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319 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Zen Dodd
55b68225e5 docs: clarify chmod copy special bits 2026-06-06 20:07:01 +10:00
Zen Dodd
b2fc33868f chmod: clear special bits on copy assignment 2026-06-06 15:00:57 +10:00
Zen Dodd
7371c898e4 chmod: support permission copy modes 2026-06-06 14:56:06 +10:00
Zen Dodd
135f2eca01 testsuite: correct files-from comment coverage 2026-06-06 14:54:55 +10:00
Zen Dodd
6bfb487155 testsuite: cover files-from comments 2026-06-06 14:54:55 +10:00
Zen Dodd
b1d68089e5 docs: describe files-from comments 2026-06-06 14:54:55 +10:00
Zen Dodd
a850e5d57e testsuite: cover groupmap empty source matching 2026-06-06 14:29:15 +10:00
Zen Dodd
6e3f17cea2 docs: clarify empty name groupmap matching 2026-06-06 14:29:15 +10:00
Zen Dodd
4a55da168c docs: clarify batch compression limits 2026-06-06 14:22:51 +10:00
Zen Dodd
7639ce4607 configure: avoid runtime IPv6 availability probe 2026-06-06 14:21:07 +10:00
Zen Dodd
0d31a20845 docs: mention systemd rsync daemon units 2026-06-06 14:17:41 +10:00
Zen Dodd
a5a7500707 build: fix rrsync manpage fallback 2026-06-06 14:17:00 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
24b44290ab fleettest: add per-target protocol passes (check30/check29)
A target can list older "protocols" (e.g. [30, 29]) in the fleet config;
each runs as an extra stdio-pipe pass with runtests --protocol=N, the fleet
analogue of a workflow's check30/check29 steps. The passes reuse the same
parsed RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED list as the default pipe run and appear as protoNN
columns in the report and --timing breakdown. Targets without the key run only
the default protocol and show "-" there.

The example config's ubuntu-2604 target (mirroring ubuntu-build.yml, which has
check30/check29 steps) now sets protocols: [30, 29].
2026-06-06 10:36:13 +10:00
SebMtn
0d0399bb14 rrsync: add -absolute argument to support calling rsync with absolute path
Signed-off-by: SebMtn <102696928+SebMtn@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-06-05 16:01:44 +10:00
Miao Wang
c1d7b5c6f9 receiver: try to chmod the target file when denied opening
When the target file exists but its permission modes prevent us from
opening it for writing, we can try first to chmod it and then open it.
2026-06-05 14:31:46 +10:00
Mike-Goutokuji
24e3d4d83c Always clear st out and validate nanoseconds before using it
Otherwise we get errors.
Fixes: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/issues/927
2026-06-05 12:28:29 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
9df00b6dc3 testsuite: regression for #880 --mkpath --dry-run file-to-file
Covers both halves: a --mkpath file-to-file --dry-run must succeed and
match the real run (the #880 abort), and a plain file-to-file --dry-run
onto an existing differing destination must still itemize the real change
rather than report it as brand new.  Both compare "--dry-run -i" output
against the real run.

Co-authored-by: Stiliyan Tonev (Bark) <stiliyan21@gmail.com>
2026-06-05 11:51:30 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
3cd70a3761 main: fix --mkpath + --dry-run file-to-file copy (#880)
A single-file --mkpath copy whose destination parent does not exist
failed under --dry-run: make_path() only *reports* the directories it
would create in a dry run, so change_dir#3 then tried to chdir into a
parent that isn't there and aborted with "change_dir#3 ... failed".

When the parent is genuinely missing in a dry run, skip the chdir and
mark the destination as not-yet-present (dry_run++), exactly as the
multi-file/dir-creation path already does, so the generator doesn't
probe the missing tree.  Gating it on the missing-parent case keeps an
ordinary file-to-file dry run chdir'ing into and itemizing against an
existing destination.

Fixes: #880

Co-authored-by: Stiliyan Tonev (Bark) <stiliyan21@gmail.com>
2026-06-05 11:51:30 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
981ba2a7b1 Drop stale "redo manual as SGML" TODO entries
The SGML manual idea is long dead (man pages are markdown now, and the
DocBook source was just removed). Remove both TODO mentions.
2026-06-05 11:09:36 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
5de07c13c1 Remove obsolete DocBook manual
doc/rsync.sgml is a 1996-2002 DocBook user manual (with README-SGML
describing the docbook-utils build) that was long ago superseded by the
markdown man pages. It is unmaintained and referenced by nothing in the
build. This empties doc/.
2026-06-05 11:09:36 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
a2ce82b35e Remove obsolete design notes
rsync3.txt and rsyncsh.txt are Martin Pool's 2001 design proposals
("notes towards a new version of rsync", an interactive rsync shell),
neither of which reflects the current implementation. doc/profile.txt is
stale profiling notes. None are referenced by the build, tests, or docs.
2026-06-05 11:09:36 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
5e88945a3c Remove obsolete testhelp/maketree.py
This Python 2 test-tree generator (print statements, string.letters,
.next()) has been broken on modern Python for years and is referenced
nowhere in the build, tests, or any script. Drop it.
2026-06-05 11:09:36 +10:00
Zen Dodd
fb7daf02f6 fix: daemon upload delete stats 2026-06-05 11:06:48 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
c5b7ea0bd2 token: drain the matched-block insert deflate (#951)
send_deflated_token() adds a matched block to the compressor history with
deflate(Z_INSERT_ONLY).  Our bundled zlib implements Z_INSERT_ONLY (it
produces no output and consumes the input in one call), but a build
against a system zlib lacks it and falls back to Z_SYNC_FLUSH (see the top
of the file), which emits a flush block into obuf.  For a large
incompressible matched token that block exceeds AVAIL_OUT_SIZE(CHUNK_SIZE),
so deflate returned with avail_in != 0 and the transfer aborted:

    "deflate on token returned 0 (N bytes left)"  at token.c

The insert output is never sent -- the receiver rebuilds the matching
history itself in see_deflate_token() -- so loop, resetting the output
buffer, and discard it.  Drain with the same condition as the data loop
above: until the input is consumed AND avail_out != 0.  Stopping at
avail_in == 0 alone can leave pending output in the deflate stream (a
full output buffer with bytes still buffered), which would then be emitted
by the next real deflate send and corrupt the stream.  A bundled-zlib
build still finishes in one iteration.

Fixes: #951
2026-06-05 10:38:03 +10:00
Zen Dodd
0b08fa4285 fix: install generated manpages out of tree 2026-06-05 09:39:21 +10:00
Zen Dodd
cb44fc5f1b fix: update skips different file type 2026-06-05 09:39:09 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
eb3796a8c5 ci: add ubuntu-latest fleettest workflow against a localhost fleet
fleettest is a developer tool meant to run on a modern Ubuntu box, so a
bitrot check belongs in its own ubuntu-latest job rather than in the
testsuite (which runs on the BSD/Solaris/macOS/Cygwin matrix, whose
older Pythons may not even parse it).

The job sets up passwordless ssh to localhost, writes a two-target
fleet config that both ssh to localhost (distinct build dirs), and runs
a real fleettest pass. Two targets exercise the parallel multi-target
path and the per-run dir / port isolation; the run exits 0 only if
every cell is OK. Triggered on changes to fleettest.py or this
workflow, manually, and weekly.
2026-06-05 08:48:17 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
571f87dd12 fleettest: add --timing to show per-target wall-clock
Records wall-clock per phase (push, build, each test transport, nonroot)
plus a total in TargetResult, and with --timing prints a breakdown after
the report, sorted slowest-target-first. Targets run in parallel, so the
run is gated by the slowest one; the phase columns show whether that
hold-up is the push, the build, or a test pass. A target that failed
early (no total) falls back to the sum of the phases it reached.
2026-06-05 08:48:17 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
ea866650be fleettest: tighten --cleanup sweep scope and rm hardening
Address review findings on the cleanup paths:

- --cleanup no longer removes a bare <builddir>, only the suffixed
  <builddir>-* run dirs it created. This keeps the sweep within its
  documented scope and avoids clobbering an unrelated tree.

- Add _unsafe_builddir(): reject empty/root/$HOME and any absolute path
  directly under / (e.g. a misconfigured builddir of "/tmp") before
  building a destructive command, in both cleanup paths.

- Use `rm -rf --` so a path with a leading dash can't be read as options.

- Soften the docs: run-dir removal on Ctrl-C/kill is best-effort (a
  signal arriving mid-push can still leave a remnant for --cleanup).
2026-06-05 08:48:17 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
c7c0109944 fleettest: isolate concurrent runs and add config/cleanup options
Each run now builds in its own randomly-named dir on every target
(<builddir>-<run_id>), so two or three fleettest runs can share the same
fleet without colliding on the pushed tree, the build, or the testtmp
scratch. Port collisions were already handled by claim_ports() locks.

The run dir is removed when the run ends -- on success, failure, or
Ctrl-C/kill (atexit + SIGINT/SIGTERM handlers); --keep retains it. A new
--cleanup mode sweeps stray <builddir>-* dirs left by a SIGKILL.

Incremental builds are dropped (every run is a fresh dir + full build):
--no-push removed, --clean removed.

Also look for the fleet config at ~/.fleettest.json first, then
testsuite/fleettest.json (still overridable with --fleet PATH).
2026-06-05 08:48:17 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
ac282725cd testsuite: regression for the #829 daemon --chown/--groupmap wildcard
Maps every source group to a second group the test user belongs to via a
daemon upload (--groupmap='*:GID') and checks the wildcard took effect.
Runs both arg modes: the default path (the '*' is safe_arg-escaped and the
daemon must un-backslash it -- the regression) and --secluded-args (the '*'
is sent raw over the protected channel, a guard that the fix left that path
alone).  Needs no root -- a non-root receiver can chgrp to a member group --
and was verified RED on a pre-fix binary (the escaped '\*' is ignored, gid
unchanged) and GREEN after the fix.
2026-06-05 06:35:12 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
6777170037 daemon: un-backslash escaped option args (#829)
Without --secluded-args, the client's safe_arg() backslash-escapes shell
and wildcard chars in option values before sending them to the server, so
--chown's --usermap=*:user is transmitted as --usermap=\*:user.  Over ssh a
remote shell removes the backslashes before rsync parses the args, but a
daemon has no shell and read_args() stored option args verbatim -- so the
receiver saw the literal "\*", the usermap/groupmap wildcard never matched,
and the module's configured uid/gid won instead.  A regression from the
secluded-args hardening; rsync 3.2.3 (protocol 31) worked.

Un-backslash option args in read_args() on the daemon's first
(non-protected) read, mirroring what the ssh-side shell does.  File args
after the dot are already handled by glob_expand(); the protected (NUL,
already-unescaped) re-read and the server's stdin read pass unescape=0 so
their raw args are left untouched.

Fixes: #829
2026-06-05 06:35:12 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
b3107260a2 build: fall back to do_mknod() when mknodat() is unavailable (#896)
do_mknod_at() (the symlink-race-safe variant used by a non-chrooted
daemon receiver) calls mknodat()/mkfifoat(), but the at-variant was
gated only on AT_FDCWD.  Older Darwin declares AT_FDCWD without
mknodat(), so the build failed with "mknodat undeclared".

Probe mknodat()/mkfifoat() in configure and require HAVE_MKNODAT for the
at-variant; without it do_mknod_at() falls back to do_mknod(), exactly
as it already does where AT_FDCWD is missing.  Linux keeps the mknodat
path since HAVE_MKNODAT is defined there.

Fixes: #896
2026-06-05 06:35:12 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
7db73ad9a1 alloc: revert "zero all new memory from allocations" (#959)
Commit d046525d made my_alloc() calloc every fresh allocation and made
expand_item_list() memset the freshly grown tail, to hand out predictably
zeroed memory.  But that forces the kernel to back pages callers never
touch: each per-directory file_list pre-allocates a FLIST_START-entry
(32768) pointer array -- 256KB -- and calloc now zeroes the whole array
even for an empty directory.  With incremental recursion over many
directories the resident set explodes; 80000 empty dirs went from ~336MB
to ~10.8GB.

Restore the pre-d046525d malloc/calloc split: fresh allocations use
malloc (so untouched tails stay lazy) and only explicit do_calloc
requests (new_array0) are zeroed.  Callers that need zeroed memory
already ask for it, and the full test suite passes.

Fixes: #959
2026-06-05 06:35:12 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
3691b719fa testsuite: regression for short-checksum --append-verify s2length
Forces --checksum-choice=xxh64 (an 8-byte transfer checksum) with a
corrupted-prefix --append-verify so the full-checksum redo path runs.
Before the generator capped s2length at MIN(SUM_LENGTH, xfer_sum_len)
this died with "Invalid checksum length 16 [sender]"; the test is RED on
the prior generator and GREEN with the cap.  Reproduces on any build that
has xxhash, so it guards the fix without an old-libxxhash host; skips when
xxh64 is absent (a build without xxhash).
2026-06-04 14:33:20 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
fe946581ba generator: cap block s2length at the negotiated checksum length
sum_sizes_sqroot() capped the strong-sum length at SUM_LENGTH (16), the
legacy MD4/MD5 digest size.  Since 0902b52f the sum2 array elements are
xfer_sum_len bytes and the sender rejects a sums header whose s2length
exceeds xfer_sum_len.  When the negotiated transfer checksum is shorter
than 16 bytes -- xxh64 (8), used when the build's libxxhash lacks
xxh128/xxh3 (e.g. Ubuntu 20.04) -- the generator still emitted s2length
up to 16, so --append-verify and other full-checksum (redo) transfers
died with "Invalid checksum length 16 [sender]" (protocol incompatibility).

Cap s2length at MIN(SUM_LENGTH, xfer_sum_len): unchanged for any checksum
>= 16 bytes (md5/xxh128/sha1), corrected for short ones.  Also closes a
latent over-read of the xfer_sum_len-sized digest buffer.
2026-06-04 14:33:20 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
4634b0ada7 android: probe openat2 usability behind a SIGSYS handler
Android's seccomp sandbox traps openat2() with SECCOMP_RET_TRAP, which
raises SIGSYS and kills the process instead of returning ENOSYS, so the
secure resolver cannot simply try openat2() and inspect errno.  Add
openat2_usable() in a new android.c: it probes openat2() once behind a
temporary SIGSYS handler and caches the result.

Gate every SYS_openat2 call on openat2_usable(): in the resolver via an
openat2_beneath() wrapper, and in t_chmod_secure's kernel probe directly,
so a blocked openat2 reports ENOSYS and the caller falls back to the
portable O_NOFOLLOW resolver.  Only openat2 is gated -- a plain openat()
(e.g. opening an operator-trusted absolute basedir) is left free.

The probe body compiles only on Android -- __ANDROID__ is a Bionic target
macro, so it is set for NDK cross-builds and native Termux alike and unset
everywhere else, where openat2_usable() collapses to a constant 1.  Link
android.o into the secure-resolver test helpers too so their self-tests
survive on Termux.

Adapted from PR #909.
2026-06-04 13:41:07 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
83a24c2117 configure: require <linux/openat2.h>, not just SYS_openat2
The openat2 secure resolver in syscall.c needs struct open_how and
RESOLVE_BENEATH from <linux/openat2.h>, not only the SYS_openat2 syscall
number.  Some setups expose the syscall number via glibc without the
kernel header present, so probing SYS_openat2 alone still left the build
broken (#905).  Exercise the header and struct in the configure check so
HAVE_OPENAT2 is defined only when both are actually usable.
2026-06-04 13:41:07 +10:00
Markus Mayer
39aa750b1c t_chmod_secure: use HAVE_OPENAT2 to check for openat2() support
To prevent using openat2() in situations where it is not supported, use
    #if defined(__linux__) && defined(HAVE_OPENAT2)
in t_chmod_secure.c, just like it was already being done in syscall.c.

Signed-off-by: Markus Mayer <mmayer@broadcom.com>
2026-06-04 13:41:07 +10:00
Markus Mayer
c73e0063b7 build: auto-detect the presence of the openat2() syscall
Let configure detect if the openat2() syscall is supported by the kernel
headers we are building against. Do not attempt to use openat2() if
support is not present.

Users can still disable using the openat2() syscall manually if so
desired.

Signed-off-by: Markus Mayer <mmayer@broadcom.com>
2026-06-04 13:41:07 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
09656e19c1 testsuite: add fleettest.py fleet CI harness
fleettest.py builds the committed HEAD of a checkout on a fleet of remote machines over ssh and runs the test suite under both the stdio-pipe and --use-tcp transports in parallel, reporting only the unexpected results. Each target mirrors a .github/workflows/*.yml job: its configure flags, and the RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED list parsed from the workflow.

The fleet is described by a JSON file (testsuite/fleettest.json, git-ignored); fleettest.json.example is a worked template. Use --fleet to point at another config and --repo to build a tree other than the current directory.

A target with nonroot:true reruns, as the unprivileged ssh user, the tests that declare a module-level fleet_nonroot=True (here ownership-depth and daemon). The set lives in the test files, so new privilege-sensitive tests join the non-root pass with no fleet-config change.

Also rename testsuite/README.testsuite to README.md and rewrite it as markdown documenting the current testsuite: runtests.py, the make check/check29/check30/installcheck/coverage targets, the result/exit-code conventions, and fleettest.py.
2026-06-04 13:00:04 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
5972ebdaf8 syscall/receiver: honour a relative alt-basis dir on a daemon receiver (#915)
The symlink-race hardening routed the receiver's basis open through
secure_relative_open(), which rejects any '..' -- so a sibling
--link-dest=../01 on a use-chroot=no daemon was silently ignored and every file
re-transferred (#915/#928, a regression from 3.4.1).

Narrow the confinement to the sanitizing daemon (am_daemon && !am_chrooted) and
re-anchor it at the module root, the real trust boundary: secure_relative_open()
prefixes the cwd's module-relative path (from rsync's logical curr_dir[], a
guaranteed lexical prefix of module_dir) and resolves beneath module_dir, so
RESOLVE_BENEATH permits an in-module '..' climb while still rejecting one that
escapes the module.  secure_basis_open() opens with a bare do_open() in the
non-sanitizing cases.  t_stub.c gains weak curr_dir[]/curr_dir_len for the
helpers (via #pragma weak on non-GNU compilers, where rsync.h erases
__attribute__).

Two tests: link-dest-relative-basis asserts the in-module '..' is honoured;
link-dest-module-escape asserts a --link-dest=../../OUTSIDE climb that leaves
the module is refused (not hard-linked to an outside file).  See upstream
PR #930.
2026-06-04 07:41:41 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
489f3e4521 sender: open a module-root-absolute path for a path = / module (#897)
A daemon module with path=/ makes F_PATHNAME absolute, so the secure_path built
for the content open starts with '/'.  secure_relative_open() rejects an
absolute relpath with EINVAL, so a use-chroot=no daemon with path=/ could not
send any file ('failed to open ...: Invalid argument (22)') -- a regression
from 3.4.2.  Strip leading slashes to a module-relative path; resolution stays
confined beneath module_dir.
2026-06-04 07:41:41 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
ebfb3c0056 flist: accept the missing-args mode-0 entry in recv_file_entry (#910)
--delete-missing-args (missing_args==2) sends a missing --files-from arg as a
mode-0 entry (IS_MISSING_FILE), the generator's delete signal.  The mode-type
validation in recv_file_entry() rejected mode 0 as an invalid file type,
aborting the transfer with 'invalid file mode 00 ... code 2' before the
generator could act (a regression from 3.4.1).  Allow mode 0 through only when
missing_args==2 (the delete mode -- not --ignore-missing-args, which never
sends a mode-0 entry); all other modes are still rejected.
2026-06-04 07:41:41 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
e16a001d39 testsuite/runtests: count XFAIL (exit 78) as expected, not a failure
The regression tests use test_xfail() (exit 78) to assert a known, documented
residual on platforms where the fix can't apply -- e.g. link-dest-relative-basis
XFAILs where the receiver has no openat2/O_RESOLVE_BENEATH and the portable
resolver rejects the '..' for safety.  runtests.py counted exit 78 in the
generic else->failed branch, so a bare XFAIL failed the whole suite; tally it
separately ('N xfailed (expected)') and exclude it from the failure exit code.
Also add --race-timeout plumbing (race_timeout env) for race tests.
2026-06-04 06:09:25 +10:00
Michael Mess
5cf7c50524 Corrected test case broken for locales that uses , instead of . for decimal numbers in human readable form. 2026-06-02 18:23:40 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
ad3bfab05d ci: version-mixing workflow, expect manifests, check-progs target
Adds .github/workflows/ubuntu-version-mix.yml (ubuntu-latest) and a
per-release manifest testsuite/expect/rsync_<ver>.expect for each of the
nine peers. The workflow builds the current rsync, then runs the two-
sided suite against every old binary over both the pipe and --use-tcp
daemon transports. All peers run in a SINGLE looped job (not a matrix)
so the PR shows one check line; each peer/transport is a foldable log
group and a failure annotates which one broke.

A new phony `check-progs` target builds rsync plus the test helper
programs and check symlinks without running the suite -- the build half
of `make check` -- so the workflow's direct runtests.py invocation has
the helpers it needs.

Notable expected results encoded in the manifests:
 - The four May-2026 security tests xfail against every released peer:
   the suite demonstrates each release is vulnerable to those findings
   while current master is fixed.
 - symlink-dirlink-basis xfails on 3.4.0/3.4.1 (issue #715: their
   secure_relative_open O_NOFOLLOW-confines the basedir, breaking a -K
   dir-symlink update; current master fixes it with secure_basis_open).
 - Older peers carry more xfails for options/negotiation they lack;
   2.6.0 (protocol 27) fails most daemon tests. reverse-daemon-delta
   passes against all peers, confirming backward compat down to 2004.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-01 19:21:35 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
e8d10dc2ad old_versions: commit static binaries of old rsync releases
Nine statically-linked, stripped binaries for the version-mixing test
suite (and ad-hoc cross-version behaviour checks): every x.y.0 release
from 2.6.0 (2004, protocol 27) through 3.4.0, plus the 3.1.3/3.2.7/3.4.1
point releases. 2.6.0 is the practical floor; older tags need more
porting to build on a current toolchain.

build_static.sh rebuilds any release from its git tag, applying the
minimal patches needed to compile old sources on a modern toolchain:
K&R lseek64 redecl, gettimeofday, -std=gnu11, --disable-openssl, and
_FORTIFY_SOURCE disabled (modern FORTIFY=3 turns latent benign over-reads
in old rsync into aborts when it runs as a server). Pre-3.0 trees ship
configure.in, so it regenerates configure (autoheader/autoconf) after
neutralizing the dead AC_LIBOBJ replacement fallbacks, generates proto.h,
and stubs the dropped vendored lib/addrinfo.h -- all guarded to no-op on
newer versions.

.gitattributes marks the binaries binary (so the text=auto rule can't
corrupt them) and export-ignore (kept out of the release tarball).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-01 19:21:35 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
ad14569561 testsuite: reverse-direction smoke test (old client -> current daemon)
Every other two-sided test drives with the current binary, covering
new-client -> old-server. This adds the backward-compat direction that
matters most for a project shipping new servers to a world of old
clients: a current daemon must keep serving the installed base of old
rsync clients.

reverse-daemon-delta_test.py starts the daemon with the current build
(via start_test_daemon's rsync_cmd override) and drives it with the old
binary. It does a push and a pull, each with and without -z, with the
receiving side pre-seeded with an older version of the file so the delta
algorithm actually runs -- exercising delta encoding both ways (old->new
on push, new->old on pull) and compression negotiation both ways. It
asserts the bytes crossing the wire are far smaller than the file, so a
silent fallback to a whole-file copy is caught, and accepts both the
modern "sent/received" and the old "wrote/read" summary wording so an
old client's output parses.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-01 19:21:35 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
e21cdabd71 runtests: add --rsync-bin2 / --expect-result for version-mixing tests
Let the suite run with two rsync binaries so the current build can be
tested against the actual old code of a previous release, rather than
only forcing the current binary to speak an old protocol (check29/30).

  --rsync-bin2 PATH  exports RSYNC_PEER, the binary used for the SERVER
                     side of two-sided transfers (the daemon process and
                     the remote-shell --rsync-path target). Defaults to
                     RSYNC, so single-binary runs are byte-for-byte
                     unchanged.
  --expect-result F  the manifest's listed tests ARE the run set; each
                     test's actual outcome (pass/skip/fail/xfail) is
                     compared to its expected one and any mismatch --
                     including an unexpected pass (xpass) -- fails the
                     run. --expect-skipped and the default exit logic
                     are untouched.

rsyncfns gains the RSYNC_PEER global and launches the daemon with it
(start_rsyncd / start_test_daemon, the latter with an optional rsync_cmd
override used by the reverse-direction test); the remote-shell tests
pass --rsync-path={RSYNC_PEER}. All no-ops when no peer is selected.

Direction is fixed: the current binary always drives (only it
understands the new test scripts); the old binary is only ever the
server/daemon side.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-01 19:21:35 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
c0219caf15 runtests: add --exclude / RSYNC_EXCLUDE to skip tests entirely
Some tests cannot run in certain build/CI environments. In particular the
protected-regular test self-re-execs under "unshare --map-users" to exercise
fs.protected_regular handling, and that user-namespace path hangs in a
restricted buildd chroot (e.g. Launchpad/sbuild), tripping the per-test
timeout and failing the whole "make check".

Add an --exclude option (comma-separated test names/globs), with an
RSYNC_EXCLUDE environment fallback so it can be set without touching the
make/check command line. Excluded tests are dropped before running -- they
are neither executed nor reported as skipped.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-01 17:52:42 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
68df17ae00 docs: document the rsync-latest snapshot PPA
Add the new ppa:rsyncproject/rsync-latest (development snapshots rebuilt
from git master) alongside the existing stable PPA in INSTALL.md and the
download page.  Notes that snapshot versions (3.5.0~git...) sort below the
matching stable release, so the two PPAs can coexist without a stable
release being silently replaced by a snapshot.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-01 15:37:10 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
3748c3288d testsuite: added a test for symlinks to the same dir
when a symlink is to the same directory as the source then it can be
considered unsafe if it goes via a path outside the directory.

This came up on the mailing list, added a test to make the case clear
2026-05-31 18:42:37 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
907505c004 ci: halve CI artifact retention from 90 to 45 days
GitHub Actions artifact storage is approaching our quota. Each `make`/build
job uploads its rsync binary + manpages, the coverage job uploads its full
HTML tree, and Android uploads its dist/ -- 11 jobs producing artifacts per
PR/push, all kept for the repo default of 90 days.

Set retention-days: 45 explicitly on every upload-artifact step so they
expire at half the previous lifetime; older artifacts can still be re-built
from the commit if needed. No other workflow behaviour changes.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-29 05:44:14 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
8bbea98392 runtests.py: accept a relative --rsync-bin
Tests are launched with subprocess.run(..., cwd=TOOLDIR) so the
subprocess's argv[0] resolves against TOOLDIR, not the runner's
invocation cwd. A user-supplied --rsync-bin=../foo/rsync therefore
worked when invoked from inside TOOLDIR but silently failed (or
ENOENT'd inside individual tests) when invoked from a sibling
directory.

Fix: absolutize rsync_bin via os.path.abspath() at parse time, before
it propagates into build_rsync_cmd()/RSYNC. abspath() captures
os.getcwd() now, which is the operator's invocation cwd -- exactly
what the --rsync-bin=../path form expresses.

Regression check:

  cd /tmp/somewhere-else
  ln -s /path/to/rsync ./alt/rsync
  python3 /path/to/rsync-git/runtests.py \
      --rsync-bin=./alt/rsync \
      --srcdir=/path/to/rsync-git --tooldir=/path/to/rsync-git \
      00-hello

Before this commit the test failed at subprocess time with the relative
path being looked up under TOOLDIR; after, it passes.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-27 09:00:24 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
f2eef1f0d2 ci: add actionlint workflow to lint GitHub Actions YAML
Adds .github/workflows/actionlint.yml which runs rhysd/actionlint over
.github/workflows/*.yml on push and PR to master.  Triggers only when
something in .github/workflows/ (or the actionlint config) changes, so
the rest of the platform matrix isn't billed when nothing here moves.

The job downloads a pinned actionlint binary (1.7.12) via the upstream
download script (which verifies a SHA256) -- no third-party Action
dependency, matching the inline-install style of the existing
ubuntu/macos/cygwin workflows.  Bump the pinned version deliberately.

actionlint catches a) GitHub Actions expression / type errors, b)
unsupported runner images, c) missing secrets / inputs, and d) the
embedded shellcheck class of issues in 'run:' scripts that the previous
commit cleaned up.  Keeping it in CI prevents regressions.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-27 06:46:08 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
d395d8df06 ci: clean up workflow shellcheck nits
actionlint (rhysd/actionlint) reported a handful of shellcheck-class issues
across the GitHub Actions workflows.  All are 1-line mechanical fixes:

  * Replace legacy backticks in --rsync-bin=`pwd`/rsync with
    --rsync-bin="$PWD/rsync" (SC2006 + SC2046; almalinux-8-build,
    macos-build, ubuntu-22.04-build, ubuntu-build).
  * Quote >>$GITHUB_PATH redirects as >>"$GITHUB_PATH"
    (SC2086; coverage, macos-build, ubuntu-22.04-build, ubuntu-build).

After this commit `actionlint .github/workflows/*.yml` exits 0.

(Also cleaned up 6 editor backup *.yml~ files from the local working
tree; those weren't tracked -- *~ is gitignored -- so the cleanup is
local-only and not part of this commit.)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-27 06:46:08 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
14d6c29d81 testsuite: close minor assertion gaps
symlink-dirlink-basis  assert the --backup file holds the pre-update content,
                         not merely that the backup file exists.
  acls-default           check that clearing the inherited default ACL actually
                         succeeded, so the no-default-ACL cases can't silently
                         test against the scratch dir's seeded default ACL.
  alt-dest               assert --copy-dest produces a distinct inode from the
                         alt-dir candidate (a copy, not a hard link) -- the
                         property that distinguishes it from --link-dest, which
                         checkit's tree comparison alone doesn't capture.

(crtimes' "independently pin the historical create time" gap is left as-is: the
touch-trick pinning is APFS-specific and not locally verifiable, and a mistuned
probe would make the test skip on macOS and break its expected-skip set.)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-26 07:43:00 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
34f40b9ea7 testsuite: tighten metadata-precision and symlink-target assertions
Replace loose/partial oracles with exact ones:

  omit-times      under -O, require EVERY directory mtime to be omitted, not
                  just one (the old "at least one differs" missed partial bugs).
  dir-sgid        assert the created dirs' actual gid: a setgid parent makes
                  them inherit its group (set to a secondary group to be
                  discriminating), while the non-setgid case gets the process's.
  relative-implied pin a deterministic umask and assert the exact default mode
                  (0o755) for --no-implied-dirs, not merely "not the source's".
  safe-links /    compare the preserved symlink TARGET strings via readlink,
  unsafe-links    not just that a symlink exists.
  preallocate     verify do_punch_hole via st_blocks on the --inplace --sparse
                  case (guarded by a sparse-capability probe).

Note: --preallocate --sparse leaves the file fully allocated on a fresh write
(the zero run is not punched), so that case stays content-only rather than
asserting hole-punching -- see the test comment; rsync.1's claim that the
combination yields sparse blocks does not hold for the fresh-write path.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-26 07:43:00 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
5b36673d0a testsuite: add content and return-code assertions
Several tests proved only that rsync exited cleanly (or that a file merely
exists), so a no-op/short transfer would pass:

  protected-regular  compare the dst bytes to the source after --inplace.
  00-hello           re-assert one/two were copied on the RSYNC_OLD_ARGS=1
                     env-var path (the explicit --old-args case already did).
  missing            check the dry-run's exit status in test 1.
  mkpath             compare transferred bytes (not just existence) and add a
                     negative control: a transfer WITHOUT --mkpath must fail
                     and create no intermediate path.
  size-filter        compare each kept file's content to its source.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-26 07:43:00 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
1687230672 testsuite: verify destination content/listings in daemon tests
These daemon tests confirmed refusals/exclusions but accepted the allowed
transfers on exit status alone, so a transfer that exited cleanly while moving
nothing would pass:

  daemon-refuse  allowed() imported verify_dirs but never called it; now it
                 confirms the allowed push/pull actually populated the dest.
  daemon-filter  pull()/the incoming push ignored their exit status, and the
                 outgoing-chmod loop iterated only files that exist -- a
                 zero-file pull passed vacuously. Check the codes and require
                 at least one file to have been mode-checked.
  daemon         run_and_check's unused `expected` param is dropped; the
                 hidden-module and glob listings now compare the exact set of
                 listed paths (catching a leaked extra path), replacing the
                 per-path containment check and the dead normalise() helper
                 whose regex never matched the -r listing format anyway.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-26 07:43:00 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
f196279c29 testsuite: add positive controls to the symlink-race security tests
The symlink-race tests only asserted that an outside sentinel was unchanged or
unlisted while ignoring rsync's exit status, so an attack transfer/listing that
failed before reaching the vulnerable receiver/sender path would pass without
the security property ever being exercised. Add a positive control to each --
an ordinary in-module write (bare-do-open, chdir) or an in-module listing
(sender-flist-leak) that must succeed -- so a globally broken/refusing daemon
can no longer make the sentinel checks vacuous, and assert the attack run did
not die from a signal.

clean-fname-underflow now also enforces a non-zero exit: clean_fname()
collapses "a/../test" to "test", whose merge file is absent, so rsync must
reject it; accepting it (rc 0) would mean the crafted name was mis-collapsed.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-26 07:43:00 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
ed11852ed0 testsuite: harden output-options checks
Several subcases ran rsync without checking the exit status, so a silent
failure could pass as the expected (often empty) output -- most notably -q,
which only asserted empty stdout. Route every expected-success run through a
helper that asserts the exit status, and verify -q actually transferred the
tree. Replace the "-h/-8 didn't break the transfer" check with positive format
assertions: -h must render byte counts with a K/M/G suffix (and the default
must not), and -8 must leave a high-bit filename byte unescaped (\#371 absent)
where the default escapes it -- best-effort, self-skipping where the platform
can't store the raw byte.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-26 07:43:00 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
9f0afbea4f testsuite: verify the negotiated compressor/checksum selection
compress-options only checked that each requested algorithm yielded
byte-identical output, which proves parsing/non-corruption but not that the
advertised algorithm was actually used -- the test would pass if the choice
were silently ignored. Capture --debug=NSTR (compat.c / checksum.c) and assert
the selected compressor, compress level, and checksum match the request
(anchored so zlib != zlibx). --skip-compress / --checksum-seed stay content
checks: they have no comparable negotiation-string signal.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-26 07:43:00 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
034a4f3b1e testsuite: verify --fuzzy actually selects a basis
Both fuzzy tests asserted only that the final file content matched, which a
full transfer that ignored --fuzzy would also satisfy -- so a broken fuzzy
basis selection would pass undetected. Drive rsync directly with --debug=FUZZY
and assert the generator reports the expected basis ("fuzzy basis selected
for <f>: <basis>", generator.c find_fuzzy): rsync2.c for fuzzy, and the
closest-named candidate archive-v1.tar for fuzzy-basis. fuzzy switches from
checkit() to a manual run plus verify_dirs() so the output can be captured.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-26 07:43:00 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
4f5a5857ce Fix --preallocate --sparse to actually produce sparse files
rsync.1 says combining --preallocate with --sparse yields sparse blocks
wherever the filesystem can punch holes, but since 2019 (commit c2da3809,
"keep file-size 0 when possible") it has silently left the file fully
allocated. Two problems, both rooted in that commit switching --preallocate /
--inplace to fallocate(FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE):

  * do_fallocate() then returned 0 instead of the reserved length, so the
    receiver's preallocated_len was 0 and write_sparse() always lseek'd over
    null runs instead of punching them (and the over-preallocation trim in
    receiver.c never fired either).

  * more fundamentally, KEEP_SIZE leaves the file size at 0 while data is
    written incrementally, so the FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLE call lands on blocks
    beyond EOF and is a silent no-op -- the reserved blocks are never freed.

Fix both: don't request KEEP_SIZE when --sparse is also active, so the file is
preallocated at full size and the punch lands within it; and return the
reserved length from do_fallocate() so preallocated_len drives the punch
decision and the over-allocation trim. --preallocate without --sparse keeps
the KEEP_SIZE (file-size-0) behaviour. t_stub.c gains a sparse_files stub since
do_fallocate now references it and the test helpers link syscall.o.

preallocate_test.py now asserts via st_blocks (where the filesystem can punch
holes) that --preallocate --sparse ends up sparse, guarding the regression.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-25 14:03:58 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
bc63ea82f2 ci: run the OpenBSD --use-tcp test step at -j2
The OpenBSD job runs inside a nested VM. At -j8 the --use-tcp run starts
many concurrent loopback daemons, and under that resource pressure the
daemon connection handshake occasionally loses a timing race and one test
hangs to the 300s runner timeout. It is an environment artifact, not an
rsync defect: the daemon handshake writes-then-reads with unbuffered early
I/O (no flush/mutual-wait deadlock), the indefinite wait is the documented
no-timeout daemon behaviour, and it does not reproduce off OpenBSD even with
the full suite pinned to a single CPU at -j8.

Drop just this job's --use-tcp parallelism to -j2 so the nested VM stops
over-subscribing; the pipe `make check` and every other platform are
unchanged.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-25 07:44:12 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
0d4fb1bc89 testsuite: cover more path/file-operation code (syscall.c, util1.c, delete.c)
Target previously-uncovered functions in the path/file-operation files the
resolver restructure touches, confirmed hit under coverage:

  preallocate   --preallocate (syscall.c do_fallocate) and sparse hole-punching
                via --preallocate --sparse and --inplace --sparse (do_punch_hole),
                on a file several levels deep.
  fuzzy-basis   --fuzzy basis selection with similar-named candidates and no
                exact match, so the generator scores them (util1.c fuzzy_distance).
  delete-deep   add a --backup --delete case so removing an extraneous
                backup-suffixed file consults delete.c is_backup_file.

preallocate probes --preallocate support up front and skips where it is
unavailable: macOS, the *BSDs and Solaris build without fallocate/posix_fallocate
(and FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLE is Linux-only), and reject the option outright. It runs
on Linux and Cygwin. fuzzy-basis and delete-deep are plain local transfers with
no skips. All green on master and under --protocol=29/30.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-25 07:44:12 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
52480aaac2 runtests: compare expected-skipped order-insensitively; register daemon-access-ip
The --expect-skipped check compared the skip list as an ordered string, so the
per-platform RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED lists had to match runtests' collection order
(sorted filenames) exactly -- a subtle, easy-to-break ordering dependency.
Compare the skipped SET instead; which tests skipped is what matters.

Register the new require_tcp test daemon-access-ip in the per-platform
expected-skipped lists (it skips in the pipe-transport make check, like
daemon-chroot-acl and proxy-response-line-too-long).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-25 07:44:12 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
702a8f61b7 testsuite: cover daemon access-control, config includes, --stop-at
Target the lowest-coverage rsync files identified from a merged (pipe + proto29/30
+ tcp) gcov report:

  daemon-access-ip  hosts allow / hosts deny with exact-IP and CIDR patterns over
                    --use-tcp, exercising access.c make_mask/match_address/
                    match_binary (19% -> 62% lines), plus client --address
                    (socket.c try_bind_local). require_tcp.
  daemon-config     the &include rsyncd.conf directive (params.c include_config/
                    parse_directives, 48% -> 60%) and a module with a missing path
                    (clientserver.c path_failure).
  stop-time         --stop-at future/past (options.c parse_time) and --stop-after
                    (options.c 59% -> 64%).

Merged scoped coverage: lines 67.3%->68.3%, functions 87.5%->88.4%.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-25 07:44:12 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
2928b2742e build: scope gcov report to rsync's own source; add coverage-all
The coverage report counted bundled third-party code (zlib/, popt/, and the
PostgreSQL/ISC lib/ imports getaddrinfo/getpass/inet_ntop/inet_pton) that rsync
ships but does not own, muddying the percentages. Add a COVERAGE_EXCLUDE gcovr
filter (shared by all coverage targets) so the report reflects rsync's own code:
on the same data, lines 63.9%->65.5%, functions 81.4%->85.0%, branches
55.0%->56.5% (rsync's own md5/mdfour/wildmatch/etc. stay in the report).

Add 'make coverage-all': run the suite under pipe + --protocol=30 + --protocol=29
+ --use-tcp, accumulating into the shared .gcda (not cleared between runs), then
one merged scoped report -- covers the daemon/TCP and protocol-compat paths a
single pipe run misses (lines 67.6%, functions 87.6%, branches 58.6%). Also add
'make coverage-fallback' for a separate --disable-openat2 build (different .gcno,
so it can't merge with the openat2 report). CI is unchanged.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-25 07:44:12 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
f1d5a3c815 ci: declare new metadata-coverage test skips for macOS and Cygwin
acls-depth skips where ACLs/setfacl are unavailable (macOS, Cygwin) like the
existing acls tests, and sparse skips on APFS (macOS), where a seek-written
hole isn't allocated sparsely. Add them to the per-platform RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED
lists so the skip-set assertion stays accurate.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
3086dbc0fd ci: add an Ubuntu gcov coverage job
Builds with --enable-coverage and runs the suite under both transports
(make coverage, then make coverage-tcp). gcovr's line/branch/decision totals
are printed to the step log and also written to the GitHub step summary, so the
coverage numbers are visible directly in the CI output; the HTML reports are
uploaded as an artifact. make coverage exits with the suite's status, so a test
regression fails the job.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
63e599b921 build: add 'make coverage-tcp' and drop deprecated gcovr --branches
coverage-tcp reuses the coverage recipe with --use-tcp (daemon tests over a real
loopback rsyncd, which also runs the require_tcp-only tests) and a separate
report directory, via COVERAGE_RUNFLAGS / COVERAGE_DIR. Verified end to end:
pipe run reports 63.9% lines, the TCP run 64.5% (it exercises more code).

Also drop gcovr's --branches flag: it is deprecated in gcovr 8 and branch +
decision coverage still appear in --print-summary and the HTML without it.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
340238421d testsuite: assert absolute --partial-dir delta resume now works
partial_test.py sub-test 5 deterministically asserts a delta (--no-whole-file)
resume from an absolute, outside-tree --partial-dir reproduces the source and
consumes the basis -- the regression guard for the receiver fix. Sub-test 4
keeps asserting the cross-directory partial WRITE on interrupt. Drop the
--whole-file workaround and the 'broken on master' notes in the docstring and
COVERAGE.md.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
31fbb17d23 receiver: fix absolute --partial-dir delta resume (false verification)
A delta (--no-whole-file) resume whose basis is an absolute --partial-dir
looped forever on exit code 23 ("failed verification -- update put into
partial-dir"), stranding the correct data in the partial-dir and never
populating the destination.

