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samba-mirror/source3/rpc_server/srv_pipe_hnd.c

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/*
* Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
* RPC Pipe client / server routines
* Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 1992-1998,
* Copyright (C) Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton 1996-1998,
* Copyright (C) Jeremy Allison 1999.
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
*/
#include "includes.h"
#undef DBGC_CLASS
#define DBGC_CLASS DBGC_RPC_SRV
#define PIPE "\\PIPE\\"
#define PIPELEN strlen(PIPE)
static smb_np_struct *chain_p;
static int pipes_open;
/*
* Sometimes I can't decide if I hate Windows printer driver
* writers more than I hate the Windows spooler service driver
* writers. This gets around a combination of bugs in the spooler
* and the HP 8500 PCL driver that causes a spooler spin. JRA.
*
* bumped up from 20 -> 64 after viewing traffic from WordPerfect
* 2002 running on NT 4.- SP6
* bumped up from 64 -> 256 after viewing traffic from con2prt
* for lots of printers on a WinNT 4.x SP6 box.
*/
#ifndef MAX_OPEN_SPOOLSS_PIPES
#define MAX_OPEN_SPOOLSS_PIPES 256
#endif
static int current_spoolss_pipes_open;
static smb_np_struct *Pipes;
static pipes_struct *InternalPipes;
static struct bitmap *bmap;
/* TODO
* the following prototypes are declared here to avoid
* code being moved about too much for a patch to be
* disrupted / less obvious.
*
* these functions, and associated functions that they
* call, should be moved behind a .so module-loading
* system _anyway_. so that's the next step...
*/
static ssize_t read_from_internal_pipe(void *np_conn, char *data, size_t n,
BOOL *is_data_outstanding);
static ssize_t write_to_internal_pipe(void *np_conn, char *data, size_t n);
static BOOL close_internal_rpc_pipe_hnd(void *np_conn);
static void *make_internal_rpc_pipe_p(char *pipe_name,
connection_struct *conn, uint16 vuid);
/****************************************************************************
Pipe iterator functions.
****************************************************************************/
smb_np_struct *get_first_pipe(void)
{
return Pipes;
}
smb_np_struct *get_next_pipe(smb_np_struct *p)
{
return p->next;
}
/****************************************************************************
Internal Pipe iterator functions.
****************************************************************************/
pipes_struct *get_first_internal_pipe(void)
{
return InternalPipes;
}
pipes_struct *get_next_internal_pipe(pipes_struct *p)
{
return p->next;
}
/* this must be larger than the sum of the open files and directories */
static int pipe_handle_offset;
/****************************************************************************
Set the pipe_handle_offset. Called from smbd/files.c
****************************************************************************/
void set_pipe_handle_offset(int max_open_files)
{
if(max_open_files < 0x7000)
pipe_handle_offset = 0x7000;
else
pipe_handle_offset = max_open_files + 10; /* For safety. :-) */
}
/****************************************************************************
Reset pipe chain handle number.
****************************************************************************/
void reset_chain_p(void)
{
chain_p = NULL;
}
/****************************************************************************
Initialise pipe handle states.
****************************************************************************/
void init_rpc_pipe_hnd(void)
{
bmap = bitmap_allocate(MAX_OPEN_PIPES);
if (!bmap)
exit_server("out of memory in init_rpc_pipe_hnd");
}
/****************************************************************************
Initialise an outgoing packet.
****************************************************************************/
static BOOL pipe_init_outgoing_data(pipes_struct *p)
{
output_data *o_data = &p->out_data;
/* Reset the offset counters. */
o_data->data_sent_length = 0;
o_data->current_pdu_len = 0;
o_data->current_pdu_sent = 0;
memset(o_data->current_pdu, '\0', sizeof(o_data->current_pdu));
/* Free any memory in the current return data buffer. */
prs_mem_free(&o_data->rdata);
/*
* Initialize the outgoing RPC data buffer.
* we will use this as the raw data area for replying to rpc requests.
*/
if(!prs_init(&o_data->rdata, MAX_PDU_FRAG_LEN, p->mem_ctx, MARSHALL)) {
DEBUG(0,("pipe_init_outgoing_data: malloc fail.\n"));
return False;
}
return True;
}
/****************************************************************************
Find first available pipe slot.
