haproxy/include/haproxy/tools.h
Willy Tarreau 16e3655fbd REORG: pool: move the area dump with symbol resolution to tools.c
This function is particularly useful to dump unknown areas watching
for opportunistic symbols, so let's move it to tools.c so that we can
reuse it a little bit more.
2024-04-12 18:01:20 +02:00

1183 lines
42 KiB
C

/*
* include/haproxy/tools.h
* This files contains some general purpose functions and macros.
*
* Copyright (C) 2000-2020 Willy Tarreau - w@1wt.eu
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation, version 2.1
* exclusively.
*
* This library 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
* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
*/
#ifndef _HAPROXY_TOOLS_H
#define _HAPROXY_TOOLS_H
#ifdef USE_BACKTRACE
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <execinfo.h>
#endif
#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/un.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <import/eb32sctree.h>
#include <import/eb32tree.h>
#include <haproxy/api.h>
#include <haproxy/chunk.h>
#include <haproxy/intops.h>
#include <haproxy/namespace-t.h>
#include <haproxy/protocol-t.h>
#include <haproxy/tools-t.h>
/****** string-specific macros and functions ******/
/* if a > max, then bound <a> to <max>. The macro returns the new <a> */
#define UBOUND(a, max) ({ typeof(a) b = (max); if ((a) > b) (a) = b; (a); })
/* if a < min, then bound <a> to <min>. The macro returns the new <a> */
#define LBOUND(a, min) ({ typeof(a) b = (min); if ((a) < b) (a) = b; (a); })
#define SWAP(a, b) do { typeof(a) t; t = a; a = b; b = t; } while(0)
/* use if you want to return a simple hash. Key 0 doesn't hash. */
#define HA_ANON_STR(key, str) hash_anon(key, str, "", "")
/* use if you want to return a hash like : ID('hash'). Key 0 doesn't hash. */
#define HA_ANON_ID(key, str) hash_anon(key, str, "ID(", ")")
/* use if you want to return a hash like : PATH('hash'). Key 0 doesn't hash. */
#define HA_ANON_PATH(key, str) hash_anon(key, str, "PATH(", ")")
/* use only in a function that contains an appctx (key comes from appctx). */
#define HA_ANON_CLI(str) hash_anon(appctx->cli_anon_key, str, "", "")
/*
* copies at most <size-1> chars from <src> to <dst>. Last char is always
* set to 0, unless <size> is 0. The number of chars copied is returned
* (excluding the terminating zero).
* This code has been optimized for size and speed : on x86, it's 45 bytes
* long, uses only registers, and consumes only 4 cycles per char.
*/
extern int strlcpy2(char *dst, const char *src, int size);
/*
* This function simply returns a locally allocated string containing
* the ascii representation for number 'n' in decimal.
*/
extern THREAD_LOCAL int itoa_idx; /* index of next itoa_str to use */
extern THREAD_LOCAL char itoa_str[][171];
extern int build_is_static;
extern char *ultoa_r(unsigned long n, char *buffer, int size);
extern char *lltoa_r(long long int n, char *buffer, int size);
extern char *sltoa_r(long n, char *buffer, int size);
extern const char *ulltoh_r(unsigned long long n, char *buffer, int size);
size_t flt_trim(char *buffer, size_t num_start, size_t len);
char *ftoa_r(double n, char *buffer, int size);
static inline const char *ultoa(unsigned long n)
{
return ultoa_r(n, itoa_str[0], sizeof(itoa_str[0]));
}
/*
* unsigned long long ASCII representation
*
* return the last char '\0' or NULL if no enough
* space in dst
*/
char *ulltoa(unsigned long long n, char *dst, size_t size);
/*
* unsigned long ASCII representation
*
* return the last char '\0' or NULL if no enough
* space in dst
*/
char *ultoa_o(unsigned long n, char *dst, size_t size);
/*
* signed long ASCII representation
*
* return the last char '\0' or NULL if no enough
* space in dst
*/
char *ltoa_o(long int n, char *dst, size_t size);
/*
* signed long long ASCII representation
*
* return the last char '\0' or NULL if no enough
* space in dst
*/
char *lltoa(long long n, char *dst, size_t size);
/*
* write a ascii representation of a unsigned into dst,
* return a pointer to the last character
* Pad the ascii representation with '0', using size.
*/
char *utoa_pad(unsigned int n, char *dst, size_t size);
/*
* This function simply returns a locally allocated string containing the ascii
* representation for number 'n' in decimal, unless n is 0 in which case it
* returns the alternate string (or an empty string if the alternate string is
* NULL). It use is intended for limits reported in reports, where it's
* desirable not to display anything if there is no limit. Warning! it shares
* the same vector as ultoa_r().
*/
extern const char *limit_r(unsigned long n, char *buffer, int size, const char *alt);
/* returns a locally allocated string containing the ASCII representation of
* the number 'n' in decimal. Up to NB_ITOA_STR calls may be used in the same
* function call (eg: printf), shared with the other similar functions making
* use of itoa_str[].
*/
static inline const char *U2A(unsigned long n)
{
const char *ret = ultoa_r(n, itoa_str[itoa_idx], sizeof(itoa_str[0]));
if (++itoa_idx >= NB_ITOA_STR)
itoa_idx = 0;
return ret;
}
/* returns a locally allocated string containing the HTML representation of
* the number 'n' in decimal. Up to NB_ITOA_STR calls may be used in the same
* function call (eg: printf), shared with the other similar functions making
* use of itoa_str[].
