_file_wireformat = FALSE;
1401 if ( tctx->options & topt_end_dot
1402 && ( last_filter_was_NL
1403 ? !write_chunk(tctx, US".\n", 2)
1404 : !write_chunk(tctx, US"\n.\n", 3)
1405 ) )
1406 yield = FALSE;
1407
1408 /* Write out any remaining data in the buffer. */
1409
1410 else
1411 yield = (len = chunk_ptr - deliver_out_buffer) <= 0
1412 || transport_write_block(tctx, deliver_out_buffer, len, FALSE);
1413 }
1414 else
1415 errno = save_errno; /* From some earlier error */
1416
1417 DEBUG(D_transport)
1418 {
1419 debug_printf("end of filtering transport writing: yield=%d\n", yield);
1420 if (!yield)
1421 debug_printf("errno=%d more_errno=%d\n", errno, tctx->addr->more_errno);
1422 }
1423
1424 return yield;
1425 }
1426
1427
1428
1429
1430
1431 /*************************************************
1432 * Update waiting database *
1433 *************************************************/
1434
1435 /* This is called when an address is deferred by remote transports that are
1436 capable of sending more than one message over one connection. A database is
1437 maintained for each transport, keeping track of which messages are waiting for
1438 which hosts. The transport can then consult this when eventually a successful
1439 delivery happens, and if it finds that another message is waiting for the same
1440 host, it can fire up a new process to deal with it using the same connection.
1441
1442 The database records are keyed by host name. They can get full if there are
1443 lots of messages waiting, and so there is a continuation mechanism for them.
1444
1445 Each record contains a list of message ids, packed end to end without any
1446 zeros. Each one is MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH bytes long. The count field says how many
1447 in this record, and the sequence field says if there are any other records for
1448 this host. If the sequence field is 0, there are none. If it is 1, then another
1449 record with the name <hostname>:0 exists; if it is 2, then two other records
1450 with sequence numbers 0 and 1 exist, and so on.
1451
1452 Currently, an exhaustive search of all continuation records has to be done to
1453 determine whether to add a message id to a given record. This shouldn't be
1454 too bad except in extreme cases. I can't figure out a *simple* way of doing
1455 better.
1456
1457 Old records should eventually get swept up by the exim_tidydb utility.
1458
1459 Arguments:
1460 hostlist list of hosts that this message could be sent to
1461 tpname name of the transport
1462
1463 Returns: nothing
1464 */
1465
1466 void
1467 transport_update_waiting(host_item *hostlist, uschar *tpname)
1468 {
1469 const uschar *prevname = US"";
1470 open_db dbblock;
1471 open_db *dbm_file;
1472
1473 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("updating wait-%s database\n", tpname);
1474
1475 /* Open the database for this transport */
1476
1477 if (!(dbm_file = dbfn_open(string_sprintf("wait-%.200s", tpname),
1478 O_RDWR, &dbblock, TRUE, TRUE)))
1479 return;
1480
1481 /* Scan the list of hosts for which this message is waiting, and ensure
1482 that the message id is in each host record. */
1483
1484 for (host_item * host = hostlist; host; host = host->next)
1485 {
1486 BOOL already = FALSE;
1487 dbdata_wait *host_record;
1488 int host_length;
1489 uschar buffer[256];
1490
1491 /* Skip if this is the same host as we just processed; otherwise remember
1492 the name for next time. */
1493
1494 if (Ustrcmp(prevname, host->name) == 0) continue;
1495 prevname = host->name;
1496
1497 /* Look up the host record; if there isn't one, make an empty one. */
1498
1499 if (!(host_record = dbfn_read(dbm_file, host->name)))
1500 {
1501 host_record = store_get(sizeof(dbdata_wait) + MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH);
1502 host_record->count = host_record->sequence = 0;
1503 }
1504
1505 /* Compute the current length */