****************************************************************************/
smb_np_struct *open_rpc_pipe_p(char *pipe_name,
connection_struct *conn, uint16 vuid)
{
int i;
smb_np_struct *p, *p_it;
static int next_pipe;
BOOL is_spoolss_pipe = False;
DEBUG(4,("Open pipe requested %s (pipes_open=%d)\n",
pipe_name, pipes_open));
if (strstr(pipe_name, "spoolss"))
is_spoolss_pipe = True;
if (is_spoolss_pipe && current_spoolss_pipes_open >= MAX_OPEN_SPOOLSS_PIPES) {
DEBUG(10,("open_rpc_pipe_p: spooler bug workaround. Denying open on pipe %s\n",
pipe_name ));
return NULL;
}
/* not repeating pipe numbers makes it easier to track things in
log files and prevents client bugs where pipe numbers are reused
over connection restarts */
delineation between smb and msrpc more marked. smbd now constructs pdus, and then feeds them over either a "local" function call or a "remote" function call to an msrpc service. the "remote" msrpc daemon, on the other side of a unix socket, then calls the same "local" function that smbd would, if the msrpc service were being run from inside smbd. this allows a transition from local msrpc services (inside the same smbd process) to remote (over a unix socket). removed reference to pipes_struct in msrpc services. all msrpc processing functions take rpcsrv_struct which is a structure containing state info for the msrpc functions to decode and create pdus. created become_vuser() which does everything not related to connection_struct that become_user() does. removed, as best i could, connection_struct dependencies from the nt spoolss printing code. todo: remove dcinfo from rpcsrv_struct because this stores NETLOGON-specific info on a per-connection basis, and if the connection dies then so does the info, and that's a fairly serious problem. had to put pretty much everything that is in user_struct into parse_creds.c to feed unix user info over to the msrpc daemons. why? because it's expensive to do unix password/group database lookups, and it's definitely expensive to do nt user profile lookups, not to mention pretty difficult and if you did either of these it would introduce a complication / unnecessary interdependency. so, send uid/gid/num_groups/gid_t* + SID+num_rids+domain_group_rids* + unix username + nt username + nt domain + user session key etc. this is the MINIMUM info identified so far that's actually implemented. missing bits include the called and calling netbios names etc. (basically, anything that can be loaded into standard_sub() and standard_sub_basic()...) (This used to be commit aa3c659a8dba0437c17c60055a6ed30fdfecdb6d)
1999-12-12 04:25:49 +03:00
if (next_pipe == 0)
next_pipe = (sys_getpid() ^ time(NULL)) % MAX_OPEN_PIPES;
i = bitmap_find(bmap, next_pipe);
if (i == -1) {
DEBUG(0,("ERROR! Out of pipe structures\n"));
return NULL;
}
next_pipe = (i+1) % MAX_OPEN_PIPES;
for (p = Pipes; p; p = p->next)
DEBUG(5,("open_rpc_pipe_p: name %s pnum=%x\n", p->name, p->pnum));
p = (smb_np_struct *)malloc(sizeof(*p));
if (!p) {
DEBUG(0,("ERROR! no memory for pipes_struct!\n"));
return NULL;
}
ZERO_STRUCTP(p);
/* add a dso mechanism instead of this, here */
p->namedpipe_create = make_internal_rpc_pipe_p;
p->namedpipe_read = read_from_internal_pipe;
p->namedpipe_write = write_to_internal_pipe;
p->namedpipe_close = close_internal_rpc_pipe_hnd;
p->np_state = p->namedpipe_create(pipe_name, conn, vuid);
if (p->np_state == NULL) {
DEBUG(0,("open_rpc_pipe_p: make_internal_rpc_pipe_p failed.\n"));
SAFE_FREE(p);
return NULL;
}
DLIST_ADD(Pipes, p);
/*
* Initialize the incoming RPC data buffer with one PDU worth of memory.
* We cheat here and say we're marshalling, as we intend to add incoming
* data directly into the prs_struct and we want it to auto grow. We will
* change the type to UNMARSALLING before processing the stream.
*/
bitmap_set(bmap, i);
i += pipe_handle_offset;
pipes_open++;
p->pnum = i;
p->open = True;
p->device_state = 0;
p->priority = 0;
p->conn = conn;
p->vuid = vuid;
p->max_trans_reply = 0;
fstrcpy(p->name, pipe_name);
DEBUG(4,("Opened pipe %s with handle %x (pipes_open=%d)\n",
pipe_name, i, pipes_open));
chain_p = p;
/* Iterate over p_it as a temp variable, to display all open pipes */
for (p_it = Pipes; p_it; p_it = p_it->next)
DEBUG(5,("open pipes: name %s pnum=%x\n", p_it->name, p_it->pnum));
return chain_p;
}
/****************************************************************************
Make an internal namedpipes structure
****************************************************************************/
static void *make_internal_rpc_pipe_p(char *pipe_name,
connection_struct *conn, uint16 vuid)
{
pipes_struct *p;
user_struct *vuser = get_valid_user_struct(vuid);
DEBUG(4,("Create pipe requested %s\n", pipe_name));
if (!vuser && vuid != UID_FIELD_INVALID) {
DEBUG(0,("ERROR! vuid %d did not map to a valid vuser struct!\n", vuid));
return NULL;
}
p = (pipes_struct *)malloc(sizeof(*p));
if (!p)
{
DEBUG(0,("ERROR! no memory for pipes_struct!\n"));
return NULL;
}
ZERO_STRUCTP(p);
if ((p->mem_ctx = talloc_init("pipe %s %p", pipe_name, p)) == NULL) {
DEBUG(0,("open_rpc_pipe_p: talloc_init failed.\n"));
SAFE_FREE(p);
return NULL;
}
if (!init_pipe_handle_list(p, pipe_name)) {
DEBUG(0,("open_rpc_pipe_p: init_pipe_handles failed.\n"));
talloc_destroy(p->mem_ctx);
SAFE_FREE(p);
return NULL;
}
/*
* Initialize the incoming RPC data buffer with one PDU worth of memory.
* We cheat here and say we're marshalling, as we intend to add incoming
* data directly into the prs_struct and we want it to auto grow. We will
* change the type to UNMARSALLING before processing the stream.