*/
static inline const char *U2H(unsigned long long n)
{
const char *ret = ulltoh_r(n, itoa_str[itoa_idx], sizeof(itoa_str[0]));
if (++itoa_idx >= NB_ITOA_STR)
itoa_idx = 0;
return ret;
}
/* returns a locally allocated string containing the ASCII representation of
* the number 'n' in decimal. Up to NB_ITOA_STR calls may be used in the same
* function call (eg: printf), shared with the other similar functions making
* use of itoa_str[].
*/
static inline const char *F2A(double n)
{
const char *ret = ftoa_r(n, itoa_str[itoa_idx], sizeof(itoa_str[0]));
if (++itoa_idx >= NB_ITOA_STR)
itoa_idx = 0;
return ret;
}
/* returns a locally allocated string containing the HTML representation of
* the number 'n' in decimal. Up to NB_ITOA_STR calls may be used in the same
* function call (eg: printf), shared with the other similar functions making
* use of itoa_str[].
*/
static inline const char *F2H(double n)
{
const char *ret = ftoa_r(n, itoa_str[itoa_idx], sizeof(itoa_str[0]));
if (++itoa_idx >= NB_ITOA_STR)
itoa_idx = 0;
return ret;
}
/* returns a locally allocated string containing the ASCII representation of
* the number 'n' in decimal. Up to NB_ITOA_STR calls may be used in the same
* function call (eg: printf), shared with the other similar functions making
* use of itoa_str[].
*/
static inline const char *LIM2A(unsigned long n, const char *alt)
{
const char *ret = limit_r(n, itoa_str[itoa_idx], sizeof(itoa_str[0]), alt);
if (++itoa_idx >= NB_ITOA_STR)
itoa_idx = 0;
return ret;
}
/* returns a locally allocated string containing the quoted encoding of the
* input string. The output may be truncated to QSTR_SIZE chars, but it is
* guaranteed that the string will always be properly terminated. Quotes are
* encoded by doubling them as is commonly done in CSV files. QSTR_SIZE must
* always be at least 4 chars.
*/
const char *qstr(const char *str);
/* returns <str> or its quote-encoded equivalent if it contains at least one
* quote or a comma. This is aimed at build CSV-compatible strings.
*/
static inline const char *cstr(const char *str)
{
const char *p = str;
while (*p) {
if (*p == ',' || *p == '"')
return qstr(str);
p++;
}
return str;
}
/*
* Returns non-zero if character <s> is a hex digit (0-9, a-f, A-F), else zero.
*/
extern int ishex(char s);
/*
* Checks <name> for invalid characters. Valid chars are [A-Za-z0-9_:.-]. If an
* invalid character is found, a pointer to it is returned. If everything is
* fine, NULL is returned.
*/
extern const char *invalid_char(const char *name);
/*
* Checks <name> for invalid characters. Valid chars are [A-Za-z0-9_.-].
* If an invalid character is found, a pointer to it is returned.
* If everything is fine, NULL is returned.
*/
extern const char *invalid_domainchar(const char *name);
/*
* Checks <name> for invalid characters. Valid chars are [A-Za-z_.-].
* If an invalid character is found, a pointer to it is returned.
* If everything is fine, NULL is returned.
*/
extern const char *invalid_prefix_char(const char *name);
/* returns true if <c> is an identifier character, that is, a digit, a letter,
* or '-', '+', '_', ':' or '.'. This is usable for proxy names, server names,
* ACL names, sample fetch names, and converter names.
*/
static inline int is_idchar(char c)
{
return isalnum((unsigned char)c) ||
c == '.' || c == '_' || c == '-' || c == '+' || c == ':';
}
/*
* converts <str> to a locally allocated struct sockaddr_storage *, and a
* port range consisting in two integers. The low and high end are always set
* even if the port is unspecified, in which case (0,0) is returned. The low
* port is set in the sockaddr. Thus, it is enough to check the size of the
* returned range to know if an array must be allocated or not. The format is
* "addr[:[port[-port]]]", where "addr" can be a dotted IPv4 address, an IPv6
* address, a host name, or empty or "*" to indicate INADDR_ANY. If an IPv6
* address wants to ignore port, it must be terminated by a trailing colon (':').
* The IPv6 '::' address is IN6ADDR_ANY, so in order to bind to a given port on
* IPv6, use ":::port". NULL is returned if the host part cannot be resolved.
* If <pfx> is non-null, it is used as a string prefix before any path-based
* address (typically the path to a unix socket).
*/
struct sockaddr_storage *str2sa_range(const char *str, int *port, int *low, int *high, int *fd,
struct protocol **proto, struct net_addr_type *sa_type,
char **err, const char *pfx, char **fqdn, unsigned int opts);
/* converts <addr> and <port> into a string representation of the address and port. This is sort
* of an inverse of str2sa_range, with some restrictions. The supported families are AF_INET,
* AF_INET6, AF_UNIX, and AF_CUST_SOCKPAIR. If the family is unsopported NULL is returned.
* If map_ports is true, then the sign of the port is included in the output, to indicate it is
* relative to the incoming port. AF_INET and AF_INET6 will be in the form "<addr>:<port>".