Cause: an absolute --partial-dir makes the basis path absolute, but the
receiver opened it with secure_relative_open(NULL, fnamecmp, ...), which by
design rejects an absolute relpath (EINVAL). The basis fd was then -1, so
receive_data() mapped no basis and (because the matched-block sum_update() is
guarded by "if (mapbuf)") computed the whole-file verification checksum over
the literal data only -> a spurious mismatch every run. (The data itself was
correct, since the in-place update leaves the matched basis bytes in place.)
Under a non-chroot daemon the in-place write went through the same call and
failed outright.

Fix: add secure_basis_open(), which treats an operator-trusted absolute basis
path as (trusted directory + confined leaf) -- the same way secure_relative_open
already trusts an absolute basedir while keeping O_NOFOLLOW on the leaf -- and
use it for both the basis read and the inplace-partial write. The strict
"reject absolute relpath" contract of secure_relative_open is left intact.

Defense-in-depth: receive_data() now treats a block-match token with no mapped
basis as a protocol inconsistency (it can only arise from a basis that the
generator opened but the receiver could not), failing cleanly instead of
silently dropping those bytes from the verify checksum or the output.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
edf298ace5 testsuite: add COVERAGE.md matrix and -u/--force coverage
COVERAGE.md is the living checklist mapping every CLI option (~142) and daemon
parameter (~54) to its test(s), with depth / cross-dir status and remaining
gaps, so the path-resolution restructure can see exactly what is guarded.

update_test.py closes two of the documented gaps: -u/--update (keep a newer
destination, update an older one) and --force (replace a non-empty destination
directory with a file), both at depth.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
1d5b5ab83a build: add gcov coverage and --disable-openat2 knobs for the test suite
Two test-coverage build knobs (both behaviour-neutral by default):

  --enable-coverage  appends '--coverage -fprofile-update=atomic -O0' and adds
                     a 'make coverage' target (whole suite, run serially, then
                     gcovr HTML with branch + decision coverage). rsync forks
                     and its children exit without running the gcov atexit
                     flush -- the generator via its SIGUSR1 handler
                     (_exit_cleanup) and the receiver via the SIGUSR2 handler
                     -- so under GCOV_COVERAGE we call __gcov_dump() at both, or
                     receiver.c/generator.c record no coverage at all.

  --disable-openat2  gates the Linux openat2(RESOLVE_BENEATH) sites in syscall.c
                     on HAVE_OPENAT2 (defined by default), so disabling it forces
                     the portable per-component O_NOFOLLOW resolver to run as the
                     primary on ordinary Linux -- exercising and
                     coverage-counting that fallback tier without a pre-5.6
                     kernel. NOTE: coordinate with the parallel syscall.c
                     path-resolution restructure.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
b0ba699031 testsuite: probe RESOLVE_BENEATH support functionally for the #715 test
Add resolve_beneath_supported() to rsyncfns: it functionally probes whether the
rsync binary can follow an in-tree directory symlink under its secure resolver
(an initial transfer plus a delta update through a dir-symlink, the operation
issue #715 is about). This tracks the actual binary instead of a platform name.

Use it in symlink-dirlink-basis_test.py in place of the SunOS/OpenBSD/NetBSD/
Cygwin name check: it skips on those platforms too, and additionally on
Linux < 5.6, a seccomp-blocked openat2, and the new --disable-openat2 build,
where the portable O_NOFOLLOW fallback rejects the in-tree symlink.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
e57c7f5d87 testsuite: output, comparison and algorithm-selection option coverage
Breadth pass for options not yet exercised:

  output-options    output shape of --version/--help/-i/-n/--stats/
                    --out-format/--list-only/-q/--progress/-h/-8 (these control
                    output, not path handling, so they're checked for shape).
  compare           -c and -I catch a stealth change (same size+mtime, new
                    content) deep in the tree; --size-only skips a same-size
                    change; --modify-window absorbs a 1s mtime difference.
  compress-options  --compress-choice for every advertised compressor,
                    --compress-level, --skip-compress, --checksum-choice for
                    every advertised checksum, and --checksum-seed -- each a
                    clean byte-identical transfer at depth.

Green on master and under --protocol=29/30.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
05f30c05c9 testsuite: daemon parameter coverage (loopback)
Drive a loopback daemon (secure stdio-pipe transport by default, also green
under --use-tcp) via the new write_daemon_conf helper and assert the behaviour
of the security-relevant rsyncd.conf parameters, transferring >=3-deep trees:

  daemon-access  path / read only / write only / list, incl. a deep sub-path
                 pull and that a list=no module is hidden yet usable by name.
  daemon-filter  daemon exclude hides matching files everywhere; incoming /
                 outgoing chmod rewrite modes of every transferred file.
  daemon-auth    auth users + secrets file accept the right password, reject a
                 wrong one and an unauthenticated request; strict modes rejects
                 a world-readable secrets file.
  daemon-exec    pre-/post-xfer exec run with RSYNC_MODULE_NAME /
                 RSYNC_EXIT_STATUS; a failing pre-xfer exec aborts the transfer
                 (marker files polled for, since post-xfer exec runs after the
                 client disconnects under TCP).
  daemon-munge   munge symlinks stores incoming links with the /rsyncd-munged/
                 prefix and strips it on the way out.
  daemon-refuse  refuse options: a named option, a wildcard, and the '* !a !v'
                 allow-list idiom.

Green on master under pipe and --use-tcp transports and under --protocol=29.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
922681e140 testsuite: filtering coverage at depth
Assert exactly which entries are/aren't transferred, deep in the tree:

  filter-depth      --exclude/--include precedence on files at every level, and
                    a -F per-directory .rsync-filter loaded from a deep dir that
                    applies to that subtree only (not above it).
  cvs-exclude       -C built-in cruft patterns (*.o, *~) at every level plus a
                    deep per-directory .cvsignore scoped to its subtree.
  size-filter       --max-size / --min-size select the right files all the way
                    down.
  files-from-depth  --files-from selects only the listed deep paths (implied
                    parents created); --from0 NUL-delimited; --exclude-from /
                    --include-from filter at depth.

(--existing / --ignore-existing are covered in delete-deep_test.py.)
Green on master and under --protocol=29/30.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
273b9f265f testsuite: metadata preservation coverage at depth
Set each attribute distinctively on a file AND a directory at every level of a
>=3-deep tree and verify it per entry after transfer (metadata is applied as a
single-component op on an entry whose parent chain the resolver restructure
rewrites):

  metadata-depth   -p preserves exact file/dir modes; -t preserves file
                   mtimes; --chmod=D710,F600 rewrites them.
  omit-times       -O omits directory times (files still preserved); -J omits
                   symlink times.
  sparse           -S preserves a deep file's hole (allocated << size);
                   --no-sparse fills it.
  xattrs-depth     -X reproduces a user xattr on every entry (gated on xattr
                   support).
  acls-depth       -A reproduces a POSIX ACL on every entry (gated on ACL
                   support + setfacl/getfacl).
  ownership-depth  --groupmap and --chown=:GROUP remap the group of every
                   entry (non-root, to a secondary group); -o/--usermap gated
                   on root.

All green on master and under --protocol=29/30.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
0d546ee3b4 testsuite: structure / recursion / link coverage at depth
Cover the structure and link options at >=3 levels and across directories,
asserting each option's specific effect:

  links            -l keeps a symlink, -L dereferences it, -k follows a
                   directory symlink -- all on a symlink several levels deep.
  dirs             -d copies the top layer (file + empty dir) without recursing.
  prune-empty-dirs -m drops empty chains and chains emptied by an exclude,
                   keeps populated ones.
  hardlinks-deep   -H preserves a hard link whose names live in different
                   directories at depth; without -H they become separate inodes.
  delete-deep      --delete removes a deep extraneous file/subtree; the four
                   delete-timing variants agree; --max-delete caps deletions;
                   --existing / --ignore-existing select/skip correctly.
  relative-implied -R mirrors an implied directory's mode at depth;
                   --no-implied-dirs does not (proto 30+).

Green on master and under --protocol=29/30 (the --no-implied-dirs sub-case is
gated to protocol >= 30, where multi-component sender paths are accepted).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
d6124a82a4 testsuite: cross-directory/temp/backup/dest coverage at depth
Fill the highest-restructure-risk gap: options that do two-directory / rename /
outside-tree work, asserted at >=3 levels deep with the aux tree kept outside
the main tree, and asserting the option's specific property rather than just
tree equality (which the ported tests already cover).

  alt-dest-deep  --link-dest hardlinks unchanged files (same inode), --copy-dest
                 copies (never links), --compare-dest omits unchanged files;
                 ref tree outside both src and dest.
  temp-dir       cross-dir temp->final rename at depth; temp dir left clean; a
                 missing --temp-dir fails (so the option is proven consulted).
  partial        --partial keeps the partial in the dest file; relative
                 --partial-dir stages per-directory at depth (pre-seed +
                 interrupt/resume); absolute --partial-dir writes the partial
                 outside the tree.
  inplace        --inplace keeps the destination inode across a delta update;
                 the default temp+rename path replaces it.
  append         --append completes truncated files tail-only; --append-verify
                 repairs a corrupted prefix (protocol >= 30).
  backup-deep    --suffix saves <name>S beside the new file; --backup-dir
                 relocates old files to a parallel deep tree outside the dest
                 and captures deletions under --delete.

All green on master and under --protocol=29/30.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
1d828f35ca testsuite: add depth/cross-dir/daemon coverage helpers to rsyncfns.py
Add helpers for the option-coverage expansion (the path-handling restructure
changes parent-component resolution, so options must be exercised at depth and
across directory boundaries):

  * make_tree() builds a tree with a regular file at every level so a property
    can be checked at the tree root and >=3 levels deep;
  * walk_files()/walk_dirs() iterate entries for per-level assertions;
  * assert_same/assert_mode/assert_mtime_close/assert_is_symlink/
    assert_hardlinked/assert_not_hardlinked/assert_exists/assert_not_exists
    assert the concrete property an option controls (not just dest == src);
  * write_daemon_conf() writes an arbitrary rsyncd.conf (globals + modules)
    for daemon-parameter tests, beyond build_rsyncd_conf's fixed four modules;
  * forced_protocol() lets protocol-sensitive tests gate sub-cases.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:31:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
7bba25e675 start on 3.5.0 2026-05-23 07:52:55 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
6e3140d5ba testsuite: read xattrs natively instead of shelling out to getfattr
xattr_set() sets attributes with the native os.setxattr(), but
xattr_dump() read them back by running "getfattr -d". That asymmetry
breaks "make check" on any system where rsync is built with xattr
support (libattr headers present) but the attr package's CLI tools are
not installed -- common on Android/Termux and minimal CI images: setting
succeeds via os.setxattr, then xattr_dump's getfattr raises
FileNotFoundError, which crashes the test (reported FAIL) instead of
running or skipping it. That's why "make check" was failing here on
xattrs / xattrs-hlink.

Read the xattrs natively with os.listxattr()/os.getxattr() on Linux,
symmetric with xattr_set(), so the suite needs no external getfattr; the
output still mimics "getfattr -d" and only has to be self-consistent
between the source and destination dumps. Cygwin keeps the CLI path
(Python there lacks os.*xattr). make check now passes with no attr
package installed.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-22 15:15:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
1d8f47cc71 testsuite: generate predictable fixture files instead of reading /etc, /bin, /
The Python rewrite of the suite carried over the shell habit of
populating the test tree by capturing "ls -l /etc" / "ls -l /bin"
(falling back to "ls /"): hands_setup() built etc-ltr-list / bin-lt-list
that way, and longdir_test.py did the same for its leaf files. That ties
the fixtures to the host filesystem layout -- those directories are
absent or unreadable on Android/Termux and other minimal environments,
where "ls /" fails outright -- and the captured content was never
reproducible from run to run.

Add a deterministic make_text_file() helper to rsyncfns.py and use it for
hands_setup()'s two fixture files and longdir's leaf files. The names
etc-ltr-list / bin-lt-list are unchanged (chmod, chmod-temp-dir and
alt-dest reference them by name); only the content source changes, so the
fixtures are now self-contained and identical on every platform. This
also drops longdir_test.py's date(1) and ls(1) subprocess calls.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-22 15:15:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
743d715d43 docs: add rsync Discord server link
Add a link to the rsync Discord server (https://discord.gg/Avfvy9zhdp)
below the mailing lists section in README.md and on the lists.html web
page.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-22 15:06:21 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
4b862306e5 testsuite: restore non-Linux xattr/fake-super coverage
The Python rewrite had gated the xattr / fake-super tests (xattrs,
xattrs-hlink, chown-fake, devices-fake) to Linux because it used the
Linux-only os.*xattr. Restore them on macOS, FreeBSD, Cygwin and Solaris
via a per-OS xattr surface in rsyncfns.py (xattrs_supported / xattr_set /
xattr_dump):
  * Linux   -- os.*xattr
  * macOS   -- xattr
  * FreeBSD -- setextattr / lsextattr / getextattr
  * Cygwin  -- getfattr / setfattr (from the `attr` package; CPython on
               Cygwin has no os.*xattr)
  * Solaris -- runat(1), with the script on stdin and the attr name/value
               passed via the environment (the runat -c form mangles args)

Test attribute names are logical; the "user." namespace prefix is added
only on the Linux-style platforms (Linux, Cygwin). RSYNC_PREFIX/RUSR vary
per OS (macOS and Solaris use rsync.nonuser to avoid rsync's reserved
rsync.* space). The macOS and Cygwin workflows no longer skip these tests;
the FreeBSD/Solaris jobs use IGNORE skip-checking so need no change.

Verified on real Linux, macOS, FreeBSD, Cygwin and Solaris hosts.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-22 14:34:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
70948a9dc3 testsuite: post-review fixes and lock-file hardening
* chmod-option: pin umask to the suite-wide 022 baseline (mirroring the
    old rsync.fns) so rsync's --chmod `D+w` is computed and applied under
    the same umask -- fixes failures under a different ambient umask (077).
  * daemon module-list test: assert the `list = no` module does NOT leak
    into the listing (the substring check alone missed regressions).
  * claim_ports() lock file: open with O_NOFOLLOW and only fchmod a file we
    O_EXCL-created, rejecting a symlink OR hard link planted at the
    well-known /tmp path -- which, with the TCP tests running under sudo in
    CI, could otherwise chmod an arbitrary root-owned target. Require a
    pristine (regular, nlink==1) file.
  * CI: extend the Linux/Cygwin expected-skip lists for the gated tests.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-22 14:34:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
951bf0a446 socket: enforce socketpair_tcp()'s anti-hijack guarantee
socketpair_tcp() fakes a connected socket pair via a loopback TCP
self-connect (socket -> bind 127.0.0.1:0 -> listen -> connect ->
accept), used by sock_exec() for RSYNC_CONNECT_PROG. Its comment has
long promised that "nobody else can attach to the socket, or if they
do that this function fails", but nothing actually verified it: the
code accept()ed whatever connection arrived first without checking it
was the one our own connect() made.

Between listen() and accept() the ephemeral loopback port is
connectable by any local user. With backlog 1 a same-host attacker who
races a connection in before our connect() lands could have their
socket returned by accept(), handing them one end of the rsync
protocol stream. The exposure is small (loopback only, random
ephemeral port, sub-millisecond window, local users only), but the
promised guarantee was simply not enforced.

Enforce it: after the connection is established, require that the peer
address of the accepted end (fd[0]) equals the local address of our
connecting end (fd[1]), and that both are 127.0.0.1. A hijacked
connection has a different source port and is rejected (errno EPERM,
fail closed). The legitimate self-connect always matches, so there is
no behaviour change for the normal path.

Verified: rebuilds clean with -Wall -W; the full testsuite still
passes in both transports (pipe `make check` 57/3, `runtests.py
--use-tcp` 59/1) -- the pipe transport exercises this code path on
every daemon test.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-22 14:34:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
bea8a3a16f testsuite: secure stdio-pipe daemon transport by default, opt-in TCP
Daemon-mode tests default to the stdio-pipe transport (RSYNC_CONNECT_PROG),
which opens no listening socket -- so `make check` never exposes a network
service. Real TCP is opt-in via `runtests.py --use-tcp`, with the daemon
bound to loopback (127.0.0.1) on a claim_ports()-reserved port; CI runs the
suite both ways.

start_test_daemon() is the single seam every daemon test uses: the secure
pipe by default, a real rsyncd on a claimed loopback port under --use-tcp.
Tests with no pipe equivalent (the fake-proxy listener and the reverse-DNS
hostname-ACL daemon test) are gated behind require_tcp().

`make check` also now runs the suite in parallel by default (CHECK_J=8);
the claim_ports() byte-range locks make that safe across concurrent runs.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-22 14:34:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
bf8aab51e8 testsuite: add claim_ports() for parallel-safe TCP-port coordination
rsyncfns.claim_ports(*ports) takes exclusive POSIX byte-range locks on
/tmp/rsync_test.lck (offset = port number) so any number of test
processes can run concurrently without colliding on a TCP port: a test
asking for a port already held blocks until the holder exits. The
kernel drops the locks automatically when the holding process dies, so
a crashed test releases its ports with no manual cleanup.

Ports are claimed in sorted order so two callers requesting the same
set in different orders can't deadlock. The lock file is forced to
mode 0o666 after creation (the umask would otherwise trim it and lock
out a second user on a shared CI runner; EPERM when we're not the
owner is fine).

proxy-response-line-too-long is the first user: it switches from an
ephemeral port to a claimed fixed port (12873).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-22 14:34:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
1f689ec0c2 testsuite: rewrite the shell testsuite in Python
Replace the entire shell-based testsuite with Python. runtests.py
already drove the suite (it had replaced runtests.sh earlier); this
converts all 60 test scripts from *.test shell to *_test.py and adds
testsuite/rsyncfns.py as the shared helper module -- the Python
counterpart of the now-removed rsync.fns.

runtests.py:
  * Discovers and runs both *.test and *_test.py; dispatches the
    Python tests via the same python3 that runs the harness.
  * Extends PYTHONPATH so tests can `import rsyncfns`.

testsuite/rsyncfns.py provides everything the ports need:
  * environment wiring (scratchdir / srcdir / TOOLDIR / RSYNC /
    TLS_ARGS, and HOME pointed at the per-test scratch dir);
  * result reporting -- test_fail / test_skipped / test_xfail mapping
    to the 0 / 1 / 77 / 78 exit-code convention;
  * the transfer-and-verify helpers checkit, checkdiff, verify_dirs,
    rsync_ls_lR, check_perms and the v_filt output filter;
  * fixture builders hands_setup, build_symlinks, build_rsyncd_conf,
    make_data_file, cp_p / cp_touch, makepath / rmtree.

All 60 tests are converted, including the four split-variant tests
that share one source via a Makefile-built symlink (chown/chown-fake,
devices/devices-fake, xattrs/xattrs-hlink, exclude/exclude-lsh);
Makefile.in's CHECK_SYMLINKS now points at the *_test.py names.

The dead rsync.fns shell library is removed.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-22 14:34:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
8839314025 ci: add static Android NDK build workflow
Cross-compiles statically-linked rsync binaries with the Android NDK for
arm64-v8a (all modern phones) and armeabi-v7a (older 32-bit devices), and
uploads them as workflow artifacts for adb push / Termux use.

The build is self-contained (optional external libraries disabled; keeps
md5/md4 and the bundled zlib) and forces a few configure cache values
that can't be probed when cross-compiling: lchmod()/lutimes() off (Bionic
doesn't declare them until API 36 though the symbols link), and
socketpair / mknod-FIFO / mknod-socket on (Android runs a Linux kernel,
so these match the native result). IPv6 is enabled explicitly.

Since the binaries are cross-compiled the test suite can't run; the job
instead asserts each binary is static and the correct architecture, and
smoke-tests `--version` under qemu-user.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-22 13:09:47 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
47e087d8eb testsuite: portable make_data_file helper; drop hard /dev/urandom dependency
symlink-dirlink-basis.test and chdir-symlink-race.test both
require a multi-kilobyte non-trivial-content source file for the
rsync delta algorithm to exercise.  Both used dd / head against
/dev/urandom directly, which fails on platforms that don't ship
/dev/urandom (e.g. HPE NonStop).  The dd error gets swallowed by
'2>/dev/null' and the test then fails with a misleading 'failed
to create test file' that hides the real cause.

Add make_data_file <path> <size> to testsuite/rsync.fns.  Prefers
/dev/urandom when readable (kernel-provided randomness, fast),
falling back to a deterministic awk LCG seeded from PID and a
POSIX cksum of the destination path.  Output is constrained to
printable ASCII (33..126) so the helper survives two awk-portability
quirks:

  - printf '%c', 0 terminates the string in some awks, emitting
    fewer than sz bytes;
  - gawk in UTF-8 locales encodes printf '%c', N for N > 127 as
    a 2-byte UTF-8 sequence, emitting more than sz bytes.

The tests don't need 8-bit binary entropy -- they just need
non-trivial bytes for rsync's block-matching algorithm.

Update both call sites to use the helper.  Linux/FreeBSD/macOS
still take the /dev/urandom fast path; NonStop and any other
platform missing the device get the awk fallback transparently.
Both paths verified locally with the symlink-dirlink-basis test.
2026-05-21 07:40:30 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
e1c5f0e93a t_chmod_secure: probe kernel RESOLVE_BENEATH at runtime; drop test skip
The chmod-symlink-race test was previously a no-op on Solaris,
OpenBSD, NetBSD, and Cygwin via a case 'uname -s' skip.  The skip
was too broad: of the four scenarios the helper exercises, only
the 'legitimate within-tree dir-symlink' one actually needs
RESOLVE_BENEATH-equivalent kernel support.  The other three
(attack rejection, plain relative path, top-level file) behave
identically on the per-component O_NOFOLLOW fallback and would
have caught the t_stub.c max_alloc=0 bug fixed in the previous
commit if the test had been allowed to run.

Make the helper probe the running kernel for either
openat2(RESOLVE_BENEATH) on Linux 5.6+ or openat(O_RESOLVE_BENEATH)
on FreeBSD 13+ / macOS 15+ by opening '.' under the requested
confinement.  Honour the result:

  - If RESOLVE_BENEATH-equivalent confinement is available, the
    within-tree symlink scenario must succeed (status quo).
  - If not, the per-component O_NOFOLLOW fallback rejects every
    symlink including legitimate ones; expect the within-tree
    symlink scenario to be rejected (rc != 0) and the file mode
    to remain unchanged.

The attack-rejection, plain-path and top-level scenarios are
unchanged: they expect the same outcome on both code paths.

Drop the case-based skip from chmod-symlink-race.test so the test
runs everywhere and the per-component fallback gets the CI
coverage that the SunOS/OpenBSD/NetBSD/Cygwin runners can
provide.  HPE NonStop -- which lacks RESOLVE_BENEATH but isn't in
the existing skip list -- is also covered by this change.
2026-05-21 07:40:30 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
cfdc27c613 t_stub.c: raise max_alloc default so test helpers can allocate
The t_stub.c shim defined max_alloc = 0 as a placeholder to satisfy
the link against util2.o.  This was harmless when the test helpers
made no allocations, but the secure_relative_open() implementation
in 3.4.0+ calls my_strdup() in its per-component O_NOFOLLOW
fallback (syscall.c around line 1857), and the 3.4.3 do_*_at()
hardening series added more such calls.  With max_alloc=0, every
allocation in that path trips the 'exceeded --max-alloc=0' check in
util2.c's my_alloc(), and t_chmod_secure (which exercises
do_chmod_at via secure_relative_open) fails on the very first
my_strdup.

The failure is invisible on Linux 5.6+ / FreeBSD 13+ / macOS 15+ /
recent Cygwin because those platforms take the kernel-enforced
openat2(RESOLVE_BENEATH) or openat(O_RESOLVE_BENEATH) branch and
never reach the per-component fallback.  It also goes unobserved
on the SunOS/OpenBSD/NetBSD/CYGWIN* CI runners because the
chmod-symlink-race.test script case-skips on those platforms (the
legitimate dir-symlink scenario the test exercises can't pass on
the per-component fallback).  HPE NonStop is the first platform
that lacks RESOLVE_BENEATH support AND isn't in the skip list AND
has someone actually running the test suite, so it surfaced the
latent bug.

Raise max_alloc to SIZE_MAX so the helpers can allocate freely.
A follow-up patch makes t_chmod_secure adapt at runtime so the
skip list can be removed and the per-component fallback gets real
CI coverage.
2026-05-21 07:40:30 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
7e7372a0c5 packaging: add ftp.filt, the FTP mirror filter file
The .filt file in /home/ftp/pub/rsync on samba.org controls which
subtrees release.py's FTP mirror excludes (currently /binaries/
and /generated-files/).  Without it, step-10-push-ftp's
'rsync --del' would propagate local deletions to the server even
for those archive subtrees.

Until now the only copy of this two-line file lived on the server.
Bundle it in source at packaging/ftp.filt so it survives a disaster
on samba.org, and have step_1_fetch seed FTP_DIR/.filt from the
bundled copy on every run (with --exclude=/.filt on the rsync pull,
so the server's copy can't silently drift the bundled one).
step-10-push-ftp then propagates any in-source updates to the
filter back to the server.
2026-05-20 15:36:44 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
8cad2097e9 packaging: remove obsolete samba-rsync and send-news scripts
Both scripts were pre-release.py legacy helpers:

  * samba-rsync rsync'd ~/samba-rsync-{ftp,html}/ to the samba.org
    server.  release.py step-10-push-ftp and step-11-push-html now
    do exactly this, using ../release/rsync-{ftp,html}/ as the
    local mirrors.

  * send-news copied README/INSTALL/NEWS .md + .html files into
    ~/samba-rsync-ftp/ and rsync'd them to samba.org.
    release.py step-8-update-ftp already does this
    (./md-convert --dest=FTP_DIR README.md NEWS.md INSTALL.md and
    the surrounding rsync of html files into FTP_DIR), and
    step-10-push-ftp pushes the result.

Update the trailing instructions printed at the end of
step-12-push-git to drop the now-obsolete 'run packaging/send-news'
suggestion, and tighten the comment in step_1_fetch that referred
to samba-rsync as a current sibling tool.
2026-05-20 15:36:44 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
d039cfa829 packaging/release.py: rsync-web is now an in-tree subdirectory
Track the move of rsync-web from sibling git checkout to a regular
subdirectory of the rsync source tree:

  * HTML_SRC: '../rsync-web' -> 'rsync-web'.
  * step_1_fetch: drop the .git-presence probe and the 'make sure
    it's up to date' reminder.  Both made sense when rsync-web was
    a separate repo the maintainer had to clone and pull, but the
    directory is now part of the same checkout as this script.
  * rsync invocation no longer needs --exclude=/.git: there is no
    .git inside rsync-web/ (it is just a subdir of the parent
    rsync-git checkout).
  * Header comment block and step-1 help text rewritten to describe
    the new layout.
2026-05-20 15:36:44 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
0af88421dc import rsync-web website content as a subdirectory
Fold the standalone rsync-web repo into the rsync source tree as
rsync-web/, eliminating the sibling-checkout convention and the
drift it causes between the release-time HTML snapshot in
../release/rsync-html and the source of truth in ../rsync-web.

Flat-copy import (no git history merge).  The standalone repo at
github.com/RsyncProject/rsync-web is retained for historical
reference and will be archived once the in-tree copy proves itself.

Add /rsync-web/ to .gitattributes with export-ignore so the
website content does not bloat the release source tarball
produced by 'git archive' in packaging/release.py step_7_tarball.

A follow-up commit repoints HTML_SRC in packaging/release.py at
the new in-tree location.
2026-05-20 15:36:44 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
9d014670df INSTALL.md: point Ubuntu users at the ppa:rsyncproject/rsync PPA
Most Ubuntu users landing on INSTALL.md want to install rsync, not
build it.  Add a short section near the top that offers the
Launchpad PPA as the one-line path for the four currently supported
series (jammy 22.04 LTS, noble 24.04 LTS, questing 25.10,
resolute 26.04 LTS), and clarify that the rest of the file is about
building from source.
2026-05-20 15:36:44 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
647a00a278 start on 3.4.4 2026-05-20 11:50:33 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
2c7777aaa6 Preparing for release of 3.4.3 [buildall] 2026-05-20 10:07:26 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
6af41d2357 version.h: bump to 3.4.3 for the release
Drops the "dev" suffix on RSYNC_VERSION ahead of the
2026-05-20 00:00 UTC public release.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
a0b9a8e989 NEWS: prepare 3.4.3 release entry with six CVEs
Set the date to 20 May 2026, add a SECURITY FIXES section listing
all six May 2026 CVEs (CVE-2026-29518, -43617, -43618, -43619,
-43620, -45232) with reach, root cause, fix and reporter for each,
plus a note on the defence-in-depth hardening that goes with them.
Also list the new symlink-race regression tests under DEVELOPER
RELATED.
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
ac692b199c util1: handle out-of-range times in timestring 2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
147e9bea8c main: reject hyphen-prefixed remote-shell hostnames 2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
a5fc5ebe7a socket: reject over-long proxy response line
fixes a one byte stack overflow when using RSYNC_PROXY with a
malicious proxy.

Reach: only when RSYNC_PROXY is set and a malicious or MITM'd
proxy returns the pathological response.  The byte written is
always '\0' and the attacker doesn't choose the offset, so impact
is corruption of one adjacent stack byte and possible later
misbehaviour or crash -- no information disclosure beyond the
existing rprintf of buffer contents.

Reported by Aisle Research via Michal Ruprich
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
c79cb81a4f rsync.h: lower MAX_WIRE_DEL_STAT to avoid signed-int overflow in read_del_stats
read_del_stats() in main.c accumulates 5 wire-supplied counts into
the int32 stats.deleted_files field:

    stats.deleted_files  = read_varint_bounded(..., MAX_WIRE_DEL_STAT, ...);
    stats.deleted_files += stats.deleted_dirs     = ...;
    stats.deleted_files += stats.deleted_symlinks = ...;
    stats.deleted_files += stats.deleted_devices  = ...;
    stats.deleted_files += stats.deleted_specials = ...;

With the previous MAX_WIRE_DEL_STAT = 2^30 (1.07 GB) the worst-case
sum is 5 * 2^30 = 5.37 GB; three maximal values already exceed
INT32_MAX = 2.15 GB on the third "+=", triggering signed integer
overflow (C99 6.5/5 -- undefined behaviour, the compiler may assume
it cannot happen and elide subsequent checks).

The bound was introduced in f0155902 ("defence-in-depth: bound
wire-supplied counts and lengths") with a commit message claiming
"per-summand cap so the total can't overflow", but 2^30 * 5 does
overflow.  Lower the per-summand cap to 2^28 (= 268M) so the worst
case is 5 * 2^28 = 1.34 GB < INT32_MAX with margin.  2^28 deletions
per category is still vastly above any plausible real transfer.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
650643109e defence-in-depth: receiver block-index bounds + read_delay_line null check
Two assorted audit findings:

  - receive_data() never bounds-checked the block index returned
    by recv_token() against sum.count before computing offset2
    and feeding it to map_ptr(). An out-of-bounds index from a
    hostile sender produces invalid memory access. Add a
    sum.count bounds check.

  - read_delay_line()'s strchr() call could return NULL when no
    space was found, but the code unconditionally added 1 to the
    result before dereferencing. Low impact (just a disconnect on
    exit of the client-specific forked process) but the NULL
    deref is real. Guard the NULL.

Both reported by Joshua Rogers.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
4cf08983e8 defence-in-depth: guard cumulative snprintf against length underflow
Two cumulative-snprintf patterns in log.c (rsyserr) and main.c
(output_itemized_counts) had the shape

    len = snprintf(buf, sizeof buf, ...);
    len += snprintf(buf+len, sizeof buf - len, ...);

with no guard between calls. snprintf returns the would-have-been
length on truncation, so a truncated first call leaves
"sizeof buf - len" as a negative-then-promoted-to-size_t value,
underflowing into a huge size_t and writing past buf.

Realistic exposure is small in both cases (log header well under
buffer, only ~5 itemized iterations writing ~25 chars each into a
1024-byte buffer) but the defect class matches bb0a8118 and the
fix is cheap. Guard before each subsequent call.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
8112445318 defence-in-depth: bound wire-supplied counts and lengths
Multiple receiver-side fields read from the wire were trusted
without upper-bound checks. A hostile peer could either request
extreme allocations (DoS via --max-alloc) or, on platforms where
read_varint returned a negative value, push ~SIZE_MAX through the
size_t conversion to wrap downstream length checks.

Introduce read_int_bounded(), read_varint_bounded() and
read_varint_size() in io.c so wire-derived integer ranges are
checked at the read site rather than scattered across each
caller, with RERR_PROTOCOL on out-of-range input.

Apply the bounded primitives to:
  - sum->count (checksum count -- previously could overflow
    (size_t)count * xfer_sum_len on 32-bit with raised max-alloc)
  - xattrs: count, name_len, datum_len, plus rel_pos overflow
    detect to stop chain wrapping the num accumulator
  - acls: ida-entry count
  - flist: file mode S_IFMT validation, modtime_nsec range check
  - delete-stat counters in main: per-summand cap so the total
    can't overflow a signed 32-bit accumulator

Reporters include Joshua Rogers (checksum-count overflow finding).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
c38f20c5ff clientserver: fix hostname ACL bypass when using daemon chroot
On an rsync daemon configured with "daemon chroot", the reverse-DNS
lookup of the connecting client was performed *after* the chroot
had been entered. If the chroot did not contain the files glibc
needs for resolution (/etc/resolv.conf, /etc/nsswitch.conf,
/etc/hosts, NSS service modules), the lookup failed and
client_name() returned "UNKNOWN". Hostname-based deny rules
("hosts deny = *.evil.example") therefore could not match, and
an attacker controlling their PTR record could connect from a
hostname the administrator had intended to deny. IP-based ACLs
were unaffected.

Do the reverse DNS lookup before chroot/setuid; client_name()
caches its result, so the post-chroot call uses the cached value
and hostname-based ACLs work even when DNS is unavailable
post-chroot.

Adds testsuite/daemon-chroot-acl.test as end-to-end regression
coverage. The test sets up an empty chroot directory, configures
"hosts deny = <localhost-resolved-name>" with daemon chroot, and
asserts the connection is refused with @ERROR access denied.
Uses unshare --user --map-root-user for non-root CAP_SYS_CHROOT;
skips cleanly on non-Linux or when user namespaces aren't
available.

Reporter: Joshua Rogers (MegaManSec).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
0cf200ecbb receiver: add parent_ndx<0 guard, mirroring 797e17f
Commit 797e17f ("fixed an invalid access to files array") added a
parent_ndx < 0 guard to send_files() in sender.c, but the visually-
identical block in recv_files() in receiver.c was not updated. A
malicious rsync:// server can therefore drive any connecting client
into the same out-of-bounds dir_flist->files[-1] read followed by a
file_struct dereference in f_name() one line later.

Reach: protocol-30+ default (inc_recurse) makes flist.c:2745 set
parent_ndx = -1 on the first received flist when the sender omits a
leading "." entry; rsync.c flist_for_ndx() does not reject ndx == 0
in that state because the range check evaluates 0 < 0 = false; and
read_ndx_and_attrs() only validates ndx with the ITEM_TRANSFER bit
set, so iflags=ITEM_IS_NEW (or any other non-transfer iflag word)
bypasses the check.

Apply the same guard receiver-side. Confirmed: the same PoC (a
minimal Python rsyncd that handshakes with CF_INC_RECURSE, sends a
no-leading-"." flist, and emits ndx=0 with ITEM_IS_NEW) crashes
unpatched 3.4.2 with SEGV_MAPERR si_addr=0x4101a-class in the
receiver child; with this guard it exits cleanly with code 2
(RERR_PROTOCOL).

The attack surface delta over the sender variant is large:
the original was malicious-client -> daemon, this is
malicious-server -> any rsync client doing a normal rsync://
or remote-shell pull.

Reported by Pratham Gupta (alchemy1729).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
e4c681fefd testsuite: cover 'refuse options = compress' for the daemon
Add a daemon-refuse-compress test that builds a module configured with
'refuse options = compress' and asserts that:
  1. an attempted -z transfer to that module fails with an error
     mentioning --compress, and
  2. the same transfer without -z still succeeds.

This pins down the documented way to disable all compression on a
daemon, which previously had no automated coverage.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
c44c90e946 token: harden compressed-token decoding against integer overflow
The receiver's three compressed-token decoders --
recv_deflated_token (zlib), recv_zstd_token, and
recv_compressed_token (lz4) -- accumulated rx_token (a 32-bit
signed counter) without overflow checking. A malicious sender
could craft a compressed-token stream that walked rx_token past
INT32_MAX, with careful manipulation leaking process memory
contents to the wire (environment variables, passwords, heap
pointers, library pointers -- significantly weakening ASLR
and facilitating further exploitation).

Cap rx_token at MAX_TOKEN_INDEX = 0x7ffffffe. Fold the
bookkeeping into recv_compressed_token_num() and
recv_compressed_token_run() shared by all three decoders. Reject
negative or out-of-range token values explicitly. Also cap the
simple_recv_token literal-block length at the source: any
wire-supplied length > CHUNK_SIZE is ill-formed (the matching
simple_send_token never writes a chunk larger than CHUNK_SIZE),
so reject before looping on attacker-controlled bytes.

Reach: an authenticated daemon connection with compression
enabled (the default for protocols >= 30 when both peers
advertise it). Disabling compression on the daemon
("refuse options = compress" in rsyncd.conf) is the available
workaround.

Reporter: Omar Elsayed (seks99x).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
fc592a8e25 ci(cygwin): mark all symlink-race regression tests as expected-skipped
Cygwin lacks RESOLVE_BENEATH-equivalent kernel support and the
per-component O_NOFOLLOW fallback also can't be exercised meaningfully
under the cygwin runner's filesystem semantics, so every test that
asserts the secure_relative_open / do_*_at machinery actually blocks
the attack would skip. Make those skips expected in the workflow's
RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED list:

  - chdir-symlink-race
  - chmod-symlink-race
  - bare-do-open-symlink-race
  - sender-flist-symlink-leak
  - daemon-chroot-acl

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
40a6e13071 testsuite: end-to-end regression test for chdir-symlink-race
testsuite/chdir-symlink-race.test runs an actual rsync daemon
(via RSYNC_CONNECT_PROG to avoid the network) configured with
"use chroot = no", plants a symlink at module/subdir -> ../outside,
and runs four flavours of attacker-shaped transfer (single-file
poc_chmod, -r push into the symlinked subdir with --size-only and
without, -r push into the module root). All four must leave the
outside-the-module sentinel file's mode AND content unchanged.

Portability:
  - file_mode() helper falls back to BSD stat -f %Lp when GNU
    stat -c %a is unavailable (macOS, FreeBSD).
  - Pre-saved pristine copy + cmp(1) replaces sha1sum, which
    differs across platforms (sha1sum / shasum / sha1).

Tests are kept running as root in the user-namespace re-exec
wrapper used by symlink-race tests so the daemon's setuid path
doesn't drop into the test user's identity (which on Linux
would mean the chmod-escape code path can't trigger because
the test user doesn't have CAP_FOWNER over the outside file).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
3cc6a9e8cd util1+syscall: secure copy_file source/dest opens; bare-path defence-in-depth
Three related codex audit findings:

  Finding 3a: copy_file()'s source open in util1.c used
  do_open_nofollow(), which only rejects a final-component
  symlink. A parent-component symlink (e.g. --copy-dest=cd where
  cd -> /outside) follows freely and reads outside the module.
  Route through secure_relative_open() with O_NOFOLLOW.

  Finding 3b: generator.c's in-place backup-file create still
  used a bare do_open with O_CREAT, leaving a tiny but reachable
  parent-symlink window between the secure unlink (already
  through do_unlink_at) and the create. Add do_open_at() that
  goes through a secure parent dirfd, and route the call site
  through it.

  Finding 3c: copy_file()'s destination open in
  unlink_and_reopen() had the same bare-do_open pattern; route
  through do_open_at as well.

Adds testsuite/copy-dest-source-symlink.test and
testsuite/bare-do-open-symlink-race.test as regression coverage
for both attack shapes.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
30656c5e35 syscall: add symlink-race-safe do_*_at() wrappers and harden secure_relative_open
Add the rest of the path-based syscall wrappers and migrate every
receiver-side caller:
  - do_lchown_at, do_rename_at, do_mkdir_at, do_symlink_at,
    do_mknod_at, do_link_at, do_unlink_at, do_rmdir_at,
    do_utimensat_at, do_stat_at, do_lstat_at

Same shape as do_chmod_at: open each parent under
secure_relative_open(), call the *at() variant against the dirfd,
fall through to the bare path-based syscall in non-daemon /
chrooted / absolute-path / no-parent cases. macOS's
setattrlist-based set_times tier is also routed through the
utimensat_at path on daemon-no-chroot.

Hardenings to secure_relative_open() itself:
  - confine basedir resolution under the same kernel mechanism
    used for relpath (basedirs from --copy-dest / --link-dest are
    sender-controllable in daemon mode)
  - reject any '..' component (bare '..', 'foo/..', 'subdir/..')
    so the per-component O_NOFOLLOW fallback can't escape
  - return the dirfd we built up from the per-component fallback
    when the caller passed O_DIRECTORY (otherwise every do_*_at
    failed with EINVAL on platforms without RESOLVE_BENEATH)

Adds testsuite/alt-dest-symlink-race.test and
testsuite/secure-relpath-validation.test (with t_secure_relpath
helper) as regression coverage for the new hardenings.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
15d2964256 util1: secure change_dir() against symlink-race chdir-escape
The receiver's chdir(2) into a destination subdirectory followed
attacker-planted symlinks at every path component. Once CWD
escaped the module, every subsequent path-relative syscall (open,
chmod, lchown, ...) inherited the escape -- defeating
secure_relative_open's RESOLVE_BENEATH anchor against AT_FDCWD,
since the anchor itself was now outside the module.

Route change_dir's relative target through secure_relative_open()
and fchdir() to the resulting dirfd in am_daemon && !am_chrooted
mode, so the chdir step itself can no longer follow a parent-
symlink. Same treatment applied to the CD_SKIP_CHDIR /
set_path_only path so it also can't follow attacker symlinks
during path tracking.

Adds testsuite/sender-flist-symlink-leak.test covering the
sender-side flist resolution variant of the same primitive.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
862fe4eeaf syscall+receiver: secure receiver-side do_chmod against symlink-race TOCTOU
CVE-2026-29518's fix routed the receiver's open() through
secure_relative_open(), but every other path-based syscall the
receiver runs on sender-controllable paths is vulnerable to the
same TOCTOU primitive. This commit closes the chmod variant.

Add do_chmod_at() that opens the parent of fname under
secure_relative_open() and uses fchmodat() against the resulting
dirfd. Gate the secure path on am_daemon && !am_chrooted (the same
gate use_secure_symlinks already uses for the receiver basis-file
open), so non-daemon callers and chrooted daemons keep the original
do_chmod() fast path.