1506
1507 host_length = host_record->count * MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH;
1508
1509 /* Search the record to see if the current message is already in it. */
1510
1511 for (uschar * s = host_record->text; s < host_record->text + host_length;
1512 s += MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH)
1513 if (Ustrncmp(s, message_id, MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH) == 0)
1514 { already = TRUE; break; }
1515
1516 /* If we haven't found this message in the main record, search any
1517 continuation records that exist. */
1518
1519 for (int i = host_record->sequence - 1; i >= 0 && !already; i--)
1520 {
1521 dbdata_wait *cont;
1522 sprintf(CS buffer, "%.200s:%d", host->name, i);
1523 if ((cont = dbfn_read(dbm_file, buffer)))
1524 {
1525 int clen = cont->count * MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH;
1526 for (uschar * s = cont->text; s < cont->text + clen; s += MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH)
1527 if (Ustrncmp(s, message_id, MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH) == 0)
1528 { already = TRUE; break; }
1529 }
1530 }
1531
1532 /* If this message is already in a record, no need to update. */
1533
1534 if (already)
1535 {
1536 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("already listed for %s\n", host->name);
1537 continue;
1538 }
1539
1540
1541 /* If this record is full, write it out with a new name constructed
1542 from the sequence number, increase the sequence number, and empty
1543 the record. */
1544
1545 if (host_record->count >= WAIT_NAME_MAX)
1546 {
1547 sprintf(CS buffer, "%.200s:%d", host->name, host_record->sequence);
1548 dbfn_write(dbm_file, buffer, host_record, sizeof(dbdata_wait) + host_length);
1549 host_record->sequence++;
1550 host_record->count = 0;
1551 host_length = 0;
1552 }
1553
1554 /* If this record is not full, increase the size of the record to
1555 allow for one new message id. */
1556
1557 else
1558 {
1559 dbdata_wait *newr =
1560 store_get(sizeof(dbdata_wait) + host_length + MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH);
1561 memcpy(newr, host_record, sizeof(dbdata_wait) + host_length);
1562 host_record = newr;
1563 }
1564
1565 /* Now add the new name on the end */
1566
1567 memcpy(host_record->text + host_length, message_id, MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH);
1568 host_record->count++;
1569 host_length += MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH;
1570
1571 /* Update the database */
1572
1573 dbfn_write(dbm_file, host->name, host_record, sizeof(dbdata_wait) + host_length);
1574 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("added to list for %s\n", host->name);
1575 }
1576
1577 /* All now done */
1578
1579 dbfn_close(dbm_file);
1580 }
1581
1582
1583
1584
1585 /*************************************************
1586 * Test for waiting messages *
1587 *************************************************/
1588
1589 /* This function is called by a remote transport which uses the previous
1590 function to remember which messages are waiting for which remote hosts. It's
1591 called after a successful delivery and its job is to check whether there is
1592 another message waiting for the same host. However, it doesn't do this if the
1593 current continue sequence is greater than the maximum supplied as an argument,
1594 or greater than the global connection_max_messages, which, if set, overrides.
1595
1596 Arguments:
1597 transport_name name of the transport
1598 hostname name of the host
1599 local_message_max maximum number of messages down one connection
1600 as set by the caller transport
1601 new_message_id set to the message id of a waiting message
1602 more set TRUE if there are yet more messages waiting
1603 oicf_func function to call to validate if it is ok to send
1604 to this message_id from the current instance.