*/
if(!prs_init(&p->in_data.data, MAX_PDU_FRAG_LEN, p->mem_ctx, MARSHALL)) {
DEBUG(0,("open_rpc_pipe_p: malloc fail for in_data struct.\n"));
return NULL;
}
DLIST_ADD(InternalPipes, p);
p->conn = conn;
/* Ensure the connection isn't idled whilst this pipe is open. */
p->conn->num_files_open++;
p->vuid = vuid;
p->ntlmssp_chal_flags = 0;
p->ntlmssp_auth_validated = False;
p->ntlmssp_auth_requested = False;
p->pipe_bound = False;
p->fault_state = False;
p->endian = RPC_LITTLE_ENDIAN;
ZERO_STRUCT(p->pipe_user);
p->pipe_user.uid = (uid_t)-1;
p->pipe_user.gid = (gid_t)-1;
/* Store the session key and NT_TOKEN */
if (vuser) {
Changes all over the shop, but all towards: - NTLM2 support in the server - KEY_EXCH support in the server - variable length session keys. In detail: - NTLM2 is an extension of NTLMv1, that is compatible with existing domain controllers (unlike NTLMv2, which requires a DC upgrade). * This is known as 'NTLMv2 session security' * (This is not yet implemented on the RPC pipes however, so there may well still be issues for PDC setups, particuarly around password changes. We do not fully understand the sign/seal implications of NTLM2 on RPC pipes.) This requires modifications to our authentication subsystem, as we must handle the 'challege' input into the challenge-response algorithm being changed. This also needs to be turned off for 'security=server', which does not support this. - KEY_EXCH is another 'security' mechanism, whereby the session key actually used by the server is sent by the client, rather than being the shared-secret directly or indirectly. - As both these methods change the session key, the auth subsystem needed to be changed, to 'override' session keys provided by the backend. - There has also been a major overhaul of the NTLMSSP subsystem, to merge the 'client' and 'server' functions, so they both operate on a single structure. This should help the SPNEGO implementation. - The 'names blob' in NTLMSSP is always in unicode - never in ascii. Don't make an ascii version ever. - The other big change is to allow variable length session keys. We have always assumed that session keys are 16 bytes long - and padded to this length if shorter. However, Kerberos session keys are 8 bytes long, when the krb5 login uses DES. * This fix allows SMB signging on machines not yet running MIT KRB5 1.3.1. * - Add better DEBUG() messages to ntlm_auth, warning administrators of misconfigurations that prevent access to the privileged pipe. This should help reduce some of the 'it just doesn't work' issues. - Fix data_blob_talloc() to behave the same way data_blob() does when passed a NULL data pointer. (just allocate) REMEMBER to make clean after this commit - I have changed plenty of data structures... (This used to be commit f3bbc87b0dac63426cda6fac7a295d3aad810ecc)
2003-11-22 16:19:38 +03:00
p->session_key = data_blob(vuser->session_key.data, vuser->session_key.length);
p->pipe_user.nt_user_token = dup_nt_token(vuser->nt_user_token);
}
/*
* Initialize the incoming RPC struct.
*/
p->in_data.pdu_needed_len = 0;
p->in_data.pdu_received_len = 0;
/*
* Initialize the outgoing RPC struct.
*/
p->out_data.current_pdu_len = 0;
p->out_data.current_pdu_sent = 0;
p->out_data.data_sent_length = 0;
delineation between smb and msrpc more marked. smbd now constructs pdus, and then feeds them over either a "local" function call or a "remote" function call to an msrpc service. the "remote" msrpc daemon, on the other side of a unix socket, then calls the same "local" function that smbd would, if the msrpc service were being run from inside smbd. this allows a transition from local msrpc services (inside the same smbd process) to remote (over a unix socket). removed reference to pipes_struct in msrpc services. all msrpc processing functions take rpcsrv_struct which is a structure containing state info for the msrpc functions to decode and create pdus. created become_vuser() which does everything not related to connection_struct that become_user() does. removed, as best i could, connection_struct dependencies from the nt spoolss printing code. todo: remove dcinfo from rpcsrv_struct because this stores NETLOGON-specific info on a per-connection basis, and if the connection dies then so does the info, and that's a fairly serious problem. had to put pretty much everything that is in user_struct into parse_creds.c to feed unix user info over to the msrpc daemons. why? because it's expensive to do unix password/group database lookups, and it's definitely expensive to do nt user profile lookups, not to mention pretty difficult and if you did either of these it would introduce a complication / unnecessary interdependency. so, send uid/gid/num_groups/gid_t* + SID+num_rids+domain_group_rids* + unix username + nt username + nt domain + user session key etc. this is the MINIMUM info identified so far that's actually implemented. missing bits include the called and calling netbios names etc. (basically, anything that can be loaded into standard_sub() and standard_sub_basic()...) (This used to be commit aa3c659a8dba0437c17c60055a6ed30fdfecdb6d)
1999-12-12 04:25:49 +03:00
/*
* Initialize the outgoing RPC data buffer with no memory.
*/
prs_init(&p->out_data.rdata, 0, p->mem_ctx, MARSHALL);
fstrcpy(p->name, pipe_name);
DEBUG(4,("Created internal pipe %s (pipes_open=%d)\n",
pipe_name, pipes_open));
return (void*)p;
}
/****************************************************************************
Sets the fault state on incoming packets.