Migrate the receiver-side do_chmod() call sites in delete.c,
generator.c, rsync.c, and xattrs.c.

Adds testsuite/chmod-symlink-race.test (with t_chmod_secure helper)
as regression coverage.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
859d44fa4f sender: fix read-path TOCTOU by opening from module root (CVE-2026-29518)
The sender's file open was vulnerable to the same TOCTOU symlink
race as the receiver-side basis-file open. change_pathname() calls
chdir() into subdirectories, which follows symlinks; an attacker
could race to swap a directory for a symlink between the chdir and
the file open, allowing reads of privileged files through the
daemon.

Reconstruct the full relative path (F_PATHNAME + fname) and open
via secure_relative_open() from the trusted module_dir, which
walks each path component without following symlinks. This is
independent of CWD, so the chdir race is neutralised.

CVE-2026-29518.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
f1c24ab03b syscall+clientserver: am_chrooted and use_secure_symlinks for daemon-no-chroot (CVE-2026-29518)
CVE-2026-29518: an rsync daemon configured with "use chroot = no"
is exposed to a TOCTOU race on parent path components. A local
attacker with write access to a module can replace a parent
directory component with a symlink between the receiver's check
and its open(), redirecting reads (basis-file disclosure) and
writes (file overwrite) outside the module. Under elevated daemon
privilege this allows privilege escalation. Default
"use chroot = yes" is not exposed.

Add secure_relative_open() in syscall.c. It walks the parent
components under RESOLVE_BENEATH (Linux 5.6+) /
O_RESOLVE_BENEATH (FreeBSD 13+, macOS 15+) / per-component
O_NOFOLLOW elsewhere, anchored at a trusted dirfd, so a parent-
symlink swap is rejected by the kernel. Route the receiver's
basis-file open in receiver.c through it when use_secure_symlinks
is set in clientserver.c rsync_module().

Reporters: Nullx3D (Batuhan SANCAK); Damien Neil; Michael Stapelberg.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 10:01:22 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
b9cc0c6176 ci(almalinux-8): use python39 module for runtests.py
The default python3 on AlmaLinux 8 is 3.6, but runtests.py uses
subprocess.run(capture_output=...) and check_output(text=...) which
were introduced in 3.7. Install the python39 module stream and point
/usr/bin/python3 at it via alternatives so the existing shebang
resolves correctly.

Reproduced as: TypeError: __init__() got an unexpected keyword
argument 'capture_output' at runtests.py line 75.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-07 05:47:29 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
c60550bff9 ci: add Ubuntu 22.04 and AlmaLinux 8 workflows for backporting
The intent is to validate that future security fixes still build and
test cleanly on the oldest still-supported LTS releases of the two
mainstream Linux families, so backports can be developed against the
same CI surface as the trunk:

  - ubuntu-22.04: oldest GitHub Actions runner image still available
    (20.04 was retired in April 2025). Mirrors the existing
    ubuntu-build.yml step list.
  - almalinux-8: RHEL 8 rebuild, full support until 2029. Runs in an
    almalinux:8 container on ubuntu-latest because GHA has no native
    runner for the Fedora/RHEL family. Pulls libzstd/xxhash/lz4 dev
    headers from PowerTools + EPEL; commonmark via pip for the man
    page generator.

Both jobs follow the same paths-ignore convention as the other
workflows so a workflow-only change to one file won't fan out across
the whole CI matrix.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-07 05:47:29 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
67f1dcf604 testsuite: run protected-regular test as non-root using unshare
Use unshare with user namespace UID mapping to run the
protected-regular test without real root privileges. Falls back
to skipping if unshare or uidmap is not available.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-01 09:27:12 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
79fd7d5885 Start 3.4.3dev going.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-30 09:43:14 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
dfdcd8f851 ci: add symlink-dirlink-basis to Cygwin's expected-skipped list
The test correctly skips on Cygwin (which lacks RESOLVE_BENEATH), but
the workflow's RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED list still treats any change in
the skipped set as a CI failure. Add the new test name so the
skipped/got comparison matches.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-30 09:30:31 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
04e2fc2c76 testsuite: skip symlink-dirlink-basis on platforms without RESOLVE_BENEATH
secure_relative_open() has a kernel-enforced "stay below dirfd" path
on Linux 5.6+ (openat2 RESOLVE_BENEATH) and FreeBSD 13+ (openat
O_RESOLVE_BENEATH). On Solaris, OpenBSD, NetBSD, and Cygwin the code
falls back to the per-component O_NOFOLLOW walk, which by design
rejects every directory symlink in the path -- the very case this
test exercises. Mark the test skipped there rather than have it
fail with a known regression that's tracked separately.

macOS is intentionally not in the skip list: although it does not
have O_RESOLVE_BENEATH either, the test passes there in practice;
investigation of the underlying reason is left as follow-up.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-30 09:30:31 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
7f60ec001a syscall: also use O_RESOLVE_BENEATH on FreeBSD and MacOS
FreeBSD and MacOS have O_RESOLVE_BENEATH as an openat() flag with the same
"must not escape dirfd" semantics as Linux's RESOLVE_BENEATH. The
kernel rejects ".." escapes, absolute symlinks, and symlinks whose
target lies outside dirfd, while still following symlinks that
resolve within it -- the same trade-off that fixes issue #715 on
Linux.

Add a parallel BSD path in secure_relative_open(), gated on
declared. Unlike Linux, BSD doesn't have the header/runtime split
where the symbol can exist without kernel support, so no runtime
fallback is needed: if the flag compiles in, the kernel honours it.

OpenBSD and NetBSD have no equivalent kernel primitive and continue
to use the existing per-component O_NOFOLLOW walk; issue #715
remains visible on those platforms (a userland resolver or
unveil(2)-based fence would be follow-up work).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-30 09:30:31 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
4fa7156ccd syscall: use openat2(RESOLVE_BENEATH) on Linux for secure_relative_open
The CVE fix in commit c35e283 made secure_relative_open() walk every
component of relpath with O_NOFOLLOW. That blocks every symlink in the
path, which is stricter than the threat model required: legitimate
directory symlinks within the destination tree (e.g. when using -K /
--copy-dirlinks) are also rejected, breaking delta transfers with
"failed verification -- update discarded".  See issue #715.

On Linux 5.6+, openat2(RESOLVE_BENEATH | RESOLVE_NO_MAGICLINKS) gives
us exactly what we want: the kernel rejects any resolution that would
escape the starting directory (via "..", absolute paths, or symlinks
pointing outside dirfd) while still following symlinks that resolve
within it. /proc magic-links are blocked too.

Use openat2 first; fall back to the existing per-component O_NOFOLLOW
walk on ENOSYS (kernel < 5.6). The lexical "../" checks at the head
of the function are kept as defense in depth. The Linux gate is
plain #ifdef __linux__: the runtime ENOSYS fallback covers the only
case that actually matters (header present + old kernel), and any
Linux build environment without linux/openat2.h will fail with a
clear "no such file" error rather than silently disabling the
protection.

Verified manually that openat2(RESOLVE_BENEATH) blocks all four
escape patterns (absolute symlink, ../ symlink, lexical .., absolute
path) while allowing direct and within-tree symlinks. The new
testsuite/symlink-dirlink-basis.test (taken from PR #864 by Samuel
Henrique) exercises the issue #715 regression and passes; full
make check passes 47/47.

Test: testsuite/symlink-dirlink-basis.test (8 scenarios)
Fixes: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/issues/715

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-30 09:30:31 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
dcf364dac5 testsuite/xattrs: ignore SUNWattr_* in the Solaris xls helper
The Solaris xls() function listed every entry in the file's xattr
directory, which on Solaris includes OS-managed SUNWattr_ro and
SUNWattr_rw pseudo-attributes. SUNWattr_rw embeds the file creation
time, so its bytes naturally differ between the source and destination
files, making the xattrs and xattrs-hlink tests fail with diffs that
have nothing to do with rsync.

Rsync's own listxattr wrapper already filters these out
(lib/sysxattrs.c), so the right fix is to filter them in the test
display too. Other platforms are unaffected because each has its own
xls() branch in the case statement.

With the test now actually passing on Solaris, drop the CI hack that
overwrote testsuite/xattrs.test with a skip stub.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-30 09:25:58 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
d1eff8f0dc ci: add OpenBSD and NetBSD build jobs, run 'make check' on the BSDs
Mirror the existing FreeBSD workflow for OpenBSD and NetBSD using
vmactions/openbsd-vm and vmactions/netbsd-vm so we get cross-BSD
coverage on push, PR, and the nightly schedule.

Also extend the FreeBSD and Solaris workflows to actually exercise the
test suite by running 'make check' after the build. The Linux, macOS,
and Cygwin jobs already did this.

The Solaris xattrs and xattrs-hlink tests are removed before 'make
check' because the Solaris SUNWattr_ro / SUNWattr_rw system attributes
leak into the test diff; that's a real rsync-on-Solaris issue to follow
up on, but skip the tests for now so the suite goes green.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-30 08:15:37 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
8f727166d9 runtests.py: error early when test helper programs are missing
When invoked directly (rather than via 'make check'), runtests.py
previously left the user with a wall of confusing "not found" errors
from inside individual test scripts if the CHECK_PROGS helpers had not
been built. Detect this up front and point the user at the make
target that builds them.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-29 17:00:55 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
5bcb3deb2f packaging: remove old release system 2026-04-28 15:08:25 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
de3cc03b03 Preparing for release of 3.4.2 [buildall] 2026-04-28 14:29:48 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
006ee327d6 packaging: new release script 2026-04-28 14:27:41 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
9b6363fa10 update NEWS.md ready for 3.4.2 2026-04-28 12:55:38 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
9e2f0fe9ae packaging: remove support for rsync-patches 2026-04-28 12:55:38 +10:00
Michal Ruprich
4f6e4ea64a Do not clean DISPLAY unconditionally 2026-04-22 13:05:35 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
567c40935f call tzset() before chroot to cache timezone data
localtime/localtime_r need /etc/localtime for timezone info.
After chroot this file is inaccessible, causing log timestamps
to fall back to UTC. Calling tzset() before chroot ensures the
timezone data is cached by glibc for subsequent calls.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-22 13:02:10 +10:00
Michal Ruprich
8e11f0c169 Using a correct time in log file 2026-04-22 13:02:10 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
e9dbc8d66d rsyncd.conf: document the temp dir parameter
The temp dir parameter was functional but undocumented in the man page.

Fixes: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/issues/820

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-22 12:34:58 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
bd2dbd2f32 runtests.py: preserve test-execution order in skipped list
The sorted() call reordered skipped test names alphabetically,
causing CI expected-skipped mismatches (e.g. acls,acls-default
instead of acls-default,acls). Sort by original test order instead.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-22 12:34:39 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
350e295d1c runtests.py: add -j/--parallel option for parallel test execution
Add parallel test execution using concurrent.futures. With -j8 the
test suite completes in ~4s vs ~29s sequential (~7x speedup).

Also fix two issues that caused failures under parallel execution:
- rsync_ls_lR now prunes testtmp/ so parallel tests don't see each
  other's temp files when scanning the source tree
- clean-fname-underflow.test now uses $scratchdir instead of /tmp

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-22 12:34:39 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
066156fcd9 replace runtests.sh with runtests.py
Rewrite the test runner in Python with proper command-line options
including --valgrind which directs valgrind output to per-process
log files so it doesn't interfere with test output comparisons.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-22 12:34:39 +10:00
Holger Hoffstätte
a5bbe859db Fix glibc-2.43 constness warnings
Glibc 2.43 added C23 const-preserving overloads to various string functions,
which change the return type depending on the constness of the argument(s).
Currently this leads to warnings from calls to strtok() or strchr().
Fix this by properly declaring the respective variable types.

Signed-off-by: Holger Hoffstätte <holger@applied-asynchrony.com>
2026-04-22 12:10:08 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
d046525de3 zero all new memory from allocations
Change my_alloc() to use calloc instead of malloc so all fresh
allocations return zeroed memory. Also zero the expanded portion
in expand_item_list() after realloc, since it knows both old and
new sizes. This gives more predictable behaviour in case of bugs
where uninitialised or stale memory is accidentally accessed.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-22 11:44:10 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
bb0a8118c2 xattrs: fixed count in qsort
this fixes the count passed to the sort of the xattr list. This issue
was reported here:

https://www.openwall.com/lists/oss-security/2026/04/16/2

the bug is not exploitable due to the fork-per-connection design of
rsync, the attack is the equivalent of the user closing the socket
themselves.
2026-04-22 10:38:14 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
d1df0aaf70 fix signed integer overflow in proxy protocol v2 header parsing
The len field in the proxy v2 header was declared as signed char,
allowing a negative size to bypass the validation check and cause
a stack buffer overflow when passed to read_buf() as size_t.

This bug was reported by John Walker from ZeroPath, many thanks for
the clear report!

With the current code this bug does not represent a security issue as
it only results in the exit of the forked process that is specific to
the attached client, so it is equivalent to the client closing the
socket, so no CVE for this, but it is good to fix it to prevent a
future issue.
2026-04-16 13:59:52 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
15d8e49a64 zlib: convert K&R function definitions to ANSI style
The bundled zlib 1.2.8 used K&R-style function definitions which are
rejected by clang 16+ as hard errors. Convert all 90 functions across
9 files to ANSI-style prototypes.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-16 13:49:30 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
b905ab23af CI: add simd-checksum to expected-skipped on macOS and Cygwin
The new simd-checksum test is skipped on platforms where SIMD
instructions are unavailable (macOS ARM, Cygwin). Add it to the
RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED lists so CI doesn't fail on the mismatch.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-02 09:52:01 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
aa142f08ef fix uninitialized mul_one in AVX2 checksum and add SIMD checksum test
The AVX2 get_checksum1_avx2_64() read mul_one before initializing it,
which is undefined behavior. Replace the cmpeq/abs trick with
_mm256_set1_epi8(1) to match the SSSE3 and SSE2 versions.

Add a TEST_SIMD_CHECKSUM1 test mode that verifies all SIMD paths
(SSE2, SSSE3, AVX2, and the full dispatch chain) produce identical
results to the C reference, across multiple buffer sizes with both
aligned and unaligned buffers.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-02 09:52:01 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
236417cf35 acl: fixed ACL ID mapping for non-root
closes issue #618
2026-01-19 11:32:13 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
2a97d81e99 CI: fixed MacOS test
fixed multiple MacOS issues
2025-12-31 11:37:27 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
359e539a72 reject negative token values in compressed stream receivers
Validate that token numbers read from compressed streams are
non-negative. A negative token value would cause the return value
of recv_*_token() to become positive, which callers interpret as
literal data length, but no data pointer is set on this code path.

While this only causes the receiver to crash (which is process-isolated
and only affects the attacker's own connection), it's still undefined
behavior.

Reported-by: Will Sergeant <wlsergeant@gmail.com>
2025-12-31 09:31:52 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
9e0898460d util: fixed issue in clean_fname()
fixes buffer underflow (not exploitable) in clean_fname
2025-12-30 17:49:35 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
185520a141 testsuite: added clean-fname-underflow test 2025-12-30 17:49:35 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
c98f9d1f68 fix uninitialized buf1 in get_checksum2() MD4 path
The static buf1 pointer was only allocated when len > len1, but on
first call with len == 0, this condition is false (0 > 0), leaving
buf1 NULL when passed to memcpy().

Fixes #673
2025-12-30 16:51:43 +11:00
Nebojša Cvetković
1f9ce2fcbe rsync: Add missing dirs long option 2025-12-30 16:48:34 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
797e17fc4a fixed an invalid access to files array
this was found by Calum Hutton from Rapid7. It is a real bug, but
analysis shows it can't be leverged into an exploit. Worth fixing
though.

Many thanks to Calum and Rapid7 for finding and reporting this
2025-08-23 17:49:19 +10:00
Ronnie Sahlberg
c2db921890 options.c: Fix segv if poptGetContext returns NULL
If poptGetContext returns NULL, perhaps due to OOM,
a NULL pointer is passed into poptReadDefaultConfig()
which in turns SEGVs when trying to dereference it.

This was found using https://github.com/sahlberg/malloc-fail-tester.git
$ ./test_malloc_failure.sh rsync -Pav crash crosh

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <ronniesahlberg@gmail.com>
2025-08-23 17:49:03 +10:00
Silent
77be09aaed syscall: fix a Y2038 bug by replacing Int32x32To64 with multiplication
Int32x32To64 macro internally truncates the arguments to int32,
while time_t is 64-bit on most/all modern platforms.
Therefore, usage of this macro creates a Year 2038 bug.
2025-08-23 17:32:11 +10:00
Jeremy Norris
0d0f615240 Ignore directory has vanished errors. 2025-08-23 17:31:52 +10:00
Max Kellermann
b6457bbc83 make lots of global variables const
This way, they can live in `.rodata` and the compiler is allowed to do
certain optimizations.
2025-08-23 17:31:40 +10:00
Peter Eriksson
1807ce485a Fix handling of objects with many xattrs on FreeBSD 2025-08-23 17:31:28 +10:00
Rahul Mehta
9c175ac9ef chore: gitignore MacOS debug symbols 2025-08-23 17:31:12 +10:00
Emily
a84b79ea58 Allow ls(1) to fail in test setup
This can happen when the tests are unable to `stat(2)` some files in
`/etc`, `/bin`, or `/`, due to Unix permissions or other sandboxing. We
still guard against serious errors, which use exit code 2.
2025-08-23 17:30:59 +10:00
fbuescher
d4c4f6754e fixed remove multiple leading slashes 2025-08-23 17:14:43 +10:00
Michal Ruprich
a4b926dcdc bool is a keyword in C23 2025-08-23 17:14:26 +10:00
Eli Schwartz
0973d0e380 configure.ac: check for xattr support both in libc and in -lattr
In 2015, the attr/xattr.h header was fully removed from upstream attr.

In 2020, rsync started preferring the standard header, if it exists:
https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/pull/22

But the fix was incomplete. We still looked for the getxattr function in
-lattr, and used it if -lattr exists. This was the case even if the
system libc was sufficient to provide the needed functions. Result:
overlinking to -lattr, if it happened to be installed for any other
reason.

```
checking whether to support extended attributes... Using Linux xattrs
checking for getxattr in -lattr... yes
```

Instead, use a different autoconf macro that first checks if the
function is available for use without any libraries (e.g. it is in
libc).

Result:

```
checking whether to support extended attributes... Using Linux xattrs
checking for library containing getxattr... none required
```

Signed-off-by: Eli Schwartz <eschwartz@gentoo.org>
2025-08-23 17:14:06 +10:00
Ethan Halsall
e405cfc073 feat: add compress threads to man page 2025-08-23 17:13:49 +10:00
Ethan Halsall
b78a841bb0 feat: validate compress threads option 2025-08-23 17:13:49 +10:00
Ethan Halsall
f7a2b8a3fa feat: add threads to zstd compression 2025-08-23 17:13:49 +10:00
Arnaud Rebillout
d941807915 Fix flaky hardlinks test
The test was added in dc34990, it turns out that it's flaky. It failed
once on the Debian build infra, cf. [1].

The problem is that the command `rsync -aH '$fromdir/sym' '$todir'`
updates the mod time of `$todir`, so there might be a diff between the
output of `rsync_ls_lR $fromdir` and `rsync_ls_lR $todir`, if ever rsync
runs 1 second (or more) after the directories were created.

To clarify: it's easy to make the test fails 100% of the times with this
change:

```
 makepath "$fromdir/sym" "$todir"
+sleep 5
 checkit "$RSYNC -aH '$fromdir/sym' '$todir'" "$fromdir" "$todir"
```

With the fix proposed here, we don't use `checkit` anymore, instead we
just run the rsync command, then a simple `diff` to compare the two
directories. This is exactly what the other `-H` test just above does.

In case there's some doubts, `diff` fails if `sym` is missing:

```
$ mkdir -p foo/sym bar
$ diff foo bar || echo KO!
Only in foo: sym
KO!
```

I tested that, after this commit, the test still catches the `-H`
regression in rsync 3.4.0.

Fixes: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/issues/735

[1]: https://buildd.debian.org/status/fetch.php?pkg=rsync&arch=ppc64el&ver=3.4.1%2Bds1-1&stamp=1741147156&raw=0
2025-08-23 17:13:28 +10:00
Krzysztof Płocharz
992e10efaf Fix --open-noatime option not working on files
atime of source files could sometimes be overwritten
even though --open-noatime option was used.

To fix that, optional O_NOATIME flag was added
to do_open_nofollow which is also used to open regular
files since fix:
  "fixed symlink race condition in sender"
Previously optional O_NOATIME flag was only in do_open.
2025-08-23 17:13:09 +10:00
Chris Lamb
1c5ebdc4e5 Make the build reproducible
From https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=1093201:
Whilst working on the Reproducible Builds effort [0], we noticed that
rsync could not be built reproducibly.

This is because the date in the manual page can vary depending on
whether there is a .git directory and the modification time of version.h
and Mafile, which might get modified when patching via quilt.

A patch is attached that makes this use SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH, which
will always be reliable.
2025-08-23 16:40:34 +10:00
Wayne Davison
9994933c8c Test on ubuntu-latest. 2025-02-11 13:37:12 -08:00
Alan Coopersmith
23d9ead5af popt: remove obsolete findme.c & findme.h
popt 1.14 merged these into popt.c but the import into rsync
missed removing them.

Fixes: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/issues/710

Signed-off-by: Alan Coopersmith <alan.coopersmith@oracle.com>
2025-01-17 08:31:36 +11:00
Wayne Davison
fcfdd36054 Update MAINTAINER_TZ_OFFSET on release.
This also fixes a string with \s that wasn't a r'...' string.
2025-01-15 23:27:27 -08:00
Wayne Davison
89b847393f Fix python deprecation warning. 2025-01-15 22:36:29 -08:00
Wayne Davison
788ecbe5ea Don't edit copyright year values anymore. 2025-01-15 22:30:32 -08:00
Wayne Davison
353506bc51 Improve interior dashes in long options.
Improve the backslash-adding code in md-convert to affect dashes in the
interior of long options.  Perhaps fixes #686.
2025-01-15 22:23:30 -08:00
Wayne Davison
7cff121ec8 Start 3.4.2dev going. 2025-01-15 22:01:42 -08:00
Andrew Tridgell
14f33837dc fixed build error on ia64 NonStop
it treats missing prototype as an error, not warning
2025-01-16 15:27:21 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
3305a7a063 Preparing for release of 3.4.1 [buildall] 2025-01-16 07:49:23 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
494879b819 update NEWS.md for 3.4.1 2025-01-16 07:47:07 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
8d6da040e5 popt: remove dependency on alloca 2025-01-16 07:27:46 +11:00
Natanael Copa
68e9add76a Fix build on ancient glibc without openat(AT_FDCWD
Fixes: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/issues/701
2025-01-16 06:43:57 +11:00
Rodrigo OSORIO
dc34990b2e Test send a single directory with -H enabled
Ensure this still working after 3.4.0 breakage

https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/issues/702
2025-01-16 06:32:17 +11:00
Natanael Copa
81ead9e70c Fix use-after-free in generator
full_fname() will free the return value in the next call so we need to
duplicate it before passing it to rsyserr.

Fixes: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/issues/704
2025-01-16 06:27:26 +11:00
Natanael Copa
996af4a79f Fix FLAG_GOT_DIR_FLIST collission with FLAG_HLINKED
fixes commit 688f5c379a (Refuse a duplicate dirlist.)

Fixes: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/issues/702
Fixes: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/issues/697
2025-01-16 06:21:54 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
dacadd53a9 update maintainer address
use rsync.project@gmail.com
2025-01-15 12:13:41 +11:00
Wayne Davison
a6312e60c9 Force rsync group when uploading files. 2025-01-14 13:09:33 -08:00
Andrew Tridgell
e3ee0e7319 Preparing for release of 3.4.0 [buildall] 2025-01-15 05:53:23 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
0fd29b6bcb packaging: adjust release script
remove auto-edit of NEWS.md
2025-01-15 05:50:22 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
7f79682732 NEWS: update protocol version table 2025-01-15 05:50:05 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
870b7d96dc update NEWS for 3.4.0 2025-01-15 05:30:32 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
9dc31473ba change version to 3.4.0 2025-01-15 05:30:32 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
536ae3f4ef raise protocol version to 32
make it easier to spot unpatched servers
2025-01-15 05:30:32 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
0590b09d9a fixed symlink race condition in sender
when we open a file that we don't expect to be a symlink use
O_NOFOLLOW to prevent a race condition where an attacker could change
a file between being a normal file and a symlink
2025-01-15 05:30:32 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
407c71c7ce make --safe-links stricter
when --safe-links is used also reject links where a '../' component is
included in the destination as other than the leading part of the
filename
2025-01-15 05:30:32 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
344327385f range check dir_ndx before use 2025-01-15 05:30:32 +11:00
Wayne Davison
688f5c379a Refuse a duplicate dirlist. 2025-01-15 05:30:32 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
9f86ddc965 disallow ../ elements in relpath for secure_relative_open 2025-01-15 05:30:32 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
c35e28331f receiver: use secure_relative_open() for basis file
this prevents attacks where the basis file is manipulated by a
malicious sender to gain information about files outside the
destination tree
2025-01-15 05:30:32 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
b4a27ca25d added secure_relative_open()
this is an open that enforces no symlink following for all path
components in a relative path
2025-01-15 05:30:32 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
8ad4b5d912 refuse fuzzy options when fuzzy not selected
this prevents a malicious server providing a file to compare to when
the user has not given the fuzzy option
2025-01-15 05:30:32 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
589b0691e5 prevent information leak off the stack
prevent leak of uninitialised stack data in hash_search
2025-01-15 05:30:32 +11:00
Charalampos Mitrodimas
36212021f0 hlink: Fix function pointer cast in qsort()
Replace unsafe generic function pointer cast with proper type cast for
qsort() comparison function. This fixes a potential type mismatch
warning without changing the behavior.

Signed-off-by: Charalampos Mitrodimas <charmitro@posteo.net>
2024-12-18 08:56:27 +11:00
Andrew Tridgell
2b38542e0d added security email address to README.md 2024-12-18 08:55:45 +11:00
Frederic Grabowski
321dd78f8c fix typo in manual page 2024-11-19 21:45:50 -08:00
Romain Geissler
6f10f12577 When not using the builtin zlib, link it before linking libcrypto, as libcrypto depends on zlib.
This prevents "undefined symbol" errors which might arise from libcrypto.a if linking openssl statically.
2024-11-19 21:40:14 -08:00
Colin Watson
1a95869dfc Allow basic connectivity check via rrsync
rsbackup (https://github.com/ewxrjk/rsbackup) uses "ssh <host> true" to
check that the host in question is reachable.  I like to configure my
backed-up hosts to force the backup system to go via `rrsync`, but I
always have to add a local tweak to allow `SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND=true` to
work.  I think this would be safe enough to include in rrsync.
2024-11-19 21:35:49 -08:00
Rose
c9fe6ca304 Introduce PTR_SUB
This is more intuitive than adding a negative number.
2024-11-19 21:33:30 -08:00
Samuel Henrique
990fa5c1e1 rrsync: fix wrong parameter name in manpage SYNOPSIS
Replace ¨rw¨ with ¨ro¨.

Reported on Debian by Adriano Rafael Gomes <adrianorg@debian.org>
2024-11-19 21:32:18 -08:00
Holger Hoffstätte
07069880a2 Fix warning about conflicting lseek/lseek64 prototypes
Clang rightfully complains about conflicting prototypes, as both lseek() variants
are redefined:

  syscall.c:394:10: warning: a function declaration without a prototype is deprecated
  in all versions of C and is treated as a zero-parameter prototype in C2x, conflicting
  with a previous declaration [-Wdeprecated-non-prototype]
        off64_t lseek64();
                ^
/usr/include/unistd.h:350:18: note: conflicting prototype is here
extern __off64_t lseek64 (int __fd, __off64_t __offset, int __whence)
                 ^
1 warning generated.

The point of the #ifdef is to build for the configured OFF_T; there is
no reason to redefine lseek/lseek64, which should have been found
via configure.

Signed-off-by: Holger Hoffstätte <holger@applied-asynchrony.com>
2024-11-19 21:28:39 -08:00
Holger Hoffstätte
e55b190f4a Fix warning about missing bomb(..) prototype
Clang rightfully complains about invoking bomb(..) without a proper prototype:
  lib/pool_alloc.c:171:16: warning: passing arguments to a function without a prototype
  is deprecated in all versions of C and is not supported in C2x [-Wdeprecated-non-prototype]
                (*pool->bomb)(bomb_msg, __FILE__, __LINE__);
                             ^
1 warning generated.

Signed-off-by: Holger Hoffstätte <holger@applied-asynchrony.com>
2024-11-19 21:28:39 -08:00
Holger Hoffstätte
48d51a1370 Fix __m128i_u / __m256i_u alignment
Building with clang-16 complains with:
./simd-checksum-x86_64.cpp:204:25: warning: passing 1-byte aligned argument to
  16-byte aligned parameter 1 of '_mm_store_si128' may result in an unaligned pointer
  access [-Walign-mismatch]

Signed-off-by: Holger Hoffstätte <holger@applied-asynchrony.com>
2024-11-19 21:28:39 -08:00
Wayne Davison
f654e47691 Mention latest NEWS. 2024-11-14 11:59:12 -08:00
Wayne Davison
83ad3533d4 Always check old==new, even for missing array size. 2024-11-14 11:53:40 -08:00
Wayne Davison
fa28c5d693 Improve packaging/var-checker.
Make var-checker compare the variable type of the extern vars to ensure
that they are all consistent. Fix the remaining issues.
2024-11-14 11:42:24 -08:00
Carlo Marcelo Arenas Belón
62bb9bba02 acls: correct type/size for orig_umask
Since 05278935 (- Call mkdir_defmode() instead of do_mkdir(). - Define
orig_umask in this file, not options.c. - Made orig_umask a mode_t, not an
int., 2006-02-24), the type for the global was changed, and therefore on
systems where sizeof(mode_t) != sizeof(int), writes or reads to them will
overflow to adjacent bytes.

Change the type to the one used everywhere else and avoid this problem.

While at it, silence again a warning that is being triggered by
Apple's clang 15.
2024-11-14 07:15:14 +11:00
Wayne Davison
6601510425 Mention more NEWS. 2024-11-09 11:05:16 -08:00
Wayne Davison
f7ac7ffd16 Some minor option/prompt tweaks. 2024-11-05 17:50:16 -08:00
Wayne Davison
4320c25fcc More helper script improvements. 2024-11-05 13:44:17 -08:00
Wayne Davison
4490fb8660 Add some info for making a release. 2024-11-05 13:03:04 -08:00
Wayne Davison
475ca7d43c Add helper script for updating samba files. 2024-11-05 12:42:42 -08:00
Wayne Davison
7c3c54b132 Don't force zsh use. 2024-11-05 11:20:28 -08:00
Wayne Davison
bcf0738f98 Indentation tweak. 2024-11-05 11:20:17 -08:00
Wayne Davison
8749ec6436 Update to newer artifact version. 2024-11-05 11:14:46 -08:00
Wayne Davison
42e2b56c4e Another cast when multiplying integers. 2024-11-05 11:01:03 -08:00
Wayne Davison
0902b52f66 Some checksum buffer fixes.
- Put sum2_array into sum_struct to hold an array of sum2 checksums
  that are each xfer_sum_len bytes.
- Remove sum2 buf from sum_buf.
- Add macro sum2_at() to access each sum2 array element.
- Throw an error if a sums header has an s2length larger than
  xfer_sum_len.
2024-10-29 23:06:34 -07:00
vincent sgherzi
9615a2492b added apple silicon path details 2024-05-29 11:19:19 +10:00
Wayne Davison
4592aa770d More tweaks for Actions.
- When a .github/workflows/*.yml file changes, skip running unaffected
  builds.
- We need git to be installed for git-version.h generation.
2024-04-10 13:24:09 -07:00
Wayne Davison
8bc363cc9f Separate the builds and make Cygwin always run. 2024-04-10 13:02:34 -07:00
Wayne Davison
a9a3155756 Work around pkg install issue.
The xxhash, lz4, and zstd libraries aren't getting installed on FreeBSD.
[buildall]
2024-04-10 12:45:26 -07:00
Wayne Davison
fcc79836b8 Get fetch-depth:0 right. 2024-04-10 12:30:05 -07:00
Wayne Davison
804411b7fd Get rid of gensend target & cached git version.
- Change the developer flow to not require updating the git-version repo
  that the builds used to download a git-version.h file. The Actions now
  do a full repo fetch so that the .h file can be generated via the git
  history.
- Get rid of the gensend Makefile target that was used for the above.
- Get rid of the pre-push git hook file that called "Make gensend".
- Change the FreeBSD build to save an artifact with its built binaries.

[buildall]
2024-04-10 12:23:58 -07:00
Wayne Davison
0b1b2a3ff4 Get the "dev" suffix right. 2024-04-10 11:53:17 -07:00
Wayne Davison
50bdf9685d Remove duplicate paragraph. 2024-04-10 11:51:59 -07:00
Charalampos Mitrodimas
3f2a38b011 CI: added Solaris build
Signed-off-by: Charalampos Mitrodimas <charmitro@posteo.net>
2024-04-09 07:34:26 +10:00
Wayne Davison
5510255f12 Tweak maintainer messaging. 2024-04-08 13:16:12 -07:00
Wayne Davison
56a039b04a Changes for 3.3.1dev. 2024-04-08 13:15:16 -07:00
Andrew Tridgell
7bc3be2b9e CI: fixed rules for when to trigger 2024-04-08 15:50:47 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
411c4789df support: added install_deps_ubuntu.sh
convenient way to bootstrap quickly
2024-04-08 15:32:16 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
231b239f30 check for stpcpy
needed for popt on macos
2024-04-08 15:31:36 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
4c8683c875 update to popt 1.19 2024-04-08 15:31:36 +10:00
Rose
85c906f964 Silence unused var warning
recv_ida_entries still needs to be called regardless, so we cannot take that out. Let's just quiet the compiler instead.
2024-04-07 09:28:03 +10:00
Christian Hesse
35f5a21a16 hint that a proxy can handle plain and ssl stream at the same time 2024-04-07 09:25:46 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
99673f937f CI: added FreeBSD build 2024-04-07 08:07:50 +10:00
Andrew Tridgell
9505ac5945 removed old cirrus CI 2024-04-07 08:07:50 +10:00
Ivan Babrou
0dd25d4752 configure.ac: fix failing IPv6 check due to missing return type
Fixing this warning escalated to an error, resuting in no IPv6 support:

```
configure.sh:7679: checking whether to enable ipv6
configure.sh:7718: clang -o conftest -g -O2 -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -Wall -W   conftest.c  >&5
conftest.c:73:1: error: type specifier missing, defaults to 'int'; ISO C99 and later do not support implicit int [-Wimplicit-int]
main()
^
int
1 error generated.
configure.sh:7718: $? = 1
configure.sh: program exited with status 1
```
2024-04-07 07:46:47 +10:00
Wayne Davison
ae3e13ba99 Update github links. 2024-04-06 10:33:42 -07:00
Wayne Davison
6c8ca91c73 Preparing for release of 3.3.0 [buildall] 2024-04-06 09:30:21 -07:00
Wayne Davison
079e74a30f Some year updates. 2024-04-06 09:22:29 -07:00
Wayne Davison
abc3c74652 Mention latest changes in NEWS. 2024-04-06 09:22:29 -07:00
Jiri Slaby
99ab59464b exclude: fix crashes with fortified strlcpy()
Fortified (-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 for gcc) builds make strlcpy() crash when
its third parameter (size) is larger than the buffer:
  $ rsync -FFXHav '--filter=merge global-rsync-filter' Align-37-43/ xxx
  sending incremental file list
  *** buffer overflow detected ***: terminated

It's in the exclude code in setup_merge_file():
  strlcpy(y, save, MAXPATHLEN);

Note the 'y' pointer was incremented, so it no longer points to memory
with MAXPATHLEN "owned" bytes.

Fix it by remembering the number of copied bytes into the 'save' buffer
and use that instead of MAXPATHLEN which is clearly incorrect.

Fixes #511.
2024-04-06 08:41:41 -07:00
Grant Gardner
a47ae6fad9 typo in rsyncd.conf.5.md 2024-04-06 09:53:47 +11:00
Wayne Davison
2f9b963aba Make --max-alloc=0 safer.
Always do size checking in my_alloc(), even for `--max-alloc=0`.
2023-06-27 09:01:25 -07:00
Wayne Davison
3476caea3e Convert mnt-excl into python. 2023-05-22 08:29:15 -07:00
Wayne Davison
6f3c5eccee Fix old stats bug that counted devices as symlinks. 2023-05-16 22:44:54 -07:00
Wayne Davison
79fda35342 A couple more NEWS improvements. 2023-05-08 08:15:42 -07:00
Wayne Davison
cd76993461 Mention updated config files. 2023-05-04 08:45:42 -07:00
zhangwenlong
05a683900f update config.guess config.sub (#478)
- curl -sL -o config.guess 'https://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=config.git;a=blob_plain;f=config.guess;hb=HEAD'
- curl -sL -o config.sub 'https://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=config.git;a=blob_plain;f=config.sub;hb=HEAD'

Signed-off-by: Wenlong Zhang <zhangwenlong@loongson.cn>
2023-05-04 08:41:52 -07:00
Wayne Davison
86f41650fb A couple spelling tweaks; tweak order. 2023-04-30 17:28:50 -07:00
Wayne Davison
9a06b2edb0 Preparing for release of 3.3.0pre1 [buildall] 2023-04-29 09:01:43 -07:00
Wayne Davison
273dced284 Update the NEWS. 2023-04-29 09:01:09 -07:00
Wayne Davison
b6e2321973 Mention that --crtimes support is spotty. 2023-04-29 08:21:19 -07:00
Wayne Davison
fe95a9369a Fix issue with trailing --sparse --inplace blocks.
Fixes #450.
2023-04-29 07:56:27 -07:00
Wayne Davison
6ae7f4085a Add --force-link-text to md-convert. 2023-04-23 08:26:32 -07:00
Wayne Davison
0f599d3641 Fix overflow of sum2 buffer for sha1 rolling checksums.
Fixed #353.
2023-04-22 08:49:50 -07:00
Wayne Davison
c3d3b49d72 Make use of .UR & .UE for links. 2023-04-22 08:40:27 -07:00
Wayne Davison
c69dc7a5ab Tweak shell protection news to mention a few more characters. 2023-03-30 12:56:49 -07:00
dogvisor
2c82006b1f add rrsync option to enforce --ignore-existing (#461)
The `-no-overwrite` rrsync option disallows the updating of existing files for incoming rrsync copies.
2023-03-30 12:55:56 -07:00
Wayne Davison
0698ea9aeb Fix flist string comparison issue in tr_TR.utf-8 locale. 2023-02-05 19:46:45 -08:00
Wayne Davison
90df93e446 Don't call memcmp() on an empty lastdir. 2023-01-08 21:35:39 -08:00
Wayne Davison
5c93dedf45 Add backtick to SHELL_CHARS. 2023-01-04 21:52:48 -08:00
Wayne Davison
f1e3434b59 Trust the sender on a local transfer. 2022-12-01 20:24:17 -08:00
Wayne Davison
48252c3c2b A couple manpage links. 2022-11-23 07:59:12 -08:00
Wayne Davison
5b67ff2a86 Improve [global] module documentation. 2022-11-22 22:55:52 -08:00
Wayne Davison
8990ad96de Duplicate argv data before poptFreeContext(). 2022-11-22 22:21:15 -08:00
Wayne Davison
0f44e864d4 Another python conversion. 2022-11-20 09:38:12 -08:00
Wayne Davison
ab0d5021ed Convert a few more scripts to python3. 2022-11-16 00:10:09 -08:00
Wayne Davison
7402896523 Tweak an older NEWS item to be a bit clearer. 2022-11-09 16:04:02 -08:00
Wayne Davison
5374994089 Avoid quoting of tilde when it's a destination arg. 2022-11-05 09:22:10 -07:00
Wayne Davison
526366129a Upgrade verion of actions. 2022-11-02 23:54:41 -07:00
Wayne Davison
556a2c5bc2 Check for EVP_MD_CTX_copy in crypto lib instead of MD5_Init. 2022-10-25 21:55:53 -07:00
Wayne Davison
27feda0436 Call OpenSSL_add_all_algorithms() on older openssl versions. 2022-10-25 09:04:45 -07:00
Wayne Davison
bf96cd314c Init the checksum choices before the daemon auth. 2022-10-25 09:04:45 -07:00
Wayne Davison
1b2688807d Fix protocol <= 29 daemon auth if openssl is handling md4. 2022-10-24 08:38:00 -07:00
Wayne Davison
08ec80ac65 Cygwin needs stdout flushed. [buildall] 2022-10-22 12:04:32 -07:00
Wayne Davison
6b5ae825db Preparing for release of 3.2.7 [buildall] 2022-10-20 17:57:22 -07:00
Wayne Davison
3b719d1d6e Improve JSON output a bit more. 2022-10-20 17:50:06 -07:00
Wayne Davison
ebe1af749c Make use of -VV when checking rsync capabilities. 2022-10-20 09:09:26 -07:00
Wayne Davison
de6848ed97 Re-run the exclude test using lsh.sh pull.
The exclude.test file continues to run local copies (which are a special
kind of "push") while the exclude-lsh.test symlink runs a a "pull" using
the lsh.sh script as the "remote" shell.
2022-10-19 20:58:29 -07:00
Wayne Davison
42f8386823 Improve --mkpath a bit more. 2022-10-16 12:27:30 -07:00
Wayne Davison
ad6245f394 Include "buildall" flag in the release commit. 2022-10-16 12:14:46 -07:00
Wayne Davison
ca980b5863 Yet another manpage tweak. 2022-10-16 12:10:05 -07:00
Wayne Davison
677aa0dc91 Fix version verification when "\|" doesn't work in sed. 2022-10-16 11:14:15 -07:00
Wayne Davison
025596757c Silence autoconf warnings. 2022-10-16 10:28:58 -07:00
Wayne Davison
449d9bf950 Make the new manpage section better. 2022-10-16 10:26:39 -07:00
Wayne Davison
35ecec972a A few more manpage clarifications. 2022-10-15 17:02:18 -07:00
Alexponomarev7
d76cabe54f Fix autoconf help strings (#389) 2022-10-15 16:54:27 -07:00
Wayne Davison
b5544a95b1 Add info on single-file copying; tweak --mkpath. 2022-10-12 10:16:47 -07:00
Wayne Davison
11bd2a4fd6 Tweak NEWS. 2022-10-10 08:55:09 -07:00
Wayne Davison
6ba434de5c Change fgrep to grep. 2022-10-06 22:18:48 -07:00
Wayne Davison
3296351442 Fix validation of "preN" git tags for git-version.h. 2022-10-02 11:43:46 -07:00
Wayne Davison
0088a85aeb Mention smart-make in a comment. 2022-10-02 11:26:44 -07:00
Wayne Davison
4923c4dc0c Mention the --list-only output format. 2022-10-02 10:35:23 -07:00
Wayne Davison
76c4fa8b54 Mention latest changes. 2022-10-02 10:03:00 -07:00
Wayne Davison
25efa10802 Complain if the destination arg is empty. 2022-10-02 09:54:59 -07:00
Wayne Davison
fdf5e577f5 Read a 4-byte mtime as unsigned (old-protocol).
When conversing with a protocol 29 or earlier rsync, the modtime values
are arriving as 4-byte integers.  This change interprets these short
values as unsigned integers, allowing the time that can be conveyed to
range from 1-Jan-1970 to 7-Feb-2106 instead of the signed range of
13-Dec-1901 to 19-Jan-2038.  Given that we are fast approaching 2038,
any old-protocol transfers will be better served using the unsigned
range rather than the signed.