1605 oicf_data opaque data for oicf_func
1606
1607 Returns: TRUE if new_message_id set; FALSE otherwise
1608 */
1609
1610 typedef struct msgq_s
1611 {
1612 uschar message_id [MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH + 1];
1613 BOOL bKeep;
1614 } msgq_t;
1615
1616 BOOL
1617 transport_check_waiting(const uschar *transport_name, const uschar *hostname,
1618 int local_message_max, uschar *new_message_id, BOOL *more, oicf oicf_func, void *oicf_data)
1619 {
1620 dbdata_wait *host_record;
1621 int host_length;
1622 open_db dbblock;
1623 open_db *dbm_file;
1624
1625 int i;
1626 struct stat statbuf;
1627
1628 *more = FALSE;
1629
1630 DEBUG(D_transport)
1631 {
1632 debug_printf("transport_check_waiting entered\n");
1633 debug_printf(" sequence=%d local_max=%d global_max=%d\n",
1634 continue_sequence, local_message_max, connection_max_messages);
1635 }
1636
1637 /* Do nothing if we have hit the maximum number that can be send down one
1638 connection. */
1639
1640 if (connection_max_messages >= 0) local_message_max = connection_max_messages;
1641 if (local_message_max > 0 && continue_sequence >= local_message_max)
1642 {
1643 DEBUG(D_transport)
1644 debug_printf("max messages for one connection reached: returning\n");
1645 return FALSE;
1646 }
1647
1648 /* Open the waiting information database. */
1649
1650 if (!(dbm_file = dbfn_open(string_sprintf("wait-%.200s", transport_name),
1651 O_RDWR, &dbblock, TRUE, TRUE)))
1652 return FALSE;
1653
1654 /* See if there is a record for this host; if not, there's nothing to do. */
1655
1656 if (!(host_record = dbfn_read(dbm_file, hostname)))
1657 {
1658 dbfn_close(dbm_file);
1659 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("no messages waiting for %s\n", hostname);
1660 return FALSE;
1661 }
1662
1663 /* If the data in the record looks corrupt, just log something and
1664 don't try to use it. */
1665
1666 if (host_record->count > WAIT_NAME_MAX)
1667 {
1668 dbfn_close(dbm_file);
1669 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "smtp-wait database entry for %s has bad "
1670 "count=%d (max=%d)", hostname, host_record->count, WAIT_NAME_MAX);
1671 return FALSE;
1672 }
1673
1674 /* Scan the message ids in the record from the end towards the beginning,
1675 until one is found for which a spool file actually exists. If the record gets
1676 emptied, delete it and continue with any continuation records that may exist.
1677 */
1678
1679 /* For Bug 1141, I refactored this major portion of the routine, it is risky
1680 but the 1 off will remain without it. This code now allows me to SKIP over
1681 a message I do not want to send out on this run. */
1682
1683 host_length = host_record->count * MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH;
1684
1685 while (1)
1686 {
1687 msgq_t *msgq;
1688 int msgq_count = 0;
1689 int msgq_actual = 0;
1690 BOOL bFound = FALSE;
1691 BOOL bContinuation = FALSE;
1692
1693 /* create an array to read entire message queue into memory for processing */
1694
1695 msgq = store_malloc(sizeof(msgq_t) * host_record->count);
1696 msgq_count = host_record->count;
1697 msgq_actual = msgq_count;
1698
1699 for (i = 0; i < host_record->count; ++i)
1700 {
1701 msgq[i].bKeep = TRUE;
1702
1703 Ustrncpy(msgq[i].message_id, host_record->text + (i * MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH),
1704 MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH);
1705 msgq[i].message_id[MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH] = 0;
1706 }
1707
1708 /* first thing remove current message id if it exists */
1709
1710 for (i = 0; i < msgq_count; ++i)
1711 if (Ustrcmp(msgq[i].message_id, message_id) == 0)
1712 {
1713 msgq[i].bKeep = FALSE;
1714 break;
1715 }
1716
1717 /* now find the next acceptable message_id */
1718
1719 for (i = msgq_count - 1; i >= 0; --i) if (msgq[i].bKeep)
1720 {
1721 uschar subdir[2];
1722
1723 subdir[0] = split_spool_directory ? msgq[i].message_id[5] : 0;
1724 subdir[1] = 0;
1725
1726 if (Ustat(spool_fname(US"input", subdir, msgq[i].message_id, US"-D"),
1727 &statbuf) != 0)
1728 msgq[i].bKeep = FALSE;