****************************************************************************/
static void set_incoming_fault(pipes_struct *p)
{
prs_mem_free(&p->in_data.data);
p->in_data.pdu_needed_len = 0;
p->in_data.pdu_received_len = 0;
p->fault_state = True;
DEBUG(10,("set_incoming_fault: Setting fault state on pipe %s : vuid = 0x%x\n",
p->name, p->vuid ));
}
/****************************************************************************
Ensures we have at least RPC_HEADER_LEN amount of data in the incoming buffer.
****************************************************************************/
static ssize_t fill_rpc_header(pipes_struct *p, char *data, size_t data_to_copy)
{
size_t len_needed_to_complete_hdr = MIN(data_to_copy, RPC_HEADER_LEN - p->in_data.pdu_received_len);
DEBUG(10,("fill_rpc_header: data_to_copy = %u, len_needed_to_complete_hdr = %u, receive_len = %u\n",
(unsigned int)data_to_copy, (unsigned int)len_needed_to_complete_hdr,
(unsigned int)p->in_data.pdu_received_len ));
memcpy((char *)&p->in_data.current_in_pdu[p->in_data.pdu_received_len], data, len_needed_to_complete_hdr);
p->in_data.pdu_received_len += len_needed_to_complete_hdr;
return (ssize_t)len_needed_to_complete_hdr;
}
/****************************************************************************
Unmarshalls a new PDU header. Assumes the raw header data is in current_in_pdu.
****************************************************************************/
static ssize_t unmarshall_rpc_header(pipes_struct *p)
{
/*
* Unmarshall the header to determine the needed length.
*/
prs_struct rpc_in;
if(p->in_data.pdu_received_len != RPC_HEADER_LEN) {
DEBUG(0,("unmarshall_rpc_header: assert on rpc header length failed.\n"));
set_incoming_fault(p);
return -1;
}
prs_init( &rpc_in, 0, p->mem_ctx, UNMARSHALL);
prs_set_endian_data( &rpc_in, p->endian);
prs_give_memory( &rpc_in, (char *)&p->in_data.current_in_pdu[0],
p->in_data.pdu_received_len, False);
/*
* Unmarshall the header as this will tell us how much
* data we need to read to get the complete pdu.
* This also sets the endian flag in rpc_in.
*/
if(!smb_io_rpc_hdr("", &p->hdr, &rpc_in, 0)) {
DEBUG(0,("unmarshall_rpc_header: failed to unmarshall RPC_HDR.\n"));
set_incoming_fault(p);
prs_mem_free(&rpc_in);
return -1;
}
/*
* Validate the RPC header.
*/
if(p->hdr.major != 5 && p->hdr.minor != 0) {
DEBUG(0,("unmarshall_rpc_header: invalid major/minor numbers in RPC_HDR.\n"));
set_incoming_fault(p);
prs_mem_free(&rpc_in);
return -1;
}
/*
* If there's not data in the incoming buffer this should be the start of a new RPC.
*/
if(prs_offset(&p->in_data.data) == 0) {
/*
* AS/U doesn't set FIRST flag in a BIND packet it seems.
*/
if ((p->hdr.pkt_type == RPC_REQUEST) && !(p->hdr.flags & RPC_FLG_FIRST)) {
/*
* Ensure that the FIRST flag is set. If not then we have
* a stream missmatch.
*/
DEBUG(0,("unmarshall_rpc_header: FIRST flag not set in first PDU !\n"));
set_incoming_fault(p);
prs_mem_free(&rpc_in);
return -1;
}
/*
* If this is the first PDU then set the endianness
* flag in the pipe. We will need this when parsing all
* data in this RPC.
*/
p->endian = rpc_in.bigendian_data;
DEBUG(5,("unmarshall_rpc_header: using %sendian RPC\n",
p->endian == RPC_LITTLE_ENDIAN ? "little-" : "big-" ));
} else {
/*
* If this is *NOT* the first PDU then check the endianness
* flag in the pipe is the same as that in the PDU.
*/
if (p->endian != rpc_in.bigendian_data) {
DEBUG(0,("unmarshall_rpc_header: FIRST endianness flag (%d) different in next PDU !\n", (int)p->endian));
set_incoming_fault(p);
prs_mem_free(&rpc_in);
return -1;
}
}
/*
* Ensure that the pdu length is sane.
*/
if((p->hdr.frag_len < RPC_HEADER_LEN) || (p->hdr.frag_len > MAX_PDU_FRAG_LEN)) {
DEBUG(0,("unmarshall_rpc_header: assert on frag length failed.\n"));
set_incoming_fault(p);
prs_mem_free(&rpc_in);
return -1;
}
DEBUG(10,("unmarshall_rpc_header: type = %u, flags = %u\n", (unsigned int)p->hdr.pkt_type,
(unsigned int)p->hdr.flags ));
/*
* Adjust for the header we just ate.
*/
p->in_data.pdu_received_len = 0;
p->in_data.pdu_needed_len = (uint32)p->hdr.frag_len - RPC_HEADER_LEN;
/*
* Null the data we just ate.
