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curl/lib/hostip4.c
Daniel Stenberg 0b5ae7c80e NI_MAXSERV: remove all use of it
Solaris with the SunStudio Compiler is reportedly missing this define,
but as we're using it without any good reason on all the places it was
used I've now instead switched to just use sensible buffer sizes that
fit a 32 bit decimal number. Which also happens to be smaller than the
common NI_MAXSERV value which is 32 on most machines.

Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1277
Reported-by: D.Flinkmann
2013-09-10 23:18:43 +02:00

311 lines
10 KiB
C

/***************************************************************************
* _ _ ____ _
* Project ___| | | | _ \| |
* / __| | | | |_) | |
* | (__| |_| | _ <| |___
* \___|\___/|_| \_\_____|
*
* Copyright (C) 1998 - 2013, Daniel Stenberg, <daniel@haxx.se>, et al.
*
* This software is licensed as described in the file COPYING, which
* you should have received as part of this distribution. The terms
* are also available at http://curl.haxx.se/docs/copyright.html.
*
* You may opt to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute and/or sell
* copies of the Software, and permit persons to whom the Software is
* furnished to do so, under the terms of the COPYING file.
*
* This software is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY
* KIND, either express or implied.
*
***************************************************************************/
#include "curl_setup.h"
#ifdef HAVE_NETINET_IN_H
#include <netinet/in.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_NETDB_H
#include <netdb.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_ARPA_INET_H
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#endif
#ifdef __VMS
#include <in.h>
#include <inet.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_PROCESS_H
#include <process.h>
#endif
#include "urldata.h"
#include "sendf.h"
#include "hostip.h"
#include "hash.h"
#include "share.h"
#include "strerror.h"
#include "url.h"
#include "inet_pton.h"
#define _MPRINTF_REPLACE /* use our functions only */
#include <curl/mprintf.h>
#include "curl_memory.h"
/* The last #include file should be: */
#include "memdebug.h"
/***********************************************************************
* Only for plain-ipv4 builds
**********************************************************************/
#ifdef CURLRES_IPV4 /* plain ipv4 code coming up */
/*
* Curl_ipvalid() checks what CURL_IPRESOLVE_* requirements that might've
* been set and returns TRUE if they are OK.
*/
bool Curl_ipvalid(struct connectdata *conn)
{
if(conn->ip_version == CURL_IPRESOLVE_V6)
/* an ipv6 address was requested and we can't get/use one */
return FALSE;
return TRUE; /* OK, proceed */
}
#ifdef CURLRES_SYNCH
/*
* Curl_getaddrinfo() - the ipv4 synchronous version.
*
* The original code to this function was from the Dancer source code, written
* by Bjorn Reese, it has since been patched and modified considerably.
*
* gethostbyname_r() is the thread-safe version of the gethostbyname()
* function. When we build for plain IPv4, we attempt to use this
* function. There are _three_ different gethostbyname_r() versions, and we
* detect which one this platform supports in the configure script and set up
* the HAVE_GETHOSTBYNAME_R_3, HAVE_GETHOSTBYNAME_R_5 or
* HAVE_GETHOSTBYNAME_R_6 defines accordingly. Note that HAVE_GETADDRBYNAME
* has the corresponding rules. This is primarily on *nix. Note that some unix
* flavours have thread-safe versions of the plain gethostbyname() etc.
*
*/
Curl_addrinfo *Curl_getaddrinfo(struct connectdata *conn,
const char *hostname,
int port,
int *waitp)
{
Curl_addrinfo *ai = NULL;
#ifdef CURL_DISABLE_VERBOSE_STRINGS
(void)conn;
#endif
*waitp = 0; /* synchronous response only */
ai = Curl_ipv4_resolve_r(hostname, port);
if(!ai)
infof(conn->data, "Curl_ipv4_resolve_r failed for %s\n", hostname);
return ai;
}
#endif /* CURLRES_SYNCH */
#endif /* CURLRES_IPV4 */
#if defined(CURLRES_IPV4) && !defined(CURLRES_ARES)
/*
* Curl_ipv4_resolve_r() - ipv4 threadsafe resolver function.
*
* This is used for both synchronous and asynchronous resolver builds,
* implying that only threadsafe code and function calls may be used.
*
*/
Curl_addrinfo *Curl_ipv4_resolve_r(const char *hostname,
int port)
{
#if !defined(HAVE_GETADDRINFO_THREADSAFE) && defined(HAVE_GETHOSTBYNAME_R_3)
int res;
#endif
Curl_addrinfo *ai = NULL;
struct hostent *h = NULL;
struct in_addr in;
struct hostent *buf = NULL;
if(Curl_inet_pton(AF_INET, hostname, &in) > 0)
/* This is a dotted IP address 123.123.123.123-style */
return Curl_ip2addr(AF_INET, &in, hostname, port);
#if defined(HAVE_GETADDRINFO_THREADSAFE)
else {
struct addrinfo hints;
char sbuf[12];
char *sbufptr = NULL;
memset(&hints, 0, sizeof(hints));
hints.ai_family = PF_INET;
hints.ai_socktype = SOCK_STREAM;
if(port) {
snprintf(sbuf, sizeof(sbuf), "%d", port);
sbufptr = sbuf;
}
(void)Curl_getaddrinfo_ex(hostname, sbufptr, &hints, &ai);
#elif defined(HAVE_GETHOSTBYNAME_R)
