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samba-mirror/source3/rpc_parse/parse_prs.c

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/*
Unix SMB/Netbios implementation.
Version 1.9.
Samba memory buffer functions
Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 1992-1997
Copyright (C) Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton 1996-1997
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.
*/
extern int DEBUGLEVEL;
#include "includes.h"
/*******************************************************************
dump a prs to a file
********************************************************************/
void prs_dump(char *name, int level, prs_struct *ps)
{
int fd;
pstring fname;
if (DEBUGLEVEL < 50) return;
slprintf(fname,sizeof(fname), "/tmp/%s_%d.prs", name, level);
fd = open(fname, O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_EXCL, 0644);
if (fd != -1) {
write(fd, ps->data_p + ps->data_offset, ps->buffer_size - ps->data_offset);
close(fd);
DEBUG(0,("created %s\n", fname));
}
}
/*******************************************************************
debug output for parsing info.
XXXX side-effect of this function is to increase the debug depth XXXX
********************************************************************/
void prs_debug(prs_struct *ps, int depth, char *desc, char *fn_name)
{
DEBUG(5+depth, ("%s%06x %s %s\n", tab_depth(depth), ps->data_offset, fn_name, desc));
}
/*******************************************************************
Initialise a parse structure - malloc the data if requested.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_init(prs_struct *ps, uint32 size, uint8 align, BOOL io)
{
ZERO_STRUCTP(ps);
ps->io = io;
ps->bigendian_data = False;
ps->align = align;
ps->is_dynamic = False;
ps->data_offset = 0;
ps->buffer_size = 0;
ps->data_p = NULL;
if (size != 0) {
ps->buffer_size = size;
if((ps->data_p = (char *)malloc((size_t)size)) == NULL) {
DEBUG(0,("prs_init: malloc fail for %u bytes.\n", (unsigned int)size));
return False;
}
ps->is_dynamic = True; /* We own this memory. */
}
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
read from a socket into memory.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_read(prs_struct *ps, int fd, size_t len, int timeout)
{
BOOL ok;
size_t prev_size = ps->buffer_size;
if (!prs_grow(ps, len))
{
return False;
}
if (timeout > 0)
{
ok = (read_with_timeout(fd, &ps->data_p[prev_size],
len, len,timeout) == len);
}
else
{
ok = (read_data(fd, &ps->data_p[prev_size], len) == len);
}
return ok;
}
/*******************************************************************
Delete the memory in a parse structure - if we own it.
********************************************************************/
void prs_mem_free(prs_struct *ps)
{
if(ps->is_dynamic && (ps->data_p != NULL))
free(ps->data_p);
ps->is_dynamic = False;
ps->data_p = NULL;
ps->buffer_size = 0;
ps->data_offset = 0;
}
/*******************************************************************
Hand some already allocated memory to a prs_struct.
********************************************************************/
void prs_give_memory(prs_struct *ps, char *buf, uint32 size, BOOL is_dynamic)
{
ps->is_dynamic = is_dynamic;
ps->data_p = buf;
ps->buffer_size = size;
}
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
/*******************************************************************
Take some memory back from a prs_struct.
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
********************************************************************/
char *prs_take_memory(prs_struct *ps, uint32 *psize)
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
{
char *ret = ps->data_p;
if(psize)
*psize = ps->buffer_size;
ps->is_dynamic = False;
prs_mem_free(ps);
return ret;
}
/*******************************************************************
Attempt, if needed, to grow a data buffer.
Also depends on the data stream mode (io).
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_grow(prs_struct *ps, uint32 extra_space)
{
uint32 new_size;
char *new_data;
if(ps->data_offset + extra_space <= ps->buffer_size)
return True;
/*
* We cannot grow the buffer if we're not reading
* into the prs_struct, or if we don't own the memory.
*/
if(UNMARSHALLING(ps) || !ps->is_dynamic) {
DEBUG(0,("prs_grow: Buffer overflow - unable to expand buffer by %u bytes.\n",
(unsigned int)extra_space));
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
return False;
}
/*
* Decide how much extra space we really need.
*/
extra_space -= (ps->buffer_size - ps->data_offset);
if(ps->buffer_size == 0) {
/*
* Ensure we have at least a PDU's length, or extra_space, whichever
* is greater.
*/
new_size = MAX(MAX_PDU_FRAG_LEN,extra_space);
if((new_data = malloc(new_size)) == NULL) {
DEBUG(0,("prs_grow: Malloc failure for size %u.\n", (unsigned int)new_size));
return False;
}
memset(new_data, '\0', new_size );
} else {
/*
* If the current buffer size is bigger than the space needed, just
* double it, else add extra_space.