* AF_UNIX will either be just the path (if using a pathname) or "abns@<path>" if it is abstract.
* AF_CUST_SOCKPAIR will be of the form "sockpair@<fd>".
*
* The returned char* is allocated, and it is the responsibility of the caller to free it.
*/
char *sa2str(const struct sockaddr_storage *addr, int port, int map_ports);
/* converts <str> to a struct in_addr containing a network mask. It can be
* passed in dotted form (255.255.255.0) or in CIDR form (24). It returns 1
* if the conversion succeeds otherwise zero.
*/
int str2mask(const char *str, struct in_addr *mask);
/* converts <str> to a struct in6_addr containing a network mask. It can be
* passed in quadruplet form (ffff:ffff::) or in CIDR form (64). It returns 1
* if the conversion succeeds otherwise zero.
*/
int str2mask6(const char *str, struct in6_addr *mask);
/* convert <cidr> to struct in_addr <mask>. It returns 1 if the conversion
* succeeds otherwise non-zero.
*/
int cidr2dotted(int cidr, struct in_addr *mask);
/*
* converts <str> to two struct in_addr* which must be pre-allocated.
* The format is "addr[/mask]", where "addr" cannot be empty, and mask
* is optional and either in the dotted or CIDR notation.
* Note: "addr" can also be a hostname. Returns 1 if OK, 0 if error.
*/
int str2net(const char *str, int resolve, struct in_addr *addr, struct in_addr *mask);
/* str2ip and str2ip2:
*
* converts <str> to a struct sockaddr_storage* provided by the caller. The
* caller must have zeroed <sa> first, and may have set sa->ss_family to force
* parse a specific address format. If the ss_family is 0 or AF_UNSPEC, then
* the function tries to guess the address family from the syntax. If the
* family is forced and the format doesn't match, an error is returned. The
* string is assumed to contain only an address, no port. The address can be a
* dotted IPv4 address, an IPv6 address, a host name, or empty or "*" to
* indicate INADDR_ANY. NULL is returned if the host part cannot be resolved.
* The return address will only have the address family and the address set,
* all other fields remain zero. The string is not supposed to be modified.
* The IPv6 '::' address is IN6ADDR_ANY.
*
* str2ip2:
*
* If <resolve> is set, this function try to resolve DNS, otherwise, it returns
* NULL result.
*/
struct sockaddr_storage *str2ip2(const char *str, struct sockaddr_storage *sa, int resolve);
static inline struct sockaddr_storage *str2ip(const char *str, struct sockaddr_storage *sa)
{
return str2ip2(str, sa, 1);
}
/*
* converts <str> to two struct in6_addr* which must be pre-allocated.
* The format is "addr[/mask]", where "addr" cannot be empty, and mask
* is an optional number of bits (128 being the default).
* Returns 1 if OK, 0 if error.
*/
int str62net(const char *str, struct in6_addr *addr, unsigned char *mask);
/*
* Parse IP address found in url.
*/
int url2ipv4(const char *addr, struct in_addr *dst);
/*
* Resolve destination server from URL. Convert <str> to a sockaddr_storage*.
*/
int url2sa(const char *url, int ulen, struct sockaddr_storage *addr, struct split_url *out);
/* Tries to convert a sockaddr_storage address to text form. Upon success, the
* address family is returned so that it's easy for the caller to adapt to the
* output format. Zero is returned if the address family is not supported. -1
* is returned upon error, with errno set. AF_INET, AF_INET6 and AF_UNIX are
* supported.
*/
int addr_to_str(const struct sockaddr_storage *addr, char *str, int size);
/* Tries to convert a sockaddr_storage port to text form. Upon success, the
* address family is returned so that it's easy for the caller to adapt to the
* output format. Zero is returned if the address family is not supported. -1
* is returned upon error, with errno set. AF_INET, AF_INET6 and AF_UNIX are
* supported.
*/
int port_to_str(const struct sockaddr_storage *addr, char *str, int size);
/* check if the given address is local to the system or not. It will return
* -1 when it's not possible to know, 0 when the address is not local, 1 when
* it is. We don't want to iterate over all interfaces for this (and it is not
* portable). So instead we try to bind in UDP to this address on a free non
* privileged port and to connect to the same address, port 0 (connect doesn't
* care). If it succeeds, we own the address. Note that non-inet addresses are
* considered local since they're most likely AF_UNIX.
*/
int addr_is_local(const struct netns_entry *ns,
const struct sockaddr_storage *orig);
/* will try to encode the string <string> replacing all characters tagged in
* <map> with the hexadecimal representation of their ASCII-code (2 digits)
* prefixed by <escape>, and will store the result between <start> (included)
* and <stop> (excluded), and will always terminate the string with a '\0'
* before <stop>. If bytes are missing between <start> and <stop>, then the
* conversion will be incomplete and truncated.
* The input string must also be zero-terminated.
*
* Return the address of the \0 character, or NULL on error
*/
extern const char hextab[];
extern long query_encode_map[];
char *encode_string(char *start, char *stop,
const char escape, const long *map,
const char *string);
/*
* Same behavior, except that it encodes chunk <chunk> instead of a string.
*/
char *encode_chunk(char *start, char *stop,
const char escape, const long *map,
const struct buffer *chunk);
/*
* Tries to prefix characters tagged in the <map> with the <escape>
* character. The input <string> is processed until string_stop
* is reached or NULL-byte is encountered. The result will
* be stored between <start> (included) and <stop> (excluded). This
* function will always try to terminate the resulting string with a '\0'
* before <stop>.