/*
* gethostbyname_r() is the preferred resolve function for many platforms.
* Since there are three different versions of it, the following code is
* somewhat #ifdef-ridden.
*/
else {
int h_errnop;
buf = calloc(1, CURL_HOSTENT_SIZE);
if(!buf)
return NULL; /* major failure */
/*
* The clearing of the buffer is a workaround for a gethostbyname_r bug in
* qnx nto and it is also _required_ for some of these functions on some
* platforms.
*/
#if defined(HAVE_GETHOSTBYNAME_R_5)
/* Solaris, IRIX and more */
h = gethostbyname_r(hostname,
(struct hostent *)buf,
(char *)buf + sizeof(struct hostent),
CURL_HOSTENT_SIZE - sizeof(struct hostent),
&h_errnop);
/* If the buffer is too small, it returns NULL and sets errno to
* ERANGE. The errno is thread safe if this is compiled with
* -D_REENTRANT as then the 'errno' variable is a macro defined to get
* used properly for threads.
*/
if(h) {
;
}
else
#elif defined(HAVE_GETHOSTBYNAME_R_6)
/* Linux */
(void)gethostbyname_r(hostname,
(struct hostent *)buf,
(char *)buf + sizeof(struct hostent),
CURL_HOSTENT_SIZE - sizeof(struct hostent),
&h, /* DIFFERENCE */
&h_errnop);
/* Redhat 8, using glibc 2.2.93 changed the behavior. Now all of a
* sudden this function returns EAGAIN if the given buffer size is too
* small. Previous versions are known to return ERANGE for the same
* problem.
*
* This wouldn't be such a big problem if older versions wouldn't
* sometimes return EAGAIN on a common failure case. Alas, we can't
* assume that EAGAIN *or* ERANGE means ERANGE for any given version of
* glibc.
*
* For now, we do that and thus we may call the function repeatedly and
* fail for older glibc versions that return EAGAIN, until we run out of
* buffer size (step_size grows beyond CURL_HOSTENT_SIZE).
*
* If anyone has a better fix, please tell us!
*
* -------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* On October 23rd 2003, Dan C dug up more details on the mysteries of
* gethostbyname_r() in glibc:
*
* In glibc 2.2.5 the interface is different (this has also been
* discovered in glibc 2.1.1-6 as shipped by Redhat 6). What I can't
* explain, is that tests performed on glibc 2.2.4-34 and 2.2.4-32
* (shipped/upgraded by Redhat 7.2) don't show this behavior!
*
* In this "buggy" version, the return code is -1 on error and 'errno'
* is set to the ERANGE or EAGAIN code. Note that 'errno' is not a
* thread-safe variable.
*/
if(!h) /* failure */
#elif defined(HAVE_GETHOSTBYNAME_R_3)
/* AIX, Digital Unix/Tru64, HPUX 10, more? */
/* For AIX 4.3 or later, we don't use gethostbyname_r() at all, because of
* the plain fact that it does not return unique full buffers on each
* call, but instead several of the pointers in the hostent structs will
* point to the same actual data! This have the unfortunate down-side that
* our caching system breaks down horribly. Luckily for us though, AIX 4.3
* and more recent versions have a "completely thread-safe"[*] libc where
* all the data is stored in thread-specific memory areas making calls to
* the plain old gethostbyname() work fine even for multi-threaded
* programs.
*
* This AIX 4.3 or later detection is all made in the configure script.
*
* Troels Walsted Hansen helped us work this out on March 3rd, 2003.
*
* [*] = much later we've found out that it isn't at all "completely
* thread-safe", but at least the gethostbyname() function is.
*/
if(CURL_HOSTENT_SIZE >=
(sizeof(struct hostent)+sizeof(struct hostent_data))) {
/* August 22nd, 2000: Albert Chin-A-Young brought an updated version
* that should work! September 20: Richard Prescott worked on the buffer
* size dilemma.
*/
res = gethostbyname_r(hostname,
(struct hostent *)buf,
(struct hostent_data *)((char *)buf +
sizeof(struct hostent)));
h_errnop = SOCKERRNO; /* we don't deal with this, but set it anyway */
}
else
res = -1; /* failure, too smallish buffer size */
if(!res) { /* success */
h = buf; /* result expected in h */
/* This is the worst kind of the different gethostbyname_r() interfaces.
* Since we don't know how big buffer this particular lookup required,
* we can't realloc down the huge alloc without doing closer analysis of
* the returned data. Thus, we always use CURL_HOSTENT_SIZE for every
* name lookup. Fixing this would require an extra malloc() and then
* calling Curl_addrinfo_copy() that subsequent realloc()s down the new
* memory area to the actually used amount.
*/
}
else
#endif /* HAVE_...BYNAME_R_5 || HAVE_...BYNAME_R_6 || HAVE_...BYNAME_R_3 */
{
h = NULL; /* set return code to NULL */
free(buf);
}
#else /* HAVE_GETADDRINFO_THREADSAFE || HAVE_GETHOSTBYNAME_R */
/*
* Here is code for platforms that don't have a thread safe
* getaddrinfo() nor gethostbyname_r() function or for which
* gethostbyname() is the preferred one.
*/
else {
h = gethostbyname((void*)hostname);
#endif /* HAVE_GETADDRINFO_THREADSAFE || HAVE_GETHOSTBYNAME_R */
}
if(h) {
ai = Curl_he2ai(h, port);
if(buf) /* used a *_r() function */
free(buf);
}
return ai;
}
#endif /* defined(CURLRES_IPV4) && !defined(CURLRES_ARES) */