It is important to keep in mind that protocol 30 & 31 convey the full
8-byte mtime value (plus nanoseconds), allowing for a huge span of time
that is not affected by this change.
2022-10-02 09:54:54 -07:00
Wayne Davison
19bd0dd340 Use newer protocol to avoid mtime corruption. 2022-10-01 08:04:00 -07:00
379 changed files with 30664 additions and 9003 deletions

View File

@@ -1,23 +0,0 @@
freebsd_task:
name: FreeBSD
freebsd_instance:
image_family: freebsd-13-1
env:
PATH: /usr/local/bin:$PATH
prep_script:
- dd if=/dev/zero of=/tmp/zpool bs=1M count=1024
- zpool create -m `pwd`/testtmp zpool /tmp/zpool
- pkg install -y bash autotools m4 xxhash zstd liblz4 wget
- wget -O git-version.h https://gist.githubusercontent.com/WayneD/c11243fa374fc64d4e42f2855c8e3827/raw/rsync-git-version.h
configure_script:
- CPPFLAGS=-I/usr/local/include/ LDFLAGS=-L/usr/local/lib/ ./configure --disable-md2man
make_script:
- make
install_script:
- make install
info_script:
- rsync --version
test_script:
- RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=acls-default,acls,crtimes,protected-regular make check
ssl_file_list_script:
- rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true

16
.gitattributes vendored
View File

@@ -1 +1,17 @@
* text=auto eol=lf
# The rsync-web/ subdirectory holds the project website source content
# (mirrors what gets pushed to https://rsync.samba.org). Exclude it from
# `git archive` output so the release source tarball produced by
# packaging/release.py step_7_tarball does not bloat with HTML the
# tarball doesn't need.
/rsync-web/ export-ignore
# old_versions/ holds static binaries of historical rsync releases, used by the
# version-mixing test suite (.github/workflows/ubuntu-version-mix.yml) to run
# the current code against a real old peer over the daemon / remote-shell.
# Mark the binaries as binary so the `text=auto eol=lf` rule above can't try to
# normalise line endings and corrupt them; export-ignore keeps them out of the
# release source tarball.
/old_versions/rsync_* binary
/old_versions/rsync_* export-ignore

43
.github/workflows/actionlint.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,43 @@
name: Lint GitHub Actions workflows
# Static-check the workflow YAML with rhysd/actionlint. Catches missing
# secrets, bad expressions, expression-type errors, unsupported runner
# images, and (via embedded shellcheck) common pitfalls in `run:` scripts.
# Trigger only on changes under .github/workflows/ so the rest of the
# matrix isn't billed when nothing here moves.
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '.github/actionlint.yaml'
- '.github/actionlint.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '.github/actionlint.yaml'
- '.github/actionlint.yml'
permissions:
contents: read
jobs:
actionlint:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: actionlint
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: install actionlint
# Pin a version so this job is reproducible; bump deliberately.
# The download script verifies a SHA256 of the release tarball.
run: |
bash <(curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -fsSL \
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rhysd/actionlint/main/scripts/download-actionlint.bash) \
1.7.12
echo "$PWD" >>"$GITHUB_PATH"
- name: actionlint --version
run: actionlint -version
- name: actionlint .github/workflows/*.yml
run: actionlint -color

83
.github/workflows/almalinux-8-build.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,83 @@
name: Test rsync on AlmaLinux 8
# Older-LTS coverage on the Fedora/RHEL family to help with backporting
# security fixes. AlmaLinux 8 is the RHEL 8 rebuild and is the oldest
# active LTS in this family (RHEL 8 full support runs to 2029).
# GitHub Actions has no native runner for this family, so the job runs
# inside an almalinux:8 container hosted on ubuntu-latest.
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/almalinux-8-build.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/almalinux-8-build.yml'
schedule:
- cron: '42 8 * * *'
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
container:
image: almalinux:8
name: Test rsync on AlmaLinux 8
steps:
- name: install git
# actions/checkout needs git in the container before the checkout step.
run: dnf -y install git
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: prep
# PowerTools is needed for libzstd-devel etc; xxhash and lz4 dev
# headers live in EPEL on RHEL 8. The default python3 on RHEL 8
# is 3.6, which is too old for runtests.py (uses capture_output=
# / text= introduced in 3.7), so install python39 and point
# /usr/bin/python3 at it.
run: |
dnf -y install epel-release
dnf config-manager --set-enabled powertools
dnf -y install gcc gcc-c++ make autoconf automake m4 \
python39 python39-pip diffutils \
openssl openssl-devel \
attr libattr-devel acl libacl-devel \
zstd libzstd-devel \
lz4 lz4-devel \
xxhash xxhash-devel
alternatives --set python3 /usr/bin/python3.9
pip3 install commonmark
- name: configure
run: ./configure --with-rrsync
- name: make
run: make
- name: info
run: ./rsync --version
- name: check
# In the container we already run as root, so no sudo. The
# crtimes-not-supported skip matches the other Linux jobs;
# daemon-chroot-acl and proxy-response-line-too-long skip because
# the default (secure) transport opens no listening socket.
run: RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=crtimes,daemon-access-ip,daemon-chroot-acl,proxy-response-line-too-long make check
- name: check (TCP daemon transport)
# Second run exercising the real loopback-TCP daemon path.
run: ./runtests.py --rsync-bin="$PWD/rsync" --use-tcp -j 8
- name: ssl file list
run: ./rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true
- name: save artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
retention-days: 45
name: almalinux-8-bin
path: |
rsync
rsync-ssl
rsync.1
rsync-ssl.1
rsyncd.conf.5
rrsync.1
rrsync

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,121 @@
name: Build static rsync for Android
# Cross-compiles statically-linked rsync binaries with the Android NDK,
# suitable for dropping onto a phone (adb push / Termux) with no shared
# libraries. arm64-v8a covers all modern phones; armeabi-v7a covers older
# 32-bit devices. The binaries are uploaded as workflow artifacts.
#
# These are cross-compiled, so the test suite can't run here; we sanity
# check that each binary is the right architecture, is static, and that
# it executes (`--version`) under qemu-user.
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/android-static-build.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/android-static-build.yml'
schedule:
- cron: '42 8 * * *'
workflow_dispatch:
env:
# Minimum supported API level. 24 (Android 7.0) runs on every modern
# phone while keeping broad reach; bump if you need newer Bionic APIs.
ANDROID_API: 24
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: ${{ matrix.abi }}
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
include:
- abi: arm64-v8a # modern phones
triple: aarch64-linux-android
qemu: qemu-aarch64-static
- abi: armeabi-v7a # older 32-bit phones
triple: armv7a-linux-androideabi
qemu: qemu-arm-static
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: Install build prerequisites
run: sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y autoconf automake gawk qemu-user-static
- name: Configure and build (${{ matrix.abi }})
shell: bash
run: |
set -euo pipefail
NDK="${ANDROID_NDK_LATEST_HOME:-$ANDROID_NDK_ROOT}"
TC="$NDK/toolchains/llvm/prebuilt/linux-x86_64/bin"
export CC="$TC/${{ matrix.triple }}${ANDROID_API}-clang"
export AR="$TC/llvm-ar" RANLIB="$TC/llvm-ranlib" STRIP="$TC/llvm-strip"
export CFLAGS="-O2" LDFLAGS="-static"
# Bionic doesn't declare lchmod()/lutimes() until API 36, but the
# symbols link, so configure mis-detects them -- force them off so
# rsync uses its fallbacks. The other cache vars restore values
# that configure can't probe when cross-compiling (Android runs a
# normal Linux kernel, so these match the native Linux result).
export ac_cv_func_lchmod=no ac_cv_func_lutimes=no \
rsync_cv_HAVE_SOCKETPAIR=yes \
rsync_cv_MKNOD_CREATES_FIFOS=yes \
rsync_cv_MKNOD_CREATES_SOCKETS=yes
# Self-contained build: drop optional external libraries so the
# static binary needs nothing at runtime. rsync keeps md5/md4
# checksums and its bundled zlib.
./configure --host=${{ matrix.triple }} --build=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu \
--enable-ipv6 \
--disable-zstd --disable-lz4 --disable-xxhash --disable-openssl \
--disable-iconv --disable-iconv-open \
--disable-acl-support --disable-xattr-support \
--disable-md2man --disable-roll-simd \
--with-included-popt --with-included-zlib
# Generate the awk-built headers serially first so the parallel
# build can't race on proto.h <- daemon-parm.h.
make proto.h
make -j"$(nproc)" rsync
"$STRIP" rsync
- name: Verify binary
shell: bash
run: |
set -euo pipefail
file rsync
# Gate: must be a statically-linked executable (no interpreter).
file rsync | grep -q "statically linked"
if file rsync | grep -q "dynamically linked"; then
echo "ERROR: binary is not static" >&2; exit 1
fi
# Best-effort: confirm it actually runs under qemu-user.
${{ matrix.qemu }} ./rsync --version | head -3 || \
echo "WARNING: qemu smoke test did not run cleanly (check on a real device)"
- name: Package
shell: bash
run: |
set -euo pipefail
VER=$(sed -n 's/.*RSYNC_VERSION "\([^"]*\)".*/\1/p' version.h)
out="rsync-${VER}-android-${{ matrix.abi }}"
mkdir -p dist
cp rsync "dist/$out"
( cd dist && sha256sum "$out" > "$out.sha256" )
echo "ARTIFACT_NAME=rsync-android-${{ matrix.abi }}" >>"$GITHUB_ENV"
- name: Upload artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
retention-days: 45
name: ${{ env.ARTIFACT_NAME }}
path: dist/

View File

@@ -1,125 +0,0 @@
name: build
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore: [ .cirrus.yml ]
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore: [ .cirrus.yml ]
schedule:
- cron: '42 8 * * *'
jobs:
ubuntu-build:
runs-on: ubuntu-20.04
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: prep
run: |
sudo apt-get install acl libacl1-dev attr libattr1-dev liblz4-dev libzstd-dev libxxhash-dev python3-cmarkgfm openssl wget
wget -O git-version.h https://gist.githubusercontent.com/WayneD/c11243fa374fc64d4e42f2855c8e3827/raw/rsync-git-version.h
echo "/usr/local/bin" >>$GITHUB_PATH
- name: configure
run: ./configure --with-rrsync
- name: make
run: make
- name: install
run: sudo make install
- name: info
run: rsync --version
- name: check
run: sudo RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=crtimes make check
- name: check30
run: sudo RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=crtimes make check30
- name: check29
run: sudo RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=crtimes make check29
- name: ssl file list
run: rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true
- name: save artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v2
with:
name: ubuntu-bin
path: |
rsync
rsync-ssl
rsync.1
rsync-ssl.1
rsyncd.conf.5
rrsync.1
rrsync
macos-build:
runs-on: macos-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: prep
run: |
brew install automake openssl xxhash zstd lz4 wget
sudo pip3 install commonmark
wget -O git-version.h https://gist.githubusercontent.com/WayneD/c11243fa374fc64d4e42f2855c8e3827/raw/rsync-git-version.h
echo "/usr/local/bin" >>$GITHUB_PATH
- name: configure
run: CPPFLAGS=-I/usr/local/opt/openssl/include/ LDFLAGS=-L/usr/local/opt/openssl/lib/ ./configure --with-rrsync
- name: make
run: make
- name: install
run: sudo make install
- name: info
run: rsync --version
- name: check
run: sudo RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=acls-default,chmod-temp-dir,chown-fake,devices-fake,dir-sgid,protected-regular,xattrs-hlink,xattrs make check
- name: ssl file list
run: rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true
- name: save artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v2
with:
name: macos-bin
path: |
rsync
rsync-ssl
rsync.1
rsync-ssl.1
rsyncd.conf.5
rrsync.1
rrsync
cygwin-build:
runs-on: windows-2022
if: (github.event_name == 'schedule' || contains(github.event.head_commit.message, '[buildall]'))
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: cygwin
run: choco install -y --no-progress cygwin cyg-get
- name: prep
run: |
cyg-get make autoconf automake gcc-core attr libattr-devel python39 python39-pip libzstd-devel liblz4-devel libssl-devel libxxhash0 libxxhash-devel
curl.exe -o git-version.h https://gist.githubusercontent.com/WayneD/c11243fa374fc64d4e42f2855c8e3827/raw/rsync-git-version.h
echo "C:/tools/cygwin/bin" >>$Env:GITHUB_PATH
- name: commonmark
run: bash -c 'python3 -mpip install --user commonmark'
- name: configure
run: bash -c './configure --with-rrsync'
- name: make
run: bash -c 'make'
- name: install
run: bash -c 'make install'
- name: info
run: bash -c '/usr/local/bin/rsync --version'
- name: check
run: bash -c 'RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=acls-default,acls,chown,devices,dir-sgid,protected-regular make check'
- name: ssl file list
run: bash -c 'PATH="/usr/local/bin:$PATH" rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true'
- name: save artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v2
with:
name: cygwin-bin
path: |
rsync.exe
rsync-ssl
rsync.1
rsync-ssl.1
rsyncd.conf.5
rrsync.1
rrsync

72
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name: Coverage (Ubuntu)
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/coverage.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/coverage.yml'
schedule:
- cron: '42 9 * * *'
workflow_dispatch:
jobs:
coverage:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: gcov coverage
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: prep
run: |
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y acl libacl1-dev attr libattr1-dev liblz4-dev libzstd-dev libxxhash-dev python3-cmarkgfm openssl gcovr
echo "/usr/local/bin" >>"$GITHUB_PATH"
- name: configure
run: ./configure --enable-coverage --with-rrsync
- name: make
run: make
- name: info
run: rsync --version
# Two coverage runs: the default pipe transport, then a second pass over a
# real loopback rsyncd (--use-tcp) which also exercises the require_tcp-only
# tests. gcovr's --print-summary line/branch/decision totals go to the step
# log (and the job summary below), so the numbers are visible in CI.
# `make coverage` exits with the suite's status, so a regression fails CI.
- name: coverage (pipe transport)
run: |
set -o pipefail
sudo make coverage 2>&1 | tee cov-pipe.log
- name: coverage (TCP transport)
run: |
set -o pipefail
sudo make coverage-tcp 2>&1 | tee cov-tcp.log
- name: coverage summary
if: always()
run: |
{
echo "## gcov coverage"
echo "### Pipe transport (\`make coverage\`)"
echo '```'
grep -E '^(lines|functions|branches|decisions):' cov-pipe.log || echo '(no summary -- see step log)'
echo '```'
echo "### TCP transport (\`make coverage-tcp\`)"
echo '```'
grep -E '^(lines|functions|branches|decisions):' cov-tcp.log || echo '(no summary -- see step log)'
echo '```'
} >> "$GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY"
- name: upload HTML reports
if: always()
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
retention-days: 45
name: coverage-html
path: |
coverage
coverage-tcp

68
.github/workflows/cygwin-build.yml vendored Normal file
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name: Test rsync on Cygwin
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/cygwin-build.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/cygwin-build.yml'
schedule:
- cron: '42 8 * * *'
jobs:
test:
runs-on: windows-2022
name: Test rsync on Cygwin
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: cygwin
run: choco install -y --no-progress cygwin cyg-get
- name: prep
run: |
cyg-get make autoconf automake gcc-core attr libattr-devel python39 python39-pip libzstd-devel liblz4-devel libssl-devel libxxhash0 libxxhash-devel
echo "C:/tools/cygwin/bin" >>$Env:GITHUB_PATH
- name: commonmark
run: bash -c 'python3 -mpip install --user commonmark'
- name: configure
run: bash -c './configure --with-rrsync'
- name: make
run: bash -c 'make'
- name: install
run: bash -c 'make install'
- name: info
run: bash -c '/usr/local/bin/rsync --version'
- name: check
# chown-fake / devices-fake / xattrs / xattrs-hlink now RUN on Cygwin
# (rsyncfns.py drives xattrs via getfattr/setfattr from the `attr`
# package installed above), verified on a real Cygwin host. The real
# chown/devices tests still skip (need root/mknod), as do the
# RESOLVE_BENEATH symlink-race tests. symlink-dirlink-basis also now
# RUNS (the #915 non-daemon basis open uses a plain do_open, restoring
# following an in-tree dir-symlink basis without RESOLVE_BENEATH).
run: bash -c 'RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=acls-default,acls-depth,acls,bare-do-open-symlink-race,chdir-symlink-race,chown,daemon-access-ip,daemon-chroot-acl,devices,dir-sgid,open-noatime,protected-regular,proxy-response-line-too-long,sender-flist-symlink-leak,simd-checksum make check'
- name: check (TCP daemon transport)
# Second run with daemon tests over a real loopback rsyncd; the default
# 'make check' above uses the secure stdio-pipe transport.
run: bash -c './runtests.py --rsync-bin=`pwd`/rsync.exe --use-tcp -j 8'
- name: ssl file list
run: bash -c 'PATH="/usr/local/bin:$PATH" rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true'
- name: save artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
retention-days: 45
name: cygwin-bin
path: |
rsync.exe
rsync-ssl
rsync.1
rsync-ssl.1
rsyncd.conf.5
rrsync.1
rrsync

64
.github/workflows/fleettest.yml vendored Normal file
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name: Test fleettest harness
# Bitrot check for testsuite/fleettest.py (the developer fleet CI harness).
# fleettest is meant to be run by developers on a modern Ubuntu box, so this
# job runs only on ubuntu-latest: it stands up a one-host "fleet" of two
# targets that both ssh to localhost and runs a real fleettest pass against it.
# It does not run on the BSD/Solaris/macOS/Cygwin matrix.
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths:
- 'testsuite/fleettest.py'
- '.github/workflows/fleettest.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths:
- 'testsuite/fleettest.py'
- '.github/workflows/fleettest.yml'
workflow_dispatch:
schedule:
- cron: '17 7 * * 1'
jobs:
fleettest:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: fleettest against localhost
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: prep
run: |
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y gcc g++ gawk autoconf automake \
acl libacl1-dev attr libattr1-dev liblz4-dev libzstd-dev libxxhash-dev \
python3-cmarkgfm openssl rsync openssh-server
- name: set up ssh to localhost
run: |
mkdir -p ~/.ssh && chmod 700 ~/.ssh
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -N '' -f ~/.ssh/id_ed25519
cat ~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
chmod 600 ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
sudo systemctl start ssh || sudo service ssh start
# fleettest connects with `ssh -o BatchMode=yes localhost`, which won't
# answer a host-key prompt -- so pre-trust localhost in known_hosts.
ssh-keyscan -H localhost 127.0.0.1 >> ~/.ssh/known_hosts 2>/dev/null
ssh -o BatchMode=yes -o ConnectTimeout=15 localhost 'echo ssh-to-localhost-ok'
- name: write localhost fleet config
run: |
cat > fleettest-ci.json <<'EOF'
{ "targets": [
{ "name": "local-a", "ssh_host": "localhost", "workflow": "none.yml",
"configure_flags": [], "builddir": "rsync-citest-a", "privilege": "sudo" },
{ "name": "local-b", "ssh_host": "localhost", "workflow": "none.yml",
"configure_flags": [], "builddir": "rsync-citest-b", "privilege": "sudo" }
] }
EOF
- name: fleettest --list (config sanity)
run: python3 testsuite/fleettest.py --fleet fleettest-ci.json --list
- name: run fleettest against localhost
# Two targets both on localhost exercise the parallel multi-target path
# and the per-run dir / port isolation; exit 0 iff every cell is OK.
run: python3 testsuite/fleettest.py --fleet fleettest-ci.json --timing

52
.github/workflows/freebsd-build.yml vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,52 @@
name: Test rsync on FreeBSD
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/freebsd-build.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/freebsd-build.yml'
schedule:
- cron: '42 8 * * *'
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: Test rsync on FreeBSD
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: Test in FreeBSD VM
id: test
uses: vmactions/freebsd-vm@v1
with:
usesh: true
prepare: |
pkg install -y bash autotools m4 devel/xxhash zstd liblz4 python3 archivers/liblz4 git
run: |
freebsd-version
./configure --with-rrsync -disable-zstd --disable-md2man --disable-xxhash --disable-lz4
make
./rsync --version
make check
./runtests.py --rsync-bin=`pwd`/rsync --use-tcp -j 8
./rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true
- name: save artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
retention-days: 45
name: freebsd-bin
path: |
rsync
rsync-ssl
rsync.1
rsync-ssl.1
rsyncd.conf.5
rrsync.1
rrsync

66
.github/workflows/macos-build.yml vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,66 @@
name: Test rsync on macOS
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/macos-build.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/macos-build.yml'
schedule:
- cron: '42 8 * * *'
jobs:
test:
runs-on: macos-latest
name: Test rsync on macOS
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: prep
run: |
brew install automake openssl xxhash zstd lz4
pip3 install --user --break-system-packages commonmark
echo "$(brew --prefix)/bin" >>"$GITHUB_PATH"
- name: configure
run: |
BREW_PREFIX=$(brew --prefix)
OPENSSL_PREFIX=$(brew --prefix openssl)
CPPFLAGS="-I${BREW_PREFIX}/include -I${OPENSSL_PREFIX}/include" \
LDFLAGS="-L${BREW_PREFIX}/lib -L${OPENSSL_PREFIX}/lib" \
./configure --with-rrsync
- name: make
run: make
- name: install
run: sudo make install
- name: info
run: rsync --version
- name: check
# chown-fake / devices-fake / xattrs / xattrs-hlink now RUN on macOS
# (rsyncfns.py drives xattrs via the `xattr` command), verified on a
# real macOS host, so they're no longer in the skip set.
run: sudo RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=acls-default,acls-depth,chmod-temp-dir,daemon-access-ip,daemon-chroot-acl,dir-sgid,open-noatime,preallocate,protected-regular,proxy-response-line-too-long,simd-checksum,sparse make check
- name: check (TCP daemon transport)
# Second run with daemon tests over a real loopback rsyncd; the default
# 'make check' above uses the secure stdio-pipe transport.
run: sudo ./runtests.py --rsync-bin="$PWD/rsync" --use-tcp -j 8
- name: ssl file list
run: rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true
- name: save artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
retention-days: 45
name: macos-bin
path: |
rsync
rsync-ssl
rsync.1
rsync-ssl.1
rsyncd.conf.5
rrsync.1
rrsync

53
.github/workflows/netbsd-build.yml vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,53 @@
name: Test rsync on NetBSD
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/netbsd-build.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/netbsd-build.yml'
schedule:
- cron: '42 8 * * *'
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: Test rsync on NetBSD
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: Test in NetBSD VM
id: test
uses: vmactions/netbsd-vm@v1
with:
usesh: true
prepare: |
PATH=/usr/sbin:$PATH pkg_add autoconf automake python312
ln -sf /usr/pkg/bin/python3.12 /usr/pkg/bin/python3
run: |
uname -a
./configure --with-rrsync --disable-zstd --disable-md2man --disable-xxhash --disable-lz4
make
./rsync --version
make check
./runtests.py --rsync-bin=`pwd`/rsync --use-tcp -j 8
./rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true
- name: save artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
retention-days: 45
name: netbsd-bin
path: |
rsync
rsync-ssl
rsync.1
rsync-ssl.1
rsyncd.conf.5
rrsync.1
rrsync

62
.github/workflows/openbsd-build.yml vendored Normal file
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name: Test rsync on OpenBSD
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/openbsd-build.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/openbsd-build.yml'
schedule:
- cron: '42 8 * * *'
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: Test rsync on OpenBSD
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: Test in OpenBSD VM
id: test
uses: vmactions/openbsd-vm@v1
with:
usesh: true
prepare: |
pkg_add -I bash autoconf%2.71 automake%1.16
run: |
uname -a
export AUTOCONF_VERSION=2.71
export AUTOMAKE_VERSION=1.16
./configure --with-rrsync --disable-zstd --disable-md2man --disable-xxhash --disable-lz4
make
./rsync --version
make check
# The --use-tcp daemon tests run at -j2 here (vs -j8 elsewhere): this
# job runs inside a nested VM, and at -j8 the many concurrent loopback
# daemons occasionally lose a connection-handshake timing race under
# that resource pressure, hanging one test to the 300s timeout. It is
# an environment artifact, not an rsync bug (the handshake is
# deadlock-free and unreproducible elsewhere, even pinned to 1 CPU at
# -j8); -j2 keeps the VM from over-subscribing. The pipe `make check`
# above stays at the default parallelism.
./runtests.py --rsync-bin=`pwd`/rsync --use-tcp -j 2
./rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true
- name: save artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
retention-days: 45
name: openbsd-bin
path: |
rsync
rsync-ssl
rsync.1
rsync-ssl.1
rsyncd.conf.5
rrsync.1
rrsync

52
.github/workflows/solaris-build.yml vendored Normal file
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name: Test rsync on Solaris
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/solaris-build.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/solaris-build.yml'
schedule:
- cron: '42 8 * * *'
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: Test rsync on Solaris
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: Test in Solaris VM
id: test
uses: vmactions/solaris-vm@v1
with:
usesh: true
prepare: |
pkg install bash automake gnu-m4 pkg://solaris/runtime/python-35 autoconf gcc git
run: |
uname -a
./configure --with-rrsync -disable-zstd --disable-md2man --disable-xxhash --disable-lz4
make
./rsync --version
make check
./runtests.py --rsync-bin=`pwd`/rsync --use-tcp -j 8
./rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true
- name: save artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
retention-days: 45
name: solaris-bin
path: |
rsync
rsync-ssl
rsync.1
rsync-ssl.1
rsyncd.conf.5
rrsync.1
rrsync

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@@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
name: Test rsync on Ubuntu 22.04
# Older-LTS coverage to help with backporting security fixes. ubuntu-22.04
# is currently the oldest GitHub Actions runner image (20.04 was retired
# in April 2025).
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/ubuntu-22.04-build.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/ubuntu-22.04-build.yml'
schedule:
- cron: '42 8 * * *'
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-22.04
name: Test rsync on Ubuntu 22.04
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: prep
run: |
sudo apt-get install acl libacl1-dev attr libattr1-dev liblz4-dev libzstd-dev libxxhash-dev python3-cmarkgfm openssl
echo "/usr/local/bin" >>"$GITHUB_PATH"
- name: configure
run: ./configure --with-rrsync
- name: make
run: make
- name: install
run: sudo make install
- name: info
run: rsync --version
- name: check
run: sudo RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=crtimes,daemon-access-ip,daemon-chroot-acl,proxy-response-line-too-long make check
- name: check30
run: sudo RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=crtimes,daemon-access-ip,daemon-chroot-acl,proxy-response-line-too-long make check30
- name: check29
run: sudo RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=crtimes,daemon-access-ip,daemon-chroot-acl,proxy-response-line-too-long make check29
- name: check (TCP daemon transport)
# Second run with daemon tests over a real loopback rsyncd; the default
# 'make check' above uses the secure stdio-pipe transport.
run: sudo ./runtests.py --rsync-bin="$PWD/rsync" --use-tcp -j 8
- name: ssl file list
run: rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true
- name: save artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
retention-days: 45
name: ubuntu-22.04-bin
path: |
rsync
rsync-ssl
rsync.1
rsync-ssl.1
rsyncd.conf.5
rrsync.1
rrsync

63
.github/workflows/ubuntu-build.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,63 @@
name: Test rsync on Ubuntu
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/ubuntu-build.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/ubuntu-build.yml'
schedule:
- cron: '42 8 * * *'
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: Test rsync on Ubuntu
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: prep
run: |
sudo apt-get install acl libacl1-dev attr libattr1-dev liblz4-dev libzstd-dev libxxhash-dev python3-cmarkgfm openssl
echo "/usr/local/bin" >>"$GITHUB_PATH"
- name: configure
run: ./configure --with-rrsync
- name: make
run: make
- name: install
run: sudo make install
- name: info
run: rsync --version
- name: check
run: sudo RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=crtimes,daemon-access-ip,daemon-chroot-acl,proxy-response-line-too-long make check
- name: check30
run: sudo RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=crtimes,daemon-access-ip,daemon-chroot-acl,proxy-response-line-too-long make check30
- name: check29
run: sudo RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED=crtimes,daemon-access-ip,daemon-chroot-acl,proxy-response-line-too-long make check29
- name: check (TCP daemon transport)
# Second run with daemon tests over a real loopback rsyncd. The default
# 'make check' above uses the secure stdio-pipe transport (no listening
# sockets); this run exercises the real TCP accept/auth path. Skip-set
# is env-dependent here (chroot-acl), so leave RSYNC_EXPECT_SKIPPED unset.
run: sudo ./runtests.py --rsync-bin="$PWD/rsync" --use-tcp -j 8
- name: ssl file list
run: rsync-ssl --no-motd download.samba.org::rsyncftp/ || true
- name: save artifact
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
with:
retention-days: 45
name: ubuntu-bin
path: |
rsync
rsync-ssl
rsync.1
rsync-ssl.1
rsyncd.conf.5
rrsync.1
rrsync

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,77 @@
name: Test rsync version mixing on Ubuntu
# Runs the CURRENT test suite with two different rsync binaries: the freshly
# built ./rsync as the client/driver, and a committed OLD static binary
# (old_versions/rsync_<ver>) as the daemon / remote-shell peer. This exercises
# real version mixing over the wire -- more convincing than --protocol forcing,
# which only makes the current binary speak an old protocol.
#
# Direction is fixed: the current binary always drives (only it understands the
# new test scripts); the old binary is only ever the server/daemon side. The
# reverse (old client driving new scripts) is not possible -- but one test,
# reverse-daemon-delta, swaps the roles internally (current build as the daemon,
# old binary as the client) to cover the backward-compat direction: a current
# daemon serving the installed base of old clients.
#
# The per-version manifest testsuite/expect/rsync_<ver>.expect lists exactly
# which tests run and each one's expected outcome (pass/skip/fail/xfail), so an
# old peer's known feature gaps are recorded rather than treated as breakage.
#
# All peers run in a SINGLE job (looped, not a matrix) so the PR shows one check
# line rather than one per version. Each peer/transport is a foldable ::group::
# in the log, and a failure annotates which peer/transport broke.
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/ubuntu-version-mix.yml'
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
paths-ignore:
- '.github/workflows/*.yml'
- '!.github/workflows/ubuntu-version-mix.yml'
schedule:
- cron: '52 8 * * *'
jobs:
version-mix:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: rsync version-mix
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: prep
run: |
sudo apt-get install acl libacl1-dev attr libattr1-dev liblz4-dev libzstd-dev libxxhash-dev python3-cmarkgfm openssl
echo "/usr/local/bin" >>"$GITHUB_PATH"
- name: configure
run: ./configure --with-rrsync
- name: make
# check-progs builds rsync AND the test helper programs (tls, trimslash,
# t_unsafe, ...) that runtests.py requires; plain `make` does not.
run: make check-progs
- name: info
run: ./rsync --version | head -1
- name: version mixing (all peers, pipe + TCP transports)
run: |
rc=0
for peer in old_versions/rsync_*; do
chmod +x "$peer"
name=$(basename "$peer")
expect="testsuite/expect/$name.expect"
for transport in pipe tcp; do
tcp=()
[ "$transport" = tcp ] && tcp=(--use-tcp)
echo "::group::$name ($transport): $("$peer" --version | head -1)"
if ! ./runtests.py --rsync-bin="$PWD/rsync" --rsync-bin2="$PWD/$peer" \
--expect-result "$expect" "${tcp[@]}" -j 8; then
echo "::error::version-mix failed: $name ($transport)"
rc=1
fi
echo "::endgroup::"
done
done
exit $rc

2
.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -52,9 +52,11 @@ aclocal.m4
/testsuite/chown-fake.test
/testsuite/devices-fake.test
/testsuite/xattrs-hlink.test
/testsuite/fleettest.json
/patches
/patches.gen
/build
/auto-build-save
.deps
/*.exe
*.dSYM/

View File

@@ -7,6 +7,34 @@ option to use if you want to just skip that feature. What follows are various
support libraries that you may want to install to build rsync with the maximum
features (the impatient can skip down to the package summary):
## Ubuntu users: skip the build, use the PPA
If you are on a currently supported Ubuntu series (jammy 22.04 LTS, noble
24.04 LTS, questing 25.10, resolute 26.04 LTS) and just want the latest
upstream rsync, the rsync project maintains a Launchpad PPA that tracks
stable releases:
> sudo add-apt-repository ppa:rsyncproject/rsync
> sudo apt update && sudo apt install rsync
See [the PPA page][ppa] for current build status across architectures.
[ppa]: https://launchpad.net/~rsyncproject/+archive/ubuntu/rsync
To test the upcoming release instead, there is also a [`rsync-latest`
PPA][ppa-latest] that is rebuilt from the tip of the git master branch. These
are development snapshots whose version numbers (such as
`3.5.0~git20260601...`) deliberately sort below the matching stable release, so
the stable PPA above will never silently move you from a release onto a
snapshot. Use it for testing only -- it may contain unreleased changes:
> sudo add-apt-repository ppa:rsyncproject/rsync-latest
> sudo apt update && sudo apt install rsync
[ppa-latest]: https://launchpad.net/~rsyncproject/+archive/ubuntu/rsync-latest
The rest of this document covers building from source.
## The basic setup
You need to have a C compiler installed and optionally a C++ compiler in order
@@ -104,6 +132,8 @@ like.
> sudo apt install -y liblz4-dev
> sudo apt install -y libssl-dev
Or run support/install_deps_ubuntu.sh
- For CentOS (use EPEL for python3-pip):
> sudo yum -y install epel-release
@@ -230,6 +260,9 @@ not completely implement the "New Sockets" API.
[This site][5] says that Apple started to support IPv6 in 10.2 (Jaguar). If
your build fails, try again after running configure with `--disable-ipv6`.
Apple Silicon macs may install packages in a slightly different location and require flags.
CFLAGS="-I /opt/homebrew/include" LDFLAGS="-L /opt/homebrew/lib"
[5]: http://www.ipv6.org/impl/mac.html
## IBM AIX notes