1729 else if (!oicf_func || oicf_func(msgq[i].message_id, oicf_data))
1730 {
1731 Ustrcpy(new_message_id, msgq[i].message_id);
1732 msgq[i].bKeep = FALSE;
1733 bFound = TRUE;
1734 break;
1735 }
1736 }
1737
1738 /* re-count */
1739 for (msgq_actual = 0, i = 0; i < msgq_count; ++i)
1740 if (msgq[i].bKeep)
1741 msgq_actual++;
1742
1743 /* reassemble the host record, based on removed message ids, from in
1744 memory queue */
1745
1746 if (msgq_actual <= 0)
1747 {
1748 host_length = 0;
1749 host_record->count = 0;
1750 }
1751 else
1752 {
1753 host_length = msgq_actual * MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH;
1754 host_record->count = msgq_actual;
1755
1756 if (msgq_actual < msgq_count)
1757 {
1758 int new_count;
1759 for (new_count = 0, i = 0; i < msgq_count; ++i)
1760 if (msgq[i].bKeep)
1761 Ustrncpy(&host_record->text[new_count++ * MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH],
1762 msgq[i].message_id, MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH);
1763
1764 host_record->text[new_count * MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH] = 0;
1765 }
1766 }
1767
1768 /* Check for a continuation record. */
1769
1770 while (host_length <= 0)
1771 {
1772 dbdata_wait * newr = NULL;
1773 uschar buffer[256];
1774
1775 /* Search for a continuation */
1776
1777 for (int i = host_record->sequence - 1; i >= 0 && !newr; i--)
1778 {
1779 sprintf(CS buffer, "%.200s:%d", hostname, i);
1780 newr = dbfn_read(dbm_file, buffer);
1781 }
1782
1783 /* If no continuation, delete the current and break the loop */
1784
1785 if (!newr)
1786 {
1787 dbfn_delete(dbm_file, hostname);
1788 break;
1789 }
1790
1791 /* Else replace the current with the continuation */
1792
1793 dbfn_delete(dbm_file, buffer);
1794 host_record = newr;
1795 host_length = host_record->count * MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH;
1796
1797 bContinuation = TRUE;
1798 }
1799
1800 if (bFound) /* Usual exit from main loop */
1801 {
1802 store_free (msgq);
1803 break;
1804 }
1805
1806 /* If host_length <= 0 we have emptied a record and not found a good message,
1807 and there are no continuation records. Otherwise there is a continuation
1808 record to process. */
1809
1810 if (host_length <= 0)
1811 {
1812 dbfn_close(dbm_file);
1813 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("waiting messages already delivered\n");
1814 return FALSE;
1815 }
1816
1817 /* we were not able to find an acceptable message, nor was there a
1818 * continuation record. So bug out, outer logic will clean this up.
1819 */
1820
1821 if (!bContinuation)
1822 {
1823 Ustrcpy(new_message_id, message_id);
1824 dbfn_close(dbm_file);
1825 return FALSE;
1826 }
1827
1828 store_free(msgq);
1829 } /* we need to process a continuation record */
1830
1831 /* Control gets here when an existing message has been encountered; its
1832 id is in new_message_id, and host_length is the revised length of the
1833 host record. If it is zero, the record has been removed. Update the
1834 record if required, close the database, and return TRUE. */
1835
1836 if (host_length > 0)
1837 {
1838 host_record->count = host_length/MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH;
1839
1840 dbfn_write(dbm_file, hostname, host_record, (int)sizeof(dbdata_wait) + host_length);
1841 *more = TRUE;
1842 }
1843
1844 dbfn_close(dbm_file);
1845 return TRUE;
1846 }
1847
1848 /*************************************************
1849 * Deliver waiting message down same socket *
1850 *************************************************/
1851
1852 /* Just the regain-root-privilege exec portion */
1853 void
1854 transport_do_pass_socket(const uschar *transport_name, const uschar *hostname,
1855 const uschar *hostaddress, uschar *id, int socket_fd)
1856 {
1857 int i = 20;
1858 const uschar **argv;
1859
1860 /* Set up the calling arguments; use the standard function for the basics,
1861 but we have a number of extras that may be added. */
1862
1863 argv = CUSS child_exec_exim(CEE_RETURN_ARGV, TRUE, &i, FALSE, 0);
1864
1865 if (f.smtp_authenticated) argv[i++] = US"-MCA";
1866 if (smtp_peer_options & OPTION_CHUNKING) argv[i++] = US"-MCK";