*
* Return the address of the \0 character, or NULL on error
*/
char *escape_string(char *start, char *stop,
const char escape, const long *map,
const char *string, const char *string_stop);
/* Check a string for using it in a CSV output format. If the string contains
* one of the following four char <">, <,>, CR or LF, the string is
* encapsulated between <"> and the <"> are escaped by a <""> sequence.
* <str> is the input string to be escaped. The function assumes that
* the input string is null-terminated.
*
* If <quote> is 0, the result is returned escaped but without double quote.
* It is useful if the escaped string is used between double quotes in the
* format.
*
* printf("..., \"%s\", ...\r\n", csv_enc(str, 0, 0, &trash));
*
* If <quote> is 1, the converter puts the quotes only if any character is
* escaped. If <quote> is 2, the converter always puts the quotes.
*
* If <oneline> is not 0, CRs are skipped and LFs are replaced by spaces.
* This re-format multi-lines strings to only one line. The purpose is to
* allow a line by line parsing but also to keep the output compliant with
* the CLI witch uses LF to defines the end of the response.
*
* If <oneline> is 2, In addition to previous action, the trailing spaces are
* removed.
*
* <output> is a struct chunk used for storing the output string.
*
* The function returns the converted string on its output. If an error
* occurs, the function returns an empty string. This type of output is useful
* for using the function directly as printf() argument.
*
* If the output buffer is too short to contain the input string, the result
* is truncated.
*
* This function appends the encoding to the existing output chunk. Please
* use csv_enc() instead if you want to replace the output chunk.
*/
const char *csv_enc_append(const char *str, int quote, int online,
struct buffer *output);
/* same as above but the output chunk is reset first */
static inline const char *csv_enc(const char *str, int quote, int oneline,
struct buffer *output)
{
chunk_reset(output);
return csv_enc_append(str, quote, oneline, output);
}
/* Decode an URL-encoded string in-place. The resulting string might
* be shorter. If some forbidden characters are found, the conversion is
* aborted, the string is truncated before the issue and non-zero is returned,
* otherwise the operation returns non-zero indicating success.
* If the 'in_form' argument is non-nul the string is assumed to be part of
* an "application/x-www-form-urlencoded" encoded string, and the '+' will be
* turned to a space. If it's zero, this will only be done after a question
* mark ('?').
*/
int url_decode(char *string, int in_form);
unsigned int inetaddr_host(const char *text);
unsigned int inetaddr_host_lim(const char *text, const char *stop);
unsigned int inetaddr_host_lim_ret(char *text, char *stop, char **ret);
/* Function that hashes or not a string according to the anonymizing key (scramble). */
const char *hash_anon(uint32_t scramble, const char *string2hash, const char *prefix, const char *suffix);
/* Function that hashes or not an ip according to the ipstring entered */
const char * hash_ipanon(uint32_t scramble, char *ipstring, int hasport);
static inline char *cut_crlf(char *s) {
while (*s != '\r' && *s != '\n') {
char *p = s++;
if (!*p)
return p;
}
*s++ = '\0';
return s;
}
static inline char *ltrim(char *s, char c) {
if (c)
while (*s == c)
s++;
return s;
}
static inline char *rtrim(char *s, char c) {
char *p = s + strlen(s);
while (p-- > s)
if (*p == c)
*p = '\0';
else
break;
return s;
}
static inline char *alltrim(char *s, char c) {
rtrim(s, c);
return ltrim(s, c);
}
/* This function converts the time_t value <now> into a broken out struct tm
* which must be allocated by the caller. It is highly recommended to use this
* function instead of localtime() because that one requires a time_t* which
* is not always compatible with tv_sec depending on OS/hardware combinations.
*/
static inline void get_localtime(const time_t now, struct tm *tm)
{
localtime_r(&now, tm);
}
/* This function converts the time_t value <now> into a broken out struct tm
* which must be allocated by the caller. It is highly recommended to use this
* function instead of gmtime() because that one requires a time_t* which
* is not always compatible with tv_sec depending on OS/hardware combinations.
*/
static inline void get_gmtime(const time_t now, struct tm *tm)
{
gmtime_r(&now, tm);
}
/* Counts a number of elapsed days since 01/01/0000 based solely on elapsed
* years and assuming the regular rule for leap years applies. It's fake but
* serves as a temporary origin. It's worth remembering that it's the first
* year of each period that is leap and not the last one, so for instance year
* 1 sees 366 days since year 0 was leap. For this reason we have to apply
* modular arithmetic which is why we offset the year by 399 before
* subtracting the excess at the end. No overflow here before ~11.7 million
* years.
*/
static inline unsigned int days_since_zero(unsigned int y)
{
return y * 365 + (y + 399) / 4 - (y + 399) / 100 + (y + 399) / 400
- 399 / 4 + 399 / 100;
}
/* Returns the number of seconds since 01/01/1970 0:0:0 GMT for GMT date <tm>.
* It is meant as a portable replacement for timegm() for use with valid inputs.
* Returns undefined results for invalid dates (eg: months out of range 0..11).
*/
extern time_t my_timegm(const struct tm *tm);
/* This function parses a time value optionally followed by a unit suffix among
* "d", "h", "m", "s", "ms" or "us". It converts the value into the unit
* expected by the caller. The computation does its best to avoid overflows.