View File

@@ -44,25 +44,27 @@ LIBOBJ=lib/wildmatch.o lib/compat.o lib/snprintf.o lib/mdfour.o lib/md5.o \
zlib_OBJS=zlib/deflate.o zlib/inffast.o zlib/inflate.o zlib/inftrees.o \
zlib/trees.o zlib/zutil.o zlib/adler32.o zlib/compress.o zlib/crc32.o
OBJS1=flist.o rsync.o generator.o receiver.o cleanup.o sender.o exclude.o \
util1.o util2.o main.o checksum.o match.o syscall.o log.o backup.o delete.o
util1.o util2.o main.o checksum.o match.o syscall.o android.o log.o backup.o delete.o
OBJS2=options.o io.o compat.o hlink.o token.o uidlist.o socket.o hashtable.o \
usage.o fileio.o batch.o clientname.o chmod.o acls.o xattrs.o
OBJS3=progress.o pipe.o @MD5_ASM@ @ROLL_SIMD@ @ROLL_ASM@
DAEMON_OBJ = params.o loadparm.o clientserver.o access.o connection.o authenticate.o
popt_OBJS=popt/findme.o popt/popt.o popt/poptconfig.o \
popt/popthelp.o popt/poptparse.o
popt_OBJS= popt/popt.o popt/poptconfig.o \
popt/popthelp.o popt/poptparse.o popt/poptint.o
OBJS=$(OBJS1) $(OBJS2) $(OBJS3) $(DAEMON_OBJ) $(LIBOBJ) @BUILD_ZLIB@ @BUILD_POPT@
TLS_OBJ = tls.o syscall.o util2.o t_stub.o lib/compat.o lib/snprintf.o lib/permstring.o lib/sysxattrs.o @BUILD_POPT@
TLS_OBJ = tls.o syscall.o android.o util2.o t_stub.o lib/compat.o lib/snprintf.o lib/permstring.o lib/sysxattrs.o @BUILD_POPT@
# Programs we must have to run the test cases
CHECK_PROGS = rsync$(EXEEXT) tls$(EXEEXT) getgroups$(EXEEXT) getfsdev$(EXEEXT) \
testrun$(EXEEXT) trimslash$(EXEEXT) t_unsafe$(EXEEXT) wildtest$(EXEEXT)
testrun$(EXEEXT) trimslash$(EXEEXT) t_unsafe$(EXEEXT) t_chmod_secure$(EXEEXT) \
t_secure_relpath$(EXEEXT) wildtest$(EXEEXT) simdtest$(EXEEXT)
CHECK_SYMLINKS = testsuite/chown-fake.test testsuite/devices-fake.test testsuite/xattrs-hlink.test
CHECK_SYMLINKS = testsuite/chown-fake_test.py testsuite/devices-fake_test.py \
testsuite/xattrs-hlink_test.py testsuite/exclude-lsh_test.py
# Objects for CHECK_PROGS to clean
CHECK_OBJS=tls.o testrun.o getgroups.o getfsdev.o t_stub.o t_unsafe.o trimslash.o wildtest.o
CHECK_OBJS=tls.o testrun.o getgroups.o getfsdev.o t_stub.o t_unsafe.o t_chmod_secure.o t_secure_relpath.o trimslash.o wildtest.o
# note that the -I. is needed to handle config.h when using VPATH
.c.o:
@@ -70,6 +72,8 @@ CHECK_OBJS=tls.o testrun.o getgroups.o getfsdev.o t_stub.o t_unsafe.o trimslash.
$(CC) -I. -I$(srcdir) $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -c $< @CC_SHOBJ_FLAG@
@OBJ_RESTORE@
# NOTE: consider running "packaging/smart-make" instead of "make" to auto-handle
# any changes to configure.sh and the main Makefile prior to a "make all".
all: Makefile rsync$(EXEEXT) stunnel-rsyncd.conf @MAKE_RRSYNC@ @MAKE_MAN@
.PHONY: all
@@ -80,12 +84,19 @@ install: all
$(INSTALLCMD) -m 755 $(srcdir)/rsync-ssl $(DESTDIR)$(bindir)
-$(MKDIR_P) $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man1
-$(MKDIR_P) $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man5
if test -f rsync.1; then $(INSTALLMAN) -m 644 rsync.1 $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man1; fi
if test -f rsync-ssl.1; then $(INSTALLMAN) -m 644 rsync-ssl.1 $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man1; fi
if test -f rsyncd.conf.5; then $(INSTALLMAN) -m 644 rsyncd.conf.5 $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man5; fi
for fn in rsync.1 rsync-ssl.1; do \
if test -f $$fn; then $(INSTALLMAN) -m 644 $$fn $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man1; \
elif test -f $(srcdir)/$$fn; then $(INSTALLMAN) -m 644 $(srcdir)/$$fn $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man1; fi; \
done
for fn in rsyncd.conf.5; do \
if test -f $$fn; then $(INSTALLMAN) -m 644 $$fn $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man5; \
elif test -f $(srcdir)/$$fn; then $(INSTALLMAN) -m 644 $(srcdir)/$$fn $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man5; fi; \
done
if test "$(with_rrsync)" = yes; then \
$(INSTALLCMD) -m 755 rrsync $(DESTDIR)$(bindir); \
if test -f rrsync.1; then $(INSTALLMAN) -m 644 rrsync.1 $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man1; fi; \
fn=rrsync.1; \
if test -f $$fn; then $(INSTALLMAN) -m 644 $$fn $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man1; \
elif test -f $(srcdir)/$$fn; then $(INSTALLMAN) -m 644 $(srcdir)/$$fn $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)/man1; fi; \
fi
install-ssl-daemon: stunnel-rsyncd.conf
@@ -168,28 +179,28 @@ getgroups$(EXEEXT): getgroups.o
getfsdev$(EXEEXT): getfsdev.o
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ getfsdev.o $(LIBS)
TRIMSLASH_OBJ = trimslash.o syscall.o util2.o t_stub.o lib/compat.o lib/snprintf.o
TRIMSLASH_OBJ = trimslash.o syscall.o android.o util2.o t_stub.o lib/compat.o lib/snprintf.o
trimslash$(EXEEXT): $(TRIMSLASH_OBJ)
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ $(TRIMSLASH_OBJ) $(LIBS)
T_UNSAFE_OBJ = t_unsafe.o syscall.o util1.o util2.o t_stub.o lib/compat.o lib/snprintf.o lib/wildmatch.o
T_UNSAFE_OBJ = t_unsafe.o syscall.o android.o util1.o util2.o t_stub.o lib/compat.o lib/snprintf.o lib/wildmatch.o
t_unsafe$(EXEEXT): $(T_UNSAFE_OBJ)
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ $(T_UNSAFE_OBJ) $(LIBS)
T_CHMOD_SECURE_OBJ = t_chmod_secure.o syscall.o android.o util1.o util2.o t_stub.o lib/compat.o lib/snprintf.o lib/wildmatch.o lib/permstring.o
t_chmod_secure$(EXEEXT): $(T_CHMOD_SECURE_OBJ)
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ $(T_CHMOD_SECURE_OBJ) $(LIBS)
T_SECURE_RELPATH_OBJ = t_secure_relpath.o syscall.o android.o util1.o util2.o t_stub.o lib/compat.o lib/snprintf.o lib/wildmatch.o lib/permstring.o
t_secure_relpath$(EXEEXT): $(T_SECURE_RELPATH_OBJ)
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ $(T_SECURE_RELPATH_OBJ) $(LIBS)
.PHONY: conf
conf: configure.sh config.h.in
.PHONY: gen
gen: conf proto.h man git-version.h
.PHONY: gensend
gensend: gen
if ! diff git-version.h $(srcdir)/gists/rsync-git-version.h >/dev/null; then \
./rsync -ai git-version.h $(srcdir)/gists/rsync-git-version.h && \
(cd $(srcdir)/gists && git commit --allow-empty-message -m '' rsync-git-version.h && git push) ; \
fi
rsync -aic $(GENFILES) git-version.h $${SAMBA_HOST-samba.org}:/home/ftp/pub/rsync/generated-files/ || true
aclocal.m4: $(srcdir)/m4/*.m4
aclocal -I $(srcdir)/m4
@@ -276,6 +287,8 @@ clean: cleantests
rm -f *~ $(OBJS) $(CHECK_PROGS) $(CHECK_OBJS) $(CHECK_SYMLINKS) @MAKE_RRSYNC@ \
git-version.h rounding rounding.h *.old rsync*.1 rsync*.5 @MAKE_RRSYNC_1@ \
*.html daemon-parm.h help-*.h default-*.h proto.h proto.h-tstamp
rm -f *.gcno *.gcda lib/*.gcno lib/*.gcda zlib/*.gcno zlib/*.gcda popt/*.gcno popt/*.gcda
rm -rf coverage coverage-tcp coverage-all coverage-fallback
.PHONY: cleantests
cleantests:
@@ -316,30 +329,139 @@ test: check
# catch Bash-isms earlier even if we're running on GNU. Of course, we
# might lose in the future where POSIX diverges from old sh.
# `make check` runs tests in parallel by default. Override with
# `make check CHECK_J=1` (serial) or any other value.
CHECK_J = 8
# Parallelism for `make coverage`. Defaults to the same as CHECK_J: the
# coverage build sets -fprofile-update=atomic (atomic in-memory counters) and
# gcc's libgcov serializes the per-source .gcda read-modify-write merge with a
# file lock, so concurrent rsync processes (incl. the forked sender/generator/
# receiver) accumulate exactly -- verified by a count-linearity check (a hot
# line accumulates identically at -j1 and -P16). Override with
# `make coverage COVERAGE_J=1` if your libgcov does not lock .gcda merges.
COVERAGE_J = $(CHECK_J)
# Output directory and extra runtests.py flags for `make coverage`. The
# `coverage-tcp` target reuses the coverage recipe with --use-tcp (real
# loopback rsyncd, which exercises the TCP accept/auth path and the
# require_tcp-only tests) and a separate output directory.
COVERAGE_DIR = coverage
COVERAGE_RUNFLAGS =
# Bundled third-party code that rsync ships but does not own; excluded from the
# coverage report so the percentages reflect rsync's own source. zlib/ and popt/
# are wholly vendored; the named lib/ files are PostgreSQL (getaddrinfo) and ISC
# (inet_ntop/inet_pton) / standalone (getpass) imports. The other lib/*.c
# (md5, mdfour, wildmatch, permstring, pool_alloc, snprintf, sysacls, sysxattrs,
# compat) are rsync's own and stay in the report.
COVERAGE_EXCLUDE = -e '(^|/)zlib/' -e '(^|/)popt/' \
-e '(^|/)lib/(getaddrinfo|getpass|inet_ntop|inet_pton)\.'
# Build everything the test suite needs (rsync + helper programs + symlinks)
# WITHOUT running it. Used by CI jobs that invoke runtests.py directly with
# custom options (e.g. the version-mix workflow's --rsync-bin2/--expect-result).
.PHONY: check-progs
check-progs: all $(CHECK_PROGS) $(CHECK_SYMLINKS)
.PHONY: check
check: all $(CHECK_PROGS) $(CHECK_SYMLINKS)
rsync_bin=`pwd`/rsync$(EXEEXT) $(srcdir)/runtests.sh
$(srcdir)/runtests.py --rsync-bin=`pwd`/rsync$(EXEEXT) -j $(CHECK_J)
.PHONY: check29
check29: all $(CHECK_PROGS) $(CHECK_SYMLINKS)
rsync_bin=`pwd`/rsync$(EXEEXT) $(srcdir)/runtests.sh --protocol=29
$(srcdir)/runtests.py --rsync-bin=`pwd`/rsync$(EXEEXT) -j $(CHECK_J) --protocol=29
.PHONY: check30
check30: all $(CHECK_PROGS) $(CHECK_SYMLINKS)
rsync_bin=`pwd`/rsync$(EXEEXT) $(srcdir)/runtests.sh --protocol=30
$(srcdir)/runtests.py --rsync-bin=`pwd`/rsync$(EXEEXT) -j $(CHECK_J) --protocol=30
# Whole-suite gcov coverage report (HTML, with branch + decision coverage).
# Requires a build configured with --enable-coverage and the `gcovr` tool
# (pip install gcovr). Runs the suite in parallel (COVERAGE_J, default CHECK_J):
# this is safe because the coverage build uses -fprofile-update=atomic and
# libgcov locks the per-source .gcda during its merge, so concurrent rsync
# processes accumulate exactly (see COVERAGE_J above). Use COVERAGE_J=1 if your
# toolchain's libgcov does not lock .gcda merges.
.PHONY: coverage
coverage: all $(CHECK_PROGS) $(CHECK_SYMLINKS)
@case '$(CFLAGS)' in *--coverage*) ;; \
*) echo "*** not a coverage build; reconfigure with --enable-coverage"; exit 1 ;; esac
@command -v gcovr >/dev/null 2>&1 || { echo "*** gcovr not found (pip install gcovr)"; exit 1; }
find . -name '*.gcda' -delete
@rc=0; $(srcdir)/runtests.py --rsync-bin=`pwd`/rsync$(EXEEXT) -j $(COVERAGE_J) $(COVERAGE_RUNFLAGS) || rc=$$?; \
rm -rf $(COVERAGE_DIR) && mkdir -p $(COVERAGE_DIR); \
gcovr --root $(srcdir) $(COVERAGE_EXCLUDE) --decisions --print-summary \
--html-details -o $(COVERAGE_DIR)/index.html . || exit $$?; \
echo "Coverage report written to $(COVERAGE_DIR)/index.html"; \
if test $$rc != 0; then \
echo "*** test suite FAILED (status $$rc) -- coverage report still written above"; \
fi; \
exit $$rc
# Same as `make coverage` but with the daemon tests run over a real loopback
# rsyncd (--use-tcp), into a separate report directory.
.PHONY: coverage-tcp
coverage-tcp:
$(MAKE) coverage COVERAGE_RUNFLAGS=--use-tcp COVERAGE_DIR=coverage-tcp
# Comprehensive single report: run the suite under several configurations,
# accumulating into the shared .gcda counters (NOT cleared between runs), then
# emit one merged, rsync-scoped report. Covers the default (pipe) transport, the
# protocol-29/30 compat branches, and the real-TCP daemon path (which also runs
# the require_tcp-only tests). Run under sudo to additionally cover root-only
# paths (devices, chown, use-chroot, protected-regular). Local target -- CI uses
# the plain `coverage`/`coverage-tcp` targets.
.PHONY: coverage-all
coverage-all: all $(CHECK_PROGS) $(CHECK_SYMLINKS)
@case '$(CFLAGS)' in *--coverage*) ;; \
*) echo "*** not a coverage build; reconfigure with --enable-coverage"; exit 1 ;; esac
@command -v gcovr >/dev/null 2>&1 || { echo "*** gcovr not found (pip install gcovr)"; exit 1; }
find . -name '*.gcda' -delete
@rc=0; \
for cfg in '' '--protocol=30' '--protocol=29' '--use-tcp'; do \
echo "===== coverage-all: runtests.py $$cfg ====="; \
$(srcdir)/runtests.py --rsync-bin=`pwd`/rsync$(EXEEXT) -j $(COVERAGE_J) $$cfg || rc=$$?; \
done; \
rm -rf coverage-all && mkdir -p coverage-all; \
gcovr --root $(srcdir) $(COVERAGE_EXCLUDE) --decisions --print-summary \
--html-details -o coverage-all/index.html . || exit $$?; \
echo "Merged coverage report written to coverage-all/index.html"; \
if test $$rc != 0; then \
echo "*** some suite runs FAILED (status $$rc) -- report still written above"; \
fi; \
exit $$rc
# Coverage for the portable (non-openat2) resolver tier. Requires a SEPARATE
# build configured with --enable-coverage --disable-openat2: its .gcno differ
# from the openat2 build, so this report cannot be merged with the others.
.PHONY: coverage-fallback
coverage-fallback:
$(MAKE) coverage COVERAGE_DIR=coverage-fallback
wildtest.o: wildtest.c t_stub.o lib/wildmatch.c rsync.h config.h
wildtest$(EXEEXT): wildtest.o lib/compat.o lib/snprintf.o @BUILD_POPT@
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ wildtest.o lib/compat.o lib/snprintf.o @BUILD_POPT@ $(LIBS)
testsuite/chown-fake.test:
ln -s chown.test $(srcdir)/testsuite/chown-fake.test
simdtest$(EXEEXT): simd-checksum-x86_64.cpp $(HEADERS)
@if test x"@ROLL_SIMD@" != x; then \
$(CXX) -I. $(CXXFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -DTEST_SIMD_CHECKSUM1 \
-o $@ $(srcdir)/simd-checksum-x86_64.cpp @ROLL_ASM@ $(LIBS); \
else \
touch $@; \
fi
testsuite/devices-fake.test:
ln -s devices.test $(srcdir)/testsuite/devices-fake.test
testsuite/chown-fake_test.py:
ln -s chown_test.py $(srcdir)/testsuite/chown-fake_test.py
testsuite/xattrs-hlink.test:
ln -s xattrs.test $(srcdir)/testsuite/xattrs-hlink.test
testsuite/devices-fake_test.py:
ln -s devices_test.py $(srcdir)/testsuite/devices-fake_test.py
testsuite/xattrs-hlink_test.py:
ln -s xattrs_test.py $(srcdir)/testsuite/xattrs-hlink_test.py
testsuite/exclude-lsh_test.py:
ln -s exclude_test.py $(srcdir)/testsuite/exclude-lsh_test.py
# This does *not* depend on building or installing: you can use it to
# check a version installed from a binary or some other source tree,
@@ -347,7 +469,7 @@ testsuite/xattrs-hlink.test:
.PHONY: installcheck
installcheck: $(CHECK_PROGS) $(CHECK_SYMLINKS)
POSIXLY_CORRECT=1 TOOLDIR=`pwd` rsync_bin="$(bindir)/rsync$(EXEEXT)" srcdir="$(srcdir)" $(srcdir)/runtests.sh
$(srcdir)/runtests.py --rsync-bin="$(bindir)/rsync$(EXEEXT)" --srcdir="$(srcdir)" --tooldir=`pwd` -j $(CHECK_J)
# TODO: Add 'dist' target; need to know which files will be included
@@ -364,4 +486,4 @@ doxygen:
.PHONY: doxygen-upload
doxygen-upload:
rsync -avzv $(srcdir)/dox/html/ --delete \
$${SAMBA_HOST-samba.org}:/home/httpd/html/rsync/doxygen/head/
$${RSYNC_SAMBA_HOST-samba.org}:/home/httpd/html/rsync/doxygen/head/

