/* * CDDL HEADER START * * The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the * Common Development and Distribution License, Version 1.0 only * (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance * with the License. * * You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE * or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions * and limitations under the License. * * When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each * file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. * If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the * fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying * information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] * * CDDL HEADER END */ /* * Copyright 2005 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. * Use is subject to license terms. */ /* Copyright (c) 1984, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989 AT&T */ /* All Rights Reserved */ #pragma ident "%Z%%M% %I% %E% SMI" /* * lssmb.c: Contains all code specific to the MS-NET file server. * Undef SMBSERVER to remove SMB support. */ #include #include #include #include #include "lsparam.h" #include "lssmbmsg.h" #include "lsdbf.h" #ifdef SMBSERVER /* * Dlevel - Debug level for DEBUG((level, ... ) type calls * Msnet - Who is logging this message (the SMB code is) */ #define Dlevel 3 #define Msnet "SMB parser:" extern char *malloc(); char *bytes_to_ascii(); void getword(char *addr, short *w); /* * In the event of an error, it may be necessary to send a response to * the remote node before closing the virtual circuit. The following * is the return message that should be sent. (Initially, I am not * bothering to send the response message; I am assuming that the * MS-NET client will be able to figure out that things went wrong, but * we may find that is not the case. */ static unsigned char errbuf[] = { /* NegProt Return */ 0xff, 'S', 'M', 'B', 0x72, /* ERRSRV */ 0x2, 0, /* SMBerror */ 0x1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* wcnt == 1 */ 1, /* no dialects */ 0xff, 0xff, 0, 0 }; /* * s m b s e r v i c e * * Function called by listener process when it receives a connect * request from a node that wants to talk Microsoft's MS-NET Core * Protocol...the functions gets called after the listener forks. */ void smbservice(bp, bufsize, argv) char *bp; /* pointer to message buffer */ int bufsize; /* size of message */ char **argv; /* server arguments */ { char *server = *argv; /* path of server */ char logbuf[256]; char **args; int i, m_size; int twos, nulls; char *p, *q; short size; /* * Is this really a correct negotiate protocol message? */ if (*(bp+FSP_COM) != FSPnegprot){ sprintf(logbuf, "%s: Bad Command Code, 0x%x", Msnet, *(bp+FSP_COM)); goto badexit; } /* * Are there exactly 0 argument words in the message? */ if (*(bp+FSP_WCNT) != 0){ sprintf(logbuf, "%s: Incorrect # of Parameter Words, 0x%x", Msnet, *(bp+FSP_WCNT)); goto badexit; } /* * get the size of the data in the message */ p = bp + FSP_PARMS; getword(p, &size); /* * make sure the data is valid; it should have a series of * "dialect" strings, which are of the form [02 string 00]. * if(twos == nulls) then the data is well formed, else something * is wrong. */ twos = nulls = 0; p += 2; for(q = p; q < p + size; ++q){ if(*q == '\0') nulls++; else if(*q == 02) twos++; } if(twos != nulls){ sprintf(logbuf, "%s: Bad Data Format, twos=%d, nulls=%d", Msnet, twos, nulls); goto badexit; } /* * Count the number of arguments that were passed * to me by the listener... */ for(i=0, args=argv; *args; ++args, ++i) ; /* * There are a few kinds of arguments that I will pass to the server: * * -D - means "the client speaks this dialect . . ." * there me be more than one of these, if the client * is able to speak multiple dialects. * * Any arguments passed to me by the listener will be passed along * as is . . . * * Allocate an array of "char *"s that will let me point to all * of the following: * 1. As many -D options as are needed (the exact number is * contained in the variable "twos"), * 2. One -A option for the single logical name * of the client, * 3. As many positions as are needed to pass along the arguments * passed to me by the listener (variable "i"), * 4. The name of the Server executable file (always arg[0]), and * 5. "Ascii-ized" version of input message as last arg. * 6. A NULL terminator. */ m_size = sizeof(char *) * (twos + i + 4); if((args = (char **)malloc((unsigned)m_size)) == 0){ sprintf(logbuf, "%s: Can't malloc arg space, %d bytes", Msnet, m_size); goto badexit; } /* * put together the first argument to exec(2) which should be * the full pathname of the executable server file. */ args[0] = server; /* * Send dialect strings down, in order of preference */ for(i=1, q=p; q < p + size; ++i, ++q){ q = strchr(q, 02); /* find start of string */ m_size = strlen(++q) + 1 + 2; if((args[i] = malloc((unsigned)m_size)) == 0){ sprintf(logbuf, "%s: Can't malloc Server Path buf, %d bytes", Msnet, m_size); goto badexit; } strcpy(args[i], "-D"); strcat(args[i], q); /* put -Ddialect\0 in arglist */ q = strchr(q, '\0'); /* find end of string */ } /* * Add in arguments that were passed to me by the listener * first arg is server path, so we ignore that. */ for( ++argv; *argv; ++argv, ++i) args[i] = *argv; /* * add ascii-ized version of message */ args[i++] = bytes_to_ascii(bp, bufsize); /* * NULL terminate the list */ args[i] = NULL; exec_cmd((dbf_t *)0, args); return; /* error logged in start_server */ badexit: logmessage(logbuf); } /* * g e t w o r d * * move a word from an arbitrary position in a character buffer, into * a short, and flip the bytes. * (NOTE that word is a 16-bit iapx-286 word). */ void getword(char *addr, short *w) { lobyte(*w) = *addr++; hibyte(*w) = *addr; } /* b y t e s _ t o _ a s c i i * Routine to convert a binary array to a printable sequence of * characters. For example, if the input to this routine were: * * inbuf = "012", and n = 3 * * then the output would be a pointer to the string: * * "303132" * * No assumption is made about NULL terminators on input, because * it is probably binary, and not a string. */ char * bytes_to_ascii(inbuf, n) char *inbuf; /* initialized buffer of binary data */ int n; /* size of input buffer */ { char *outbuf; /* return string */ char *p; /* scratch pointer */ int i; /* scratch variable */ /* malloc 2x space for output plus one for NULL */ if (outbuf = malloc(n * 2 + 1)) { /* Fill in output buffer, with 2 character, capitalized hex. */ for (i = 0, p = outbuf; i < n; ++inbuf, p += 2, ++i) { sprintf(p, "%2.2X", *inbuf); } return(outbuf); } else return(NULL); } #else void smbservice(bp, size, argv) char *bp; /* pointer to message buffer */ int size; /* size of message */ char **argv; /* server arguments */ { logmessage("SMB service NOT supported"); } #endif /* SMBSERVICE */