*/
memset((char *)&p->in_data.current_in_pdu[0], '\0', RPC_HEADER_LEN);
prs_mem_free(&rpc_in);
return 0; /* No extra data processed. */
}
/****************************************************************************
Call this to free any talloc'ed memory. Do this before and after processing
a complete PDU.
****************************************************************************/
void free_pipe_context(pipes_struct *p)
{
if (p->mem_ctx) {
DEBUG(3,("free_pipe_context: destroying talloc pool of size %lu\n", (unsigned long)talloc_pool_size(p->mem_ctx) ));
talloc_destroy_pool(p->mem_ctx);
} else {
p->mem_ctx = talloc_init("pipe %s %p", p->name, p);
if (p->mem_ctx == NULL)
p->fault_state = True;
}
}
/****************************************************************************
Processes a request pdu. This will do auth processing if needed, and
appends the data into the complete stream if the LAST flag is not set.
****************************************************************************/
static BOOL process_request_pdu(pipes_struct *p, prs_struct *rpc_in_p)
{
BOOL auth_verify = ((p->ntlmssp_chal_flags & NTLMSSP_NEGOTIATE_SIGN) != 0);
size_t data_len = p->hdr.frag_len - RPC_HEADER_LEN - RPC_HDR_REQ_LEN -
(auth_verify ? RPC_HDR_AUTH_LEN : 0) - p->hdr.auth_len;
if(!p->pipe_bound) {
DEBUG(0,("process_request_pdu: rpc request with no bind.\n"));
set_incoming_fault(p);
return False;
}
/*
* Check if we need to do authentication processing.
* This is only done on requests, not binds.
*/
/*
* Read the RPC request header.
*/
if(!smb_io_rpc_hdr_req("req", &p->hdr_req, rpc_in_p, 0)) {
DEBUG(0,("process_request_pdu: failed to unmarshall RPC_HDR_REQ.\n"));
set_incoming_fault(p);
return False;
}
if(p->ntlmssp_auth_validated && !api_pipe_auth_process(p, rpc_in_p)) {
DEBUG(0,("process_request_pdu: failed to do auth processing.\n"));
set_incoming_fault(p);
return False;
}
if (p->ntlmssp_auth_requested && !p->ntlmssp_auth_validated) {
/*
* Authentication _was_ requested and it already failed.
*/
DEBUG(0,("process_request_pdu: RPC request received on pipe %s "
"where authentication failed. Denying the request.\n",
p->name));
set_incoming_fault(p);
return False;
}
if (p->netsec_auth_validated && !api_pipe_netsec_process(p, rpc_in_p)) {
DEBUG(0,("process_request_pdu: failed to do schannel processing.\n"));
set_incoming_fault(p);
return False;
}
/*
* Check the data length doesn't go over the 15Mb limit.
* increased after observing a bug in the Windows NT 4.0 SP6a
* spoolsv.exe when the response to a GETPRINTERDRIVER2 RPC
* will not fit in the initial buffer of size 0x1068 --jerry 22/01/2002
*/
if(prs_offset(&p->in_data.data) + data_len > 15*1024*1024) {
DEBUG(0,("process_request_pdu: rpc data buffer too large (%u) + (%u)\n",
(unsigned int)prs_data_size(&p->in_data.data), (unsigned int)data_len ));
set_incoming_fault(p);
return False;
}
/*
* Append the data portion into the buffer and return.
*/
if(!prs_append_some_prs_data(&p->in_data.data, rpc_in_p, prs_offset(rpc_in_p), data_len)) {
DEBUG(0,("process_request_pdu: Unable to append data size %u to parse buffer of size %u.\n",
(unsigned int)data_len, (unsigned int)prs_data_size(&p->in_data.data) ));
set_incoming_fault(p);
return False;
}
if(p->hdr.flags & RPC_FLG_LAST) {
BOOL ret = False;
/*
* Ok - we finally have a complete RPC stream.
* Call the rpc command to process it.
*/
/*
* Ensure the internal prs buffer size is *exactly* the same
* size as the current offset.
*/
if(!prs_set_buffer_size(&p->in_data.data, prs_offset(&p->in_data.data)))
{
DEBUG(0,("process_request_pdu: Call to prs_set_buffer_size failed!\n"));
set_incoming_fault(p);
return False;
}
/*
* Set the parse offset to the start of the data and set the
* prs_struct to UNMARSHALL.
*/
prs_set_offset(&p->in_data.data, 0);
prs_switch_type(&p->in_data.data, UNMARSHALL);
/*
* Process the complete data stream here.
*/
free_pipe_context(p);
if(pipe_init_outgoing_data(p))
ret = api_pipe_request(p);
free_pipe_context(p);
/*
* We have consumed the whole data stream. Set back to
* marshalling and set the offset back to the start of
* the buffer to re-use it (we could also do a prs_mem_free()
* and then re_init on the next start of PDU. Not sure which
* is best here.... JRA.
*/
prs_switch_type(&p->in_data.data, MARSHALL);
prs_set_offset(&p->in_data.data, 0);
return ret;
}
return True;
}
/****************************************************************************
Processes a finished PDU stored in current_in_pdu. The RPC_HEADER has
already been parsed and stored in p->hdr.