*/
new_size = MAX(ps->buffer_size*2, ps->buffer_size + extra_space);
if ((new_data = Realloc(ps->data_p, new_size)) == NULL) {
DEBUG(0,("prs_grow: Realloc failure for size %u.\n",
(unsigned int)new_size));
return False;
}
}
ps->buffer_size = new_size;
ps->data_p = new_data;
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
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Attempt to force a data buffer to grow by len bytes.
This is only used when appending more data onto a prs_struct
when reading an rpc reply, before unmarshalling it.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_force_grow(prs_struct *ps, uint32 extra_space)
{
uint32 new_size = ps->buffer_size + extra_space;
char *new_data;
if(!UNMARSHALLING(ps) || !ps->is_dynamic) {
DEBUG(0,("prs_force_grow: Buffer overflow - unable to expand buffer by %u bytes.\n",
(unsigned int)extra_space));
return False;
}
if((new_data = Realloc(ps->data_p, new_size)) == NULL) {
DEBUG(0,("prs_force_grow: Realloc failure for size %u.\n",
(unsigned int)new_size));
return False;
}
ps->buffer_size = new_size;
ps->data_p = new_data;
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Get the data pointer (external interface).
********************************************************************/
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
char *prs_data_p(prs_struct *ps)
{
return ps->data_p;
}
/*******************************************************************
Get the current data size (external interface).
********************************************************************/
uint32 prs_data_size(prs_struct *ps)
{
return ps->buffer_size;
}
/*******************************************************************
Fetch the current offset (external interface).
********************************************************************/
uint32 prs_offset(prs_struct *ps)
{
return ps->data_offset;
}
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
/*******************************************************************
Set the current offset (external interface).
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
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_set_offset(prs_struct *ps, uint32 offset)
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(offset <= ps->data_offset) {
ps->data_offset = offset;
return True;
}
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(!prs_grow(ps, offset - ps->data_offset))
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
return False;
ps->data_offset = offset;
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
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Append the data from one parse_struct into another.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_append_prs_data(prs_struct *dst, prs_struct *src)
{
if(!prs_grow(dst, prs_offset(src)))
return False;
memcpy(&dst->data_p[dst->data_offset], prs_data_p(src), (size_t)prs_offset(src));
dst->data_offset += prs_offset(src);
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
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Append some data from one parse_struct into another.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_append_some_prs_data(prs_struct *dst, prs_struct *src, int32 start, uint32 len)
{
if(!prs_grow(dst, len))
return False;
memcpy(&dst->data_p[dst->data_offset], prs_data_p(src)+start, (size_t)len);
dst->data_offset += len;
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Append the data from a buffer into a parse_struct.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_append_data(prs_struct *dst, char *src, uint32 len)
{
if(!prs_grow(dst, len))
return False;
memcpy(&dst->data_p[dst->data_offset], src, (size_t)len);
dst->data_offset += len;
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Set the data as big-endian (external interface).
********************************************************************/
void prs_set_bigendian_data(prs_struct *ps)
{
ps->bigendian_data = True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Align a the data_len to a multiple of align bytes - filling with
zeros.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_align(prs_struct *ps)
{
uint32 mod = ps->data_offset & (ps->align-1);
if (ps->align != 0 && mod != 0) {
uint32 extra_space = (ps->align - mod);
if(!prs_grow(ps, extra_space))
return False;
memset(&ps->data_p[ps->data_offset], '\0', (size_t)extra_space);
ps->data_offset += extra_space;
}
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Ensure we can read/write to a given offset.
********************************************************************/
char *prs_mem_get(prs_struct *ps, uint32 extra_size)
{
if(UNMARSHALLING(ps)) {
/*
* If reading, ensure that we can read the requested size item.
*/
if (ps->data_offset + extra_size > ps->buffer_size) {
DEBUG(0,("prs_mem_get: reading data of size %u would overrun buffer.\n",
(unsigned int)extra_size ));
return NULL;
}
} else {
/*
* Writing - grow the buffer if needed.
*/
if(!prs_grow(ps, extra_size))
return False;
}
return &ps->data_p[ps->data_offset];
}
/*******************************************************************
Change the struct type.
********************************************************************/
void prs_switch_type(prs_struct *ps, BOOL io)
{
if ((ps->io ^ io) == True)
ps->io=io;
}
/*******************************************************************
Force a prs_struct to be dynamic even when it's size is 0.