1867 if (smtp_peer_options & OPTION_DSN) argv[i++] = US"-MCD";
1868 if (smtp_peer_options & OPTION_PIPE) argv[i++] = US"-MCP";
1869 if (smtp_peer_options & OPTION_SIZE) argv[i++] = US"-MCS";
1870 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
1871 if (smtp_peer_options & OPTION_TLS)
1872 if (tls_out.active.sock >= 0 || continue_proxy_cipher)
1873 {
1874 argv[i++] = US"-MCt";
1875 argv[i++] = sending_ip_address;
1876 argv[i++] = string_sprintf("%d", sending_port);
1877 argv[i++] = tls_out.active.sock >= 0 ? tls_out.cipher : continue_proxy_cipher;
1878 }
1879 else
1880 argv[i++] = US"-MCT";
1881 #endif
1882
1883 if (queue_run_pid != (pid_t)0)
1884 {
1885 argv[i++] = US"-MCQ";
1886 argv[i++] = string_sprintf("%d", queue_run_pid);
1887 argv[i++] = string_sprintf("%d", queue_run_pipe);
1888 }
1889
1890 argv[i++] = US"-MC";
1891 argv[i++] = US transport_name;
1892 argv[i++] = US hostname;
1893 argv[i++] = US hostaddress;
1894 argv[i++] = string_sprintf("%d", continue_sequence + 1);
1895 argv[i++] = id;
1896 argv[i++] = NULL;
1897
1898 /* Arrange for the channel to be on stdin. */
1899
1900 if (socket_fd != 0)
1901 {
1902 (void)dup2(socket_fd, 0);
1903 (void)close(socket_fd);
1904 }
1905
1906 DEBUG(D_exec) debug_print_argv(argv);
1907 exim_nullstd(); /* Ensure std{out,err} exist */
1908 execv(CS argv[0], (char *const *)argv);
1909
1910 DEBUG(D_any) debug_printf("execv failed: %s\n", strerror(errno));
1911 _exit(errno); /* Note: must be _exit(), NOT exit() */
1912 }
1913
1914
1915
1916 /* Fork a new exim process to deliver the message, and do a re-exec, both to
1917 get a clean delivery process, and to regain root privilege in cases where it
1918 has been given away.
1919
1920 Arguments:
1921 transport_name to pass to the new process
1922 hostname ditto
1923 hostaddress ditto
1924 id the new message to process
1925 socket_fd the connected socket
1926
1927 Returns: FALSE if fork fails; TRUE otherwise
1928 */
1929
1930 BOOL
1931 transport_pass_socket(const uschar *transport_name, const uschar *hostname,
1932 const uschar *hostaddress, uschar *id, int socket_fd)
1933 {
1934 pid_t pid;
1935 int status;
1936
1937 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("transport_pass_socket entered\n");
1938
1939 if ((pid = fork()) == 0)
1940 {
1941 /* Disconnect entirely from the parent process. If we are running in the
1942 test harness, wait for a bit to allow the previous process time to finish,
1943 write the log, etc., so that the output is always in the same order for
1944 automatic comparison. */
1945
1946 if ((pid = fork()) != 0)
1947 {
1948 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("transport_pass_socket succeeded (final-pid %d)\n", pid);
1949 _exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
1950 }
1951 if (f.running_in_test_harness) sleep(1);
1952
1953 transport_do_pass_socket(transport_name, hostname, hostaddress,
1954 id, socket_fd);
1955 }
1956
1957 /* If the process creation succeeded, wait for the first-level child, which
1958 immediately exits, leaving the second level process entirely disconnected from
1959 this one. */
1960
1961 if (pid > 0)
1962 {
1963 int rc;
1964 while ((rc = wait(&status)) != pid && (rc >= 0 || errno != ECHILD));
1965 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("transport_pass_socket succeeded (inter-pid %d)\n", pid);
1966 return TRUE;
1967 }
1968 else
1969 {
1970 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("transport_pass_socket failed to fork: %s\n",
1971 strerror(errno));
1972 return FALSE;
1973 }
1974 }
1975
1976
1977
1978 /*************************************************
1979 * Set up direct (non-shell) command *
1980 *************************************************/
1981
1982 /* This function is called when a command line is to be parsed and executed
1983 directly, without the use of /bin/sh. It is called by the pipe transport,
1984 the queryprogram router, and also from the main delivery code when setting up a
1985 transport filter process. The code for ETRN also makes use of this; in that
1986 case, no addresses are passed.