537
NEWS.md
View File

@@ -1,4 +1,476 @@
# NEWS for rsync 3.2.7 (UNRELEASED)
# NEWS for rsync 3.4.3 (20 May 2026)
## Changes in this version:
### SECURITY FIXES:
Six CVEs are fixed in this release. All six are assigned by
VulnCheck as CNA. Affected versions are 3.4.2 and earlier in every
case. Three of the six (CVE-2026-29518, CVE-2026-43617,
CVE-2026-43619) require non-default daemon configuration to reach:
the first and third need `use chroot = no` for a module, the second
needs `daemon chroot = ...` set in rsyncd.conf. Two (CVE-2026-43618,
CVE-2026-43620) are reachable from a normal pull or a normal
authenticated daemon connection. The sixth (CVE-2026-45232) is
reachable only when `RSYNC_PROXY` is set and the proxy (or a MITM)
returns a pathological response. Many thanks to the external
researchers who reported these issues.
- CVE-2026-29518 (CVSS v4.0 7.3, HIGH): TOCTOU symlink race condition
allowing local privilege escalation in daemon mode without chroot.
An rsync daemon configured with "use chroot = no" was exposed to a
time-of-check / time-of-use race on parent path components: a local
attacker with write access to a module could replace a parent
directory component with a symlink between the receiver's check and
its open(), redirecting reads (basis-file disclosure) and writes
(file overwrite) outside the module. Default "use chroot = yes" is
not exposed. `secure_relative_open()` (added in 3.4.0 for
CVE-2024-12086) was previously unused in the daemon-no-chroot
case; the fix enables it there and reroutes the sender's
read-path opens through it. Reported by Nullx3D (Batuhan Sancak),
Damien Neil and Michael Stapelberg.
- CVE-2026-43617 (CVSS v3.1 4.8, MEDIUM): Hostname/ACL bypass on an
rsync daemon configured with `daemon chroot = /X` in rsyncd.conf
when the chroot tree lacks DNS resolution support. The
reverse-DNS lookup of the connecting client was performed *after*
the daemon chroot had been entered; if /X did not contain the
libc resolver fixtures (`/etc/resolv.conf`, `/etc/nsswitch.conf`,
`/etc/hosts`, NSS service modules) the lookup failed and the
connecting hostname was set to "UNKNOWN", causing hostname-based
deny rules to silently fail open. IP-based ACLs are unaffected.
The per-module `use chroot` setting is unrelated to this issue.
The fix performs the lookup before entering the daemon chroot.
Reported by MegaManSec.
- CVE-2026-43618 (CVSS v3.1 8.1, HIGH): Integer overflow in the
compressed-token decoder enabling remote memory disclosure to an
authenticated daemon peer. The receiver accumulated a 32-bit
signed counter without overflow checking; a malicious sender could
trigger an overflow that, with careful manipulation, leaked process
memory contents to the attacker -- environment variables,
passwords, heap and library pointers -- significantly weakening
ASLR. The fix bounds the counter and adds wire-input validation in
several adjacent places (defence-in-depth). Workaround for older
releases: `refuse options = compress` in rsyncd.conf. Reported by
Omar Elsayed.
- CVE-2026-43619 (CVSS v3.1 6.3, MEDIUM): Symlink races on path-based
system calls in "use chroot = no" daemon mode (generalisation of
CVE-2026-29518). Earlier fixes for symlink races on the receiver's
open() call missed the same race class on every other path-based
system call: chmod, lchown, utimes, rename, unlink, mkdir, symlink,
mknod, link, rmdir and lstat. The fix routes each affected
path-based syscall through a parent dirfd opened under
RESOLVE_BENEATH-equivalent kernel-enforced confinement (openat2 on
Linux 5.6+, O_RESOLVE_BENEATH on FreeBSD 13+ and macOS 15+,
per-component O_NOFOLLOW walk elsewhere). Default "use chroot =
yes" is not exposed. Reported by Andrew Tridgell as a follow-on
audit of CVE-2026-29518.
- CVE-2026-43620 (CVSS v3.1 6.5, MEDIUM): Out-of-bounds read in the
receiver's recv_files() enabling remote denial-of-service of any
client pulling from a malicious server (incomplete fix of commit
797e17f). The earlier parent_ndx<0 guard added to send_files() was
not applied to the visually-identical block in recv_files(). A
malicious rsync server can drive any connecting client into a
deterministic SIGSEGV by setting CF_INC_RECURSE in the
compatibility flags and sending a crafted file list and transfer
record. inc_recurse is the protocol-30+ default, so no special
options are required on the victim. Workaround for older
releases: `--no-inc-recursive` on the client. Reported by Pratham
Gupta.
- CVE-2026-45232 (CVSS v3.1 3.1, LOW): Off-by-one out-of-bounds stack
write in the rsync client's HTTP CONNECT proxy handler
(`establish_proxy_connection()` in `socket.c`). After issuing the
CONNECT request, rsync read the proxy's first response line one
byte at a time into a 1024-byte stack buffer with the bound
`cp < &buffer[sizeof buffer - 1]`. If the proxy (or a MITM in
front of it) returned 1023+ bytes on that first line without a
newline terminator, `cp` exited the loop pointing at a buffer slot
the loop never wrote, leaving `*cp` holding stale stack data from
the earlier `snprintf()` of the outgoing CONNECT request. The
post-loop logic then wrote a single `\0` one byte past the end of
the buffer on the stack. Reach is client-side only, and only when
`RSYNC_PROXY` is set so rsync tunnels an `rsync://` connection
through an HTTP CONNECT proxy. The written byte is always `\0`
and the offset is fixed by the buffer size, not attacker-chosen,
so this is not an arbitrary-write primitive: practical impact is
corruption of one adjacent stack byte and possible later
misbehaviour or crash. The fix detects the "buffer filled without
finding `\n`" case explicitly by position and refuses the response
with "proxy response line too long". Reported by Aisle Research
via Michal Ruprich (rsync-3.4.1-2.el10 QE).
In addition to the six CVE fixes, this release adds defence-in-depth
hardening on several adjacent paths: bounded wire-supplied counts and
lengths in flist/io/acls/xattrs, a guard against length underflow in
cumulative `snprintf()` callers, a parent block-index bounds check on
the receiver, a NULL check in `read_delay_line()`, a lower ceiling on
`MAX_WIRE_DEL_STAT` to avoid signed-int overflow in the
`read_del_stats()` accumulator, rejection of hyphen-prefixed
remote-shell hostnames (defence-in-depth against argv-injection in
tooling that forwards untrusted input into the hostspec position;
reported by Aisle Research via Michal Ruprich), and a NULL-check on
`localtime_r()` in `timestring()` to keep a malicious server from
crashing the client by advertising a file with an out-of-range
modtime.
### BUG FIXES:
- Fixed a regression introduced by the 3.4.0 secure_relative_open()
CVE fix where legitimate directory symlinks on the receiver side
(e.g. when using `-K` / `--copy-dirlinks`) caused "failed
verification -- update discarded" errors on delta transfers. The
old code rejected every symlink in the path with a per-component
`O_NOFOLLOW` walk; the receiver now uses kernel-enforced "stay
below dirfd" path resolution where available. Fixes #715.
### PORTABILITY / BUILD:
- secure_relative_open() now uses `openat2(RESOLVE_BENEATH |
RESOLVE_NO_MAGICLINKS)` on Linux 5.6+, and `openat()` with
`O_RESOLVE_BENEATH` on FreeBSD 13+ and macOS 15+ (Sequoia) /
iOS 18+. The kernel rejects ".." escapes, absolute symlinks, and
symlinks whose target lies outside the starting directory, while
still following symlinks that resolve within it -- the same
trade-off that fixes the issue #715 regression without weakening
the original CVE protection. Other platforms (Solaris, OpenBSD,
NetBSD, Cygwin) retain the previous per-component `O_NOFOLLOW`
walk; on those platforms the issue #715 regression remains
visible.
- testsuite/xattrs: ignore `SUNWattr_*` in the Solaris `xls`
helper.
### DEVELOPER RELATED:
- Added testsuite/symlink-dirlink-basis.test (taken from PR #864
by Samuel Henrique) covering the issue #715 regression and
several edge cases (`--backup`, `--inplace`, `--partial-dir`
with protocol < 29, top-level files). The test skips on
platforms without a RESOLVE_BENEATH equivalent.
- Added regression tests for the new security fixes:
`chmod-symlink-race.test`, `chdir-symlink-race.test`,
`bare-do-open-symlink-race.test`, `alt-dest-symlink-race.test`,
`copy-dest-source-symlink.test`, `sender-flist-symlink-leak.test`,
`secure-relpath-validation.test`, `daemon-chroot-acl.test` and
`daemon-refuse-compress.test`. The symlink-race tests skip on
Cygwin, Solaris, OpenBSD and NetBSD (no RESOLVE_BENEATH
equivalent on those platforms).
- runtests.py now errors early with a clear message when any of
the test helper programs (`tls`, `trimslash`, `t_unsafe`,
`t_chmod_secure`, `t_secure_relpath`, `wildtest`, `getgroups`,
`getfsdev`) are missing, instead of letting many tests fail with
confusing "not found" errors.
- Added OpenBSD and NetBSD CI jobs that run `make check` on those
platforms.
- Added Ubuntu 22.04 and AlmaLinux 8 CI workflows so future
backports to the two mainstream LTS families build and test on
the same CI surface as trunk.
- testsuite/protected-regular.test now runs unprivileged via
`unshare` with user-namespace UID mapping, falling back to skip
if `unshare`/`uidmap` is not available; previously it required
real root.
- Added `symlink-dirlink-basis` to the Cygwin CI's expected-skipped
list.
- Removed the old release system (replaced by the new release
script in 3.4.2).
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# NEWS for rsync 3.4.2 (28 Apr 2026)
## Changes in this version:
### SECURITY RELATED:
Several security-relevant defects were reported and fixed since 3.4.1.
None were assigned a CVE — rsync's fork-per-connection design scopes
the impact of each of these to the attacker's own connection, which is
equivalent to the client closing the socket itself — but they are
fixed here as a matter of hygiene and to reduce the chances of a
future exploitable combination. Many thanks to the external
researchers who reported these issues.
- Fixed a signed integer overflow in the PROXY protocol v2 header
parser: a negative `len` field could bypass the size check and cause
a stack buffer overflow in `read_buf()`. Reported by John Walker of
ZeroPath.
- Fixed an invalid access to the files array. Reported by Calum
Hutton of Rapid7.
- Reject negative token values in the compressed-stream token
decoder; a negative value could cause callers to misinterpret a
missing data pointer as literal data. Reported by Will Sergeant.
- Fixed the element count passed to the xattr `qsort()` (see
https://www.openwall.com/lists/oss-security/2026/04/16/2).
- Fixed a buffer underflow in `clean_fname()`, and added a regression
test.
- Fixed an uninitialized `mul_one` in the AVX2 get_checksum1 path
(undefined behaviour), and added a SIMD-checksum self-test that
cross-checks SSE2, SSSE3 and AVX2 against the C reference on both
aligned and unaligned buffers.
- Fixed an uninitialized `buf1` on the first call to
`get_checksum2()` in the MD4 path (fixes #673).
- Zero all new memory from internal allocations: `my_alloc()` now uses
`calloc`, and `expand_item_list()` zeros the expanded portion after
`realloc`. This gives more predictable behaviour if stale or
uninitialised memory is ever accidentally read.
### BUG FIXES:
- Call `tzset()` before chroot so that log timestamps continue to
reflect the configured local timezone after the daemon chroots
(glibc needs `/etc/localtime`, which is unreachable post-chroot).
- Use the correct time when writing to the log file.
- Do not clear `DISPLAY` unconditionally.
- Fixed a Y2038 bug in `syscall.c` by replacing the `Int32x32To64`
macro (which truncates its arguments to 32 bits) with a plain
64-bit multiplication.
- Fixed ACL ID mapping for non-root users (closes #618).
- Fixed handling of objects with many xattrs on FreeBSD.
- Fixed `--open-noatime` not taking effect when opening regular
files: `O_NOATIME` is now also passed to `do_open_nofollow()`, which
has been used for regular files since the CVE fix "fixed symlink
race condition in sender".
- Ignore "directory has vanished" errors.
- Fixed the removal of multiple leading slashes.
- Added the missing `--dirs` long option.
- Fixed a segfault if `poptGetContext()` returns NULL (e.g. under
OOM) by not passing NULL to `poptReadDefaultConfig()`. Reported by
Ronnie Sahlberg; found with `malloc-fail-tester`.
- Fixed a build error on ia64 NonStop (which treats missing
prototypes as an error, not a warning).
- Fixed a flaky hardlinks test (fixes #735).
### ENHANCEMENTS:
- Added multi-threaded `zstd` compression, gated by a new
`--compress-threads=N` option, with validation and man-page
coverage.
- Documented the `temp dir` parameter in the rsyncd.conf man page
(fixes #820).
- Improved rendering of interior dashes in long-option names in
`md-convert` (perhaps fixes #686).
### PORTABILITY / BUILD:
- Fixed glibc 2.43 const-preserving overloads of `strtok()`,
`strchr()` etc. by declaring the affected locals with the right
constness. Contributed by Holger Hoffstätte.
- Converted the bundled zlib 1.2.8 from K&R-style function
definitions to ANSI prototypes, so it builds with clang 16+.
- Avoid using `bool` as an identifier; it is a keyword in C23.
- `configure.ac`: check for xattr functions in libc first and only
fall back to `-lattr`, avoiding spurious overlinking when `-lattr`
happens to be installed. Contributed by Eli Schwartz.
- Made the build reproducible by honouring `SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH` for
the manpage date.
- Removed obsolete `popt/findme.c` and `popt/findme.h` that upstream
popt 1.14 folded into `popt.c` (fixes #710). Contributed by Alan
Coopersmith.
### INTERNAL:
- Made many module-global variables `const` so they can live in
`.rodata` and enable additional compiler optimization.
### DEVELOPER RELATED:
- Replaced `runtests.sh` with `runtests.py`, a Python test runner
that supports `--valgrind` (with per-process log files so valgrind
output no longer interferes with output comparisons) and
`-j/--parallel` execution for roughly a 7× speed-up on typical
hardware.
- Added a SIMD checksum self-test and a `clean-fname-underflow`
regression test.
- Various CI fixes for macOS and Cygwin (including adding
`simd-checksum` to the expected-skipped lists on platforms without
SIMD), and tests now run on `ubuntu-latest`.
- removed support for the unmaintained rsync-patches archive
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# NEWS for rsync 3.4.1 (16 Jan 2025)
Release 3.4.1 is a fix for regressions introduced in 3.4.0
## Changes in this version:
### BUG FIXES:
- fixed handling of -H flag with conflict in internal flag values
- fixed a user after free in logging of failed rename
- fixed build on systems without openat()
- removed dependency on alloca() in bundled popt
### DEVELOPER RELATED:
- fix to permissions handling in the developer release script
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# NEWS for rsync 3.4.0 (15 Jan 2025)
Release 3.4.0 is a security release that fixes a number of important vulnerabilities.
For more details on the vulnerabilities please see the CERT report
https://kb.cert.org/vuls/id/952657
## Changes in this version:
### PROTOCOL NUMBER:
- The protocol number was changed to 32 to make it easier for
administrators to check their servers have been updated
### SECURITY FIXES:
Many thanks to Simon Scannell, Pedro Gallegos, and Jasiel Spelman at
Google Cloud Vulnerability Research and Aleksei Gorban (Loqpa) for
discovering these vulnerabilities and working with the rsync project
to develop and test fixes.
- CVE-2024-12084 - Heap Buffer Overflow in Checksum Parsing.
- CVE-2024-12085 - Info Leak via uninitialized Stack contents defeats ASLR.
- CVE-2024-12086 - Server leaks arbitrary client files.
- CVE-2024-12087 - Server can make client write files outside of destination directory using symbolic links.
- CVE-2024-12088 - --safe-links Bypass.
- CVE-2024-12747 - symlink race condition.
### BUG FIXES:
- Fixed the included popt to avoid a memory error on modern gcc versions.
- Fixed an incorrect extern variable's type that caused an ACL issue on macOS.
- Fixed IPv6 configure check
### INTERNAL:
- Updated included popt to version 1.19.
### DEVELOPER RELATED:
- Various improvements to the release scripts and git setup.
- Improved packaging/var-checker to identify variable type issues.
- added FreeBSD and Solaris CI builds
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# NEWS for rsync 3.3.0 (6 Apr 2024)
## Changes in this version:
### BUG FIXES:
- Fixed a bug with `--sparse --inplace` where a trailing gap in the source
file would not clear out the trailing data in the destination file.
- Fixed an buffer overflow in the checksum2 code if SHA1 is being used for
the checksum2 algorithm.
- Fixed an issue when rsync is compiled using `_FORTIFY_SOURCE` so that the
extra tests don't complain about a strlcpy() limit value (which was too
large, even though it wasn't possible for the larger value to cause an
overflow).
- Add a backtick to the list of characters that the filename quoting needs to
escape using backslashes.
- Fixed a string-comparison issue in the internal handling of `--progress` (a
locale such as tr_TR.utf-8 needed the internal triggering of `--info` options
to use upper-case flag names to ensure that they match).
- Make sure that a local transfer marks the sender side as trusted.
- Change the argv handling to work with a newer popt library -- one that likes
to free more data than it used to.
- Rsync now calls `OpenSSL_add_all_algorithms()` when compiled against an older
openssl library.
- Fixed a problem in the daemon auth for older protocols (29 and before) if the
openssl library is being used to compute MD4 checksums.
- Fixed `rsync -VV` on Cygwin -- it needed a flush of stdout.
- Fixed an old stats bug that counted devices as symlinks.
### ENHANCEMENTS:
- Enhanced rrsync with the `-no-overwrite` option that allows you to ensure
that existing files on your restricted but writable directory can't be
modified.
- Enhanced the manpages to mark links with .UR & .UE. If your nroff doesn't
support these idioms, touch the file `.md2man-force` in the source directory
so that `md-convert` gets called with the `--force-link-text` option, and
that should ensure that your manpages are still readable even with the
ignored markup.
- Some manpage improvements on the handling of [global] modules.
- Changed the mapfrom & mapto perl scripts (in the support dir) into a single
python script named idmap. Converted a couple more perl scripts into python.
- Changed the mnt-excl perl script (in the support dir) into a python script.
### DEVELOPER RELATED:
- Updated config.guess (timestamp 2023-01-01) and config.sub (timestamp
2023-01-21).
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# NEWS for rsync 3.2.7 (20 Oct 2022)
## Changes in this version:
@@ -25,31 +497,46 @@
- Added support for the SHA1 digest in file checksums. While this tends to be
overkill, it is available if someone really needs it. This overly-long
checksum is at the lowest priority in the normal checksum negotiation list.
See `--checksum-choice` (`--cc`) and the `RSYNC_CHECKSUM_LIST` environment
var for how to customize this.
See [`--checksum-choice`](rsync.1#opt) (`--cc`) and the `RSYNC_CHECKSUM_LIST`
environment var for how to customize this.
- Improved the xattr hash table to use a 64-bit key without slowing down the
key's computation. This should make extra sure that a collision doesn't
key's computation. This should make extra sure that a hash collision doesn't
happen.
- If the `--version` option is repeated (e.g. `-VV`) then the information is
output in a (still fairly readable) JSON format. Client side only.
output in a (still readable) JSON format. Client side only.
- The script `support/json-rsync-version` is available to get the JSON style
version output from any rsync. The script accepts either text on stdin
**or** an arg that specifies an rsync executable to run with a doubled
`--version` option. If the text we get isn't already in JSON format, it is
converted. Newer rsync versions will provide more complete json info than
older rsync versions.
older rsync versions. Various tweaks are made to keep the flag names
consistent across versions.
- The [`use chroot`](rsyncd.conf.5#use_chroot) daemon parameter now defaults to
"unset" so that rsync can use chroot when it works and a sanitized copy when
chroot is not supported (e.g., for a non-root daemon). Explicitly setting
the parameter to true or false (on or off) behaves the same way as before.
- The [`use chroot`](rsyncd.conf.5#) daemon parameter now defaults to "unset"
so that rsync can use chroot when it works and a sanitized copy when chroot
is not supported (e.g., for a non-root daemon). Explicitly setting the
parameter to true or false (on or off) behaves the same way as before.
- The `--fuzzy` option was optimized a bit to try to cut down on the amount of
computations when considering a big pool of files. The simple heuristic from
Kenneth Finnegan resuled in about a 2x speedup.
Kenneth Finnegan resulted in about a 2x speedup.
- If rsync is forced to use protocol 29 or before (perhaps due to talking to an
rsync before 3.0.0), the modify time of a file is limited to 4-bytes. Rsync
now interprets this value as an unsigned integer so that a current year past
2038 can continue to be represented. This does mean that years prior to 1970
cannot be represented in an older protocol, but this trade-off seems like the
right choice given that (1) 2038 is very rapidly approaching, and (2) newer
protocols support a much wider range of old and new dates.
- The rsync client now treats an empty destination arg as an error, just like
it does for an empty source arg. This doesn't affect a `host:` arg (which is
treated the same as `host:.`) since the arg is not completely empty. The use
of [`--old-args`](rsync.1#opt) (including via `RSYNC_OLD_ARGS`) allows the
prior behavior of treating an empty destination arg as a ".".
### PACKAGING RELATED:
@@ -57,7 +544,7 @@
deprecation warnings and makes it easy to support more digest methods. On
newer systems, the MD4 digest is marked as legacy in the openssl code, which
makes openssl refuse to support it via EVP. You can choose to ignore this
and allow the included MD4 code to be used for older rsync connections (when
and allow rsync's MD4 code to be used for older rsync connections (when
talking to an rsync prior to 3.0.0) or you can choose to configure rsync to
tell openssl to enable legacy algorithms (see below).
@@ -202,9 +689,10 @@
- A new form of arg protection was added that works similarly to the older
`--protect-args` ([`-s`](rsync.1#opt)) option but in a way that avoids
breaking things like rrsync (the restricted rsync script): rsync now uses
backslash escaping for sending "shell-active" characters to the remote
shell. This includes spaces, so fetching a remote file via a simple quoted
filename value now works by default without any extra quoting:
backslash escaping for sending "shell-active" characters to the remote shell
(such as `$(){}<>#&` and others). This includes spaces, so fetching a remote
file via a quoted filename value now works by default without any extra
quoting:
```shell
rsync -aiv host:'a simple file.pdf' .
@@ -212,10 +700,14 @@
Wildcards are not escaped in filename args, but they are escaped in options
like the [`--suffix`](rsync.1#opt) and [`--usermap`](rsync.1#opt) values.
If your rsync script depends on the old arg-splitting behavior, either run
it with the [`--old-args`](rsync.1#opt) option or `export RSYNC_OLD_ARGS=1`
in the script's environment. See also the [ADVANCED USAGE](rsync.1#)
section of rsync's manpage for how to use a more modern arg style.
If a script depends on the old arg behavior (perhaps because it quotes or
protects the args already, or perhaps because it expects arg splitting),
there are two easy ways to get things going with a modern rsync: either
`export RSYNC_OLD_ARGS=1` in the script's environment (perhaps in the script
itself) or add the option [`--old-args`](rsync.1#opt) to the rsync commands
that are run. See also the [ADVANCED USAGE](rsync.1#) section of rsync's
manpage for how to use a more modern arg style.
- A long-standing bug was preventing rsync from figuring out the current
locale's decimal point character, which made rsync always output numbers
@@ -4677,7 +5169,12 @@
| RELEASE DATE | VER. | DATE OF COMMIT\* | PROTOCOL |
|--------------|--------|------------------|-------------|
| ?? Dec 2022 | 3.2.7 | | 31 |
| 20 May 2026 | 3.4.3 | | 32 |
| 28 Apr 2026 | 3.4.2 | | 32 |
| 16 Jan 2025 | 3.4.1 | | 32 |
| 15 Jan 2025 | 3.4.0 | 15 Jan 2025 | 32 |
| 06 Apr 2024 | 3.3.0 | | 31 |
| 20 Oct 2022 | 3.2.7 | | 31 |
| 09 Sep 2022 | 3.2.6 | | 31 |
| 14 Aug 2022 | 3.2.5 | | 31 |
| 15 Apr 2022 | 3.2.4 | | 31 |

View File

@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ If you need to build rsync yourself, check out the [INSTALL][1] page for
information on what libraries and packages you can use to get the maximum
features in your build.
[1]: https://github.com/WayneD/rsync/blob/master/INSTALL.md
[1]: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/blob/master/INSTALL.md
SETUP
-----
@@ -93,6 +93,15 @@ details.
[3]: https://rsync.samba.org/lists.html
DISCORD
-------
There is also an rsync [Discord server][d] for real-time chat about rsync
and its development.
[d]: https://discord.gg/Avfvy9zhdp
BUG REPORTS
-----------
@@ -112,6 +121,7 @@ page of the web site.
Alternately, email your bug report to <rsync@lists.samba.org>.
For security issues please email details of the issue to <rsync.project@gmail.com>.
GIT REPOSITORY
--------------
@@ -120,7 +130,7 @@ If you want to get the very latest version of rsync direct from the
source code repository, then you will need to use git. The git repo
is hosted [on GitHub][6] and [on Samba's site][7].
[6]: https://github.com/WayneD/rsync
[6]: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync
[7]: https://git.samba.org/?p=rsync.git;a=summary
See [the download page][8] for full details on all the ways to grab the
@@ -132,13 +142,12 @@ source.
COPYRIGHT
---------
Rsync was originally written by Andrew Tridgell and is currently
maintained by Wayne Davison. It has been improved by many developers
from around the world.
Rsync was originally written by Andrew Tridgell and Paul Mackerras. Many
people from around the world have helped to maintain and improve it.
Rsync may be used, modified and redistributed only under the terms of
the GNU General Public License, found in the file [COPYING][9] in this
distribution, or at [the Free Software Foundation][10].
[9]: https://github.com/WayneD/rsync/blob/master/COPYING
[9]: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/blob/master/COPYING
[10]: https://www.fsf.org/licenses/gpl.html

View File

@@ -9,4 +9,5 @@ help backporting fixes into an older release, feel free to ask.
Email your vulnerability information to rsync's maintainer:
Wayne Davison <wayne@opencoder.net>
Rsync Project <rsync.project@gmail.com>

11
TODO
View File

@@ -15,7 +15,6 @@ Create more granular verbosity 2003/05/15
DOCUMENTATION --------------------------------------------------------
Keep list of open issues and todos on the web site
Perhaps redo manual as SGML
LOGGING --------------------------------------------------------------
Memory accounting
@@ -213,16 +212,6 @@ DOCUMENTATION --------------------------------------------------------
Keep list of open issues and todos on the web site
-- --
Perhaps redo manual as SGML
The man page is getting rather large, and there is more information
that ought to be added.
TexInfo source is probably a dying format.
Linuxdoc looks like the most likely contender. I know DocBook is
favoured by some people, but it's so bloody verbose, even with emacs
support.

View File

@@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ static void make_mask(char *mask, int plen, int addrlen)
return;
}
static int match_address(const char *addr, const char *tok)
static int match_address(const char *addr, char *tok)
{
char *p;
struct addrinfo hints, *resa, *rest;

9
acls.c
View File

@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ extern int dry_run;
extern int am_root;
extern int read_only;
extern int list_only;
extern int orig_umask;
extern mode_t orig_umask;
extern int numeric_ids;
extern int inc_recurse;
extern int preserve_devices;
@@ -697,7 +697,7 @@ static uint32 recv_acl_access(int f, uchar *name_follows_ptr)
static uchar recv_ida_entries(int f, ida_entries *ent)
{
uchar computed_mask_bits = 0;
int i, count = read_varint(f);
int i, count = read_varint_bounded(f, 0, MAX_WIRE_ACL_COUNT, "ACL count");
ent->idas = count ? new_array(id_access, count) : NULL;
ent->count = count;
@@ -713,7 +713,7 @@ static uchar recv_ida_entries(int f, ida_entries *ent)
else
id = recv_group_name(f, id, NULL);
} else if (access & NAME_IS_USER) {
if (inc_recurse && am_root && !numeric_ids)
if (inc_recurse && !numeric_ids)
id = match_uid(id);
} else {
if (inc_recurse && (!am_root || !numeric_ids))
@@ -765,6 +765,7 @@ static int recv_rsync_acl(int f, item_list *racl_list, SMB_ACL_TYPE_T type, mode
/* If we received a superfluous mask, throw it away. */
duo_item->racl.mask_obj = NO_ENTRY;
(void)mode;
(void)computed_mask_bits;
#else
if (duo_item->racl.names.count && duo_item->racl.mask_obj == NO_ENTRY) {
/* Mask must be non-empty with lists. */
@@ -981,7 +982,7 @@ static int set_rsync_acl(const char *fname, acl_duo *duo_item,
&& !pack_smb_acl(&duo_item->sacl, &duo_item->racl))
return -1;
#ifdef HAVE_OSX_ACLS
mode = 0; /* eliminate compiler warning */
(void)mode; /* eliminate compiler warning */
#else
if (type == SMB_ACL_TYPE_ACCESS) {
cur_mode = change_sacl_perms(duo_item->sacl, &duo_item->racl, cur_mode, mode);

82
android.c Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,82 @@
/*
* Android-specific helpers.
*
* openat2() usability probe
* -------------------------
* openat2(2) is invoked directly via syscall() because the C library lacked a
* wrapper for it for years. Under a seccomp filter that uses
* SECCOMP_RET_TRAP -- as the Android application sandbox does -- a disallowed
* syscall raises SIGSYS and *kills the process* rather than failing with
* ENOSYS, so inspecting errno after the call is too late. We therefore probe
* openat2() once, behind a temporary SIGSYS handler, so a trapped syscall is
* caught and secure_relative_open_linux() can fall back to the portable
* per-component O_NOFOLLOW resolver instead of the whole process dying.
*
* This is only needed on Android, so the probe body is compiled only there.
* __ANDROID__ is defined by Bionic's headers and reflects the *target*, not
* the build host: it is set both for NDK cross-compiles (from a Linux/macOS
* host) and for native Termux builds, and is unset on every other platform.
* That makes it a reliable compile-time switch for cross builds -- there is
* nothing to detect in configure. Everywhere else openat2() is never
* seccomp-trapped to SIGSYS (a missing syscall simply returns ENOSYS), so
* openat2_usable() collapses to a constant 1 with no run-time cost.
*/
#include "rsync.h"
#if defined(__ANDROID__) && defined(HAVE_OPENAT2)
#include <setjmp.h>
#include <sys/syscall.h>
#include <linux/openat2.h>
static sigjmp_buf openat2_probe_env;
static void openat2_probe_handler(int signo)
{
(void)signo;
siglongjmp(openat2_probe_env, 1);
}
#endif
int openat2_usable(void)
{
#if defined(__ANDROID__) && defined(HAVE_OPENAT2)
static int cached = -1;
struct sigaction sa, old_sa;
if (cached >= 0)
return cached;
memset(&sa, 0, sizeof sa);
sa.sa_handler = openat2_probe_handler;
sigemptyset(&sa.sa_mask);
if (sigaction(SIGSYS, &sa, &old_sa) != 0)
return cached = 0;
if (sigsetjmp(openat2_probe_env, 1) != 0) {
/* SIGSYS delivered: openat2 is blocked by a seccomp filter. */
cached = 0;
} else {
struct open_how how;
int fd;
memset(&how, 0, sizeof how);
how.flags = O_RDONLY | O_DIRECTORY;
how.resolve = RESOLVE_BENEATH | RESOLVE_NO_MAGICLINKS;
fd = syscall(SYS_openat2, AT_FDCWD, ".", &how, sizeof how);
if (fd >= 0)
close(fd);
/* Usable only if the probe actually succeeded. Any failure --
* ENOSYS (kernel < 5.6), a seccomp SECCOMP_RET_ERRNO denial
* (EPERM/EACCES), or EINVAL (RESOLVE_BENEATH unsupported) --
* means we must fall back to the portable O_NOFOLLOW walk. */
cached = fd >= 0;
}
sigaction(SIGSYS, &old_sa, NULL);
return cached;
#else
return 1;
#endif
}

View File

@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ static int validate_backup_dir(void)
{
STRUCT_STAT st;
if (do_lstat(backup_dir_buf, &st) < 0) {
if (do_lstat_at(backup_dir_buf, &st) < 0) {
if (errno == ENOENT)
return 0;
rsyserr(FERROR, errno, "backup lstat %s failed", backup_dir_buf);
@@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ static BOOL copy_valid_path(const char *fname)
for ( ; b; name = b + 1, b = strchr(name, '/')) {
*b = '\0';
while (do_mkdir(backup_dir_buf, ACCESSPERMS) < 0) {
while (do_mkdir_at(backup_dir_buf, ACCESSPERMS) < 0) {
if (errno == EEXIST) {
val = validate_backup_dir();
if (val > 0)
@@ -197,7 +197,7 @@ static inline int link_or_rename(const char *from, const char *to,
if (IS_SPECIAL(stp->st_mode) || IS_DEVICE(stp->st_mode))
return 0; /* Use copy code. */
#endif
if (do_link(from, to) == 0) {
if (do_link_at(from, to) == 0) {
if (DEBUG_GTE(BACKUP, 1))
rprintf(FINFO, "make_backup: HLINK %s successful.\n", from);
return 2;
@@ -207,7 +207,7 @@ static inline int link_or_rename(const char *from, const char *to,
return 0;
}
#endif
if (do_rename(from, to) == 0) {
if (do_rename_at(from, to) == 0) {
if (stp->st_nlink > 1 && !S_ISDIR(stp->st_mode)) {
/* If someone has hard-linked the file into the backup
* dir, rename() might return success but do nothing! */
@@ -246,7 +246,7 @@ int make_backup(const char *fname, BOOL prefer_rename)
goto success;
if (errno == EEXIST || errno == EISDIR) {
STRUCT_STAT bakst;
if (do_lstat(buf, &bakst) == 0) {
if (do_lstat_at(buf, &bakst) == 0) {
int flags = get_del_for_flag(bakst.st_mode) | DEL_FOR_BACKUP | DEL_RECURSE;
if (delete_item(buf, bakst.st_mode, flags) != 0)
return 0;
@@ -277,7 +277,7 @@ int make_backup(const char *fname, BOOL prefer_rename)
/* Check to see if this is a device file, or link */
if ((am_root && preserve_devices && IS_DEVICE(file->mode))
|| (preserve_specials && IS_SPECIAL(file->mode))) {
if (do_mknod(buf, file->mode, sx.st.st_rdev) < 0)
if (do_mknod_at(buf, file->mode, sx.st.st_rdev) < 0)
rsyserr(FERROR, errno, "mknod %s failed", full_fname(buf));
else if (DEBUG_GTE(BACKUP, 1))
rprintf(FINFO, "make_backup: DEVICE %s successful.\n", fname);
@@ -294,7 +294,7 @@ int make_backup(const char *fname, BOOL prefer_rename)
}
ret = 2;
} else {
if (do_symlink(sl, buf) < 0)
if (do_symlink_at(sl, buf) < 0)
rsyserr(FERROR, errno, "link %s -> \"%s\"", full_fname(buf), sl);
else if (DEBUG_GTE(BACKUP, 1))
rprintf(FINFO, "make_backup: SYMLINK %s successful.\n", fname);

View File

@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ static int *flag_ptr[] = {
NULL
};
static char *flag_name[] = {
static const char *const flag_name[] = {
"--recurse (-r)",
"--owner (-o)",
"--group (-g)",

View File

@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
*
* Copyright (C) 1996 Andrew Tridgell
* Copyright (C) 1996 Paul Mackerras
* Copyright (C) 2004-2022 Wayne Davison
* Copyright (C) 2004-2023 Wayne Davison
*
* 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
@@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ static const EVP_MD *csum_evp_md(struct name_num_item *nni)
emd = NULL;
else
#endif
emd = EVP_get_digestbyname(nni->name);
emd = EVP_get_digestbyname(nni->name);
if (emd && !(nni->flags & NNI_EVP_OK)) { /* Make sure it works before we advertise it */
if (!ctx_evp && !(ctx_evp = EVP_MD_CTX_create()))
out_of_memory("csum_evp_md");
@@ -176,7 +176,7 @@ void parse_checksum_choice(int final_call)
if (valid_checksums.negotiated_nni)
xfer_sum_nni = file_sum_nni = valid_checksums.negotiated_nni;
else {
char *cp = checksum_choice ? strchr(checksum_choice, ',') : NULL;
const char *cp = checksum_choice ? strchr(checksum_choice, ',') : NULL;
if (cp) {
xfer_sum_nni = parse_csum_name(checksum_choice, cp - checksum_choice);
file_sum_nni = parse_csum_name(cp+1, -1);
@@ -300,6 +300,7 @@ uint32 get_checksum1(char *buf1, int32 len)
}
#endif
/* The "sum" buffer must be at least MAX_DIGEST_LEN bytes! */
void get_checksum2(char *buf, int32 len, char *sum)
{
#ifdef USE_OPENSSL
@@ -365,9 +366,8 @@ void get_checksum2(char *buf, int32 len, char *sum)
mdfour_begin(&m);
if (len > len1) {
if (buf1)
free(buf1);
if (len > len1 || !buf1) {
free(buf1);
buf1 = new_array(char, len+4);
len1 = len;
}
@@ -405,7 +405,7 @@ void file_checksum(const char *fname, const STRUCT_STAT *st_p, char *sum)
int32 remainder;
int fd;
fd = do_open(fname, O_RDONLY, 0);
fd = do_open_checklinks(fname);
if (fd == -1) {
memset(sum, 0, file_sum_len);
return;
@@ -787,6 +787,10 @@ void init_checksum_choices()
if (initialized_choices)
return;
#if defined USE_OPENSSL && OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER < 0x10100000L
OpenSSL_add_all_algorithms();
#endif
#if defined SUPPORT_XXH3 || defined USE_OPENSSL
for (nni = valid_checksums.list; nni->name; nni++)
verify_digest(nni, True);

95
chmod.c
View File

@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ extern mode_t orig_umask;
struct chmod_mode_struct {
struct chmod_mode_struct *next;
int ModeAND, ModeOR;
int ModeAND, ModeOR, ModeCOPY_SRC, ModeCOPY_DST, ModeCOPY_AND, ModeOP;
char flags;
};
@@ -43,6 +43,20 @@ struct chmod_mode_struct {
#define STATE_2ND_HALF 2
#define STATE_OCTAL_NUM 3
static int mode_dest_special_bits(int where)
{
int bits = 0;
if (where & 0100)
bits |= S_ISUID;
if (where & 0010)
bits |= S_ISGID;
if (where & 0001)
bits |= S_ISVTX;
return bits;
}
/* Parse a chmod-style argument, and break it down into one or more AND/OR
* pairs in a linked list. We return a pointer to new items on success
* (appending the items to the specified list), or NULL on error. */
@@ -50,13 +64,13 @@ struct chmod_mode_struct *parse_chmod(const char *modestr,
struct chmod_mode_struct **root_mode_ptr)
{
int state = STATE_1ST_HALF;
int where = 0, what = 0, op = 0, topbits = 0, topoct = 0, flags = 0;
int where = 0, what = 0, op = 0, topbits = 0, topoct = 0, flags = 0, copybits = 0;
struct chmod_mode_struct *first_mode = NULL, *curr_mode = NULL,
*prev_mode = NULL;
while (state != STATE_ERROR) {
if (!*modestr || *modestr == ',') {
int bits;
int bits, where_specified;
if (!op) {
state = STATE_ERROR;
@@ -70,9 +84,10 @@ struct chmod_mode_struct *parse_chmod(const char *modestr,
first_mode = curr_mode;
curr_mode->next = NULL;
if (where)
where_specified = where;
if (where) {
bits = where * what;
else {
} else {
where = 0111;
bits = (where * what) & ~orig_umask;
}
@@ -81,18 +96,35 @@ struct chmod_mode_struct *parse_chmod(const char *modestr,
case CHMOD_ADD:
curr_mode->ModeAND = CHMOD_BITS;
curr_mode->ModeOR = bits + topoct;
curr_mode->ModeCOPY_SRC = copybits;
curr_mode->ModeCOPY_DST = where;
curr_mode->ModeCOPY_AND = where_specified ? CHMOD_BITS : ~orig_umask;
curr_mode->ModeOP = op;
break;
case CHMOD_SUB:
curr_mode->ModeAND = CHMOD_BITS - bits - topoct;
curr_mode->ModeOR = 0;
curr_mode->ModeCOPY_SRC = copybits;
curr_mode->ModeCOPY_DST = where;
curr_mode->ModeCOPY_AND = where_specified ? CHMOD_BITS : ~orig_umask;
curr_mode->ModeOP = op;
break;
case CHMOD_EQ:
curr_mode->ModeAND = CHMOD_BITS - (where * 7) - (topoct ? topbits : 0);
curr_mode->ModeAND = CHMOD_BITS - (where * 7) - (topoct ? topbits : 0)
- (copybits ? mode_dest_special_bits(where) : 0);
curr_mode->ModeOR = bits + topoct;
curr_mode->ModeCOPY_SRC = copybits;
curr_mode->ModeCOPY_DST = where;
curr_mode->ModeCOPY_AND = where_specified ? CHMOD_BITS : ~orig_umask;
curr_mode->ModeOP = op;
break;
case CHMOD_SET:
curr_mode->ModeAND = 0;
curr_mode->ModeOR = bits;
curr_mode->ModeCOPY_SRC = 0;
curr_mode->ModeCOPY_DST = 0;
curr_mode->ModeCOPY_AND = CHMOD_BITS;
curr_mode->ModeOP = op;
break;
}
@@ -103,7 +135,7 @@ struct chmod_mode_struct *parse_chmod(const char *modestr,
modestr++;
state = STATE_1ST_HALF;
where = what = op = topoct = topbits = flags = 0;
where = what = op = topoct = topbits = flags = copybits = 0;
}
switch (state) {
@@ -159,26 +191,53 @@ struct chmod_mode_struct *parse_chmod(const char *modestr,
case STATE_2ND_HALF:
switch (*modestr) {
case 'r':
if (copybits)
state = STATE_ERROR;
what |= 4;
break;
case 'w':
if (copybits)
state = STATE_ERROR;
what |= 2;
break;
case 'X':
if (copybits)
state = STATE_ERROR;
flags |= FLAG_X_KEEP;
/* FALL THROUGH */
case 'x':
if (copybits)
state = STATE_ERROR;
what |= 1;
break;
case 's':
if (copybits)
state = STATE_ERROR;
if (topbits)
topoct |= topbits;
else
topoct = 04000;
break;
case 't':
if (copybits)
state = STATE_ERROR;
topoct |= 01000;
break;
case 'u':
if (what || topoct || copybits)
state = STATE_ERROR;
copybits = 0100;
break;
case 'g':
if (what || topoct || copybits)
state = STATE_ERROR;
copybits = 0010;
break;
case 'o':
if (what || topoct || copybits)
state = STATE_ERROR;
copybits = 0001;
break;
default:
state = STATE_ERROR;
break;
@@ -212,6 +271,20 @@ struct chmod_mode_struct *parse_chmod(const char *modestr,
return first_mode;
}
static int mode_copy_bits(int mode, int copy_src, int copy_dst, int copy_and)
{
int copy_bits = 0;
if (copy_src & 0100)
copy_bits |= (mode >> 6) & 7;
if (copy_src & 0010)
copy_bits |= (mode >> 3) & 7;
if (copy_src & 0001)
copy_bits |= mode & 7;
return (copy_dst * copy_bits) & copy_and;
}
/* Takes an existing file permission and a list of AND/OR changes, and
* create a new permissions. */
@@ -219,17 +292,25 @@ int tweak_mode(int mode, struct chmod_mode_struct *chmod_modes)
{
int IsX = mode & 0111;
int NonPerm = mode & ~CHMOD_BITS;
int copy_bits;
for ( ; chmod_modes; chmod_modes = chmod_modes->next) {
if ((chmod_modes->flags & FLAG_DIRS_ONLY) && !S_ISDIR(NonPerm))
continue;
if ((chmod_modes->flags & FLAG_FILES_ONLY) && S_ISDIR(NonPerm))
continue;
copy_bits = mode_copy_bits(mode, chmod_modes->ModeCOPY_SRC,
chmod_modes->ModeCOPY_DST,
chmod_modes->ModeCOPY_AND);
mode &= chmod_modes->ModeAND;
if ((chmod_modes->flags & FLAG_X_KEEP) && !IsX && !S_ISDIR(NonPerm))
mode |= chmod_modes->ModeOR & ~0111;
else
mode |= chmod_modes->ModeOR;
if (chmod_modes->ModeOP == CHMOD_SUB)
mode &= CHMOD_BITS - copy_bits;
else
mode |= copy_bits;
}
return mode | NonPerm;

View File

@@ -198,7 +198,7 @@ NORETURN void _exit_cleanup(int code, const char *file, int line)
switch_step++;
if (cleanup_fname)
do_unlink(cleanup_fname);
do_unlink_at(cleanup_fname);
if (exit_code)
kill_all(SIGUSR1);
if (cleanup_pid && cleanup_pid == getpid()) {
@@ -269,8 +269,16 @@ NORETURN void _exit_cleanup(int code, const char *file, int line)
break;
}
if (called_from_signal_handler)
if (called_from_signal_handler) {
#ifdef GCOV_COVERAGE
/* _exit() bypasses the gcov atexit flush; rsync's generator (and
* other processes) normally finish via the signal handler, so
* without this they would write no .gcda. Harmless otherwise. */
extern void __gcov_dump(void);
__gcov_dump();
#endif
_exit(exit_code);
}
exit(exit_code);
}

View File

@@ -167,7 +167,7 @@ int read_proxy_protocol_header(int fd)
char sig[PROXY_V2_SIG_SIZE];
char ver_cmd;
char fam;
char len[2];
unsigned char len[2];
union {
struct {
char src_addr[4];

View File

@@ -30,6 +30,7 @@ extern int list_only;
extern int am_sender;
extern int am_server;
extern int am_daemon;
extern int am_chrooted;
extern int am_root;
extern int msgs2stderr;
extern int rsync_port;
@@ -38,6 +39,7 @@ extern int ignore_errors;
extern int preserve_xattrs;
extern int kluge_around_eof;
extern int munge_symlinks;
extern int use_secure_symlinks;
extern int open_noatime;
extern int sanitize_paths;
extern int numeric_ids;
@@ -976,11 +978,14 @@ static int rsync_module(int f_in, int f_out, int i, const char *addr, const char
}
if (use_chroot) {
/* Cache timezone data before chroot makes /etc/localtime inaccessible */
tzset();
if (chroot(module_chdir)) {
rsyserr(FLOG, errno, "chroot(\"%s\") failed", module_chdir);
io_printf(f_out, "@ERROR: chroot failed\n");
return -1;
}
am_chrooted = 1;
module_chdir = module_dir;
}
@@ -1003,6 +1008,15 @@ static int rsync_module(int f_in, int f_out, int i, const char *addr, const char
}
}
/* Enable secure symlink handling for any non-chrooted daemon module.
* This prevents TOCTOU race attacks where an attacker could switch a
* directory to a symlink between path validation and file open.
* Match the gate used by the do_*_at() wrappers in syscall.c
* (am_daemon && !am_chrooted) -- the protection has nothing to do
* with symlink munging, so a module configured with
* "munge symlinks = false" must still get the secure-open path. */
use_secure_symlinks = am_daemon && !am_chrooted;
if (gid_list.count) {
gid_t *gid_array = gid_list.items;
if (setgid(gid_array[0])) {
@@ -1056,7 +1070,7 @@ static int rsync_module(int f_in, int f_out, int i, const char *addr, const char
io_printf(f_out, "@RSYNCD: OK\n");
read_args(f_in, name, line, sizeof line, rl_nulls, &argv, &argc, &request);
read_args(f_in, name, line, sizeof line, rl_nulls, 1, &argv, &argc, &request);
orig_argv = argv;
save_munge_symlinks = munge_symlinks;
@@ -1066,7 +1080,7 @@ static int rsync_module(int f_in, int f_out, int i, const char *addr, const char
if (protect_args && ret) {
orig_early_argv = orig_argv;
protect_args = 2;
read_args(f_in, name, line, sizeof line, 1, &argv, &argc, &request);
read_args(f_in, name, line, sizeof line, 1, 0, &argv, &argc, &request);
orig_argv = argv;
ret = parse_arguments(&argc, (const char ***) &argv);
} else
@@ -1298,13 +1312,49 @@ int start_daemon(int f_in, int f_out)
if (lp_proxy_protocol() && !read_proxy_protocol_header(f_in))
return -1;
/* Do reverse DNS lookup before chroot/setuid. The result is cached,
* so the later client_name() call will use this cached value. This
* ensures hostname-based ACLs work even when DNS is unavailable
* after chroot.
*
* "reverse lookup" can be set globally OR per-module, so we also
* scan each module: a deployment with "reverse lookup = no" in the
* global section but "reverse lookup = yes" in a specific module
* still triggers a post-chroot lookup at access-check time
* (rsync_module() in this file), which would also fail in the
* chroot and turn hostname-based deny rules into silent bypasses. */
{
int need_reverse = lp_reverse_lookup(-1);
int j, num_modules = lp_num_modules();
for (j = 0; !need_reverse && j < num_modules; j++) {
if (lp_reverse_lookup(j))
need_reverse = 1;
}
if (need_reverse)
(void)client_name(client_addr(f_in));
}
p = lp_daemon_chroot();
if (*p) {
log_init(0); /* Make use we've initialized syslog before chrooting. */
tzset();
if (chroot(p) < 0) {
rsyserr(FLOG, errno, "daemon chroot(\"%s\") failed", p);
return -1;
}
/* Deliberately do NOT set am_chrooted here. am_chrooted
* gates the per-module symlink-race defenses
* (secure_relative_open() and the do_*_at() wrappers in
* syscall.c) and means "the kernel is enforcing path
* confinement at the module boundary". The daemon chroot
* confines path resolution to the daemon-chroot directory,
* not to any individual module path -- modules sharing the
* daemon chroot are still distinguishable filesystem
* subtrees and a sender-controlled symlink in module A
* could redirect a syscall to module B (or to other files
* inside the daemon chroot) without the per-module
* defenses. Leave am_chrooted=0 here so secure_relative_open()
* still fires for "use chroot = no" modules. */
if (chdir("/") < 0) {
rsyserr(FLOG, errno, "daemon chdir(\"/\") failed");
return -1;

View File

@@ -52,6 +52,7 @@ extern int need_messages_from_generator;
extern int delete_mode, delete_before, delete_during, delete_after;
extern int do_compression;
extern int do_compression_level;
extern int do_compression_threads;
extern int saw_stderr_opt;
extern int msgs2stderr;
extern char *shell_cmd;
@@ -131,7 +132,7 @@ static const char *client_info;
* of that protocol for it to be advertised as available. */
static void check_sub_protocol(void)
{
char *dot;
const char *dot;
int their_protocol, their_sub;
int our_sub = get_subprotocol_version();
@@ -414,7 +415,7 @@ static const char *getenv_nstr(int ntype)
env_str = ntype == NSTR_COMPRESS ? "zlib" : protocol_version >= 30 ? "md5" : "md4";
if (am_server && env_str) {
char *cp = strchr(env_str, '&');
const char *cp = strchr(env_str, '&');
if (cp)
env_str = cp + 1;
}
@@ -834,6 +835,8 @@ void output_daemon_greeting(int f_out, int am_client)
char tmpbuf[MAX_NSTR_STRLEN];
int our_sub = get_subprotocol_version();
init_checksum_choices();
get_default_nno_list(&valid_auth_checksums, tmpbuf, MAX_NSTR_STRLEN, '\0');
io_printf(f_out, "@RSYNCD: %d.%d %s\n", protocol_version, our_sub, tmpbuf);
@@ -873,8 +876,10 @@ void negotiate_daemon_auth(int f_out, int am_client)
}
}
am_server = save_am_server;
if (md4_is_old && valid_auth_checksums.negotiated_nni->num == CSUM_MD4)
if (md4_is_old && valid_auth_checksums.negotiated_nni->num == CSUM_MD4) {
valid_auth_checksums.negotiated_nni->num = CSUM_MD4_OLD;
valid_auth_checksums.negotiated_nni->flags = 0;
}
}
int get_subprotocol_version()

1210
config.guess vendored
View File

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

676
config.sub vendored
View File

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -4,7 +4,6 @@ AC_INIT([rsync],[ ],[https://rsync.samba.org/bug-tracking.html])
AC_C_BIGENDIAN
AC_HEADER_DIRENT
AC_HEADER_TIME
AC_HEADER_SYS_WAIT
AC_CHECK_HEADERS(sys/fcntl.h sys/select.h fcntl.h sys/time.h sys/unistd.h \
unistd.h utime.h compat.h sys/param.h ctype.h sys/wait.h sys/stat.h \
@@ -20,7 +19,7 @@ AC_HEADER_MAJOR_FIXED
AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR([m4])
AC_CONFIG_SRCDIR([byteorder.h])
AC_CONFIG_HEADER(config.h)
AC_CONFIG_HEADERS([config.h])
AC_PREREQ([2.69])
