tcpdmatch.c revision 1.4 1 /* $NetBSD: tcpdmatch.c,v 1.4 1998/03/05 18:23:31 christos Exp $ */
2
3 /*
4 * tcpdmatch - explain what tcpd would do in a specific case
5 *
6 * usage: tcpdmatch [-d] [-i inet_conf] daemon[@host] [user@]host
7 *
8 * -d: use the access control tables in the current directory.
9 *
10 * -i: location of inetd.conf file.
11 *
12 * All errors are reported to the standard error stream, including the errors
13 * that would normally be reported via the syslog daemon.
14 *
15 * Author: Wietse Venema, Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands.
16 */
17
18 #include <sys/cdefs.h>
19 #ifndef lint
20 #if 0
21 static char sccsid[] = "@(#) tcpdmatch.c 1.5 96/02/11 17:01:36";
22 #else
23 __RCSID("$NetBSD: tcpdmatch.c,v 1.4 1998/03/05 18:23:31 christos Exp $");
24 #endif
25 #endif
26
27 /* System libraries. */
28
29 #include <sys/types.h>
30 #include <sys/stat.h>
31 #include <sys/socket.h>
32 #include <netinet/in.h>
33 #include <arpa/inet.h>
34 #include <netdb.h>
35 #include <stdio.h>
36 #include <syslog.h>
37 #include <setjmp.h>
38 #include <string.h>
39 #include <stdlib.h>
40 #include <unistd.h>
41
42 #ifndef INADDR_NONE
43 #define INADDR_NONE (-1) /* XXX should be 0xffffffff */
44 #endif
45
46 #ifndef S_ISDIR
47 #define S_ISDIR(m) (((m) & S_IFMT) == S_IFDIR)
48 #endif
49
50 /* Application-specific. */
51
52 #include "tcpd.h"
53 #include "inetcf.h"
54 #include "scaffold.h"
55
56 static void usage __P((char *));
57 static void expand __P((char *, char *, struct request_info *));
58 static void tcpdmatch __P((struct request_info *));
59 int main __P((int, char **));
60
61 /* The main program */
62
63 int main(argc, argv)
64 int argc;
65 char **argv;
66 {
67 struct hostent *hp;
68 char *myname = argv[0];
69 char *client;
70 char *server;
71 char *addr;
72 char *user;
73 char *daemon;
74 struct request_info request;
75 int ch;
76 char *inetcf = 0;
77 int count;
78 struct sockaddr_in server_sin;
79 struct sockaddr_in client_sin;
80 struct stat st;
81
82 /*
83 * Show what rule actually matched.
84 */
85 hosts_access_verbose = 2;
86
87 /*
88 * Parse the JCL.
89 */
90 while ((ch = getopt(argc, argv, "di:")) != -1) {
91 switch (ch) {
92 case 'd':
93 hosts_allow_table = "hosts.allow";
94 hosts_deny_table = "hosts.deny";
95 break;
96 case 'i':
97 inetcf = optarg;
98 break;
99 default:
100 usage(myname);
101 /* NOTREACHED */
102 }
103 }
104 if (argc != optind + 2)
105 usage(myname);
106
107 /*
108 * When confusion really strikes...
109 */
110 if (check_path(REAL_DAEMON_DIR, &st) < 0) {
111 tcpd_warn("REAL_DAEMON_DIR %s: %m", REAL_DAEMON_DIR);
112 } else if (!S_ISDIR(st.st_mode)) {
113 tcpd_warn("REAL_DAEMON_DIR %s is not a directory", REAL_DAEMON_DIR);
114 }
115
116 /*
117 * Default is to specify a daemon process name. When daemon@host is
118 * specified, separate the two parts.
119 */
120 if ((server = split_at(argv[optind], '@')) == 0)
121 server = unknown;
122 if (argv[optind][0] == '/') {
123 daemon = strrchr(argv[optind], '/') + 1;
124 tcpd_warn("%s: daemon name normalized to: %s", argv[optind], daemon);
125 } else {
126 daemon = argv[optind];
127 }
128
129 /*
130 * Default is to specify a client hostname or address. When user@host is
131 * specified, separate the two parts.
132 */
133 if ((client = split_at(argv[optind + 1], '@')) != 0) {
134 user = argv[optind + 1];
135 } else {
136 client = argv[optind + 1];
137 user = unknown;
138 }
139
140 /*
141 * Analyze the inetd (or tlid) configuration file, so that we can warn
142 * the user about services that may not be wrapped, services that are not
143 * configured, or services that are wrapped in an incorrect manner. Allow
144 * for services that are not run from inetd, or that have tcpd access
145 * control built into them.
146 */
147 inetcf = inet_cfg(inetcf);
148 inet_set("portmap", WR_NOT);
149 inet_set("rpcbind", WR_NOT);
150 switch (inet_get(daemon)) {
151 case WR_UNKNOWN:
152 tcpd_warn("%s: no such process name in %s", daemon, inetcf);
153 break;
154 case WR_NOT:
155 tcpd_warn("%s: service possibly not wrapped", daemon);
156 break;
157 }
158
159 /*
160 * Check accessibility of access control files.
161 */
162 (void) check_path(hosts_allow_table, &st);
163 (void) check_path(hosts_deny_table, &st);
164
165 /*
166 * Fill in what we have figured out sofar. Use socket and DNS routines
167 * for address and name conversions. We attach stdout to the request so
168 * that banner messages will become visible.
169 */
170 request_init(&request, RQ_DAEMON, daemon, RQ_USER, user, RQ_FILE, 1, 0);
171 sock_methods(&request);
172
173 /*
174 * If a server hostname is specified, insist that the name maps to at
175 * most one address. eval_hostname() warns the user about name server
176 * problems, while using the request.server structure as a cache for host
177 * address and name conversion results.