* The value is returned in <ret> if everything is fine, and a NULL is returned
* by the function. In case of error, a pointer to the error is returned and
* <ret> is left untouched.
*/
extern const char *parse_time_err(const char *text, unsigned *ret, unsigned unit_flags);
extern const char *parse_size_err(const char *text, unsigned *ret);
/*
* Parse binary string written in hexadecimal (source) and store the decoded
* result into binstr and set binstrlen to the length of binstr. Memory for
* binstr is allocated by the function. In case of error, returns 0 with an
* error message in err.
*/
int parse_binary(const char *source, char **binstr, int *binstrlen, char **err);
/* copies at most <n> characters from <src> and always terminates with '\0' */
char *my_strndup(const char *src, int n);
/*
* search needle in haystack
* returns the pointer if found, returns NULL otherwise
*/
const void *my_memmem(const void *, size_t, const void *, size_t);
/* get length of the initial segment consisting entirely of bytes within a given
* mask
*/
size_t my_memspn(const void *, size_t, const void *, size_t);
/* get length of the initial segment consisting entirely of bytes not within a
* given mask
*/
size_t my_memcspn(const void *, size_t, const void *, size_t);
/* This function returns the first unused key greater than or equal to <key> in
* ID tree <root>. Zero is returned if no place is found.
*/
unsigned int get_next_id(struct eb_root *root, unsigned int key);
/* dump the full tree to <file> in DOT format for debugging purposes. Will
* optionally highlight node <subj> if found, depending on operation <op> :
* 0 : nothing
* >0 : insertion, node/leaf are surrounded in red
* <0 : removal, node/leaf are dashed with no background
* Will optionally add "desc" as a label on the graph if set and non-null.
*/
void eb32sc_to_file(FILE *file, struct eb_root *root, const struct eb32sc_node *subj,
int op, const char *desc);
/* same but for ebmb */
void ebmb_to_file(FILE *file, struct eb_root *root, const struct ebmb_node *subj,
int op, const char *desc);
/* This function compares a sample word possibly followed by blanks to another
* clean word. The compare is case-insensitive. 1 is returned if both are equal,
* otherwise zero. This intends to be used when checking HTTP headers for some
* values.
*/
int word_match(const char *sample, int slen, const char *word, int wlen);
/* Convert a fixed-length string to an IP address. Returns 0 in case of error,
* or the number of chars read in case of success.
*/
int buf2ip(const char *buf, size_t len, struct in_addr *dst);
int buf2ip6(const char *buf, size_t len, struct in6_addr *dst);
/* To be used to quote config arg positions. Returns the string at <ptr>
* surrounded by simple quotes if <ptr> is valid and non-empty, or "end of line"
* if ptr is NULL or empty. The string is locally allocated.
*/
const char *quote_arg(const char *ptr);
/* returns an operator among STD_OP_* for string <str> or < 0 if unknown */
int get_std_op(const char *str);
/* sets the address family to AF_UNSPEC so that is_addr() does not match */
static inline void clear_addr(struct sockaddr_storage *addr)
{
addr->ss_family = AF_UNSPEC;
}
/* returns non-zero if addr has a valid and non-null IPv4 or IPv6 address,
* otherwise zero.
*/
static inline int is_inet_addr(const struct sockaddr_storage *addr)
{
int i;
switch (addr->ss_family) {
case AF_INET:
return *(int *)&((struct sockaddr_in *)addr)->sin_addr;
case AF_INET6:
for (i = 0; i < sizeof(struct in6_addr) / sizeof(int); i++)
if (((int *)&((struct sockaddr_in6 *)addr)->sin6_addr)[i] != 0)
return ((int *)&((struct sockaddr_in6 *)addr)->sin6_addr)[i];
}
return 0;
}
/* returns non-zero if addr has a valid and non-null IPv4 or IPv6 address,
* or is a unix address, otherwise returns zero.
*/
static inline int is_addr(const struct sockaddr_storage *addr)
{
if (addr->ss_family == AF_UNIX || addr->ss_family == AF_CUST_SOCKPAIR)
return 1;
else
return is_inet_addr(addr);
}
/* returns port in network byte order */
static inline int get_net_port(const struct sockaddr_storage *addr)
{
switch (addr->ss_family) {
case AF_INET:
return ((struct sockaddr_in *)addr)->sin_port;
case AF_INET6:
return ((struct sockaddr_in6 *)addr)->sin6_port;
}
return 0;
}
/* returns port in host byte order */
static inline int get_host_port(const struct sockaddr_storage *addr)
{
switch (addr->ss_family) {
case AF_INET:
return ntohs(((struct sockaddr_in *)addr)->sin_port);
case AF_INET6:
return ntohs(((struct sockaddr_in6 *)addr)->sin6_port);
}
return 0;
}
/* returns address len for <addr>'s family, 0 for unknown families */
static inline int get_addr_len(const struct sockaddr_storage *addr)
{
switch (addr->ss_family) {
case AF_INET:
return sizeof(struct sockaddr_in);
case AF_INET6:
return sizeof(struct sockaddr_in6);
case AF_UNIX:
return sizeof(struct sockaddr_un);
}
return 0;
}
/* set port in host byte order */
static inline int set_net_port(struct sockaddr_storage *addr, int port)
{
switch (addr->ss_family) {
case AF_INET:
((struct sockaddr_in *)addr)->sin_port = port;
break;
case AF_INET6:
((struct sockaddr_in6 *)addr)->sin6_port = port;
break;
}
return 0;
}
/* set port in network byte order */
static inline int set_host_port(struct sockaddr_storage *addr, int port)
{
switch (addr->ss_family) {
case AF_INET:
((struct sockaddr_in *)addr)->sin_port = htons(port);
break;
case AF_INET6:
((struct sockaddr_in6 *)addr)->sin6_port = htons(port);
break;
}
return 0;
}
/* Convert mask from bit length form to in_addr form.