PACKAGE_VERSION=`sed -n 's/.*RSYNC_VERSION.*"\(.*\)".*/\1/p' <$srcdir/version.h`
@@ -61,7 +60,6 @@ AC_PROG_AWK
AC_PROG_EGREP
AC_PROG_INSTALL
AC_PROG_MKDIR_P
AC_PROG_CC_STDC
AC_SUBST(SHELL)
AC_PATH_PROG([PERL], [perl])
AC_PATH_PROG([PYTHON3], [python3])
@@ -84,6 +82,28 @@ if test x"$enable_profile" = x"yes"; then
CFLAGS="$CFLAGS -pg"
fi
dnl Coverage build (gcov) for `make coverage`. NOTE: --enable-profile above is
dnl gprof (-pg) and is NOT coverage. -O0 keeps branch coverage meaningful;
dnl -fprofile-update=atomic keeps the shared .gcda counters correct while the
dnl suite runs many rsync processes in parallel.
AC_ARG_ENABLE(coverage,
AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-coverage],[build with gcov instrumentation for `make coverage`]))
if test x"$enable_coverage" = x"yes"; then
CFLAGS="$CFLAGS --coverage -fprofile-update=atomic -O0"
CXXFLAGS="$CXXFLAGS --coverage -fprofile-update=atomic -O0"
LDFLAGS="$LDFLAGS --coverage"
AC_DEFINE([GCOV_COVERAGE], 1,
[Flush gcov counters at exit_cleanup: rsync's children exit via _exit(), which bypasses the gcov atexit handler, so without this no .gcda is written for the receiver/generator/daemon-worker processes.])
fi
dnl openat2(RESOLVE_BENEATH) is used on Linux 5.6+ for the secure resolver.
dnl --disable-openat2 forces the portable per-component O_NOFOLLOW fallback to
dnl run as the primary resolver on ordinary Linux, so that tier is exercised
dnl (and coverage-counted) without needing a pre-5.6 kernel. Behaviour-neutral
dnl by default (the knob only REMOVES a tier when explicitly disabled).
AC_ARG_ENABLE(openat2,
AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-openat2],[do not use Linux openat2(RESOLVE_BENEATH); force the portable resolver (for exercising the fallback tier)]))
AC_MSG_CHECKING([if md2man can create manpages])
if test x"$ac_cv_path_PYTHON3" = x; then
AC_MSG_RESULT(no - python3 not found)
@@ -333,6 +353,28 @@ AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([[ ]], [[return 0;]])],
CFLAGS="$OLD_CFLAGS"
AC_SUBST(NOEXECSTACK)
dnl We need both the SYS_openat2 syscall number and <linux/openat2.h> (for
dnl struct open_how / RESOLVE_BENEATH); some setups have one without the other.
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for openat2],rsync_cv_HAVE_OPENAT2,[
AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([
AC_LANG_PROGRAM([[
#include <sys/syscall.h>
#include <linux/openat2.h>
]], [[
struct open_how how;
how.resolve = RESOLVE_BENEATH;
return SYS_openat2 + (int)how.resolve;
]])
],
[rsync_cv_HAVE_OPENAT2=yes], [rsync_cv_HAVE_OPENAT2=no])
])
if test x"$enable_openat2" != x"no"; then
if test x"$rsync_cv_HAVE_OPENAT2" = x"yes"; then
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_OPENAT2], 1,
[Define to use Linux openat2(RESOLVE_BENEATH) in secure_relative_open where available.])
fi
fi
# arrgh. libc in some old debian version screwed up the largefile
# stuff, getting byte range locking wrong
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for broken largefile support],rsync_cv_HAVE_BROKEN_LARGEFILE,[
@@ -390,22 +432,18 @@ AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-ipv6],[disable to omit ipv6 support]),
;;
esac ],
AC_TRY_RUN([ /* AF_INET6 availability check */
#include <stdlib.h>
AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([[
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
main()
{
if (socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, 0) < 0)
exit(1);
else
exit(0);
}
],
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
AC_DEFINE(INET6, 1, [true if you have IPv6]),
AC_MSG_RESULT(no),
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
#include <netinet/in.h>
]], [[
struct sockaddr_in6 sa6;
(void)sa6;
(void)AF_INET6;
]])],
[AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
AC_DEFINE(INET6, 1, [true if you have IPv6])],
[AC_MSG_RESULT(no)]
))
dnl Do you want to disable use of locale functions
@@ -426,6 +464,26 @@ case $host_os in
* ) AC_MSG_RESULT(no);;
esac
# We default to using our zlib unless --with-included-zlib=no is given.
if test x"$with_included_zlib" != x"no"; then
with_included_zlib=yes
elif test x"$ac_cv_header_zlib_h" != x"yes"; then
with_included_zlib=yes
fi
if test x"$with_included_zlib" != x"yes"; then
AC_CHECK_LIB(z, deflateParams, , [with_included_zlib=yes])
fi
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether to use included zlib])
if test x"$with_included_zlib" = x"yes"; then
AC_MSG_RESULT($srcdir/zlib)
BUILD_ZLIB='$(zlib_OBJS)'
CFLAGS="-I$srcdir/zlib $CFLAGS"
else
AC_DEFINE(EXTERNAL_ZLIB, 1, [Define to 1 if using external zlib])
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
fi
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether to enable use of openssl crypto library])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([openssl],
AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-openssl],[disable to omit openssl crypto library]))
@@ -434,10 +492,10 @@ AH_TEMPLATE([USE_OPENSSL],
if test x"$enable_openssl" != x"no"; then
if test x"$ac_cv_header_openssl_md4_h" = x"yes" && test x"$ac_cv_header_openssl_md5_h" = x"yes"; then
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
AC_SEARCH_LIBS(MD5_Init, crypto,
AC_SEARCH_LIBS(EVP_MD_CTX_copy, crypto,
[AC_DEFINE(USE_OPENSSL)
enable_openssl=yes],
[err_msg="$err_msg$nl- Failed to find MD5_Init function in openssl crypto lib.";
[err_msg="$err_msg$nl- Failed to find EVP_MD_CTX_copy function in openssl crypto lib.";
no_lib="$no_lib openssl"])
else
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
@@ -528,7 +586,7 @@ fi
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether to enable zstd compression])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([zstd],
AC_HELP_STRING([--disable-zstd], [disable to omit zstd compression]))
AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-zstd], [disable to omit zstd compression]))
AH_TEMPLATE([SUPPORT_ZSTD],
[Undefine if you do not want zstd compression. By default this is defined.])
if test x"$enable_zstd" != x"no"; then
@@ -549,7 +607,7 @@ fi
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether to enable LZ4 compression])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([lz4],
AC_HELP_STRING([--disable-lz4], [disable to omit LZ4 compression]))
AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-lz4], [disable to omit LZ4 compression]))
AH_TEMPLATE([SUPPORT_LZ4],
[Undefine if you do not want LZ4 compression. By default this is defined.])
if test x"$enable_lz4" != x"no"; then
@@ -575,7 +633,7 @@ if test x"$no_lib" != x; then
echo ""
echo "See the INSTALL file for hints on how to install the missing libraries and/or"
echo "how to generate (or fetch) manpages:"
echo " https://github.com/WayneD/rsync/blob/master/INSTALL.md"
echo " https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/blob/master/INSTALL.md"
echo ""
echo "To disable one or more features, the relevant configure options are:"
for lib in $no_lib; do
@@ -870,9 +928,9 @@ AC_FUNC_UTIME_NULL
AC_FUNC_ALLOCA
AC_CHECK_FUNCS(waitpid wait4 getcwd chown chmod lchmod mknod mkfifo \
fchmod fstat ftruncate strchr readlink link utime utimes lutimes strftime \
chflags getattrlist mktime innetgr linkat \
chflags getattrlist mktime innetgr linkat mknodat mkfifoat \
memmove lchown vsnprintf snprintf vasprintf asprintf setsid strpbrk \
strlcat strlcpy strtol mallinfo mallinfo2 getgroups setgroups geteuid getegid \
strlcat strlcpy stpcpy strtol mallinfo mallinfo2 getgroups setgroups geteuid getegid \
setlocale setmode open64 lseek64 mkstemp64 mtrace va_copy __va_copy \
seteuid strerror putenv iconv_open locale_charset nl_langinfo getxattr \
extattr_get_link sigaction sigprocmask setattrlist getgrouplist \
@@ -1086,6 +1144,8 @@ if test x"$with_included_popt" = x"yes"; then
AC_MSG_RESULT($srcdir/popt)
BUILD_POPT='$(popt_OBJS)'
CFLAGS="-I$srcdir/popt $CFLAGS"
AC_DEFINE(POPT_SYSCONFDIR, "/etc", [sysconfig dir for popt])
AC_DEFINE(PACKAGE, "rsync", [package name for rsync])
if test x"$ALLOCA" != x
then
# this can be removed when/if we add an included alloca.c;
@@ -1096,26 +1156,6 @@ else
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
fi
# We default to using our zlib unless --with-included-zlib=no is given.
if test x"$with_included_zlib" != x"no"; then
with_included_zlib=yes
elif test x"$ac_cv_header_zlib_h" != x"yes"; then
with_included_zlib=yes
fi
if test x"$with_included_zlib" != x"yes"; then
AC_CHECK_LIB(z, deflateParams, , [with_included_zlib=yes])
fi
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether to use included zlib])
if test x"$with_included_zlib" = x"yes"; then
AC_MSG_RESULT($srcdir/zlib)
BUILD_ZLIB='$(zlib_OBJS)'
CFLAGS="-I$srcdir/zlib $CFLAGS"
else
AC_DEFINE(EXTERNAL_ZLIB, 1, [Define to 1 if using external zlib])
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
fi
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for unsigned char],rsync_cv_SIGNED_CHAR_OK,[
AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([[]], [[signed char *s = (signed char *)""]])],[rsync_cv_SIGNED_CHAR_OK=yes],[rsync_cv_SIGNED_CHAR_OK=no])])
if test x"$rsync_cv_SIGNED_CHAR_OK" = x"yes"; then
@@ -1392,7 +1432,7 @@ else
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_LINUX_XATTRS, 1, [True if you have Linux xattrs (or equivalent)])
AC_DEFINE(SUPPORT_XATTRS, 1)
AC_DEFINE(NO_SYMLINK_USER_XATTRS, 1, [True if symlinks do not support user xattrs])
AC_CHECK_LIB(attr,getxattr)
AC_SEARCH_LIBS(getxattr,attr)
;;
darwin*)
AC_MSG_RESULT(Using OS X xattrs)

View File

@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
BEGIN {
heading = "/* DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE! It is auto-generated from a list of values in " ARGV[1] "! */\n\n"
sect = psect = defines = accessors = prior_ptype = ""
parms = "\nstatic struct parm_struct parm_table[] = {"
parms = "\nstatic const struct parm_struct parm_table[] = {"
comment_fmt = "\n/********** %s **********/\n"
tdstruct = "typedef struct {"
}

View File

@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
* Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Andrew Tridgell
* Copyright (C) 1996 Paul Mackerras
* Copyright (C) 2002 Martin Pool <mbp@samba.org>
* Copyright (C) 2003-2020 Wayne Davison
* Copyright (C) 2003-2024 Wayne Davison
*
* 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
@@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ static enum delret delete_dir_contents(char *fname, uint16 flags)
strlcpy(p, fp->basename, remainder);
if (!(fp->mode & S_IWUSR) && !am_root && fp->flags & FLAG_OWNED_BY_US)
do_chmod(fname, fp->mode | S_IWUSR);
do_chmod_at(fname, fp->mode | S_IWUSR);
/* Save stack by recursing to ourself directly. */
if (S_ISDIR(fp->mode)) {
if (delete_dir_contents(fname, flags | DEL_RECURSE) != DR_SUCCESS)
@@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ enum delret delete_item(char *fbuf, uint16 mode, uint16 flags)
}
if (flags & DEL_NO_UID_WRITE)
do_chmod(fbuf, mode | S_IWUSR);
do_chmod_at(fbuf, mode | S_IWUSR);
if (S_ISDIR(mode) && !(flags & DEL_DIR_IS_EMPTY)) {
/* This only happens on the first call to delete_item() since
@@ -160,7 +160,7 @@ enum delret delete_item(char *fbuf, uint16 mode, uint16 flags)
if (S_ISDIR(mode)) {
what = "rmdir";
ok = do_rmdir(fbuf) == 0;
ok = do_rmdir_at(fbuf) == 0;
} else {
if (make_backups > 0 && !(flags & DEL_FOR_BACKUP) && (backup_dir || !is_backup_file(fbuf))) {
what = "make_backup";
@@ -188,7 +188,7 @@ enum delret delete_item(char *fbuf, uint16 mode, uint16 flags)
stats.deleted_symlinks++;
#endif
else if (IS_DEVICE(mode))
stats.deleted_symlinks++;
stats.deleted_devices++;
else
stats.deleted_specials++;
}

View File

@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
Handling the rsync SGML documentation
rsync documentation is now primarily in Docbook format. Docbook is an
SGML/XML documentation format that is becoming standard on free
operating systems. It's also used for Samba documentation.
The SGML files are source code that can be translated into various
useful output formats, primarily PDF, HTML, Postscript and plain text.
To do this transformation on Debian, you should install the
docbook-utils package. Having done that, you can say
docbook2pdf rsync.sgml
and so on.
On other systems you probably need James Clark's "sp" and "JadeTeX"
packages. Work it out for yourself and send a note to the mailing
list.

View File

@@ -1,42 +0,0 @@
Notes on rsync profiling
strlcpy is hot:
0.00 0.00 1/7735635 push_dir [68]
0.00 0.00 1/7735635 pop_dir [71]
0.00 0.00 1/7735635 send_file_list [15]
0.01 0.00 18857/7735635 send_files [4]
0.04 0.00 129260/7735635 send_file_entry [18]
0.04 0.00 129260/7735635 make_file [20]
0.04 0.00 141666/7735635 send_directory <cycle 1> [36]
2.29 0.00 7316589/7735635 f_name [13]
[14] 11.7 2.42 0.00 7735635 strlcpy [14]
Here's the top few functions:
46.23 9.57 9.57 13160929 0.00 0.00 mdfour64
14.78 12.63 3.06 13160929 0.00 0.00 copy64
11.69 15.05 2.42 7735635 0.00 0.00 strlcpy
10.05 17.13 2.08 41438 0.05 0.38 sum_update
4.11 17.98 0.85 13159996 0.00 0.00 mdfour_update
1.50 18.29 0.31 file_compare
1.45 18.59 0.30 129261 0.00 0.01 send_file_entry
1.23 18.84 0.26 2557585 0.00 0.00 f_name
1.11 19.07 0.23 1483750 0.00 0.00 u_strcmp
1.11 19.30 0.23 118129 0.00 0.00 writefd_unbuffered
0.92 19.50 0.19 1085011 0.00 0.00 writefd
0.43 19.59 0.09 156987 0.00 0.00 read_timeout
0.43 19.68 0.09 129261 0.00 0.00 clean_fname
0.39 19.75 0.08 32887 0.00 0.38 matched
0.34 19.82 0.07 1 70.00 16293.92 send_files
0.29 19.89 0.06 129260 0.00 0.00 make_file
0.29 19.95 0.06 75430 0.00 0.00 read_unbuffered
mdfour could perhaps be made faster:
/* NOTE: This code makes no attempt to be fast! */
There might be an optimized version somewhere that we can borrow.

View File

@@ -1,351 +0,0 @@
<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V4.1//EN">
<book id="rsync">
<bookinfo>
<title>rsync</title>
<copyright>
<year>1996 -- 2002</year>
<holder>Martin Pool</holder>
<holder>Andrew Tridgell</holder>
</copyright>
<author>
<firstname>Martin</firstname>
<surname>Pool</surname>
</author>
</bookinfo>
<chapter>
<title>Introduction</title>
<para>rsync is a flexible program for efficiently copying files or
directory trees.
<para>rsync has many options to select which files will be copied
and how they are to be transferred. It may be used as an
alternative to ftp, http, scp or rcp.
<para>The rsync remote-update protocol allows rsync to transfer just
the differences between two sets of files across the network link,
using an efficient checksum-search algorithm described in the
technical report that accompanies this package.</para>
<para>Some of the additional features of rsync are:</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>support for copying links, devices, owners, groups and
permissions
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
exclude and exclude-from options similar to GNU tar
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
a CVS exclude mode for ignoring the same files that CVS would ignore
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
can use any transparent remote shell, including rsh or ssh
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
does not require root privileges
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
pipelining of file transfers to minimize latency costs
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
support for anonymous or authenticated rsync servers (ideal for
mirroring)
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>Using rsync</title>
<section>
<title>
Introductory example
</title>
<para>
Probably the most common case of rsync usage is to copy files
to or from a remote machine using
<application>ssh</application> as a network transport. In
this situation rsync is a good alternative to
<application>scp</application>.
</para>
<para>
The most commonly used arguments for rsync are
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term><option>-v</option></term>
<listitem>
<para>Be verbose. Primarily, display the name of each file as it is copied.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><option>-a</option></term>
<listitem>
<para>
Reproduce the structure and attributes of the origin files as exactly
as possible: this includes copying subdirectories, symlinks, special
files, ownership and permissions. (@xref{Attributes to
copy}.)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<para><option>-v </option>
<para><option>-z</option>
Compress network traffic, using a modified version of the
@command{zlib} library.</para>
<para><option>-P</option>
Display a progress indicator while files are transferred. This should
normally be omitted if rsync is not run on a terminal.
</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Local and remote</title>
<para>There are six different ways of using rsync. They
are:</para>
<!-- one of (CALLOUTLIST GLOSSLIST ITEMIZEDLIST ORDEREDLIST SEGMENTEDLIST SIMPLELIST VARIABLELIST CAUTION IMPORTANT NOTE TIP WARNING LITERALLAYOUT PROGRAMLISTING PROGRAMLISTINGCO SCREEN SCREENCO SCREENSHOT SYNOPSIS CMDSYNOPSIS FUNCSYNOPSIS CLASSSYNOPSIS FIELDSYNOPSIS CONSTRUCTORSYNOPSIS DESTRUCTORSYNOPSIS METHODSYNOPSIS FORMALPARA PARA SIMPARA ADDRESS BLOCKQUOTE GRAPHIC GRAPHICCO MEDIAOBJECT MEDIAOBJECTCO INFORMALEQUATION INFORMALEXAMPLE INFORMALFIGURE INFORMALTABLE EQUATION EXAMPLE FIGURE TABLE MSGSET PROCEDURE SIDEBAR QANDASET ANCHOR BRIDGEHEAD REMARK HIGHLIGHTS ABSTRACT AUTHORBLURB EPIGRAPH INDEXTERM REFENTRY SECTION) -->
<orderedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
for copying local files. This is invoked when neither
source nor destination path contains a @code{:} separator
<listitem>
<para>
for copying from the local machine to a remote machine using
a remote shell program as the transport (such as rsh or
ssh). This is invoked when the destination path contains a
single @code{:} separator.
<listitem>
<para>
for copying from a remote machine to the local machine
using a remote shell program. This is invoked when the source
contains a @code{:} separator.
<listitem>
<para>
for copying from a remote rsync server to the local
machine. This is invoked when the source path contains a @code{::}
separator or a @code{rsync://} URL.
<listitem>
<para>
for copying from the local machine to a remote rsync
server. This is invoked when the destination path contains a @code{::}
separator.
<listitem>
<para>
for listing files on a remote machine. This is done the
same way as rsync transfers except that you leave off the
local destination.
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
<para>
Note that in all cases (other than listing) at least one of the source
and destination paths must be local.
<para>
Any one invocation of rsync makes a copy in a single direction. rsync
currently has no equivalent of @command{ftp}'s interactive mode.
@cindex @sc{nfs}
@cindex network filesystems
@cindex remote filesystems
<para>
rsync's network protocol is generally faster at copying files than
network filesystems such as @sc{nfs} or @sc{cifs}. It is better to
run rsync on the file server either as a daemon or over ssh than
running rsync giving the network directory.
</para>
</section>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>Frequently asked questions</title>
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<qandaset>
<!-- one of (QANDADIV QANDAENTRY) -->
<qandaentry>
<question>
<!-- one of (CALLOUTLIST GLOSSLIST ITEMIZEDLIST ORDEREDLIST
SEGMENTEDLIST SIMPLELIST VARIABLELIST CAUTION IMPORTANT NOTE
TIP WARNING LITERALLAYOUT PROGRAMLISTING PROGRAMLISTINGCO
SCREEN SCREENCO SCREENSHOT SYNOPSIS CMDSYNOPSIS FUNCSYNOPSIS
CLASSSYNOPSIS FIELDSYNOPSIS CONSTRUCTORSYNOPSIS
DESTRUCTORSYNOPSIS METHODSYNOPSIS FORMALPARA PARA SIMPARA
ADDRESS BLOCKQUOTE GRAPHIC GRAPHICCO MEDIAOBJECT
MEDIAOBJECTCO INFORMALEQUATION INFORMALEXAMPLE
INFORMALFIGURE INFORMALTABLE EQUATION EXAMPLE FIGURE TABLE
PROCEDURE ANCHOR BRIDGEHEAD REMARK HIGHLIGHTS INDEXTERM) -->
<para>Are there mailing lists for rsync?
</question>
<answer>
<para>Yes, and you can subscribe and unsubscribe through a
web interface at
<ulink
url="http://lists.samba.org/">http://lists.samba.org/</ulink>
</para>
<para>
If you are having trouble with the mailing list, please
send mail to the administrator
<email>rsync-admin@lists.samba.org</email>
not to the list itself.
</para>
<para>
The mailing list archives are searchable. Use
<ulink url="http://google.com/">Google</ulink> and prepend
the search with <userinput>site:lists.samba.org
rsync</userinput>, plus relevant keywords.
</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>
Why is rsync so much bigger when I build it with
<command>gcc</command>?
</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>
On gcc, rsync builds by default with debug symbols
included. If you strip both executables, they should end
up about the same size. (Use <command>make
install-strip</command>.)
</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question>
<para>Is rsync useful for a single large file like an ISO image?</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>
Yes, but note the following:
<para>
Background: A common use of rsync is to update a file (or set of files) in one location from a more
correct or up-to-date copy in another location, taking advantage of portions of the files that are
identical to speed up the process. (Note that rsync will transfer a file in its entirety if no copy
exists at the destination.)
<para>
(This discussion is written in terms of updating a local copy of a file from a correct file in a
remote location, although rsync can work in either direction.)
<para>
The file to be updated (the local file) must be in a destination directory that has enough space for
two copies of the file. (In addition, keep an extra copy of the file to be updated in a different
location for safety -- see the discussion (below) about rsync's behavior when the rsync process is
interrupted before completion.)
<para>
The local file must have the same name as the remote file being sync'd to (I think?). If you are
trying to upgrade an iso from, for example, beta1 to beta2, rename the local file to the same name
as the beta2 file. *(This is a useful thing to do -- only the changed portions will be
transmitted.)*
<para>
The extra copy of the local file kept in a different location is because of rsync's behavior if
interrupted before completion:
<para>
* If you specify the --partial option and rsync is interrupted, rsync will save the partially
rsync'd file and throw away the original local copy. (The partially rsync'd file is correct but
truncated.) If rsync is restarted, it will not have a local copy of the file to check for duplicate
blocks beyond the section of the file that has already been rsync'd, thus the remainder of the rsync
process will be a "pure transfer" of the file rather than taking advantage of the rsync algorithm.
<para>
* If you don't specify the --partial option and rsync is interrupted, rsync will throw away the
partially rsync'd file, and, when rsync is restarted starts the rsync process over from the
beginning.
<para>
Which of these is most desirable depends on the degree of commonality between the local and remote
copies of the file *and how much progress was made before the interruption*.
<para>
The ideal approach after an interruption would be to create a new file by taking the original file
and deleting a portion equal in size to the portion already rsync'd and then appending *the
remaining* portion to the portion of the file that has already been rsync'd. (There has been some
discussion about creating an option to do this automatically.)
The --compare-dest option is useful when transferring multiple files, but is of no benefit in
transferring a single file. (AFAIK)
*Other potentially useful information can be found at:
-[3]http://twiki.org/cgi-bin/view/Wikilearn/RsyncingALargeFile
This answer, formatted with "real" bullets, can be found at:
-[4]http://twiki.org/cgi-bin/view/Wikilearn/RsyncingALargeFileFAQ*
</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
</qandaset>
</chapter>
<appendix>
<title>Other Resources</title>
<para><ulink url="http://www.ccp14.ac.uk/ccp14admin/rsync/"></ulink></para>
</appendix>
</book>

View File

@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
* Copyright (C) 1996-2001 Andrew Tridgell <tridge@samba.org>
* Copyright (C) 1996 Paul Mackerras
* Copyright (C) 2002 Martin Pool
* Copyright (C) 2003-2022 Wayne Davison
* Copyright (C) 2003-2024 Wayne Davison
*
* 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
@@ -720,7 +720,8 @@ static BOOL setup_merge_file(int mergelist_num, filter_rule *ex,
parent_dirscan = True;
while (*y) {
char save[MAXPATHLEN];
strlcpy(save, y, MAXPATHLEN);
/* copylen is strlen(y) which is < MAXPATHLEN. +1 for \0 */
size_t copylen = strlcpy(save, y, MAXPATHLEN) + 1;
*y = '\0';
dirbuf_len = y - dirbuf;
strlcpy(x, ex->pattern, MAXPATHLEN - (x - buf));
@@ -734,7 +735,7 @@ static BOOL setup_merge_file(int mergelist_num, filter_rule *ex,
lp->head = NULL;
}
lp->tail = NULL;
strlcpy(y, save, MAXPATHLEN);
strlcpy(y, save, copylen);
while ((*x++ = *y++) != '/') {}
}
parent_dirscan = False;
@@ -903,7 +904,7 @@ static int rule_matches(const char *fname, filter_rule *ex, int name_flags)
{
int slash_handling, str_cnt = 0, anchored_match = 0;
int ret_match = ex->rflags & FILTRULE_NEGATE ? 0 : 1;
char *p, *pattern = ex->pattern;
const char *p, *pattern = ex->pattern;
const char *strings[16]; /* more than enough */
const char *name = fname + (*fname == '/');

View File

@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
*
* Copyright (C) 1998 Andrew Tridgell
* Copyright (C) 2002 Martin Pool
* Copyright (C) 2004-2020 Wayne Davison
* Copyright (C) 2004-2023 Wayne Davison
*
* 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
@@ -40,30 +40,34 @@ OFF_T preallocated_len = 0;
static OFF_T sparse_seek = 0;
static OFF_T sparse_past_write = 0;
int sparse_end(int f, OFF_T size)
int sparse_end(int f, OFF_T size, int updating_basis_or_equiv)
{
int ret;
int ret = 0;
sparse_past_write = 0;
if (!sparse_seek)
return 0;
#ifdef HAVE_FTRUNCATE
ret = do_ftruncate(f, size);
#else
if (do_lseek(f, sparse_seek-1, SEEK_CUR) != size-1)
ret = -1;
else {
do {
ret = write(f, "", 1);
} while (ret < 0 && errno == EINTR);
ret = ret <= 0 ? -1 : 0;
}
if (updating_basis_or_equiv) {
if (sparse_seek && do_punch_hole(f, sparse_past_write, sparse_seek) < 0)
ret = -1;
#ifdef HAVE_FTRUNCATE /* A compilation formality -- in-place requires ftruncate() */
else /* Just in case the original file was longer */
ret = do_ftruncate(f, size);
#endif
} else if (sparse_seek) {
#ifdef HAVE_FTRUNCATE
ret = do_ftruncate(f, size);
#else
if (do_lseek(f, sparse_seek-1, SEEK_CUR) != size-1)
ret = -1;
else {
do {
ret = write(f, "", 1);
} while (ret < 0 && errno == EINTR);
sparse_seek = 0;
ret = ret <= 0 ? -1 : 0;
}
#endif
}
sparse_past_write = sparse_seek = 0;
return ret;
}

90
flist.c
View File

@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
* Copyright (C) 1996 Andrew Tridgell
* Copyright (C) 1996 Paul Mackerras
* Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 Martin Pool <mbp@samba.org>
* Copyright (C) 2002-2022 Wayne Davison
* Copyright (C) 2002-2023 Wayne Davison
*
* 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
@@ -132,6 +132,18 @@ static int64 tmp_dev = -1, tmp_ino;
#endif
static char tmp_sum[MAX_DIGEST_LEN];
#ifdef ST_MTIME_NSEC
/* Return st_mtim nsec if it is in the wire-valid range, else 0. */
static inline uint32 wire_mtime_nsec_from_stat(const STRUCT_STAT *stp)
{
unsigned long nsec = (unsigned long)stp->ST_MTIME_NSEC;
if (nsec > MAX_WIRE_NSEC)
return 0;
return (uint32)nsec;
}
#endif
static char empty_sum[MAX_DIGEST_LEN];
static int flist_count_offset; /* for --delete --progress */
static int show_filelist_progress;
@@ -836,13 +848,13 @@ static struct file_struct *recv_file_entry(int f, struct file_list *flist, int x
}
#endif
} else
modtime = read_int(f);
modtime = read_uint(f);
}
if (xflags & XMIT_MOD_NSEC)
#ifndef CAN_SET_NSEC
(void)read_varint(f);
(void)read_varint_bounded(f, 0, MAX_WIRE_NSEC, "modtime_nsec");
#else
modtime_nsec = read_varint(f);
modtime_nsec = read_varint_bounded(f, 0, MAX_WIRE_NSEC, "modtime_nsec");
else
modtime_nsec = 0;
#endif
@@ -861,8 +873,24 @@ static struct file_struct *recv_file_entry(int f, struct file_list *flist, int x
#endif
}
#endif
if (!(xflags & XMIT_SAME_MODE))
if (!(xflags & XMIT_SAME_MODE)) {
mode = from_wire_mode(read_int(f));
/* Reject modes whose type bits are not one of the standard
* file types; otherwise garbage mode values propagate through
* the file-type checks below unpredictably. mode 0 is the one
* legitimate exception: --delete-missing-args (missing_args==2)
* sends a missing arg as a mode-0 entry (IS_MISSING_FILE), the
* generator's delete signal (#910). */
if (mode != 0 || missing_args != 2) {
if (!S_ISREG(mode) && !S_ISDIR(mode) && !S_ISLNK(mode)
&& !S_ISCHR(mode) && !S_ISBLK(mode)
&& !S_ISFIFO(mode) && !S_ISSOCK(mode)) {
rprintf(FERROR, "invalid file mode 0%o for %s [%s]\n",
(unsigned)mode, lastname, who_am_i());
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
}
}
if (atimes_ndx && !S_ISDIR(mode) && !(xflags & XMIT_SAME_ATIME)) {
atime = read_varlong(f, 4);
#if SIZEOF_TIME_T < SIZEOF_INT64
@@ -1239,7 +1267,7 @@ struct file_struct *make_file(const char *fname, struct file_list *flist,
int extra_len = file_extra_cnt * EXTRA_LEN;
const char *basename;
alloc_pool_t *pool;
STRUCT_STAT st;
STRUCT_STAT st = {0};
char *bp;
if (strlcpy(thisname, fname, sizeof thisname) >= sizeof thisname) {
@@ -1390,7 +1418,7 @@ struct file_struct *make_file(const char *fname, struct file_list *flist,
if (copy_devices && am_sender && IS_DEVICE(st.st_mode)) {
if (st.st_size == 0) {
int fd = do_open(fname, O_RDONLY, 0);
int fd = do_open_checklinks(fname);
if (fd >= 0) {
st.st_size = get_device_size(fd, fname);
close(fd);
@@ -1401,8 +1429,12 @@ struct file_struct *make_file(const char *fname, struct file_list *flist,
}
#ifdef ST_MTIME_NSEC
if (st.ST_MTIME_NSEC && protocol_version >= 31)
extra_len += EXTRA_LEN;
{
uint32 nsec = wire_mtime_nsec_from_stat(&st);
if (nsec && protocol_version >= 31)
extra_len += EXTRA_LEN;
}
#endif
#if SIZEOF_CAPITAL_OFF_T >= 8
if (st.st_size > 0xFFFFFFFFu && S_ISREG(st.st_mode))
@@ -1457,9 +1489,13 @@ struct file_struct *make_file(const char *fname, struct file_list *flist,
file->flags = flags;
file->modtime = st.st_mtime;
#ifdef ST_MTIME_NSEC
if (st.ST_MTIME_NSEC && protocol_version >= 31) {
file->flags |= FLAG_MOD_NSEC;
F_MOD_NSEC(file) = st.ST_MTIME_NSEC;
{
uint32 nsec = wire_mtime_nsec_from_stat(&st);
if (nsec && protocol_version >= 31) {
file->flags |= FLAG_MOD_NSEC;
F_MOD_NSEC(file) = nsec;
}
}
#endif
file->len32 = (uint32)st.st_size;
@@ -2059,10 +2095,9 @@ static void send1extra(int f, struct file_struct *file, struct file_list *flist)
}
if (name_type != NORMAL_NAME) {
STRUCT_STAT st;
if (name_type == MISSING_NAME)
memset(&st, 0, sizeof st);
else if (link_stat(fbuf, &st, 1) != 0) {
STRUCT_STAT st = {0};
if (name_type != MISSING_NAME && link_stat(fbuf, &st, 1) != 0) {
interpret_stat_error(fbuf, True);
continue;
}
@@ -2194,7 +2229,7 @@ struct file_list *send_file_list(int f, int argc, char *argv[])
static const char *lastdir;
static int lastdir_len = -1;
int len, dirlen;
STRUCT_STAT st;
STRUCT_STAT st = {0};
char *p, *dir;
struct file_list *flist;
struct timeval start_tv, end_tv;
@@ -2367,7 +2402,7 @@ struct file_list *send_file_list(int f, int argc, char *argv[])
}
dirlen = dir ? strlen(dir) : 0;
if (dirlen != lastdir_len || memcmp(lastdir, dir, dirlen) != 0) {
if (dirlen != lastdir_len || (dirlen && memcmp(lastdir, dir, dirlen) != 0)) {
if (!change_pathname(NULL, dir, -dirlen))
goto bad_path;
lastdir = pathname;
@@ -2584,6 +2619,19 @@ struct file_list *recv_file_list(int f, int dir_ndx)
init_hard_links();
#endif
if (inc_recurse && dir_ndx >= 0) {
if (dir_ndx >= dir_flist->used) {
rprintf(FERROR_XFER, "rsync: refusing invalid dir_ndx %u >= %u\n", dir_ndx, dir_flist->used);
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
struct file_struct *file = dir_flist->files[dir_ndx];
if (file->flags & FLAG_GOT_DIR_FLIST) {
rprintf(FERROR_XFER, "rsync: refusing malicious duplicate flist for dir %d\n", dir_ndx);
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
file->flags |= FLAG_GOT_DIR_FLIST;
}
flist = flist_new(0, "recv_file_list");
flist_expand(flist, FLIST_START_LARGE);
@@ -2659,7 +2707,7 @@ struct file_list *recv_file_list(int f, int dir_ndx)
} else if (S_ISLNK(file->mode))
stats.num_symlinks++;
else if (IS_DEVICE(file->mode))
stats.num_symlinks++;
stats.num_devices++;
else
stats.num_specials++;
@@ -3154,8 +3202,8 @@ static void output_flist(struct file_list *flist)
} else
*uidbuf = '\0';
if (gid_ndx) {
static char parens[] = "(\0)\0\0\0";
char *pp = parens + (file->flags & FLAG_SKIP_GROUP ? 0 : 3);
static const char parens[] = "(\0)\0\0\0";
const char *pp = parens + (file->flags & FLAG_SKIP_GROUP ? 0 : 3);
snprintf(gidbuf, sizeof gidbuf, " gid=%s%u%s",
pp, F_GROUP(file), pp + 2);
} else

View File

@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
* Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Andrew Tridgell
* Copyright (C) 1996 Paul Mackerras
* Copyright (C) 2002 Martin Pool <mbp@samba.org>
* Copyright (C) 2003-2022 Wayne Davison
* Copyright (C) 2003-2023 Wayne Davison
*
* 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
@@ -66,6 +66,7 @@ extern int inplace;
extern int append_mode;
extern int make_backups;
extern int csum_length;
extern int xfer_sum_len;
extern int ignore_times;
extern int size_only;
extern OFF_T max_size;
@@ -229,11 +230,13 @@ static int read_delay_line(char *buf, int *flags_p)
*flags_p = 0;
if (sscanf(bp, "%x ", &mode) != 1) {
invalid_data:
rprintf(FERROR, "ERROR: invalid data in delete-delay file.\n");
return -1;
goto invalid_data;
}
past_space = strchr(bp, ' ') + 1;
past_space = strchr(bp, ' ');
if (!past_space) {
goto invalid_data;
}
past_space++;
len = j - read_pos - (past_space - bp) + 1; /* count the '\0' */
read_pos = j + 1;
@@ -247,6 +250,10 @@ static int read_delay_line(char *buf, int *flags_p)
memcpy(buf, past_space, len);
return mode;
invalid_data:
rprintf(FERROR, "ERROR: invalid data in delete-delay file.\n");
return -1;
}
static void do_delayed_deletions(char *delbuf)
@@ -691,6 +698,11 @@ static void sum_sizes_sqroot(struct sum_struct *sum, int64 len)
{
int32 blength;
int s2length;
/* The strong sum can be no longer than the negotiated checksum digest:
* a short checksum (e.g. xxh64 = 8 bytes, when xxh128/xxh3 are absent)
* makes xfer_sum_len < SUM_LENGTH, and the sender rejects an s2length
* larger than xfer_sum_len (io.c). */
int max_s2length = MIN(SUM_LENGTH, xfer_sum_len);
int64 l;
if (len < 0) {
@@ -725,7 +737,7 @@ static void sum_sizes_sqroot(struct sum_struct *sum, int64 len)
if (protocol_version < 27) {
s2length = csum_length;
} else if (csum_length == SUM_LENGTH) {
s2length = SUM_LENGTH;
s2length = max_s2length;
} else {
int32 c;
int b = BLOCKSUM_BIAS;
@@ -734,7 +746,7 @@ static void sum_sizes_sqroot(struct sum_struct *sum, int64 len)
/* add a bit, subtract rollsum, round up. */
s2length = (b + 1 - 32 + 7) / 8; /* --optimize in compiler-- */
s2length = MAX(s2length, csum_length);
s2length = MIN(s2length, SUM_LENGTH);
s2length = MIN(s2length, max_s2length);
}
sum->flength = len;
@@ -783,7 +795,7 @@ static int generate_and_send_sums(int fd, OFF_T len, int f_out, int f_copy)
for (i = 0; i < sum.count; i++) {
int32 n1 = (int32)MIN(len, (OFF_T)sum.blength);
char *map = map_ptr(mapbuf, offset, n1);
char sum2[SUM_LENGTH];
char sum2[MAX_DIGEST_LEN];
uint32 sum1;
len -= n1;
@@ -984,7 +996,7 @@ static int try_dests_reg(struct file_struct *file, char *fname, int ndx,
if (find_exact_for_existing) {
if (alt_dest_type == LINK_DEST && real_st.st_dev == sxp->st.st_dev && real_st.st_ino == sxp->st.st_ino)
return -1;
if (do_unlink(fname) < 0 && errno != ENOENT)
if (do_unlink_at(fname) < 0 && errno != ENOENT)
goto got_nothing_for_ya;
}
#ifdef SUPPORT_HARD_LINKS
@@ -1112,7 +1124,7 @@ static int try_dests_non(struct file_struct *file, char *fname, int ndx,
&& !IS_SPECIAL(file->mode) && !IS_DEVICE(file->mode)
#endif
&& !S_ISDIR(file->mode)) {
if (do_link(cmpbuf, fname) < 0) {
if (do_link_at(cmpbuf, fname) < 0) {
rsyserr(FERROR_XFER, errno,
"failed to hard-link %s with %s",
cmpbuf, fname);
@@ -1315,7 +1327,7 @@ static void recv_generator(char *fname, struct file_struct *file, int ndx,
}
}
if (relative_paths && !implied_dirs && file->mode != 0
&& do_stat(dn, &sx.st) < 0) {
&& do_stat_at(dn, &sx.st) < 0) {
if (dry_run)
goto parent_is_dry_missing;
if (make_path(fname, MKP_DROP_NAME | MKP_SKIP_SLASH) < 0) {
@@ -1427,7 +1439,7 @@ static void recv_generator(char *fname, struct file_struct *file, int ndx,
&& (stype == FT_DIR
|| delete_item(fname, sx.st.st_mode, del_opts | DEL_FOR_DIR) != 0))
goto cleanup; /* Any errors get reported later. */
if (do_mkdir(fname, (file->mode|added_perms) & 0700) == 0)
if (do_mkdir_at(fname, (file->mode|added_perms) & 0700) == 0)
file->flags |= FLAG_DIR_CREATED;
goto cleanup;
}
@@ -1469,10 +1481,10 @@ static void recv_generator(char *fname, struct file_struct *file, int ndx,
itemize(fnamecmp, file, ndx, statret, &sx,
statret ? ITEM_LOCAL_CHANGE : 0, 0, NULL);
}
if (real_ret != 0 && do_mkdir(fname,file->mode|added_perms) < 0 && errno != EEXIST) {
if (real_ret != 0 && do_mkdir_at(fname,file->mode|added_perms) < 0 && errno != EEXIST) {
if (!relative_paths || errno != ENOENT
|| make_path(fname, MKP_DROP_NAME | MKP_SKIP_SLASH) < 0
|| (do_mkdir(fname, file->mode|added_perms) < 0 && errno != EEXIST)) {
|| (do_mkdir_at(fname, file->mode|added_perms) < 0 && errno != EEXIST)) {
rsyserr(FERROR_XFER, errno,
"recv_generator: mkdir %s failed",
full_fname(fname));
@@ -1499,7 +1511,7 @@ static void recv_generator(char *fname, struct file_struct *file, int ndx,
#ifdef HAVE_CHMOD
if (!am_root && (file->mode & S_IRWXU) != S_IRWXU && dir_tweaking) {
mode_t mode = file->mode | S_IRWXU;
if (do_chmod(fname, mode) < 0) {
if (do_chmod_at(fname, mode) < 0) {
rsyserr(FERROR_XFER, errno,
"failed to modify permissions on %s",
full_fname(fname));
@@ -1706,7 +1718,8 @@ static void recv_generator(char *fname, struct file_struct *file, int ndx,
goto cleanup;
}
if (update_only > 0 && statret == 0 && file->modtime - sx.st.st_mtime < modify_window) {
if (update_only > 0 && statret == 0 && stype == ftype
&& file->modtime - sx.st.st_mtime < modify_window) {
if (INFO_GTE(SKIP, 1))
rprintf(FINFO, "%s is newer\n", fname);
#ifdef SUPPORT_HARD_LINKS
@@ -1798,7 +1811,7 @@ static void recv_generator(char *fname, struct file_struct *file, int ndx,
if (write_devices && IS_DEVICE(sx.st.st_mode) && sx.st.st_size == 0) {
/* This early open into fd skips the regular open below. */
if ((fd = do_open(fnamecmp, O_RDONLY, 0)) >= 0)
if ((fd = do_open_nofollow(fnamecmp, O_RDONLY)) >= 0)
real_sx.st.st_size = sx.st.st_size = get_device_size(fd, fnamecmp);
}
@@ -1808,7 +1821,7 @@ static void recv_generator(char *fname, struct file_struct *file, int ndx,
;
else if (quick_check_ok(FT_REG, fnamecmp, file, &sx.st)) {
if (partialptr) {
do_unlink(partialptr);
do_unlink_at(partialptr);
handle_partial_dir(partialptr, PDIR_DELETE);
}
set_file_attrs(fname, file, &sx, NULL, maybe_ATTRS_REPORT | maybe_ATTRS_ACCURATE_TIME);
@@ -1867,7 +1880,7 @@ static void recv_generator(char *fname, struct file_struct *file, int ndx,
}
/* open the file */
if (fd < 0 && (fd = do_open(fnamecmp, O_RDONLY, 0)) < 0) {
if (fd < 0 && (fd = do_open_checklinks(fnamecmp)) < 0) {
rsyserr(FERROR, errno, "failed to open %s, continuing",
full_fname(fnamecmp));
pretend_missing:
@@ -1896,7 +1909,7 @@ static void recv_generator(char *fname, struct file_struct *file, int ndx,
back_file = NULL;
goto cleanup;
}
if ((f_copy = do_open(backupptr, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC | O_EXCL, 0600)) < 0) {
if ((f_copy = do_open_at(backupptr, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC | O_EXCL, 0600)) < 0) {
rsyserr(FERROR_XFER, errno, "open %s", full_fname(backupptr));
unmake_file(back_file);
back_file = NULL;
@@ -2016,7 +2029,7 @@ int atomic_create(struct file_struct *file, char *fname, const char *slnk, const
if (slnk) {
#ifdef SUPPORT_LINKS
if (do_symlink(slnk, create_name) < 0) {
if (do_symlink_at(slnk, create_name) < 0) {
rsyserr(FERROR_XFER, errno, "symlink %s -> \"%s\" failed",
full_fname(create_name), slnk);
return 0;
@@ -2032,7 +2045,7 @@ int atomic_create(struct file_struct *file, char *fname, const char *slnk, const
return 0;
#endif
} else {
if (do_mknod(create_name, file->mode, rdev) < 0) {
if (do_mknod_at(create_name, file->mode, rdev) < 0) {
rsyserr(FERROR_XFER, errno, "mknod %s failed",
full_fname(create_name));
return 0;
@@ -2040,10 +2053,14 @@ int atomic_create(struct file_struct *file, char *fname, const char *slnk, const
}
if (!skip_atomic) {
if (do_rename(tmpname, fname) < 0) {
if (do_rename_at(tmpname, fname) < 0) {
char *full_tmpname = strdup(full_fname(tmpname));
if (full_tmpname == NULL)
out_of_memory("atomic_create");
rsyserr(FERROR_XFER, errno, "rename %s -> \"%s\" failed",
full_fname(tmpname), full_fname(fname));
do_unlink(tmpname);
full_tmpname, full_fname(fname));
free(full_tmpname);
do_unlink_at(tmpname);
return 0;
}
}
@@ -2107,7 +2124,7 @@ static void touch_up_dirs(struct file_list *flist, int ndx)
continue;
fname = f_name(file, NULL);
if (fix_dir_perms)
do_chmod(fname, file->mode);
do_chmod_at(fname, file->mode);
if (need_retouch_dir_times) {
STRUCT_STAT st;
if (link_stat(fname, &st, 0) == 0 && mtime_differs(&st, file)) {
@@ -2142,6 +2159,8 @@ void check_for_finished_files(int itemizing, enum logcode code, int check_redo)
if (send_failed)
ndx = get_hlink_num();
flist = flist_for_ndx(ndx, "check_for_finished_files.1");
if (ndx < flist->ndx_start)
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
file = flist->files[ndx - flist->ndx_start];
assert(file->flags & FLAG_HLINKED);
if (send_failed)
@@ -2170,6 +2189,8 @@ void check_for_finished_files(int itemizing, enum logcode code, int check_redo)
flist = cur_flist;
cur_flist = flist_for_ndx(ndx, "check_for_finished_files.2");
if (ndx < cur_flist->ndx_start)
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
file = cur_flist->files[ndx - cur_flist->ndx_start];
if (solo_file)
@@ -2370,7 +2391,7 @@ void generate_files(int f_out, const char *local_name)
write_ndx(f_out, NDX_DONE);
if (protocol_version >= 31 && EARLY_DELETE_DONE_MSG()) {
if ((INFO_GTE(STATS, 2) && (delete_mode || force_delete)) || read_batch)
if (delete_mode || force_delete || read_batch)
write_del_stats(f_out);
if (EARLY_DELAY_DONE_MSG()) /* Can't send this before delay */
write_ndx(f_out, NDX_DONE);
@@ -2415,7 +2436,7 @@ void generate_files(int f_out, const char *local_name)
if (protocol_version >= 31) {
if (!EARLY_DELETE_DONE_MSG()) {
if (INFO_GTE(STATS, 2) || read_batch)
if (delete_mode || force_delete || read_batch)
write_del_stats(f_out);
write_ndx(f_out, NDX_DONE);
}

View File

@@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ static void match_gnums(int32 *ndx_list, int ndx_count)
struct ht_int32_node *node = NULL;
int32 gnum, gnum_next;
qsort(ndx_list, ndx_count, sizeof ndx_list[0], (int (*)()) hlink_compare_gnum);
qsort(ndx_list, ndx_count, sizeof ndx_list[0], (int (*)(const void*, const void*))hlink_compare_gnum);
for (from = 0; from < ndx_count; from++) {
file = hlink_flist->sorted[ndx_list[from]];
@@ -454,7 +454,7 @@ int hard_link_check(struct file_struct *file, int ndx, char *fname,
int hard_link_one(struct file_struct *file, const char *fname,
const char *oldname, int terse)
{
if (do_link(oldname, fname) < 0) {
if (do_link_at(oldname, fname) < 0) {
enum logcode code;
if (terse) {
if (!INFO_GTE(NAME, 1))

93
io.c
View File

@@ -55,6 +55,7 @@ extern int read_batch;
extern int compat_flags;
extern int protect_args;
extern int checksum_seed;
extern int xfer_sum_len;
extern int daemon_connection;
extern int protocol_version;
extern int remove_source_files;
@@ -116,7 +117,7 @@ static int active_filecnt = 0;
static OFF_T active_bytecnt = 0;
static int first_message = 1;
static char int_byte_extra[64] = {
static const char int_byte_extra[64] = {
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* (00 - 3F)/4 */
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* (40 - 7F)/4 */
1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, /* (80 - BF)/4 */
@@ -1089,6 +1090,9 @@ static void got_flist_entry_status(enum festatus status, int ndx)
{
struct file_list *flist = flist_for_ndx(ndx, "got_flist_entry_status");
if (ndx < flist->ndx_start)
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
if (remove_source_files) {
active_filecnt--;
active_bytecnt -= F_LENGTH(flist->files[ndx - flist->ndx_start]);
@@ -1157,8 +1161,8 @@ void set_io_timeout(int secs)
static void check_for_d_option_error(const char *msg)
{
static char rsync263_opts[] = "BCDHIKLPRSTWabceghlnopqrtuvxz";
char *colon;
static const char rsync263_opts[] = "BCDHIKLPRSTWabceghlnopqrtuvxz";
const char *colon;
int saw_d = 0;
if (*msg != 'r'
@@ -1288,8 +1292,21 @@ int read_line(int fd, char *buf, size_t bufsiz, int flags)
return s - buf;
}
/* Reverse safe_arg()'s backslash escaping of a daemon option arg, the way a
* remote shell un-escapes args for the ssh transport. In place; \X -> X. */
static void unbackslash_arg(char *s)
{
char *f = s, *t = s;
while (*f) {
if (*f == '\\' && f[1])
f++;
*t++ = *f++;
}
*t = '\0';
}
void read_args(int f_in, char *mod_name, char *buf, size_t bufsiz, int rl_nulls,
char ***argv_p, int *argc_p, char **request_p)
int unescape, char ***argv_p, int *argc_p, char **request_p)
{
int maxargs = MAX_ARGS;
int dot_pos = 0, argc = 0, request_len = 0;
@@ -1331,6 +1348,11 @@ void read_args(int f_in, char *mod_name, char *buf, size_t bufsiz, int rl_nulls,
glob_expand(buf, &argv, &argc, &maxargs);
} else {
p = strdup(buf);
/* An option arg the client escaped with safe_arg() (no
* remote shell un-escapes it for a daemon). File args
* after the dot are handled by glob_expand() below. */
if (unescape)
unbackslash_arg(p);
argv[argc++] = p;
if (*p == '.' && p[1] == '\0')
dot_pos = argc;
@@ -1784,6 +1806,13 @@ int32 read_int(int f)
return num;
}
uint32 read_uint(int f)
{
char b[4];
read_buf(f, b, 4);
return IVAL(b, 0);
}
int32 read_varint(int f)
{
union {
@@ -1857,6 +1886,45 @@ int64 read_varlong(int f, uchar min_bytes)
return u.x;
}
/* Read an int32 and verify lo <= v <= hi. On out-of-range, abort with a
* protocol error naming "what". The bound is co-located with the read so it
* cannot be forgotten by a downstream user. */
int32 read_int_bounded(int f, int32 lo, int32 hi, const char *what)
{
int32 v = read_int(f);
if (v < lo || v > hi) {
rprintf(FERROR, "wire value %s out of range: %ld not in [%ld,%ld] [%s]\n",
what, (long)v, (long)lo, (long)hi, who_am_i());
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
return v;
}
/* As read_int_bounded but for varint-encoded values. */
int32 read_varint_bounded(int f, int32 lo, int32 hi, const char *what)
{
int32 v = read_varint(f);
if (v < lo || v > hi) {
rprintf(FERROR, "wire value %s out of range: %ld not in [%ld,%ld] [%s]\n",
what, (long)v, (long)lo, (long)hi, who_am_i());
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
return v;
}
/* Read a varint that will be used as a size_t. Rejects negative values
* (which would wrap to ~SIZE_MAX) and values exceeding the supplied max. */
size_t read_varint_size(int f, size_t max, const char *what)
{
int32 v = read_varint(f);
if (v < 0 || (size_t)v > max) {
rprintf(FERROR, "wire size %s out of range: %ld > %lu [%s]\n",
what, (long)v, (unsigned long)max, who_am_i());
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
return (size_t)v;
}
int64 read_longint(int f)
{
#if SIZEOF_INT64 >= 8
@@ -1963,6 +2031,21 @@ void read_sum_head(int f, struct sum_struct *sum)
(long)sum->count, who_am_i());
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
/* Guard against integer overflow in downstream allocations sized by
* count*element_size. my_alloc uses divide-not-multiply so it is
* already wraparound-safe, but checking here gives a clearer error
* and also covers the (size_t)count * xfer_sum_len arithmetic that
* is performed *before* reaching my_alloc. */
if (xfer_sum_len > 0 && (size_t)sum->count > SIZE_MAX / (size_t)xfer_sum_len) {
rprintf(FERROR, "Invalid checksum count %ld (too large) [%s]\n",
(long)sum->count, who_am_i());
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
if ((size_t)sum->count > SIZE_MAX / sizeof(struct sum_buf)) {
rprintf(FERROR, "Invalid checksum count %ld (sum_buf overflow) [%s]\n",
(long)sum->count, who_am_i());
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
sum->blength = read_int(f);
if (sum->blength < 0 || sum->blength > max_blength) {
rprintf(FERROR, "Invalid block length %ld [%s]\n",
@@ -1970,7 +2053,7 @@ void read_sum_head(int f, struct sum_struct *sum)
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
sum->s2length = protocol_version < 27 ? csum_length : (int)read_int(f);
if (sum->s2length < 0 || sum->s2length > MAX_DIGEST_LEN) {
if (sum->s2length < 0 || sum->s2length > xfer_sum_len) {
rprintf(FERROR, "Invalid checksum length %d [%s]\n",
sum->s2length, who_am_i());
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);

View File

@@ -1 +1 @@
#define LATEST_YEAR "2022"
#define LATEST_YEAR "2026"

View File

@@ -197,7 +197,7 @@ void md5_update(md_context *ctx, const uchar *input, uint32 length)
memcpy(ctx->buffer + left, input, length);
}
static uchar md5_padding[CSUM_CHUNK] = { 0x80 };
static const uchar md5_padding[CSUM_CHUNK] = { 0x80 };
void md5_result(md_context *ctx, uchar digest[MD5_DIGEST_LEN])
{

View File

@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ struct alloc_pool
size_t size; /* extent size */
size_t quantum; /* allocation quantum */
struct pool_extent *extents; /* top extent is "live" */
void (*bomb)(); /* called if malloc fails */
