| /* vi: set sw=4 ts=4: */ |
| /* |
| * micro lpd |
| * |
| * Copyright (C) 2008 by Vladimir Dronnikov <dronnikov@gmail.com> |
| * |
| * Licensed under GPLv2, see file LICENSE in this source tree. |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * A typical usage of BB lpd looks as follows: |
| * # tcpsvd -E 0 515 lpd [SPOOLDIR] [HELPER-PROG [ARGS...]] |
| * |
| * This starts TCP listener on port 515 (default for LP protocol). |
| * When a client connection is made (via lpr) lpd first changes its |
| * working directory to SPOOLDIR (current dir is the default). |
| * |
| * SPOOLDIR is the spool directory which contains printing queues |
| * and should have the following structure: |
| * |
| * SPOOLDIR/ |
| * <queue1> |
| * ... |
| * <queueN> |
| * |
| * <queueX> can be of two types: |
| * A. a printer character device, an ordinary file or a link to such; |
| * B. a directory. |
| * |
| * In case A lpd just dumps the data it receives from client (lpr) to the |
| * end of queue file/device. This is non-spooling mode. |
| * |
| * In case B lpd enters spooling mode. It reliably saves client data along |
| * with control info in two unique files under the queue directory. These |
| * files are named dfAXXXHHHH and cfAXXXHHHH, where XXX is the job number |
| * and HHHH is the client hostname. Unless a printing helper application |
| * is specified lpd is done at this point. |
| * |
| * NB: file names are produced by peer! They actually may be anything at all. |
| * lpd only sanitizes them (by removing most non-alphanumerics). |
| * |
| * If HELPER-PROG (with optional arguments) is specified then lpd continues |
| * to process client data: |
| * 1. it reads and parses control file (cfA...). The parse process |
| * results in setting environment variables whose values were passed |
| * in control file; when parsing is complete, lpd deletes control file. |
| * 2. it spawns specified helper application. It is then |
| * the helper application who is responsible for both actual printing |
| * and deleting of processed data file. |
| * |
| * A good lpr passes control files which when parsed provides the following |
| * variables: |
| * $H = host which issues the job |
| * $P = user who prints |
| * $C = class of printing (what is printed on banner page) |
| * $J = the name of the job |
| * $L = print banner page |
| * $M = the user to whom a mail should be sent if a problem occurs |
| * |
| * We specifically filter out and NOT provide: |
| * $l = name of datafile ("dfAxxx") - file whose content are to be printed |
| * |
| * lpd provides $DATAFILE instead - the ACTUAL name |
| * of the datafile under which it was saved. |
| * $l would be not reliable (you would be at mercy of remote peer). |
| * |
| * Thus, a typical helper can be something like this: |
| * #!/bin/sh |
| * cat ./"$DATAFILE" >/dev/lp0 |
| * mv -f ./"$DATAFILE" save/ |
| */ |
| //config:config LPD |
| //config: bool "lpd (5.5 kb)" |
| //config: default y |
| //config: help |
| //config: lpd is a print spooling daemon. |
| |
| //applet:IF_LPD(APPLET(lpd, BB_DIR_USR_SBIN, BB_SUID_DROP)) |
| |
| //kbuild:lib-$(CONFIG_LPD) += lpd.o |
| |
| //usage:#define lpd_trivial_usage |
| //usage: "SPOOLDIR [HELPER [ARGS]]" |
| //usage:#define lpd_full_usage "\n\n" |
| //usage: "SPOOLDIR must contain (symlinks to) device nodes or directories" |
| //usage: "\nwith names matching print queue names. In the first case, jobs are" |
| //usage: "\nsent directly to the device. Otherwise each job is stored in queue" |
| //usage: "\ndirectory and HELPER program is called. Name of file to print" |
| //usage: "\nis passed in $DATAFILE variable." |
| //usage: "\nExample:" |
| //usage: "\n tcpsvd -E 0 515 softlimit -m 999999 lpd /var/spool ./print" |
| |
| #include "libbb.h" |
| |
| // strip argument of bad chars |
| static char *sane(char *str) |
| { |
| char *s = str; |
| char *p = s; |
| while (*s) { |
| if (isalnum(*s) || '-' == *s || '_' == *s) { |
| *p++ = *s; |
| } |
| s++; |
| } |
| *p = '\0'; |
| return str; |
| } |
| |
| static char *xmalloc_read_stdin(void) |
| { |
| // SECURITY: |
| size_t max = 4 * 1024; // more than enough for commands! |
| return xmalloc_reads(STDIN_FILENO, &max); |
| } |
| |
| int lpd_main(int argc, char *argv[]) MAIN_EXTERNALLY_VISIBLE; |
| int lpd_main(int argc UNUSED_PARAM, char *argv[]) |
| { |
| int spooling = spooling; // for compiler |
| char *s, *queue; |
| char *filenames[2]; |
| |
| // goto spool directory |
| if (*++argv) |
| xchdir(*argv++); |
| |
| // error messages of xfuncs will be sent over network |
| xdup2(STDOUT_FILENO, STDERR_FILENO); |
| |
| // nullify ctrl/data filenames |
| memset(filenames, 0, sizeof(filenames)); |
| |
| // read command |
| s = queue = xmalloc_read_stdin(); |
| if (!s) // eof? |
| return EXIT_FAILURE; |
| // we understand only "receive job" command |