178 */
179 if (NOT_INADDR(server) == 0 || HOSTNAME_KNOWN(server)) {
180 if ((hp = find_inet_addr(server)) == 0)
181 exit(1);
182 memset((char *) &server_sin, 0, sizeof(server_sin));
183 server_sin.sin_family = AF_INET;
184 request_set(&request, RQ_SERVER_SIN, &server_sin, 0);
185
186 for (count = 0; (addr = hp->h_addr_list[count]) != 0; count++) {
187 memcpy((char *) &server_sin.sin_addr, addr,
188 sizeof(server_sin.sin_addr));
189
190 /*
191 * Force evaluation of server host name and address. Host name
192 * conflicts will be reported while eval_hostname() does its job.
193 */
194 request_set(&request, RQ_SERVER_NAME, "", RQ_SERVER_ADDR, "", 0);
195 if (STR_EQ(eval_hostname(request.server), unknown))
196 tcpd_warn("host address %s->name lookup failed",
197 eval_hostaddr(request.server));
198 }
199 if (count > 1) {
200 fprintf(stderr, "Error: %s has more than one address\n", server);
201 fprintf(stderr, "Please specify an address instead\n");
202 exit(1);
203 }
204 free((char *) hp);
205 } else {
206 request_set(&request, RQ_SERVER_NAME, server, 0);
207 }
208
209 /*
210 * If a client address is specified, we simulate the effect of client
211 * hostname lookup failure.
212 */
213 if (dot_quad_addr(client) != INADDR_NONE) {
214 request_set(&request, RQ_CLIENT_ADDR, client, 0);
215 tcpdmatch(&request);
216 exit(0);
217 }
218
219 /*
220 * Perhaps they are testing special client hostname patterns that aren't
221 * really host names at all.
222 */
223 if (NOT_INADDR(client) && HOSTNAME_KNOWN(client) == 0) {
224 request_set(&request, RQ_CLIENT_NAME, client, 0);
225 tcpdmatch(&request);
226 exit(0);
227 }
228
229 /*
230 * Otherwise, assume that a client hostname is specified, and insist that
231 * the address can be looked up. The reason for this requirement is that
232 * in real life the client address is available (at least with IP). Let
233 * eval_hostname() figure out if this host is properly registered, while
234 * using the request.client structure as a cache for host name and
235 * address conversion results.
236 */
237 if ((hp = find_inet_addr(client)) == 0)
238 exit(1);
239 memset((char *) &client_sin, 0, sizeof(client_sin));
240 client_sin.sin_family = AF_INET;
241 request_set(&request, RQ_CLIENT_SIN, &client_sin, 0);
242
243 for (count = 0; (addr = hp->h_addr_list[count]) != 0; count++) {
244 memcpy((char *) &client_sin.sin_addr, addr,
245 sizeof(client_sin.sin_addr));
246
247 /*
248 * Force evaluation of client host name and address. Host name
249 * conflicts will be reported while eval_hostname() does its job.
250 */
251 request_set(&request, RQ_CLIENT_NAME, "", RQ_CLIENT_ADDR, "", 0);
252 if (STR_EQ(eval_hostname(request.client), unknown))
253 tcpd_warn("host address %s->name lookup failed",
254 eval_hostaddr(request.client));
255 tcpdmatch(&request);
256 if (hp->h_addr_list[count + 1])
257 printf("\n");
258 }
259 free((char *) hp);
260 exit(0);
261 }
262
263 /* Explain how to use this program */
264
265 static void usage(myname)
266 char *myname;
267 {
268 fprintf(stderr, "usage: %s [-d] [-i inet_conf] daemon[@host] [user@]host\n",
269 myname);
270 fprintf(stderr, " -d: use allow/deny files in current directory\n");
271 fprintf(stderr, " -i: location of inetd.conf file\n");
272 exit(1);
273 }
274
275 /* Print interesting expansions */
276
277 static void expand(text, pattern, request)
278 char *text;
279 char *pattern;
280 struct request_info *request;
281 {
282 char buf[BUFSIZ];
283
284 if (STR_NE(percent_x(buf, sizeof(buf), pattern, request), unknown))
285 printf("%s %s\n", text, buf);
286 }
287
288 /* Try out a (server,client) pair */
289
290 static void tcpdmatch(request)
291 struct request_info *request;
292 {
293 int verdict;
294
295 /*
296 * Show what we really know. Suppress uninteresting noise.
297 */
298 expand("client: hostname", "%n", request);
299 expand("client: address ", "%a", request);
300 expand("client: username", "%u", request);
301 expand("server: hostname", "%N", request);
302 expand("server: address ", "%A", request);
303 expand("server: process ", "%d", request);
304
305 /*
306 * Reset stuff that might be changed by options handlers. In dry-run
307 * mode, extension language routines that would not return should inform
308 * us of their plan, by clearing the dry_run flag. This is a bit clumsy
309 * but we must be able to verify hosts with more than one network
310 * address.
311 */
312 rfc931_timeout = RFC931_TIMEOUT;
313 allow_severity = SEVERITY;
314 deny_severity = LOG_WARNING;
315 dry_run = 1;
316
317 /*
318 * When paranoid mode is enabled, access is rejected no matter what the
319 * access control rules say.
320 */
321 #ifdef PARANOID
322 if (STR_EQ(eval_hostname(request->client), paranoid)) {
323 printf("access: denied (PARANOID mode)\n\n");
324 return;
325 }
326 #endif
327
328 /*
329 * Report the access control verdict.
330 */
331 verdict = hosts_access(request);
332 printf("access: %s\n",
333 dry_run == 0 ? "delegated" :
334 verdict ? "granted" : "denied");
335 }
336