* This function never fails.
*/
void len2mask4(int len, struct in_addr *addr);
/* Convert mask from bit length form to in6_addr form.
* This function never fails.
*/
void len2mask6(int len, struct in6_addr *addr);
/* Return true if IPv4 address is part of the network */
extern int in_net_ipv4(const void *addr, const struct in_addr *mask, const struct in_addr *net);
/* Return true if IPv6 address is part of the network */
extern int in_net_ipv6(const void *addr, const struct in6_addr *mask, const struct in6_addr *net);
/* Map IPv4 address on IPv6 address, as specified in RFC 3513. */
extern void v4tov6(struct in6_addr *sin6_addr, struct in_addr *sin_addr);
/* Map IPv6 address on IPv4 address, as specified in RFC 3513.
* Return true if conversion is possible and false otherwise.
*/
extern int v6tov4(struct in_addr *sin_addr, struct in6_addr *sin6_addr);
/* compare two struct sockaddr_storage, including port if <check_port> is true,
* and return:
* 0 (true) if the addr is the same in both
* 1 (false) if the addr is not the same in both
* -1 (unable) if one of the addr is not AF_INET*
*/
int ipcmp(const struct sockaddr_storage *ss1, const struct sockaddr_storage *ss2, int check_port);
/* compare a struct sockaddr_storage to a struct net_addr and return :
* 0 (true) if <addr> is matching <net>
* 1 (false) if <addr> is not matching <net>
* -1 (unable) if <addr> or <net> is not AF_INET*
*/
int ipcmp2net(const struct sockaddr_storage *addr, const struct net_addr *net);
/* copy ip from <source> into <dest>
* the caller must clear <dest> before calling.
* Returns a pointer to the destination
*/
struct sockaddr_storage *ipcpy(const struct sockaddr_storage *source, struct sockaddr_storage *dest);
char *human_time(int t, short hz_div);
extern const char *monthname[];
/* date2str_log: write a date in the format :
* sprintf(str, "%02d/%s/%04d:%02d:%02d:%02d.%03d",
* tm.tm_mday, monthname[tm.tm_mon], tm.tm_year+1900,
* tm.tm_hour, tm.tm_min, tm.tm_sec, (int)date.tv_usec/1000);
*
* without using sprintf. return a pointer to the last char written (\0) or
* NULL if there isn't enough space.
*/
char *date2str_log(char *dest, const struct tm *tm, const struct timeval *date, size_t size);
/* Return the GMT offset for a specific local time.
* Both t and tm must represent the same time.
* The string returned has the same format as returned by strftime(... "%z", tm).
* Offsets are kept in an internal cache for better performances.
*/
const char *get_gmt_offset(time_t t, struct tm *tm);
/* gmt2str_log: write a date in the format :
* "%02d/%s/%04d:%02d:%02d:%02d +0000" without using snprintf
* return a pointer to the last char written (\0) or
* NULL if there isn't enough space.
*/
char *gmt2str_log(char *dst, struct tm *tm, size_t size);
/* localdate2str_log: write a date in the format :
* "%02d/%s/%04d:%02d:%02d:%02d +0000(local timezone)" without using snprintf
* Both t and tm must represent the same time.
* return a pointer to the last char written (\0) or
* NULL if there isn't enough space.
*/
char *localdate2str_log(char *dst, time_t t, struct tm *tm, size_t size);
/* These 3 functions parses date string and fills the
* corresponding broken-down time in <tm>. In success case,
* it returns 1, otherwise, it returns 0.
*/
int parse_http_date(const char *date, int len, struct tm *tm);
int parse_imf_date(const char *date, int len, struct tm *tm);
int parse_rfc850_date(const char *date, int len, struct tm *tm);
int parse_asctime_date(const char *date, int len, struct tm *tm);
int print_time_short(struct buffer *out, const char *pfx, uint64_t ns, const char *sfx);
/* Dynamically allocates a string of the proper length to hold the formatted
* output. NULL is returned on error. The caller is responsible for freeing the
* memory area using free(). The resulting string is returned in <out> if the
* pointer is not NULL. A previous version of <out> might be used to build the
* new string, and it will be freed before returning if it is not NULL, which
* makes it possible to build complex strings from iterative calls without
* having to care about freeing intermediate values, as in the example below :
*
* memprintf(&err, "invalid argument: '%s'", arg);
* ...
* memprintf(&err, "parser said : <%s>\n", *err);
* ...
* free(*err);
*
* This means that <err> must be initialized to NULL before first invocation.
* The return value also holds the allocated string, which eases error checking
* and immediate consumption. If the output pointer is not used, NULL must be
* passed instead and it will be ignored. The returned message will then also
* be NULL so that the caller does not have to bother with freeing anything.