********************************************************************/
void prs_force_dynamic(prs_struct *ps)
{
ps->is_dynamic=True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Stream a uint8.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_uint8(char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, uint8 *data8)
{
char *q = prs_mem_get(ps, sizeof(uint8));
if (q == NULL)
return False;
DBG_RW_CVAL(name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, q, *data8)
ps->data_offset += sizeof(uint8);
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Stream a uint16.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_uint16(char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, uint16 *data16)
{
char *q = prs_mem_get(ps, sizeof(uint16));
if (q == NULL)
return False;
DBG_RW_SVAL(name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, ps->bigendian_data, q, *data16)
ps->data_offset += sizeof(uint16);
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Stream a uint32.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_uint32(char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, uint32 *data32)
{
char *q = prs_mem_get(ps, sizeof(uint32));
if (q == NULL)
return False;
DBG_RW_IVAL(name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, ps->bigendian_data, q, *data32)
ps->data_offset += sizeof(uint32);
return True;
}
/******************************************************************
Stream an array of uint8s. Length is number of uint8s.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_uint8s(BOOL charmode, char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, uint8 *data8s, int len)
{
char *q = prs_mem_get(ps, len * sizeof(uint8));
if (q == NULL)
return False;
DBG_RW_PCVAL(charmode, name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, q, data8s, len)
ps->data_offset += (len * sizeof(uint8));
return True;
}
/******************************************************************
Stream an array of uint16s. Length is number of uint16s.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_uint16s(BOOL charmode, char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, uint16 *data16s, int len)
{
char *q = prs_mem_get(ps, len * sizeof(uint16));
if (q == NULL)
return False;
DBG_RW_PSVAL(charmode, name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, ps->bigendian_data, q, data16s, len)
ps->data_offset += (len * sizeof(uint16));
return True;
}
/******************************************************************
Stream an array of uint32s. Length is number of uint32s.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_uint32s(BOOL charmode, char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, uint32 *data32s, int len)
{
char *q = prs_mem_get(ps, len * sizeof(uint32));
if (q == NULL)
return False;
DBG_RW_PIVAL(charmode, name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, ps->bigendian_data, q, data32s, len)
ps->data_offset += (len * sizeof(uint32));
return True;
}
/******************************************************************
Stream a "not" unicode string, length/buffer specified separately,
in byte chars. String is in little-endian format.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_buffer2(BOOL charmode, char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, BUFFER2 *str)
{
char *p = (char *)str->buffer;
char *q = prs_mem_get(ps, str->buf_len);
if (q == NULL)
return False;
/* If we're using big-endian, reverse to get little-endian. */
if(ps->bigendian_data)
DBG_RW_PSVAL(charmode, name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, ps->bigendian_data, q, p, str->buf_len/2)
else
DBG_RW_PCVAL(charmode, name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, q, p, str->buf_len)
ps->data_offset += str->buf_len;
return True;
}
/******************************************************************
Stream a string, length/buffer specified separately,
in uint8 chars.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_string2(BOOL charmode, char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, STRING2 *str)
{
char *q = prs_mem_get(ps, str->str_str_len * sizeof(uint8));
if (q == NULL)
return False;
DBG_RW_PCVAL(charmode, name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, q, str->buffer, str->str_max_len)
ps->data_offset += (str->str_str_len * sizeof(uint8));
return True;
}
/******************************************************************
Stream a unicode string, length/buffer specified separately,
in uint16 chars. We use DBG_RW_PCVAL, not DBG_RW_PSVAL here
as the unicode string is already in little-endian format.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_unistr2(BOOL charmode, char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, UNISTR2 *str)
{
char *p = (char *)str->buffer;
char *q = prs_mem_get(ps, str->uni_str_len * sizeof(uint16));
if (q == NULL)
return False;
/* If we're using big-endian, reverse to get little-endian. */
if(ps->bigendian_data)
DBG_RW_PSVAL(charmode, name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, ps->bigendian_data, q, p, str->uni_str_len)
else
DBG_RW_PCVAL(charmode, name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, q, p, str->uni_str_len * 2)
ps->data_offset += (str->uni_str_len * sizeof(uint16));
return True;
}
/******************************************************************
Stream a unicode string, length/buffer specified separately,
in uint16 chars. We use DBG_RW_PCVAL, not DBG_RW_PSVAL here
as the unicode string is already in little-endian format.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_unistr3(BOOL charmode, char *name, UNISTR3 *str, prs_struct *ps, int depth)
{
char *p = (char *)str->str.buffer;
char *q = prs_mem_get(ps, str->uni_str_len * sizeof(uint16));
if (q == NULL)
return False;
/* If we're using big-endian, reverse to get little-endian. */
if(ps->bigendian_data)
DBG_RW_PSVAL(charmode, name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, ps->bigendian_data, q, p, str->uni_str_len)
else
DBG_RW_PCVAL(charmode, name, depth, ps->data_offset, ps->io, q, p, str->uni_str_len * 2)
ps->data_offset += (str->uni_str_len * sizeof(uint16));
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Stream a unicode null-terminated string. As the string is already
in little-endian format then do it as a stream of bytes.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_unistr(char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, UNISTR *str)
{
int len = 0;
unsigned char *p = (unsigned char *)str->buffer;
uint8 *start;
char *q;
char zero=0;
for(len = 0; len < (sizeof(str->buffer) / sizeof(str->buffer[0])) &&
str->buffer[len] != 0; len++)
;
q = prs_mem_get(ps, (len+1)*2);
if (q == NULL)
return False;
start = (uint8*)q;
for(len = 0; len < (sizeof(str->buffer) / sizeof(str->buffer[0])) &&
str->buffer[len] != 0; len++) {
if(ps->bigendian_data) {
RW_SVAL(ps->io, ps->bigendian_data, q, *p, 0);
p += 2;
q += 2;
} else {
RW_CVAL(ps->io, q, *p, 0);
p++;
q++;
RW_CVAL(ps->io, q, *p, 0);
p++;
q++;
}
}
/*
* even if the string is 'empty' (only an \0 char)
* at this point the leading \0 hasn't been parsed.