****************************************************************************/
static ssize_t process_complete_pdu(pipes_struct *p)
{
prs_struct rpc_in;
size_t data_len = p->in_data.pdu_received_len;
char *data_p = (char *)&p->in_data.current_in_pdu[0];
BOOL reply = False;
if(p->fault_state) {
DEBUG(10,("process_complete_pdu: pipe %s in fault state.\n",
p->name ));
set_incoming_fault(p);
setup_fault_pdu(p, NT_STATUS(0x1c010002));
return (ssize_t)data_len;
}
prs_init( &rpc_in, 0, p->mem_ctx, UNMARSHALL);
/*
* Ensure we're using the corrent endianness for both the
* RPC header flags and the raw data we will be reading from.
*/
prs_set_endian_data( &rpc_in, p->endian);
prs_set_endian_data( &p->in_data.data, p->endian);
prs_give_memory( &rpc_in, data_p, (uint32)data_len, False);
DEBUG(10,("process_complete_pdu: processing packet type %u\n",
(unsigned int)p->hdr.pkt_type ));
switch (p->hdr.pkt_type) {
case RPC_BIND:
case RPC_ALTCONT:
/*
* We assume that a pipe bind is only in one pdu.
*/
if(pipe_init_outgoing_data(p))
reply = api_pipe_bind_req(p, &rpc_in);
break;
case RPC_BINDRESP:
/*
* We assume that a pipe bind_resp is only in one pdu.
*/
if(pipe_init_outgoing_data(p))
reply = api_pipe_bind_auth_resp(p, &rpc_in);
break;
case RPC_REQUEST:
reply = process_request_pdu(p, &rpc_in);
break;
default:
DEBUG(0,("process_complete_pdu: Unknown rpc type = %u received.\n", (unsigned int)p->hdr.pkt_type ));
break;
}
/* Reset to little endian. Probably don't need this but it won't hurt. */
prs_set_endian_data( &p->in_data.data, RPC_LITTLE_ENDIAN);
if (!reply) {
DEBUG(3,("process_complete_pdu: DCE/RPC fault sent on pipe %s\n", p->pipe_srv_name));
set_incoming_fault(p);
setup_fault_pdu(p, NT_STATUS(0x1c010002));
prs_mem_free(&rpc_in);
} else {
/*
* Reset the lengths. We're ready for a new pdu.
*/
p->in_data.pdu_needed_len = 0;
p->in_data.pdu_received_len = 0;
}
prs_mem_free(&rpc_in);
return (ssize_t)data_len;
}
/****************************************************************************
Accepts incoming data on an rpc pipe. Processes the data in pdu sized units.
****************************************************************************/
static ssize_t process_incoming_data(pipes_struct *p, char *data, size_t n)
{
size_t data_to_copy = MIN(n, MAX_PDU_FRAG_LEN - p->in_data.pdu_received_len);
size_t old_pdu_received_len = p->in_data.pdu_received_len;
DEBUG(10,("process_incoming_data: Start: pdu_received_len = %u, pdu_needed_len = %u, incoming data = %u\n",
(unsigned int)p->in_data.pdu_received_len, (unsigned int)p->in_data.pdu_needed_len,
(unsigned int)n ));
if(data_to_copy == 0) {
/*
* This is an error - data is being received and there is no
* space in the PDU. Free the received data and go into the fault state.
*/
DEBUG(0,("process_incoming_data: No space in incoming pdu buffer. Current size = %u \
incoming data size = %u\n", (unsigned int)p->in_data.pdu_received_len, (unsigned int)n ));
set_incoming_fault(p);
return -1;
}
/*
* If we have no data already, wait until we get at least a RPC_HEADER_LEN
* number of bytes before we can do anything.
*/
if((p->in_data.pdu_needed_len == 0) && (p->in_data.pdu_received_len < RPC_HEADER_LEN)) {
/*
* Always return here. If we have more data then the RPC_HEADER
* will be processed the next time around the loop.
*/
return fill_rpc_header(p, data, data_to_copy);
}
/*
* At this point we know we have at least an RPC_HEADER_LEN amount of data
* stored in current_in_pdu.
*/
/*
* If pdu_needed_len is zero this is a new pdu.
* Unmarshall the header so we know how much more
* data we need, then loop again.
*/
if(p->in_data.pdu_needed_len == 0)
return unmarshall_rpc_header(p);
/*
* Ok - at this point we have a valid RPC_HEADER in p->hdr.
* Keep reading until we have a full pdu.
*/
data_to_copy = MIN(data_to_copy, p->in_data.pdu_needed_len);
/*
* Copy as much of the data as we need into the current_in_pdu buffer.
*/
memcpy( (char *)&p->in_data.current_in_pdu[p->in_data.pdu_received_len], data, data_to_copy);
p->in_data.pdu_received_len += data_to_copy;
/*
* Do we have a complete PDU ?
* (return the nym of bytes handled in the call)
*/
if(p->in_data.pdu_received_len == p->in_data.pdu_needed_len)
return process_complete_pdu(p) - old_pdu_received_len;
DEBUG(10,("process_incoming_data: not a complete PDU yet. pdu_received_len = %u, pdu_needed_len = %u\n",
(unsigned int)p->in_data.pdu_received_len, (unsigned int)p->in_data.pdu_needed_len ));
return (ssize_t)data_to_copy;
}
/****************************************************************************
Accepts incoming data on an rpc pipe.