1987
1988 Arguments:
1989 argvptr pointer to anchor for argv vector
1990 cmd points to the command string (modified IN PLACE)
1991 expand_arguments true if expansion is to occur
1992 expand_failed error value to set if expansion fails; not relevant if
1993 addr == NULL
1994 addr chain of addresses, or NULL
1995 etext text for use in error messages
1996 errptr where to put error message if addr is NULL;
1997 otherwise it is put in the first address
1998
1999 Returns: TRUE if all went well; otherwise an error will be
2000 set in the first address and FALSE returned
2001 */
2002
2003 BOOL
2004 transport_set_up_command(const uschar ***argvptr, uschar *cmd,
2005 BOOL expand_arguments, int expand_failed, address_item *addr,
2006 uschar *etext, uschar **errptr)
2007 {
2008 const uschar **argv;
2009 uschar *s, *ss;
2010 int address_count = 0;
2011 int argcount = 0;
2012 int max_args;
2013
2014 /* Get store in which to build an argument list. Count the number of addresses
2015 supplied, and allow for that many arguments, plus an additional 60, which
2016 should be enough for anybody. Multiple addresses happen only when the local
2017 delivery batch option is set. */
2018
2019 for (address_item * ad = addr; ad; ad = ad->next) address_count++;
2020 max_args = address_count + 60;
2021 *argvptr = argv = store_get((max_args+1)*sizeof(uschar *));
2022
2023 /* Split the command up into arguments terminated by white space. Lose
2024 trailing space at the start and end. Double-quoted arguments can contain \\ and
2025 \" escapes and so can be handled by the standard function; single-quoted
2026 arguments are verbatim. Copy each argument into a new string. */
2027
2028 s = cmd;
2029 while (isspace(*s)) s++;
2030
2031 while (*s != 0 && argcount < max_args)
2032 {
2033 if (*s == '\'')
2034 {
2035 ss = s + 1;
2036 while (*ss != 0 && *ss != '\'') ss++;
2037 argv[argcount++] = ss = store_get(ss - s++);
2038 while (*s != 0 && *s != '\'') *ss++ = *s++;
2039 if (*s != 0) s++;
2040 *ss++ = 0;
2041 }
2042 else argv[argcount++] = string_copy(string_dequote(CUSS &s));
2043 while (isspace(*s)) s++;
2044 }
2045
2046 argv[argcount] = US 0;
2047
2048 /* If *s != 0 we have run out of argument slots. */
2049
2050 if (*s != 0)
2051 {
2052 uschar *msg = string_sprintf("Too many arguments in command \"%s\" in "
2053 "%s", cmd, etext);
2054 if (addr != NULL)
2055 {
2056 addr->transport_return = FAIL;
2057 addr->message = msg;
2058 }
2059 else *errptr = msg;
2060 return FALSE;
2061 }
2062
2063 /* Expand each individual argument if required. Expansion happens for pipes set
2064 up in filter files and with directly-supplied commands. It does not happen if
2065 the pipe comes from a traditional .forward file. A failing expansion is a big
2066 disaster if the command came from Exim's configuration; if it came from a user
2067 it is just a normal failure. The expand_failed value is used as the error value
2068 to cater for these two cases.