*
* It is also convenient to use it without any free except the last one :
* err = NULL;
* if (!fct1(err)) report(*err);
* if (!fct2(err)) report(*err);
* if (!fct3(err)) report(*err);
* free(*err);
*
* memprintf relies on memvprintf. This last version can be called from any
* function with variadic arguments.
*/
char *memvprintf(char **out, const char *format, va_list args)
__attribute__ ((format(printf, 2, 0)));
char *memprintf(char **out, const char *format, ...)
__attribute__ ((format(printf, 2, 3)));
/* Used to add <level> spaces before each line of <out>, unless there is only one line.
* The input argument is automatically freed and reassigned. The result will have to be
* freed by the caller.
* Example of use :
* parse(cmd, &err); (callee: memprintf(&err, ...))
* fprintf(stderr, "Parser said: %s\n", indent_error(&err));
* free(err);
*/
char *indent_msg(char **out, int level);
int append_prefixed_str(struct buffer *out, const char *in, const char *pfx, char eol, int first);
/* removes environment variable <name> from the environment as found in
* environ. This is only provided as an alternative for systems without
* unsetenv() (old Solaris and AIX versions). THIS IS NOT THREAD SAFE.
* The principle is to scan environ for each occurrence of variable name
* <name> and to replace the matching pointers with the last pointer of
* the array (since variables are not ordered).
* It always returns 0 (success).
*/
int my_unsetenv(const char *name);
/* Convert occurrences of environment variables in the input string to their
* corresponding value. A variable is identified as a series of alphanumeric
* characters or underscores following a '$' sign. The <in> string must be
* free()able. NULL returns NULL. The resulting string might be reallocated if
* some expansion is made.
*/
char *env_expand(char *in);
uint32_t parse_line(char *in, char *out, size_t *outlen, char **args, int *nbargs, uint32_t opts, const char **errptr);
ssize_t read_line_to_trash(const char *path_fmt, ...);
size_t sanitize_for_printing(char *line, size_t pos, size_t width);
void update_word_fingerprint(uint8_t *fp, const char *word);
void make_word_fingerprint(uint8_t *fp, const char *word);
int word_fingerprint_distance(const uint8_t *fp1, const uint8_t *fp2);
/* debugging macro to emit messages using write() on fd #-1 so that strace sees
* them.
*/
#define fddebug(msg...) do { char *_m = NULL; memprintf(&_m, ##msg); if (_m) write(-1, _m, strlen(_m)); free(_m); } while (0)
/* displays a <len> long memory block at <buf>, assuming first byte of <buf>
* has address <baseaddr>. String <pfx> may be placed as a prefix in front of
* each line. It may be NULL if unused. The output is emitted to file <out>.
*/
void debug_hexdump(FILE *out, const char *pfx, const char *buf, unsigned int baseaddr, int len);
/* this is used to emit call traces when building with TRACE=1 */
__attribute__((format(printf, 1, 2)))
void calltrace(char *fmt, ...);
/* same as strstr() but case-insensitive */
const char *strnistr(const char *str1, int len_str1, const char *str2, int len_str2);
int strordered(const char *s1, const char *s2, const char *s3);
/* after increasing a pointer value, it can exceed the first buffer
* size. This function transform the value of <ptr> according with
* the expected position. <chunks> is an array of the one or two
* available chunks. The first value is the start of the first chunk,
* the second value if the end+1 of the first chunks. The third value
* is NULL or the start of the second chunk and the fourth value is
* the end+1 of the second chunk. The function returns 1 if does a
* wrap, else returns 0.
*/
static inline int fix_pointer_if_wrap(const char **chunks, const char **ptr)
{
if (*ptr < chunks[1])
return 0;
if (!chunks[2])
return 0;
*ptr = chunks[2] + ( *ptr - chunks[1] );
return 1;
}
unsigned char utf8_next(const char *s, int len, unsigned int *c);
static inline unsigned char utf8_return_code(unsigned int code)
{
return code & 0xf0;
}
static inline unsigned char utf8_return_length(unsigned char code)
{
return code & 0x0f;
}
/* returns a 64-bit a timestamp with the finest resolution available. The
* unit is intentionally not specified. It's mostly used to compare dates.
*/
#if defined(__i386__) || defined(__x86_64__)
static inline unsigned long long rdtsc()
{
unsigned int a, d;
asm volatile("rdtsc" : "=a" (a), "=d" (d));
return a + ((unsigned long long)d << 32);
}
#else
static inline unsigned long long rdtsc()
{
struct timeval tv;
gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);
return tv.tv_sec * 1000000 + tv.tv_usec;
}
#endif
/* append a copy of string <str> (in a wordlist) at the end of the list <li>
* On failure : return 0 and <err> filled with an error message.
* The caller is responsible for freeing the <err> and <str> copy
* memory area using free()
*/
struct list;
int list_append_word(struct list *li, const char *str, char **err);
int dump_text(struct buffer *out, const char *buf, int bsize);
int dump_binary(struct buffer *out, const char *buf, int bsize);
int dump_text_line(struct buffer *out, const char *buf, int bsize, int len,
int *line, int ptr);
void dump_addr_and_bytes(struct buffer *buf, const char *pfx, const void *addr, int n);
void dump_area_with_syms(struct buffer *output, const void *base, const void *addr,
const void *special, const char *spec_type, const char *spec_name);
void dump_hex(struct buffer *out, const char *pfx, const void *buf, int len, int unsafe);
int may_access(const void *ptr);
const void *resolve_sym_name(struct buffer *buf, const char *pfx, const void *addr);
const char *get_exec_path(void);
void *get_sym_curr_addr(const char *name);
void *get_sym_next_addr(const char *name);
int dump_libs(struct buffer *output, int with_addr);
/* Note that this may result in opening libgcc() on first call, so it may need
* to have been called once before chrooting.