****************************************************************************/
ssize_t write_to_pipe(smb_np_struct *p, char *data, size_t n)
{
DEBUG(6,("write_to_pipe: %x", p->pnum));
DEBUG(6,(" name: %s open: %s len: %d\n",
p->name, BOOLSTR(p->open), (int)n));
dump_data(50, data, n);
return p->namedpipe_write(p->np_state, data, n);
}
/****************************************************************************
Accepts incoming data on an internal rpc pipe.
****************************************************************************/
static ssize_t write_to_internal_pipe(void *np_conn, char *data, size_t n)
{
pipes_struct *p = (pipes_struct*)np_conn;
size_t data_left = n;
while(data_left) {
ssize_t data_used;
DEBUG(10,("write_to_pipe: data_left = %u\n", (unsigned int)data_left ));
data_used = process_incoming_data(p, data, data_left);
DEBUG(10,("write_to_pipe: data_used = %d\n", (int)data_used ));
if(data_used < 0)
return -1;
data_left -= data_used;
data += data_used;
}
return n;
}
/****************************************************************************
Replies to a request to read data from a pipe.
Headers are interspersed with the data at PDU intervals. By the time
this function is called, the start of the data could possibly have been
read by an SMBtrans (file_offset != 0).
Calling create_rpc_reply() here is a hack. The data should already
have been prepared into arrays of headers + data stream sections.
****************************************************************************/
ssize_t read_from_pipe(smb_np_struct *p, char *data, size_t n,
BOOL *is_data_outstanding)
{
if (!p || !p->open) {
DEBUG(0,("read_from_pipe: pipe not open\n"));
return -1;
}
DEBUG(6,("read_from_pipe: %x", p->pnum));
return p->namedpipe_read(p->np_state, data, n, is_data_outstanding);
}
/****************************************************************************
Replies to a request to read data from a pipe.
Headers are interspersed with the data at PDU intervals. By the time
this function is called, the start of the data could possibly have been
read by an SMBtrans (file_offset != 0).
Calling create_rpc_reply() here is a hack. The data should already
have been prepared into arrays of headers + data stream sections.
****************************************************************************/
static ssize_t read_from_internal_pipe(void *np_conn, char *data, size_t n,
BOOL *is_data_outstanding)
{
pipes_struct *p = (pipes_struct*)np_conn;
uint32 pdu_remaining = 0;
ssize_t data_returned = 0;
if (!p) {
DEBUG(0,("read_from_pipe: pipe not open\n"));
return -1;
}
DEBUG(6,(" name: %s len: %u\n", p->name, (unsigned int)n));
/*
* We cannot return more than one PDU length per
* read request.
*/
/*
* This condition should result in the connection being closed.
* Netapp filers seem to set it to 0xffff which results in domain
* authentications failing. Just ignore it so things work.
*/
if(n > MAX_PDU_FRAG_LEN) {
DEBUG(5,("read_from_pipe: too large read (%u) requested on \
pipe %s. We can only service %d sized reads.\n", (unsigned int)n, p->name, MAX_PDU_FRAG_LEN ));
}
/*
* Determine if there is still data to send in the
* pipe PDU buffer. Always send this first. Never
* send more than is left in the current PDU. The
* client should send a new read request for a new
* PDU.
*/
if((pdu_remaining = p->out_data.current_pdu_len - p->out_data.current_pdu_sent) > 0) {
data_returned = (ssize_t)MIN(n, pdu_remaining);
DEBUG(10,("read_from_pipe: %s: current_pdu_len = %u, current_pdu_sent = %u \
returning %d bytes.\n", p->name, (unsigned int)p->out_data.current_pdu_len,
(unsigned int)p->out_data.current_pdu_sent, (int)data_returned));
memcpy( data, &p->out_data.current_pdu[p->out_data.current_pdu_sent], (size_t)data_returned);
p->out_data.current_pdu_sent += (uint32)data_returned;
goto out;
}
/*
* At this point p->current_pdu_len == p->current_pdu_sent (which
* may of course be zero if this is the first return fragment.
*/
DEBUG(10,("read_from_pipe: %s: fault_state = %d : data_sent_length \
= %u, prs_offset(&p->out_data.rdata) = %u.\n",
p->name, (int)p->fault_state, (unsigned int)p->out_data.data_sent_length, (unsigned int)prs_offset(&p->out_data.rdata) ));
if(p->out_data.data_sent_length >= prs_offset(&p->out_data.rdata)) {
/*
* We have sent all possible data, return 0.
*/
data_returned = 0;
goto out;
}
/*
* We need to create a new PDU from the data left in p->rdata.
* Create the header/data/footers. This also sets up the fields
* p->current_pdu_len, p->current_pdu_sent, p->data_sent_length
* and stores the outgoing PDU in p->current_pdu.
*/
if(!create_next_pdu(p)) {
DEBUG(0,("read_from_pipe: %s: create_next_pdu failed.\n", p->name));
return -1;
}
data_returned = MIN(n, p->out_data.current_pdu_len);
memcpy( data, p->out_data.current_pdu, (size_t)data_returned);
p->out_data.current_pdu_sent += (uint32)data_returned;
out:
(*is_data_outstanding) = p->out_data.current_pdu_len > n;
return data_returned;
}
/****************************************************************************
Wait device state on a pipe. Exactly what this is for is unknown...