2069
2070 An argument consisting just of the text "$pipe_addresses" is treated specially.
2071 It is not passed to the general expansion function. Instead, it is replaced by
2072 a number of arguments, one for each address. This avoids problems with shell
2073 metacharacters and spaces in addresses.
2074
2075 If the parent of the top address has an original part of "system-filter", this
2076 pipe was set up by the system filter, and we can permit the expansion of
2077 $recipients. */
2078
2079 DEBUG(D_transport)
2080 {
2081 debug_printf("direct command:\n");
2082 for (int i = 0; argv[i] != US 0; i++)
2083 debug_printf(" argv[%d] = %s\n", i, string_printing(argv[i]));
2084 }
2085
2086 if (expand_arguments)
2087 {
2088 BOOL allow_dollar_recipients = addr != NULL &&
2089 addr->parent != NULL &&
2090 Ustrcmp(addr->parent->address, "system-filter") == 0;
2091
2092 for (int i = 0; argv[i] != US 0; i++)
2093 {
2094
2095 /* Handle special fudge for passing an address list */
2096
2097 if (addr != NULL &&
2098 (Ustrcmp(argv[i], "$pipe_addresses") == 0 ||
2099 Ustrcmp(argv[i], "${pipe_addresses}") == 0))
2100 {
2101 int additional;
2102
2103 if (argcount + address_count - 1 > max_args)
2104 {
2105 addr->transport_return = FAIL;
2106 addr->message = string_sprintf("Too many arguments to command \"%s\" "
2107 "in %s", cmd, etext);
2108 return FALSE;
2109 }
2110
2111 additional = address_count - 1;
2112 if (additional > 0)
2113 memmove(argv + i + 1 + additional, argv + i + 1,
2114 (argcount - i)*sizeof(uschar *));
2115
2116 for (address_item * ad = addr; ad; ad = ad->next)
2117 {
2118 argv[i++] = ad->address;
2119 argcount++;
2120 }
2121
2122 /* Subtract one since we replace $pipe_addresses */
2123 argcount--;
2124 i--;
2125 }
2126
2127 /* Handle special case of $address_pipe when af_force_command is set */
2128
2129 else if (addr != NULL && testflag(addr,af_force_command) &&
2130 (Ustrcmp(argv[i], "$address_pipe") == 0 ||
2131 Ustrcmp(argv[i], "${address_pipe}") == 0))
2132 {
2133 int address_pipe_argcount = 0;
2134 int address_pipe_max_args;
2135 uschar **address_pipe_argv;
2136
2137 /* We can never have more then the argv we will be loading into */
2138 address_pipe_max_args = max_args - argcount + 1;
2139
2140 DEBUG(D_transport)
2141 debug_printf("address_pipe_max_args=%d\n", address_pipe_max_args);
2142
2143 /* We allocate an additional for (uschar *)0 */
2144 address_pipe_argv = store_get((address_pipe_max_args+1)*sizeof(uschar *));
2145
2146 /* +1 because addr->local_part[0] == '|' since af_force_command is set */
2147 s = expand_string(addr->local_part + 1);
2148
2149 if (s == NULL || *s == '\0')
2150 {
2151 addr->transport_return = FAIL;
2152 addr->message = string_sprintf("Expansion of \"%s\" "
2153 "from command \"%s\" in %s failed: %s",
2154 (addr->local_part + 1), cmd, etext, expand_string_message);
2155 return FALSE;
2156 }
2157
2158 while (isspace(*s)) s++; /* strip leading space */
2159
2160 while (*s != 0 && address_pipe_argcount < address_pipe_max_args)
2161 {
2162 if (*s == '\'')
2163 {
2164 ss = s + 1;
2165 while (*ss != 0 && *ss != '\'') ss++;
2166 address_pipe_argv[address_pipe_argcount++] = ss = store_get(ss - s++);