* so parse it now
*/
RW_CVAL(ps->io, q, zero, 0);
q++;
RW_CVAL(ps->io, q, zero, 0);
q++;
len++;
ps->data_offset += len*2;
dump_data(5+depth, (char *)start, len * 2);
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
Stream a null-terminated string. len is strlen, and therefore does
not include the null-termination character.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_string(char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, char *str, int len, int max_buf_size)
{
char *q;
uint8 *start;
int i;
len = MIN(len, (max_buf_size-1));
q = prs_mem_get(ps, len+1);
if (q == NULL)
return False;
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
start = (uint8*)q;
for(i = 0; i < len; i++) {
RW_CVAL(ps->io, q, str[i],0);
q++;
}
/* The terminating null. */
str[i] = '\0';
if (MARSHALLING(ps)) {
RW_CVAL(ps->io, q, str[i], 0);
}
ps->data_offset += len+1;
dump_data(5+depth, (char *)start, len);
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
prs_uint16 wrapper. Call this and it sets up a pointer to where the
uint16 should be stored, or gets the size if reading.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_uint16_pre(char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, uint16 *data16, uint32 *offset)
{
(*offset) = ps->data_offset;
if (UNMARSHALLING(ps)) {
/* reading. */
return prs_uint16(name, ps, depth, data16);
} else {
char *q = prs_mem_get(ps, sizeof(uint16));
if(q ==NULL)
return False;
ps->data_offset += sizeof(uint16);
}
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
prs_uint16 wrapper. call this and it retrospectively stores the size.
does nothing on reading, as that is already handled by ...._pre()
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_uint16_post(char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, uint16 *data16,
uint32 ptr_uint16, uint32 start_offset)
{
if (MARSHALLING(ps)) {
/*
* Writing - temporarily move the offset pointer.
*/
uint16 data_size = ps->data_offset - start_offset;
uint32 old_offset = ps->data_offset;
ps->data_offset = ptr_uint16;
if(!prs_uint16(name, ps, depth, &data_size)) {
ps->data_offset = old_offset;
return False;
}
ps->data_offset = old_offset;
} else {
ps->data_offset = start_offset + (uint32)(*data16);
}
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
prs_uint32 wrapper. Call this and it sets up a pointer to where the
uint32 should be stored, or gets the size if reading.
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_uint32_pre(char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, uint32 *data32, uint32 *offset)
{
(*offset) = ps->data_offset;
if (UNMARSHALLING(ps)) {
/* reading. */
return prs_uint32(name, ps, depth, data32);
} else {
ps->data_offset += sizeof(uint32);
}
return True;
}
/*******************************************************************
prs_uint32 wrapper. call this and it retrospectively stores the size.
does nothing on reading, as that is already handled by ...._pre()
********************************************************************/
BOOL prs_uint32_post(char *name, prs_struct *ps, int depth, uint32 *data32,
uint32 ptr_uint32, uint32 data_size)
{
if (MARSHALLING(ps)) {
/*
* Writing - temporarily move the offset pointer.
*/
uint32 old_offset = ps->data_offset;
ps->data_offset = ptr_uint32;
if(!prs_uint32(name, ps, depth, &data_size)) {
ps->data_offset = old_offset;
return False;
}
ps->data_offset = old_offset;
}
return True;
}