| if (2 != *queue) { |
| unsupported_cmd: |
| printf("Command %02x %s\n", |
| (unsigned char)s[0], "is not supported"); |
| goto err_exit; |
| } |
| |
| // parse command: "2 | QUEUE_NAME | '\n'" |
| queue++; |
| // protect against "/../" attacks |
| // *strchrnul(queue, '\n') = '\0'; - redundant, sane() will do |
| if (!*sane(queue)) |
| return EXIT_FAILURE; |
| |
| // queue is a directory -> chdir to it and enter spooling mode |
| spooling = chdir(queue) + 1; // 0: cannot chdir, 1: done |
| // we don't free(s), we might need "queue" var later |
| |
| while (1) { |
| char *fname; |
| int fd; |
| // int is easier than ssize_t: can use xatoi_positive, |
| // and can correctly display error returns (-1) |
| int expected_len, real_len; |
| |
| // signal OK |
| safe_write(STDOUT_FILENO, "", 1); |
| |
| // get subcommand |
| // valid s must be of form: "SUBCMD | LEN | space | FNAME" |
| // N.B. we bail out on any error |
| s = xmalloc_read_stdin(); |
| if (!s) { // (probably) EOF |
| char *p, *q, var[2]; |
| |
| // non-spooling mode or no spool helper specified |
| if (!spooling || !*argv) |
| return EXIT_SUCCESS; // the only non-error exit |
| // spooling mode but we didn't see both ctrlfile & datafile |
| if (spooling != 7) |
| goto err_exit; // reject job |
| |
| // spooling mode and spool helper specified -> exec spool helper |
| // (we exit 127 if helper cannot be executed) |
| var[1] = '\0'; |
| // read and delete ctrlfile |
| q = xmalloc_xopen_read_close(filenames[0], NULL); |
| unlink(filenames[0]); |
| // provide datafile name |
| // we can use leaky setenv since we are about to exec or exit |
| xsetenv("DATAFILE", filenames[1]); |
| // parse control file by "\n" |
| while ((p = strchr(q, '\n')) != NULL && isalpha(*q)) { |
| *p++ = '\0'; |
| // q is a line of <SYM><VALUE>, |
| // we are setting environment string <SYM>=<VALUE>. |
| // Ignoring "l<datafile>", exporting others: |
| if (*q != 'l') { |
| var[0] = *q++; |
| xsetenv(var, q); |
| } |
| q = p; // next line |
| } |
| // helper should not talk over network. |
| // this call reopens stdio fds to "/dev/null". |
| bb_daemon_helper(DAEMON_DEVNULL_STDIO); |
| BB_EXECVP_or_die(argv); |
| } |
| |
| // validate input. |
| // we understand only "control file" or "data file" subcmds |
| if (2 != s[0] && 3 != s[0]) |
| goto unsupported_cmd; |
| if (spooling & (1 << (s[0]-1))) { |
| puts("Duplicated subcommand"); |
| goto err_exit; |
| } |
| // get filename |
| chomp(s); |
| fname = strchr(s, ' '); |
| if (!fname) { |
| // bad_fname: |
| puts("No or bad filename"); |
| goto err_exit; |
| } |
| *fname++ = '\0'; |
| // // s[0]==2: ctrlfile, must start with 'c' |
| // // s[0]==3: datafile, must start with 'd' |
| // if (fname[0] != s[0] + ('c'-2)) |
| // goto bad_fname; |
| // get length |
| expected_len = bb_strtou(s + 1, NULL, 10); |
| if (errno || expected_len < 0) { |
| puts("Bad length"); |
| goto err_exit; |
| } |
| if (2 == s[0] && expected_len > 16 * 1024) { |
| // SECURITY: |
| // ctrlfile can't be big (we want to read it back later!) |
| puts("File is too big"); |
| goto err_exit; |
| } |
| |
| // open the file |
| if (spooling) { |
| // spooling mode: dump both files |
| // job in flight has mode 0200 "only writable" |
| sane(fname); |
| fd = open3_or_warn(fname, O_CREAT | O_WRONLY | O_TRUNC | O_EXCL, 0200); |
| if (fd < 0) |
| goto err_exit; |
| filenames[s[0] - 2] = xstrdup(fname); |
| } else { |
| // non-spooling mode: |
| // 2: control file (ignoring), 3: data file |
| fd = -1; |
| if (3 == s[0]) |
| fd = xopen(queue, O_RDWR | O_APPEND); |
| } |
| |
| // signal OK |
| safe_write(STDOUT_FILENO, "", 1); |
| |
| // copy the file |
| real_len = bb_copyfd_size(STDIN_FILENO, fd, expected_len); |
| if (real_len != expected_len) { |
| printf("Expected %d but got %d bytes\n", |
| expected_len, real_len); |
| goto err_exit; |
| } |
| // get EOF indicator, see whether it is NUL (ok) |
| // (and don't trash s[0]!) |
| if (safe_read(STDIN_FILENO, &s[1], 1) != 1 || s[1] != 0) { |
| // don't send error msg to peer - it obviously |
| // doesn't follow the protocol, so probably |
| // it can't understand us either |
| goto err_exit; |
| } |
| |
| if (spooling) { |
| // chmod completely downloaded file as "readable+writable" |
| fchmod(fd, 0600); |
| // accumulate dump state |
| // N.B. after all files are dumped spooling should be 1+2+4==7 |
| spooling |= (1 << (s[0]-1)); // bit 1: ctrlfile; bit 2: datafile |
| } |
| |
| free(s); |
| close(fd); // NB: can do close(-1). Who cares? |
| |
| // NB: don't do "signal OK" write here, it will be done |
| // at the top of the loop |
| } // while (1) |
| |
| err_exit: |
| // don't keep corrupted files |
| if (spooling) { |
| int i; |
| for (i = 2; --i >= 0; ) |
| if (filenames[i]) |
| unlink(filenames[i]); |
| } |
| return EXIT_FAILURE; |
| } |