****************************************************************************/
BOOL wait_rpc_pipe_hnd_state(smb_np_struct *p, uint16 priority)
{
if (p == NULL)
return False;
if (p->open) {
DEBUG(3,("wait_rpc_pipe_hnd_state: Setting pipe wait state priority=%x on pipe (name=%s)\n",
priority, p->name));
p->priority = priority;
return True;
}
DEBUG(3,("wait_rpc_pipe_hnd_state: Error setting pipe wait state priority=%x (name=%s)\n",
priority, p->name));
return False;
}
/****************************************************************************
Set device state on a pipe. Exactly what this is for is unknown...
****************************************************************************/
BOOL set_rpc_pipe_hnd_state(smb_np_struct *p, uint16 device_state)
{
if (p == NULL)
return False;
if (p->open) {
DEBUG(3,("set_rpc_pipe_hnd_state: Setting pipe device state=%x on pipe (name=%s)\n",
device_state, p->name));
p->device_state = device_state;
return True;
}
DEBUG(3,("set_rpc_pipe_hnd_state: Error setting pipe device state=%x (name=%s)\n",
device_state, p->name));
return False;
}
/****************************************************************************
Close an rpc pipe.
****************************************************************************/
BOOL close_rpc_pipe_hnd(smb_np_struct *p)
{
if (!p) {
DEBUG(0,("Invalid pipe in close_rpc_pipe_hnd\n"));
return False;
}
p->namedpipe_close(p->np_state);
bitmap_clear(bmap, p->pnum - pipe_handle_offset);
pipes_open--;
DEBUG(4,("closed pipe name %s pnum=%x (pipes_open=%d)\n",
p->name, p->pnum, pipes_open));
DLIST_REMOVE(Pipes, p);
ZERO_STRUCTP(p);
SAFE_FREE(p);
return True;
}
/****************************************************************************
Close an rpc pipe.
****************************************************************************/
static BOOL close_internal_rpc_pipe_hnd(void *np_conn)
{
pipes_struct *p = (pipes_struct *)np_conn;
if (!p) {
DEBUG(0,("Invalid pipe in close_internal_rpc_pipe_hnd\n"));
return False;
}
prs_mem_free(&p->out_data.rdata);
prs_mem_free(&p->in_data.data);
if (p->mem_ctx)
talloc_destroy(p->mem_ctx);
free_pipe_rpc_context( p->contexts );
/* Free the handles database. */
close_policy_by_pipe(p);
delete_nt_token(&p->pipe_user.nt_user_token);
SAFE_FREE(p->pipe_user.groups);
DLIST_REMOVE(InternalPipes, p);
p->conn->num_files_open--;
delineation between smb and msrpc more marked. smbd now constructs pdus, and then feeds them over either a "local" function call or a "remote" function call to an msrpc service. the "remote" msrpc daemon, on the other side of a unix socket, then calls the same "local" function that smbd would, if the msrpc service were being run from inside smbd. this allows a transition from local msrpc services (inside the same smbd process) to remote (over a unix socket). removed reference to pipes_struct in msrpc services. all msrpc processing functions take rpcsrv_struct which is a structure containing state info for the msrpc functions to decode and create pdus. created become_vuser() which does everything not related to connection_struct that become_user() does. removed, as best i could, connection_struct dependencies from the nt spoolss printing code. todo: remove dcinfo from rpcsrv_struct because this stores NETLOGON-specific info on a per-connection basis, and if the connection dies then so does the info, and that's a fairly serious problem. had to put pretty much everything that is in user_struct into parse_creds.c to feed unix user info over to the msrpc daemons. why? because it's expensive to do unix password/group database lookups, and it's definitely expensive to do nt user profile lookups, not to mention pretty difficult and if you did either of these it would introduce a complication / unnecessary interdependency. so, send uid/gid/num_groups/gid_t* + SID+num_rids+domain_group_rids* + unix username + nt username + nt domain + user session key etc. this is the MINIMUM info identified so far that's actually implemented. missing bits include the called and calling netbios names etc. (basically, anything that can be loaded into standard_sub() and standard_sub_basic()...) (This used to be commit aa3c659a8dba0437c17c60055a6ed30fdfecdb6d)
1999-12-12 04:25:49 +03:00
ZERO_STRUCTP(p);
SAFE_FREE(p);
return True;
}
/****************************************************************************
Find an rpc pipe given a pipe handle in a buffer and an offset.
****************************************************************************/
smb_np_struct *get_rpc_pipe_p(char *buf, int where)
{
int pnum = SVAL(buf,where);
if (chain_p)
return chain_p;
return get_rpc_pipe(pnum);
}
/****************************************************************************
Find an rpc pipe given a pipe handle.
****************************************************************************/
smb_np_struct *get_rpc_pipe(int pnum)
{
smb_np_struct *p;
DEBUG(4,("search for pipe pnum=%x\n", pnum));
for (p=Pipes;p;p=p->next)
DEBUG(5,("pipe name %s pnum=%x (pipes_open=%d)\n",
p->name, p->pnum, pipes_open));
for (p=Pipes;p;p=p->next) {
if (p->pnum == pnum) {
chain_p = p;
return p;
}
}
return NULL;
}