*/
static forceinline int my_backtrace(void **buffer, int max)
{
#if !defined(USE_BACKTRACE)
return 0;
#elif defined(HA_HAVE_WORKING_BACKTRACE)
return backtrace(buffer, max);
#else
const struct frame {
const struct frame *next;
void *ra;
} *frame;
int count;
frame = __builtin_frame_address(0);
for (count = 0; count < max && may_access(frame) && may_access(frame->ra);) {
buffer[count++] = frame->ra;
frame = frame->next;
}
return count;
#endif
}
/* same as realloc() except that ptr is also freed upon failure */
static inline void *my_realloc2(void *ptr, size_t size)
{
void *ret;
ret = realloc(ptr, size);
if (!ret && size)
free(ptr);
return ret;
}
int parse_dotted_uints(const char *s, unsigned int **nums, size_t *sz);
/* PRNG */
void ha_generate_uuid(struct buffer *output);
void ha_random_seed(const unsigned char *seed, size_t len);
void ha_random_jump96(uint32_t dist);
uint64_t ha_random64(void);
static inline uint32_t ha_random32()
{
return ha_random64() >> 32;
}
static inline int32_t ha_random()
{
return ha_random32() >> 1;
}
extern THREAD_LOCAL unsigned int statistical_prng_state;
/* Xorshift RNGs from http://www.jstatsoft.org/v08/i14/paper.
* This has a (2^32)-1 period, only zero is never returned.
*/
static inline unsigned int statistical_prng()
{
unsigned int x = statistical_prng_state;
x ^= x << 13;
x ^= x >> 17;
x ^= x << 5;
return statistical_prng_state = x;
}
/* returns a random number between 0 and <range> - 1 that is evenly distributed
* over the range.
*/
static inline uint statistical_prng_range(uint range)
{
return mul32hi(statistical_prng(), range ? range - 1 : 0);
}
/* returns a hash on <bits> bits of pointer <p> that is suitable for being used
* to compute statistic buckets, in that it's fast and reasonably distributed
* thanks to mixing the bits via a multiplication by a prime number and using
* the middle bits on 64-bit platforms or remixing the topmost with lowest ones
* on 32-bit. The distribution is smooth enough for the hash to provide on
* average 1/e non-colliding entries per input, and use on average 1-1/e
* entries total. Thus for example hashing 1024 random valid pointers will
* result on average in ~647 distinct keys, 377 of which are unique. It was
* carefully selected to deliver optimal distribution for low bit counts so
* that hashing on 2,3,4 or 5 bits delivers good results.
*/
static forceinline uint ptr_hash(const void *p, const int bits)
{
unsigned long long x = (unsigned long)p;
if (!bits)
return 0;
x *= 0xacd1be85U;
if (sizeof(long) == 4)
x ^= x >> 32;
else
x >>= 31 - (bits + 1) / 2;
return x & (~0U >> (-bits & 31));
}
/* Same as above but works on two pointers. It will return the same values
* if the second pointer is NULL.
*/
static forceinline uint ptr2_hash(const void *p1, const void *p2, const int bits)
{
unsigned long long x = (unsigned long)p1;
unsigned long long y = (unsigned long)p2;
if (!bits)
return 0;
x *= 0xacd1be85U;
y *= 0x9d28e4e9U;
x ^= y;
if (sizeof(long) == 4)
x ^= x >> 32;
else
x >>= 33 - bits / 2;
return x & (~0U >> (-bits & 31));
}
/* Update array <fp> with the character transition <prev> to <curr>. If <prev>
* is zero, it's assumed that <curr> is the first character. If <curr> is zero
* its assumed to mark the end. Both may be zero. <fp> is a 1024-entries array
* indexed as 32*from+to. Positions for 'from' and 'to' are:
* 1..26=letter, 27=digit, 28=other/begin/end.
* Row "from=0" is used to mark the character's presence. Others unused.
*/
static inline void update_char_fingerprint(uint8_t *fp, char prev, char curr)
{
int from, to;
switch (prev) {
case 0: from = 28; break; // begin
case 'a'...'z': from = prev - 'a' + 1; break;
case 'A'...'Z': from = tolower(prev) - 'a' + 1; break;
case '0'...'9': from = 27; break;
default: from = 28; break;
}
switch (curr) {
case 0: to = 28; break; // end
case 'a'...'z': to = curr - 'a' + 1; break;
case 'A'...'Z': to = tolower(curr) - 'a' + 1; break;
case '0'...'9': to = 27; break;
default: to = 28; break;
}
if (curr)
fp[to] = 1;
fp[32 * from + to]++;
}
/* compare the current OpenSSL version to a string */
int openssl_compare_current_version(const char *version);
/* compare the current OpenSSL name to a string */
int openssl_compare_current_name(const char *name);
#endif /* _HAPROXY_TOOLS_H */