2167 while (*s != 0 && *s != '\'') *ss++ = *s++;
2168 if (*s != 0) s++;
2169 *ss++ = 0;
2170 }
2171 else address_pipe_argv[address_pipe_argcount++] =
2172 string_copy(string_dequote(CUSS &s));
2173 while (isspace(*s)) s++; /* strip space after arg */
2174 }
2175
2176 address_pipe_argv[address_pipe_argcount] = US 0;
2177
2178 /* If *s != 0 we have run out of argument slots. */
2179 if (*s != 0)
2180 {
2181 uschar *msg = string_sprintf("Too many arguments in $address_pipe "
2182 "\"%s\" in %s", addr->local_part + 1, etext);
2183 if (addr != NULL)
2184 {
2185 addr->transport_return = FAIL;
2186 addr->message = msg;
2187 }
2188 else *errptr = msg;
2189 return FALSE;
2190 }
2191
2192 /* address_pipe_argcount - 1
2193 * because we are replacing $address_pipe in the argument list
2194 * with the first thing it expands to */
2195 if (argcount + address_pipe_argcount - 1 > max_args)
2196 {
2197 addr->transport_return = FAIL;
2198 addr->message = string_sprintf("Too many arguments to command "
2199 "\"%s\" after expanding $address_pipe in %s", cmd, etext);
2200 return FALSE;
2201 }
2202
2203 /* If we are not just able to replace the slot that contained
2204 * $address_pipe (address_pipe_argcount == 1)
2205 * We have to move the existing argv by address_pipe_argcount - 1
2206 * Visually if address_pipe_argcount == 2:
2207 * [argv 0][argv 1][argv 2($address_pipe)][argv 3][0]
2208 * [argv 0][argv 1][ap_arg0][ap_arg1][old argv 3][0]
2209 */
2210 if (address_pipe_argcount > 1)
2211 memmove(
2212 /* current position + additional args */
2213 argv + i + address_pipe_argcount,
2214 /* current position + 1 (for the (uschar *)0 at the end) */
2215 argv + i + 1,
2216 /* -1 for the (uschar *)0 at the end)*/
2217 (argcount - i)*sizeof(uschar *)
2218 );
2219
2220 /* Now we fill in the slots we just moved argv out of
2221 * [argv 0][argv 1][argv 2=pipeargv[0]][argv 3=pipeargv[1]][old argv 3][0]
2222 */
2223 for (int address_pipe_i = 0;
2224 address_pipe_argv[address_pipe_i] != US 0;
2225 address_pipe_i++)
2226 {
2227 argv[i++] = address_pipe_argv[address_pipe_i];
2228 argcount++;
2229 }
2230
2231 /* Subtract one since we replace $address_pipe */
2232 argcount--;
2233 i--;
2234 }
2235
2236 /* Handle normal expansion string */
2237
2238 else
2239 {
2240 const uschar *expanded_arg;
2241 f.enable_dollar_recipients = allow_dollar_recipients;
2242 expanded_arg = expand_cstring(argv[i]);
2243 f.enable_dollar_recipients = FALSE;
2244
2245 if (expanded_arg == NULL)
2246 {
2247 uschar *msg = string_sprintf("Expansion of \"%s\" "
2248 "from command \"%s\" in %s failed: %s",
2249 argv[i], cmd, etext, expand_string_message);
2250 if (addr != NULL)
2251 {
2252 addr->transport_return = expand_failed;
2253 addr->message = msg;
2254 }
2255 else *errptr = msg;
2256 return FALSE;
2257 }
2258 argv[i] = expanded_arg;
2259 }
2260 }
2261
2262 DEBUG(D_transport)
2263 {
2264 debug_printf("direct command after expansion:\n");
2265 for (int i = 0; argv[i] != US 0; i++)
2266 debug_printf(" argv[%d] = %s\n", i, string_printing(argv[i]));
2267 }
2268 }
2269
2270 return TRUE;
2271 }
2272
2273 #endif /*!MACRO_PREDEF*/
2274 /* vi: aw ai sw=2
2275 */
2276 /* End of transport.c */