void (*bomb)(const char*, const char*, int); /* called if malloc fails */
int flags;
/* statistical data */
@@ -42,6 +42,7 @@ struct align_test {
/* Temporarily cast a void* var into a char* var when adding an offset (to
* keep some compilers from complaining about the pointer arithmetic). */
#define PTR_ADD(b,o) ( (void*) ((char*)(b) + (o)) )
#define PTR_SUB(b,o) ( (void*) ((char*)(b) - (o)) )
alloc_pool_t
pool_create(size_t size, size_t quantum, void (*bomb)(const char*, const char*, int), int flags)
@@ -100,7 +101,7 @@ pool_destroy(alloc_pool_t p)
for (cur = pool->extents; cur; cur = next) {
next = cur->next;
if (pool->flags & POOL_PREPEND)
free(PTR_ADD(cur->start, -sizeof (struct pool_extent)));
free(PTR_SUB(cur->start, sizeof (struct pool_extent)));
else {
free(cur->start);
free(cur);
@@ -235,7 +236,7 @@ pool_free(alloc_pool_t p, size_t len, void *addr)
if (cur->free + cur->bound >= pool->size) {
prev->next = cur->next;
if (pool->flags & POOL_PREPEND)
free(PTR_ADD(cur->start, -sizeof (struct pool_extent)));
free(PTR_SUB(cur->start, sizeof (struct pool_extent)));
else {
free(cur->start);
free(cur);
@@ -292,7 +293,7 @@ pool_free_old(alloc_pool_t p, void *addr)
while ((cur = next) != NULL) {
next = cur->next;
if (pool->flags & POOL_PREPEND)
free(PTR_ADD(cur->start, -sizeof (struct pool_extent)));
free(PTR_SUB(cur->start, sizeof (struct pool_extent)));
else {
free(cur->start);
free(cur);

View File

@@ -126,9 +126,18 @@ ssize_t sys_llistxattr(const char *path, char *list, size_t size)
unsigned char keylen;
ssize_t off, len = extattr_list_link(path, EXTATTR_NAMESPACE_USER, list, size);
if (len <= 0 || (size_t)len > size)
if (len <= 0 || size == 0)
return len;
if ((size_t)len >= size) {
/* FreeBSD extattr_list_xx() returns 'size' as 'len' in case there are
more data available, truncating the output, we solve this by signalling
ERANGE in case len == size so that the code in xattrs.c will retry with
a bigger buffer */
errno = ERANGE;
return -1;
}
/* FreeBSD puts a single-byte length before each string, with no '\0'
* terminator. We need to change this into a series of null-terminted
* strings. Since the size is the same, we can simply transform the
@@ -136,7 +145,7 @@ ssize_t sys_llistxattr(const char *path, char *list, size_t size)
for (off = 0; off < len; off += keylen + 1) {
keylen = ((unsigned char*)list)[off];
if (off + keylen >= len) {
/* Should be impossible, but kernel bugs happen! */
/* Should be impossible, but bugs happen! */
errno = EINVAL;
return -1;
}

View File

@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ typedef enum {
struct enum_list {
int value;
char *name;
const char *name;
};
struct parm_struct {
@@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ struct parm_struct {
parm_type type;
parm_class class;
void *ptr;
struct enum_list *enum_list;
const struct enum_list *enum_list;
unsigned flags;
};
@@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ static item_list section_list = EMPTY_ITEM_LIST;
static int iSectionIndex = -1;
static BOOL bInGlobalSection = True;
static struct enum_list enum_syslog_facility[] = {
static const struct enum_list enum_syslog_facility[] = {
#ifdef LOG_AUTH
{ LOG_AUTH, "auth" },
#endif
@@ -178,7 +178,7 @@ static char *expand_vars(const char *str)
for (t = buf, f = str; bufsize && *f; ) {
if (*f == '%' && isUpper(f+1)) {
char *percent = strchr(f+1, '%');
const char *percent = strchr(f+1, '%');
if (percent && percent - f < bufsize) {
char *val;
strlcpy(t, f+1, percent - f);

12
log.c
View File

@@ -456,11 +456,17 @@ void rsyserr(enum logcode code, int errcode, const char *format, ...)
char buf[BIGPATHBUFLEN];
size_t len;
/* snprintf returns the would-have-been length on truncation, so
* each cumulative call must be guarded; if not, sizeof buf - len
* can underflow when promoted to size_t and the next call writes
* past the buffer. */
len = snprintf(buf, sizeof buf, RSYNC_NAME ": [%s] ", who_am_i());
va_start(ap, format);
len += vsnprintf(buf + len, sizeof buf - len, format, ap);
va_end(ap);
if (len < sizeof buf) {
va_start(ap, format);
len += vsnprintf(buf + len, sizeof buf - len, format, ap);
va_end(ap);
}
if (len < sizeof buf) {
len += snprintf(buf + len, sizeof buf - len,

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,5 @@
dnl AC_HAVE_TYPE(TYPE,INCLUDES)
AC_DEFUN([AC_HAVE_TYPE], [
AC_REQUIRE([AC_HEADER_STDC])
cv=`echo "$1" | sed 'y%./+- %__p__%'`
AC_MSG_CHECKING(for $1)
AC_CACHE_VAL([ac_cv_type_$cv],

83
main.c
View File

@@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ extern int protect_args;
extern int relative_paths;
extern int sanitize_paths;
extern int curr_dir_depth;
extern int curr_dir_len;
extern unsigned int curr_dir_len;
extern int module_id;
extern int rsync_port;
extern int whole_file;
@@ -89,6 +89,8 @@ extern int backup_dir_len;
extern int basis_dir_cnt;
extern int default_af_hint;
extern int stdout_format_has_i;
extern int trust_sender_filter;
extern int trust_sender_args;
extern struct stats stats;
extern char *stdout_format;
extern char *logfile_format;
@@ -237,11 +239,11 @@ void write_del_stats(int f)
void read_del_stats(int f)
{
stats.deleted_files = read_varint(f);
stats.deleted_files += stats.deleted_dirs = read_varint(f);
stats.deleted_files += stats.deleted_symlinks = read_varint(f);
stats.deleted_files += stats.deleted_devices = read_varint(f);
stats.deleted_files += stats.deleted_specials = read_varint(f);
stats.deleted_files = read_varint_bounded(f, 0, MAX_WIRE_DEL_STAT, "deleted_files");
stats.deleted_files += stats.deleted_dirs = read_varint_bounded(f, 0, MAX_WIRE_DEL_STAT, "deleted_dirs");
stats.deleted_files += stats.deleted_symlinks = read_varint_bounded(f, 0, MAX_WIRE_DEL_STAT, "deleted_symlinks");
stats.deleted_files += stats.deleted_devices = read_varint_bounded(f, 0, MAX_WIRE_DEL_STAT, "deleted_devices");
stats.deleted_files += stats.deleted_specials = read_varint_bounded(f, 0, MAX_WIRE_DEL_STAT, "deleted_specials");
}
static void become_copy_as_user()
@@ -384,7 +386,7 @@ static void handle_stats(int f)
static void output_itemized_counts(const char *prefix, int *counts)
{
static char *labels[] = { "reg", "dir", "link", "dev", "special" };
static char *const labels[] = { "reg", "dir", "link", "dev", "special" };
char buf[1024], *pre = " (";
int j, len = 0;
int total = counts[0];
@@ -392,9 +394,18 @@ static void output_itemized_counts(const char *prefix, int *counts)
counts[0] -= counts[1] + counts[2] + counts[3] + counts[4];
for (j = 0; j < 5; j++) {
if (counts[j]) {
/* snprintf can return more than its size arg
* on truncation; keep len <= sizeof buf - 2 so
* the closing ')' and trailing NUL always
* have room and the next iteration's
* sizeof buf - len - 2 cannot underflow. */
if (len >= (int)sizeof buf - 2)
break;
len += snprintf(buf+len, sizeof buf - len - 2,
"%s%s: %s",
pre, labels[j], comma_num(counts[j]));
if (len > (int)sizeof buf - 2)
len = (int)sizeof buf - 2;
pre = ", ";
}
}
@@ -660,6 +671,16 @@ static pid_t do_cmd(char *cmd, char *machine, char *user, char **remote_argv, in
return pid;
}
/* Older versions turn an empty string as a reference to the current directory.
* We now treat this as an error unless --old-args was used. */
static char *dot_dir_or_error()
{
if (old_style_args || am_server)
return ".";
rprintf(FERROR, "Empty destination arg specified (use \".\" or see --old-args).\n");
exit_cleanup(RERR_SYNTAX);
}
/* The receiving side operates in one of two modes:
*
* 1. it receives any number of files into a destination directory,
@@ -687,9 +708,8 @@ static char *get_local_name(struct file_list *flist, char *dest_path)
if (!dest_path || list_only)
return NULL;
/* Treat an empty string as a copy into the current directory. */
if (!*dest_path)
dest_path = ".";
dest_path = dot_dir_or_error();
if (daemon_filter_list.head) {
char *slash = strrchr(dest_path, '/');
@@ -812,7 +832,16 @@ static char *get_local_name(struct file_list *flist, char *dest_path)
dest_path = "/";
*cp = '\0';
if (!change_dir(dest_path, CD_NORMAL)) {
if (dry_run && mkpath_dest_arg && do_stat(dest_path, &st) < 0) {
/* --mkpath would have created this parent dir, but a dry run did
* not, so don't chdir into it; flag the destination as not yet
* present (as the dir-creation path above does) so the generator
* doesn't try to compare against the missing tree (#880). Only
* the missing-parent case is touched, so an ordinary file-to-file
* dry run still itemizes against an existing destination. */
dry_run++;
change_dir(dest_path, CD_SKIP_CHDIR);
} else if (!change_dir(dest_path, CD_NORMAL)) {
rsyserr(FERROR, errno, "change_dir#3 %s failed",
full_fname(dest_path));
exit_cleanup(RERR_FILESELECT);
@@ -1372,15 +1401,6 @@ int client_run(int f_in, int f_out, pid_t pid, int argc, char *argv[])
return MAX(exit_code, exit_code2);
}
static void dup_argv(char *argv[])
{
int i;
for (i = 0; argv[i]; i++)
argv[i] = strdup(argv[i]);
}
/* Start a client for either type of remote connection. Work out
* whether the arguments request a remote shell or rsyncd connection,
* and call the appropriate connection function, then run_client.
@@ -1396,10 +1416,6 @@ static int start_client(int argc, char *argv[])
int ret;
pid_t pid;
/* Don't clobber argv[] so that ps(1) can still show the right
* command line. */
dup_argv(argv);
if (!read_batch) { /* for read_batch, NO source is specified */
char *path = check_for_hostspec(argv[0], &shell_machine, &rsync_port);
if (path) { /* source is remote */
@@ -1432,6 +1448,8 @@ static int start_client(int argc, char *argv[])
if (argc > 1) {
p = argv[--argc];
if (!*p)
p = dot_dir_or_error();
remote_argv = argv + argc;
} else {
static char *dotarg[1] = { "." };
@@ -1473,8 +1491,10 @@ static int start_client(int argc, char *argv[])
}
/* A local transfer doesn't unbackslash anything, so leave the args alone. */
if (local_server)
if (local_server) {
old_style_args = 2;
trust_sender_args = trust_sender_filter = 1;
}
if (!rsync_port && remote_argc && !**remote_argv) /* Turn an empty arg into a dot dir. */
*remote_argv = ".";
@@ -1557,6 +1577,10 @@ static int start_client(int argc, char *argv[])
shell_user = shell_machine;
shell_machine = p+1;
}
if (*shell_machine == '-') {
rprintf(FERROR, "Invalid remote host: hostnames may not start with '-'.\n");
exit_cleanup(RERR_SYNTAX);
}
}
if (DEBUG_GTE(CMD, 2)) {
@@ -1603,6 +1627,11 @@ static void sigusr2_handler(UNUSED(int val))
if (!am_server)
output_summary();
close_all();
#ifdef GCOV_COVERAGE
/* The receiver child is killed here via SIGUSR2 and exits with _exit(),
* bypassing the gcov atexit flush; without this it writes no .gcda. */
{ extern void __gcov_dump(void); __gcov_dump(); }
#endif
if (got_xfer_error)
_exit(RERR_PARTIAL);
_exit(0);
@@ -1741,7 +1770,9 @@ int main(int argc,char *argv[])
our_gid = MY_GID();
am_root = our_uid == ROOT_UID;
unset_env_var("DISPLAY");
// DISPLAY should not be emptied unconditionally
if (!getenv("SSH_ASKPASS"))
unset_env_var("DISPLAY");
#if defined USE_OPENSSL && defined SET_OPENSSL_CONF
#define TO_STR2(x) #x
@@ -1823,7 +1854,7 @@ int main(int argc,char *argv[])
if (am_server && protect_args) {
char buf[MAXPATHLEN];
protect_args = 2;
read_args(STDIN_FILENO, NULL, buf, sizeof buf, 1, &argv, &argc, NULL);
read_args(STDIN_FILENO, NULL, buf, sizeof buf, 1, 0, &argv, &argc, NULL);
if (!parse_arguments(&argc, (const char ***) &argv)) {
option_error();
exit_cleanup(RERR_SYNTAX);

15
match.c
View File

@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
*
* Copyright (C) 1996 Andrew Tridgell
* Copyright (C) 1996 Paul Mackerras
* Copyright (C) 2003-2022 Wayne Davison
* Copyright (C) 2003-2023 Wayne Davison
*
* 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
@@ -142,11 +142,14 @@ static void hash_search(int f,struct sum_struct *s,
{
OFF_T offset, aligned_offset, end;
int32 k, want_i, aligned_i, backup;
char sum2[SUM_LENGTH];
char sum2[MAX_DIGEST_LEN];
uint32 s1, s2, sum;
int more;
schar *map;
// prevent possible memory leaks
memset(sum2, 0, sizeof sum2);
/* want_i is used to encourage adjacent matches, allowing the RLL
* coding of the output to work more efficiently. */
want_i = 0;
@@ -232,7 +235,7 @@ static void hash_search(int f,struct sum_struct *s,
done_csum2 = 1;
}
if (memcmp(sum2,s->sums[i].sum2,s->s2length) != 0) {
if (memcmp(sum2, sum2_at(s, i), s->s2length) != 0) {
false_alarms++;
continue;
}
@@ -252,7 +255,7 @@ static void hash_search(int f,struct sum_struct *s,
if (i != aligned_i) {
if (sum != s->sums[aligned_i].sum1
|| l != s->sums[aligned_i].len
|| memcmp(sum2, s->sums[aligned_i].sum2, s->s2length) != 0)
|| memcmp(sum2, sum2_at(s, aligned_i), s->s2length) != 0)
goto check_want_i;
i = aligned_i;
}
@@ -271,7 +274,7 @@ static void hash_search(int f,struct sum_struct *s,
if (sum != s->sums[i].sum1)
goto check_want_i;
get_checksum2((char *)map, l, sum2);
if (memcmp(sum2, s->sums[i].sum2, s->s2length) != 0)
if (memcmp(sum2, sum2_at(s, i), s->s2length) != 0)
goto check_want_i;
/* OK, we have a re-alignment match. Bump the offset
* forward to the new match point. */
@@ -290,7 +293,7 @@ static void hash_search(int f,struct sum_struct *s,
&& (!updating_basis_file || s->sums[want_i].offset >= offset
|| s->sums[want_i].flags & SUMFLG_SAME_OFFSET)
&& sum == s->sums[want_i].sum1
&& memcmp(sum2, s->sums[want_i].sum2, s->s2length) == 0) {
&& memcmp(sum2, sum2_at(s, want_i), s->s2length) == 0) {
/* we've found an adjacent match - the RLL coder
* will be happy */
i = want_i;

View File

@@ -8,13 +8,14 @@ fi
inname="$1"
srcdir=`dirname "$0"`
flagfile="$srcdir/.md2man-works"
force_flagfile="$srcdir/.md2man-force"
if [ ! -f "$flagfile" ]; then
# We test our smallest manpage just to see if the python setup works.
if "$srcdir/md-convert" --test "$srcdir/rsync-ssl.1.md" >/dev/null 2>&1; then
touch $flagfile
else
outname=`echo "$inname" | sed 's/\.md$//'`
outname=`basename "$inname" .md`
if [ -f "$outname" ]; then
exit 0
elif [ -f "$srcdir/$outname" ]; then
@@ -32,4 +33,10 @@ if [ ! -f "$flagfile" ]; then
fi
fi
"$srcdir/md-convert" "$srcdir/$inname"
if [ -f "$force_flagfile" ]; then
opt='--force-link-text'
else
opt=''
fi
"$srcdir/md-convert" $opt "$srcdir/$inname"

View File

@@ -120,6 +120,7 @@ TZ_RE = re.compile(r'^#define\s+MAINTAINER_TZ_OFFSET\s+(-?\d+(\.\d+)?)', re.M)
VAR_REF_RE = re.compile(r'\$\{(\w+)\}')
VERSION_RE = re.compile(r' (\d[.\d]+)[, ]')
BIN_CHARS_RE = re.compile(r'[\1-\7]+')
LONG_OPT_DASH_RE = re.compile(r'(--\w[-\w]+)')
SPACE_DOUBLE_DASH_RE = re.compile(r'\s--(\s)')
NON_SPACE_SINGLE_DASH_RE = re.compile(r'(^|\W)-')
WHITESPACE_RE = re.compile(r'\s')
@@ -247,6 +248,9 @@ def find_man_substitutions():
env_subs['date'] = time.strftime('%d %b %Y', time.gmtime(mtime + tz_offset)).lstrip('0')
if 'SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH' in os.environ:
env_subs['date'] = time.strftime('%d %b %Y', time.gmtime(int(os.environ.get('SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH', time.time()))))
def html_via_commonmark(txt):
return commonmark.HtmlRenderer().render(commonmark.Parser().parse(txt))
@@ -276,7 +280,10 @@ class TransformHtml(HTMLParser):
bad_hashtags = set(),
latest_targets = [ ],
opt_prefix = 'opt',
a_href = None,
a_href_external = False,
a_txt_start = None,
after_a_tag = False,
target_suf = '',
)
@@ -315,6 +322,13 @@ class TransformHtml(HTMLParser):
for bad in st.referenced_hashtags - st.created_hashtags:
warn('Unknown hashtag link in', self.fn + ':', '#' + bad)
def handle_UE(self):
st = self.state
if st.txt.startswith(('.', ',', '!', '?', ';', ':')):
st.man_out[-1] = ".UE " + st.txt[0] + "\n"
st.txt = st.txt[1:]
st.after_a_tag = False
def handle_starttag(self, tag, attrs_list):
st = self.state
if args.debug:
@@ -387,13 +401,20 @@ class TransformHtml(HTMLParser):
for var, val in attrs_list:
if var == 'href':
if val.startswith(('https://', 'http://', 'mailto:', 'ftp:')):
pass # nothing to check
if st.after_a_tag:
self.handle_UE()
st.man_out.append(manify(st.txt.strip()) + "\n")
st.man_out.append(".UR " + val + "\n")
st.txt = ''
st.a_href = val
st.a_href_external = True
elif '#' in val:
pg, tgt = val.split('#', 1)
if pg and pg not in VALID_PAGES or '#' in tgt:
st.bad_hashtags.add(val)
elif tgt in ('', 'opt', 'dopt'):
st.a_href = val
st.a_href_external = False
elif pg == '':
st.referenced_hashtags.add(tgt)
if tgt in st.latest_targets:
@@ -409,6 +430,8 @@ class TransformHtml(HTMLParser):
st = self.state
if args.debug:
self.output_debug('END', (tag,))
if st.after_a_tag:
self.handle_UE()
if tag in CONSUMES_TXT or st.dt_from == tag:
txt = st.txt.strip()
st.txt = ''
@@ -473,7 +496,15 @@ class TransformHtml(HTMLParser):
elif tag == 'hr':
return
elif tag == 'a':
if st.a_href:
if st.a_href_external:
st.txt = st.txt.strip()
if args.force_link_text or st.a_href != st.txt:
st.man_out.append(manify(st.txt) + "\n")
st.man_out.append(".UE\n") # This might get replaced with a punctuation version in handle_UE()
st.after_a_tag = True
st.a_href_external = False
st.txt = ''
elif st.a_href:
atxt = st.txt[st.a_txt_start:]
find = 'href="' + st.a_href + '"'
for j in range(len(st.html_out)-1, 0, -1):
@@ -513,6 +544,7 @@ class TransformHtml(HTMLParser):
if st.in_pre:
html = htmlify(txt)
else:
txt = LONG_OPT_DASH_RE.sub(lambda x: x.group(1).replace('-', NBR_DASH[0]), txt)
txt = SPACE_DOUBLE_DASH_RE.sub(NBR_SPACE[0] + r'--\1', txt).replace('--', NBR_DASH[0]*2)
txt = NON_SPACE_SINGLE_DASH_RE.sub(r'\1' + NBR_DASH[0], txt)
html = htmlify(txt)
@@ -612,6 +644,7 @@ if __name__ == '__main__':
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Convert markdown into html and (optionally) nroff. Each input filename must have a .md suffix, which is changed to .html for the output filename. If the input filename ends with .num.md (e.g. foo.1.md) then a nroff file is also output with the input filename's .md suffix removed (e.g. foo.1).", add_help=False)
parser.add_argument('--test', action='store_true', help="Just test the parsing without outputting any files.")
parser.add_argument('--dest', metavar='DIR', help="Create files in DIR instead of the current directory.")
parser.add_argument('--force-link-text', action='store_true', help="Don't remove the link text if it matches the link href. Useful when nroff doesn't understand .UR and .UE.")
parser.add_argument('--debug', '-D', action='count', default=0, help='Output copious info on the html parsing. Repeat for even more.')
parser.add_argument("--help", "-h", action="help", help="Output this help message and exit.")
parser.add_argument("mdfiles", metavar='FILE.md', nargs='+', help="One or more .md files to convert.")

View File

@@ -7,8 +7,10 @@ if [ ! -f git-version.h ]; then
fi
if test -d "$srcdir/.git" || test -f "$srcdir/.git"; then
gitver=`git describe --abbrev=8 2>/dev/null | sed -n '/^v3\.[0-9][0-9]*\.[0-9][0-9]*\(-\|$\)/p'`
if [ -n "$gitver" ]; then
gitver=`git describe --abbrev=8 2>/dev/null`
# NOTE: I'm avoiding "|" in sed since I'm not sure if sed -r is portable and "\|" fails on some OSes.
verchk=`echo "$gitver-" | sed -n '/^v3\.[0-9][0-9]*\.[0-9][0-9]*\(pre[0-9]*\)*-/p'`
if [ -n "$verchk" ]; then
echo "#define RSYNC_GITVER \"$gitver\"" >git-version.h.new
if ! diff git-version.h.new git-version.h >/dev/null; then
echo "Updating git-version.h"

87
old_versions/README.md Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,87 @@
# Old rsync version archive
Static rsync binaries built from historical release tags. Two uses:
1. **Cross-version behaviour checks** — confirming whether a behaviour a user
reported on an old release is version-specific or option-driven.
2. **The version-mixing test suite**`runtests.py --rsync-bin2=...` runs the
current code against one of these as the daemon / remote-shell peer; CI
(`.github/workflows/ubuntu-version-mix.yml`) does this for every binary
here against the per-version manifests in `testsuite/expect/`.
Binaries are **statically linked** so they run regardless of the host's
shared libraries, and named `rsync_<version>`:
| Binary | Version | Protocol | Notes |
|----------------|---------|----------|-----------------------------------------|
| `rsync_2.6.0` | 2.6.0 | 27 | 2004; needs autoconf regen (see below) |
| `rsync_3.0.0` | 3.0.0 | 30 | 2008 |
| `rsync_3.1.0` | 3.1.0 | 31 | 2013 |
| `rsync_3.1.3` | 3.1.3 | 31 | Ubuntu 18.04 / Debian buster era (2018) |
| `rsync_3.2.0` | 3.2.0 | 31 | 2020 (zstd/lz4/xxhash negotiation added)|
| `rsync_3.2.7` | 3.2.7 | 31 | 2022 |
| `rsync_3.3.0` | 3.3.0 | 31 | 2024 |
| `rsync_3.4.0` | 3.4.0 | 32 | 2025 |
| `rsync_3.4.1` | 3.4.1 | 32 | 2025 |
These are every `x.y.0` release from 2.6.0 (2004) onward plus a few point
releases. 2.6.0 is the practical floor: older tags need progressively more
porting to build on a current toolchain.
All built `--disable-openssl` and with `_FORTIFY_SOURCE` disabled (see below);
xxhash/zstd/lz4 are compiled in where the version supports them.
## Adding a version
```bash
./build_static.sh 3.2.7 # uses git tag v3.2.7
./build_static.sh 3.0.9 v3.0.9 # explicit tag if naming differs
```
The script checks out the tag into a throwaway `git worktree`, applies the
minimal patches needed to compile old sources on a modern toolchain, links
statically, verifies the result is static and reports the requested version,
then installs `rsync_<version>` here and removes the worktree.
Override the source repo with `RSYNC_REPO=/path/to/rsync ./build_static.sh ...`
(defaults to `../rsync.4`).
## Why the patches?
Modern GCC (>= 14, C23 default) and glibc reject things old rsync relied on.
`build_static.sh` handles these, each guarded so it's a no-op when not needed:
1. **K&R `lseek64()` redeclaration** in `syscall.c` clashes with glibc's real
prototype — removed.
2. **`gettimeofday()`** — glibc only has the 2-arg form; configure misdetects
the 1-arg form, so `HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY_TZ` is forced on in `config.h`.
3. **C23 `()` == `(void)`** breaks K&R prototypes called with arguments
(`qsort` comparator, `pool->bomb`, etc.) — built with `-std=gnu11`.
4. Assorted modern `-Werror` promotions (incompatible pointer types, implicit
declarations) downgraded to warnings; bundled zlib/popt used to keep the
static link self-contained.
5. **OpenSSL (3.2+)** is disabled with `--disable-openssl`: linking
`libcrypto.a` statically drags in jitterentropy (`jent_*`) and zlib's
`uncompress` (OpenSSL's COMP module), which don't resolve here. OpenSSL only
provided optional MD4/MD5, which rsync implements natively, so checksum
behaviour is unaffected.
6. **`_FORTIFY_SOURCE` disabled** (`-U_FORTIFY_SOURCE -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=0`):
modern Ubuntu defaults it to `=3`, whose stricter object-size checks turn
latent (historically benign) over-reads in OLD rsync into hard
`*** buffer overflow detected ***` aborts when the binary runs as a
server/daemon — which made e.g. 3.1.3 and 3.2.7 unusable as peers. Disabling
it makes the archival binaries behave as the released versions did.
7. **Pre-3.0 tags (e.g. 2.6.0)** ship `configure.in`, not a generated
`configure`. The script runs `autoheader`/`autoconf` to generate it, after
neutralizing the `AC_CHECK_FUNCS(fn,,AC_LIBOBJ(lib/...))` fallbacks for
`inet_ntop`/`inet_pton`/`getaddrinfo`/`getnameinfo` — modern autoconf emits
broken shell for those never-taken branches (the funcs exist in glibc). It
also generates `proto.h` (no make rule in that era) and stubs the vendored
`lib/addrinfo.h` the tag dropped (modern glibc supplies `struct addrinfo`).
All guarded so they no-op on 3.x.
Newer versions may need fewer or different tweaks; if a build fails, the
script prints the first compiler errors from its log.

128
old_versions/build_static.sh Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,128 @@
#!/bin/bash
# Build a static rsync binary from a historical git tag, for cross-version
# behaviour testing. Produces ./rsync_<version> in this directory.
#
# Usage: ./build_static.sh <version> [git-tag]
# Example: ./build_static.sh 3.1.3 # uses tag v3.1.3
# ./build_static.sh 3.2.7 v3.2.7
#
# Old rsync releases don't compile cleanly on a modern toolchain (GCC >= 14
# defaults to C23, where an empty () prototype means (void); glibc dropped the
# 1-arg gettimeofday; lseek64 K&R redeclarations clash). This script applies
# the minimal, best-effort workarounds and links statically so the result is
# self-contained and reproducible regardless of the host's shared libraries.
#
# Each workaround is guarded so it's a no-op on versions that don't need it.
set -euo pipefail
VERSION="${1:?usage: build_static.sh <version> [git-tag]}"
TAG="${2:-v$VERSION}"
ARCHIVE_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
REPO="${RSYNC_REPO:-/home/tridge/project/rsync/rsync.4}" # any rsync worktree
WORKTREE="$(mktemp -d /tmp/rsync-build-XXXXXX)"
OUT="$ARCHIVE_DIR/rsync_$VERSION"
# C standard restores K&R () semantics; permissive flags downgrade the pile of
# modern -Werror promotions (incompatible pointers, implicit decls) to warnings.
# _FORTIFY_SOURCE is forced OFF: modern Ubuntu defaults it to =3, whose stricter
# object-size checks turn latent (historically benign) over-reads in OLD rsync
# into hard "*** buffer overflow detected ***" aborts when the binary acts as a
# server/daemon. Disabling it makes these archival binaries behave the way the
# released versions did, which is the whole point of the archive.
CFLAGS_OLD="-I. -I./zlib -O2 -g -std=gnu11 -fcommon -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -Wno-error \
-U_FORTIFY_SOURCE -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=0 \
-Wno-incompatible-pointer-types -Wno-implicit-function-declaration -Wno-int-conversion"
cleanup() {
cd "$REPO"
git worktree remove --force "$WORKTREE" 2>/dev/null || true
git worktree prune 2>/dev/null || true
}
trap cleanup EXIT
echo ">>> checking out $TAG into $WORKTREE"
# prefer an exact tag to avoid ambiguity with similarly-named branches
REF="$TAG"
if git -C "$REPO" rev-parse -q --verify "refs/tags/$TAG" >/dev/null; then
REF="refs/tags/$TAG"
fi
git -C "$REPO" worktree add --detach "$WORKTREE" "$REF"
cd "$WORKTREE"
# --- workaround 1: K&R lseek64 redeclaration clashes with glibc's prototype ---
if grep -q 'off64_t lseek64();' syscall.c 2>/dev/null; then
echo ">>> patching syscall.c lseek64 redeclaration"
perl -0pi -e 's/#ifdef HAVE_LSEEK64\n#if !SIZEOF_OFF64_T\n\tOFF_T lseek64\(\);\n#else\n\toff64_t lseek64\(\);\n#endif\n\treturn lseek64/#ifdef HAVE_LSEEK64\n\treturn lseek64/' syscall.c
fi
# --- workaround 0: pre-3.0 tags ship configure.in, not a generated configure.
# Generate it. Modern autoconf emits broken shell for their
# AC_CHECK_FUNCS(fn,,AC_LIBOBJ(lib/...)) fallbacks -- but those branches are
# dead on a modern host (glibc has inet_ntop/inet_pton/getaddrinfo/getnameinfo),
# so neutralize the AC_LIBOBJ replacements before regenerating.
OLD_TREE=0
if [ ! -f ./configure ] && { [ -f configure.in ] || [ -f configure.ac ]; }; then
OLD_TREE=1
acsrc=configure.ac; [ -f configure.in ] && acsrc=configure.in
echo ">>> generating configure for an old tag (autoheader/autoconf)"
sed -i 's#AC_LIBOBJ(lib/[a-zA-Z_]*)#:#g' "$acsrc"
autoheader 2>/dev/null || true
autoconf 2>/dev/null || { echo "autoconf failed"; exit 1; }
fi
CONF_ARGS=(--disable-md2man --with-included-zlib=yes --with-included-popt=yes)
# OpenSSL (3.2+) only adds optional MD4/MD5 that rsync already implements, but
# linking libcrypto.a statically drags in jitterentropy + zlib's uncompress,
# which aren't resolvable here. Drop it when the flag exists.
if ./configure --help 2>/dev/null | grep -q -- '--disable-openssl'; then
echo ">>> disabling openssl for self-contained static link"
CONF_ARGS+=(--disable-openssl)
fi
echo ">>> configure (bundled zlib + popt, static-friendly)"
./configure "${CONF_ARGS[@]}" \
>"$WORKTREE/conf.log" 2>&1 || { tail -20 "$WORKTREE/conf.log"; exit 1; }
# --- workaround 2: modern glibc only has the 2-arg gettimeofday ---------------
if grep -q '/\* #undef HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY_TZ \*/' config.h; then
echo ">>> forcing HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY_TZ (configure misdetects it)"
sed -i 's|/\* #undef HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY_TZ \*/|#define HAVE_GETTIMEOFDAY_TZ 1|' config.h
fi
# --- workaround 4 (old trees only): generate proto.h if the tree has no make
# rule for it, and stub a vendored lib/addrinfo.h that the git tag dropped
# (modern glibc supplies struct addrinfo / sockaddr_storage, so empty is right).
if [ "$OLD_TREE" = 1 ]; then
if [ ! -f proto.h ] && [ -f mkproto.awk ]; then
echo ">>> generating proto.h"
cat ./*.c ./lib/compat.c 2>/dev/null | awk -f ./mkproto.awk > proto.h
fi
if grep -q 'include "lib/addrinfo.h"' rsync.h 2>/dev/null && [ ! -f lib/addrinfo.h ]; then
echo ">>> stubbing lib/addrinfo.h"
echo '/* emptied: modern glibc provides struct addrinfo */' > lib/addrinfo.h
fi
fi
echo ">>> building (static)"
make -j"$(nproc)" CFLAGS="$CFLAGS_OLD" LDFLAGS="-static" \
>"$WORKTREE/make.log" 2>&1 || { grep -E 'error:|\*\*\*' "$WORKTREE/make.log" | head; exit 1; }
# verify it's actually static before we keep it
if ldd ./rsync 2>&1 | grep -qv 'not a dynamic executable'; then
echo "ERROR: binary is not statically linked:" >&2
ldd ./rsync >&2
exit 1
fi
GOT="$(./rsync --version | head -1 | awk '{print $3}')"
if [ "$GOT" != "$VERSION" ]; then
echo "ERROR: built version '$GOT' != requested '$VERSION'" >&2
exit 1
fi
cp ./rsync "$OUT"
strip "$OUT"
echo ">>> installed $OUT"
"$OUT" --version | head -1
file "$OUT"

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200
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@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
*
* Copyright (C) 1998-2001 Andrew Tridgell <tridge@samba.org>
* Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002 Martin Pool <mbp@samba.org>
* Copyright (C) 2002-2022 Wayne Davison
* Copyright (C) 2002-2023 Wayne Davison
*
* 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
@@ -86,6 +86,7 @@ int sparse_files = 0;
int preallocate_files = 0;
int do_compression = 0;
int do_compression_level = CLVL_NOT_SPECIFIED;
int do_compression_threads = 0; /*n = 0 use rsync thread, n >= 1 spawn n threads for compression */
int am_root = 0; /* 0 = normal, 1 = root, 2 = --super, -1 = --fake-super */
int am_server = 0;
int am_sender = 0;
@@ -113,11 +114,20 @@ int mkpath_dest_arg = 0;
int allow_inc_recurse = 1;
int xfer_dirs = -1;
int am_daemon = 0;
/* Set after a successful per-module chroot ("use chroot = yes") in
* clientserver.c. NOT set for the daemon-level "daemon chroot = /X"
* chroot: that confines path resolution to /X, but module paths
* /X/modA, /X/modB, etc. are not chroot boundaries, so the per-module
* symlink-race defenses (secure_relative_open() / do_*_at() in
* syscall.c, gated by `am_daemon && !am_chrooted`) must still fire
* even when the daemon is inside a daemon chroot. */
int am_chrooted = 0;
int connect_timeout = 0;
int keep_partial = 0;
int safe_symlinks = 0;
int copy_unsafe_links = 0;
int munge_symlinks = 0;
int use_secure_symlinks = 0;
int size_only = 0;
int daemon_bwlimit = 0;
int bwlimit = 0;
@@ -200,6 +210,7 @@ int remote_option_cnt = 0;
const char **remote_options = NULL;
const char *checksum_choice = NULL;
const char *compress_choice = NULL;
static const char *empty_argv[1];
int quiet = 0;
int output_motd = 1;
@@ -224,7 +235,7 @@ char *iconv_opt =
struct chmod_mode_struct *chmod_modes = NULL;
static const char *debug_verbosity[] = {
static const char *const debug_verbosity[] = {
/*0*/ NULL,
/*1*/ NULL,
/*2*/ "BIND,CMD,CONNECT,DEL,DELTASUM,DUP,FILTER,FLIST,ICONV",
@@ -235,7 +246,7 @@ static const char *debug_verbosity[] = {
#define MAX_VERBOSITY ((int)(sizeof debug_verbosity / sizeof debug_verbosity[0]) - 1)
static const char *info_verbosity[1+MAX_VERBOSITY] = {
static const char *const info_verbosity[1+MAX_VERBOSITY] = {
/*0*/ "NONREG",
/*1*/ "COPY,DEL,FLIST,MISC,NAME,STATS,SYMSAFE",
/*2*/ "BACKUP,MISC2,MOUNT,NAME2,REMOVE,SKIP",
@@ -473,7 +484,7 @@ static void parse_output_words(struct output_struct *words, short *levels, const
static void output_item_help(struct output_struct *words)
{
short *levels = words == info_words ? info_levels : debug_levels;
const char **verbosity = words == info_words ? info_verbosity : debug_verbosity;
const char *const*verbosity = words == info_words ? info_verbosity : debug_verbosity;
char buf[128], *opt, *fmt = "%-10s %s\n";
int j;
@@ -755,6 +766,8 @@ static struct poptOption long_options[] = {
{"skip-compress", 0, POPT_ARG_STRING, &skip_compress, 0, 0, 0 },
{"compress-level", 0, POPT_ARG_INT, &do_compression_level, 0, 0, 0 },
{"zl", 0, POPT_ARG_INT, &do_compression_level, 0, 0, 0 },
{"compress-threads", 0, POPT_ARG_INT, &do_compression_threads, 0, 0, 0 },
{"zt", 0, POPT_ARG_INT, &do_compression_threads, 0, 0, 0 },
{0, 'P', POPT_ARG_NONE, 0, 'P', 0, 0 },
{"progress", 0, POPT_ARG_VAL, &do_progress, 1, 0, 0 },
{"no-progress", 0, POPT_ARG_VAL, &do_progress, 0, 0, 0 },
@@ -843,7 +856,7 @@ static struct poptOption long_options[] = {
{0,0,0,0, 0, 0, 0}
};
static struct poptOption long_daemon_options[] = {
static const struct poptOption long_daemon_options[] = {
/* longName, shortName, argInfo, argPtr, value, descrip, argDesc */
{"address", 0, POPT_ARG_STRING, &bind_address, 0, 0, 0 },
{"bwlimit", 0, POPT_ARG_INT, &daemon_bwlimit, 0, 0, 0 },
@@ -1155,7 +1168,7 @@ static time_t parse_time(const char *arg)
{
const char *cp;
time_t val, now = time(NULL);
struct tm t, *today = localtime(&now);
struct tm t, tmp, *today = localtime_r(&now, &tmp);
int in_date, old_mday, n;
memset(&t, 0, sizeof t);
@@ -1347,7 +1360,7 @@ char *alt_dest_opt(int type)
**/
int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
{
static poptContext pc;
poptContext pc;
const char *arg, **argv = *argv_p;
int argc = *argc_p;
int opt, want_dest_type;
@@ -1367,11 +1380,11 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
/* TODO: Call poptReadDefaultConfig; handle errors. */
/* The context leaks in case of an error, but if there's a
* problem we always exit anyhow. */
if (pc)
poptFreeContext(pc);
pc = poptGetContext(RSYNC_NAME, argc, argv, long_options, 0);
if (pc == NULL) {
strlcpy(err_buf, "poptGetContext returned NULL\n", sizeof err_buf);
return 0;
}
if (!am_server) {
poptReadDefaultConfig(pc, 0);
popt_unalias(pc, "--daemon");
@@ -1413,7 +1426,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
strlcpy(err_buf,
"Attempt to hack rsync thwarted!\n",
sizeof err_buf);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
#ifdef ICONV_OPTION
iconv_opt = NULL;
@@ -1459,7 +1472,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (tmpdir && strlen(tmpdir) >= MAXPATHLEN - 10) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"the --temp-dir path is WAY too long.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (!daemon_opt) {
@@ -1469,8 +1482,16 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
exit_cleanup(RERR_SYNTAX);
}
*argv_p = argv = poptGetArgs(pc);
*argc_p = argc = count_args(argv);
argv = poptGetArgs(pc);
argc = count_args(argv);
if (!argc) {
*argv_p = empty_argv;
*argc_p = 0;
} else if (poptDupArgv(argc, argv, argc_p, argv_p) != 0)
out_of_memory("parse_arguments");
argv = *argv_p;
poptFreeContext(pc);
am_starting_up = 0;
daemon_opt = 0;
am_daemon = 1;
@@ -1525,7 +1546,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
case 'a':
if (refused_archive_part) {
create_refuse_error(refused_archive_part);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (!recurse) /* preserve recurse == 2 */
recurse = 1;
@@ -1595,7 +1616,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
case 'P':
if (refused_partial || refused_progress) {
create_refuse_error(refused_partial ? refused_partial : refused_progress);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
do_progress = 1;
keep_partial = 1;
@@ -1630,7 +1651,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (*arg != '-') {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"Remote option must start with a dash: %s\n", arg);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (remote_option_cnt+2 >= remote_option_alloc) {
remote_option_alloc += 16;
@@ -1672,27 +1693,27 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
ssize_t size;
arg = poptGetOptArg(pc);
if ((size = parse_size_arg(arg, 'b', "block-size", 0, max_blength, False)) < 0)
return 0;
goto cleanup;
block_size = (int32)size;
break;
}
case OPT_MAX_SIZE:
if ((max_size = parse_size_arg(max_size_arg, 'b', "max-size", 0, -1, False)) < 0)
return 0;
goto cleanup;
max_size_arg = strdup(do_big_num(max_size, 0, NULL));
break;
case OPT_MIN_SIZE:
if ((min_size = parse_size_arg(min_size_arg, 'b', "min-size", 0, -1, False)) < 0)
return 0;
goto cleanup;
min_size_arg = strdup(do_big_num(min_size, 0, NULL));
break;
case OPT_BWLIMIT: {
ssize_t size = parse_size_arg(bwlimit_arg, 'K', "bwlimit", 512, -1, True);
if (size < 0)
return 0;
goto cleanup;
bwlimit_arg = strdup(do_big_num(size, 0, NULL));
bwlimit = (size + 512) / 1024;
break;
@@ -1721,7 +1742,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"ERROR: the %s option conflicts with the %s option\n",
alt_dest_opt(want_dest_type), alt_dest_opt(0));
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
alt_dest_type = want_dest_type;
@@ -1729,7 +1750,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"ERROR: at most %d %s args may be specified\n",
MAX_BASIS_DIRS, alt_dest_opt(0));
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
/* We defer sanitizing this arg until we know what
* our destination directory is going to be. */
@@ -1742,7 +1763,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"Invalid argument passed to --chmod (%s)\n",
arg);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
break;
@@ -1761,11 +1782,11 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (usermap_via_chown) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--usermap conflicts with prior --chown.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"You can only specify --usermap once.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
usermap = (char *)poptGetOptArg(pc);
usermap_via_chown = False;
@@ -1777,11 +1798,11 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (groupmap_via_chown) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--groupmap conflicts with prior --chown.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"You can only specify --groupmap once.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
groupmap = (char *)poptGetOptArg(pc);
groupmap_via_chown = False;
@@ -1800,11 +1821,11 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (!usermap_via_chown) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--chown conflicts with prior --usermap.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"You can only specify a user-affecting --chown once.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (asprintf(&usermap, "*:%.*s", len, chown) < 0)
out_of_memory("parse_arguments");
@@ -1816,11 +1837,11 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (!groupmap_via_chown) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--chown conflicts with prior --groupmap.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"You can only specify a group-affecting --chown once.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (asprintf(&groupmap, "*:%s", arg) < 0)
out_of_memory("parse_arguments");
@@ -1848,7 +1869,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
snprintf(err_buf,sizeof(err_buf),
"ACLs are not supported on this %s\n",
am_server ? "server" : "client");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
#endif
case 'X':
@@ -1859,7 +1880,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
snprintf(err_buf,sizeof(err_buf),
"extended attributes are not supported on this %s\n",
am_server ? "server" : "client");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
#endif
case OPT_STOP_AFTER: {
@@ -1868,7 +1889,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
stop_at_utime = time(NULL);
if ((val = atol(arg) * 60) <= 0 || LONG_MAX - val < stop_at_utime || (long)(time_t)val != val) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf, "invalid --stop-after value: %s\n", arg);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
stop_at_utime += val;
break;
@@ -1879,11 +1900,11 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
arg = poptGetOptArg(pc);
if ((stop_at_utime = parse_time(arg)) == (time_t)-1) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf, "invalid --stop-at format: %s\n", arg);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (stop_at_utime <= time(NULL)) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf, "--stop-at time is not in the future: %s\n", arg);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
break;
#endif
@@ -1901,7 +1922,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
else {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--stderr mode \"%s\" is not one of errors, all, or client\n", arg);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
saw_stderr_opt = 1;
break;
@@ -1912,13 +1933,13 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
* turned this option off. */
if (opt >= OPT_REFUSED_BASE) {
create_refuse_error(opt);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf, "%s%s: %s\n",
am_server ? "on remote machine: " : "",
poptBadOption(pc, POPT_BADOPTION_NOALIAS),
poptStrerror(opt));
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
}
@@ -1938,9 +1959,11 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (max_alloc_arg) {
ssize_t size = parse_size_arg(max_alloc_arg, 'B', "max-alloc", 1024*1024, -1, True);
if (size < 0)
return 0;
goto cleanup;
max_alloc = size;
}
if (!max_alloc)
max_alloc = SIZE_MAX;
if (old_style_args < 0) {
if (!am_server && protect_args <= 0 && (arg = getenv("RSYNC_OLD_ARGS")) != NULL && *arg) {
@@ -1952,7 +1975,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (protect_args > 0) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--secluded-args conflicts with --old-args.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
protect_args = 0;
}
@@ -1997,8 +2020,10 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
do_compression = CPRES_AUTO;
if (do_compression && refused_compress) {
create_refuse_error(refused_compress);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (do_compression_threads < 0)
do_compression_threads = 0;
}
#ifdef HAVE_SETVBUF
@@ -2022,7 +2047,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
default:
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"Invalid --outbuf setting -- specify N, L, or B.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
setvbuf(stdout, (char *)NULL, mode, 0);
}
@@ -2050,7 +2075,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
}
if (refused_no_iconv && !iconv_opt) {
create_refuse_error(refused_no_iconv);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
#endif
@@ -2061,18 +2086,30 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (orig_protect_args == 2 && am_server)
protect_args = orig_protect_args;
if (protect_args == 1 && am_server)
if (protect_args == 1 && am_server) {
poptFreeContext(pc);
return 1;
}
*argv_p = argv = poptGetArgs(pc);
*argc_p = argc = count_args(argv);
/* Because popt 1.19 has started to free the returned args data, we now
* make a copy of the array and then do an immediate cleanup. */
argv = poptGetArgs(pc);
argc = count_args(argv);
if (!argc) {
*argv_p = empty_argv;
*argc_p = 0;
} else if (poptDupArgv(argc, argv, argc_p, argv_p) != 0)
out_of_memory("parse_arguments");
argv = *argv_p;
poptFreeContext(pc);
pc = NULL;
#ifndef SUPPORT_LINKS
if (preserve_links && !am_sender) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"symlinks are not supported on this %s\n",
am_server ? "server" : "client");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
#endif
@@ -2081,7 +2118,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"hard links are not supported on this %s\n",
am_server ? "server" : "client");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
#endif
@@ -2089,20 +2126,20 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (am_root < 0 && preserve_xattrs > 1) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--fake-super conflicts with -XX\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
#else
if (am_root < 0) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--fake-super requires an rsync with extended attributes enabled\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
#endif
if (write_batch && read_batch) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--write-batch and --read-batch can not be used together\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (write_batch > 0 || read_batch) {
if (am_server) {
@@ -2121,25 +2158,25 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (read_batch && files_from) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--read-batch cannot be used with --files-from\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (read_batch && remove_source_files) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--read-batch cannot be used with --remove-%s-files\n",
remove_source_files == 1 ? "source" : "sent");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (batch_name && strlen(batch_name) > MAX_BATCH_NAME_LEN) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"the batch-file name must be %d characters or less.\n",
MAX_BATCH_NAME_LEN);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (tmpdir && strlen(tmpdir) >= MAXPATHLEN - 10) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"the --temp-dir path is WAY too long.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (max_delete < 0 && max_delete != INT_MIN) {
@@ -2173,7 +2210,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (delete_before + !!delete_during + delete_after > 1) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"You may not combine multiple --delete-WHEN options.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (delete_before || delete_during || delete_after)
delete_mode = 1;
@@ -2184,7 +2221,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
delete_during = 1;
else {
create_refuse_error(refused_delete_before);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
} else if (refused_delete_during)
delete_before = 1;
@@ -2193,14 +2230,14 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (!xfer_dirs && delete_mode) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--delete does not work without --recursive (-r) or --dirs (-d).\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (missing_args == 3) /* simplify if both options were specified */
missing_args = 2;
if (refused_delete && (delete_mode || missing_args == 2)) {
create_refuse_error(refused_delete);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (remove_source_files) {
@@ -2209,7 +2246,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
* options. */
if (refused_delete && am_sender) {
create_refuse_error(refused_delete);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
need_messages_from_generator = 1;
}
@@ -2263,7 +2300,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--suffix cannot contain slashes: %s\n",
backup_suffix);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (backup_dir) {
size_t len;
@@ -2276,7 +2313,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (len > sizeof backup_dir_buf - 128) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"the --backup-dir path is WAY too long.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
backup_dir_len = (int)len;
if (!backup_dir_len) {
@@ -2295,7 +2332,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
"--suffix cannot be empty %s\n", backup_dir_len < 0
? "when --backup-dir is the same as the dest dir"
: "without a --backup-dir");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
} else if (make_backups && delete_mode && !delete_excluded && !am_server) {
snprintf(backup_dir_buf, sizeof backup_dir_buf,
"P *%s", backup_suffix);
@@ -2323,7 +2360,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (do_progress && !am_server) {
if (!log_before_transfer && INFO_EQ(NAME, 0))
parse_output_words(info_words, info_levels, "name", DEFAULT_PRIORITY);
parse_output_words(info_words, info_levels, "flist2,progress", DEFAULT_PRIORITY);
parse_output_words(info_words, info_levels, "FLIST2,PROGRESS", DEFAULT_PRIORITY);
}
if (dry_run)
@@ -2364,11 +2401,11 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (whole_file > 0) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"--append cannot be used with --whole-file\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
if (refused_inplace) {
create_refuse_error(refused_inplace);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
inplace = 1;
}
@@ -2376,7 +2413,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (write_devices) {
if (refused_inplace) {
create_refuse_error(refused_inplace);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
inplace = 1;
}
@@ -2391,13 +2428,13 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
"--%s cannot be used with --%s\n",
append_mode ? "append" : "inplace",
delay_updates ? "delay-updates" : "partial-dir");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
/* --inplace implies --partial for refusal purposes, but we
* clear the keep_partial flag for internal logic purposes. */
if (refused_partial) {
create_refuse_error(refused_partial);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
keep_partial = 0;
#else
@@ -2405,7 +2442,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
"--%s is not supported on this %s\n",
append_mode ? "append" : "inplace",
am_server ? "server" : "client");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
#endif
} else {
if (keep_partial && !partial_dir && !am_server) {
@@ -2419,7 +2456,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
partial_dir = NULL;
if (!partial_dir && refused_partial) {
create_refuse_error(refused_partial);
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
keep_partial = 1;
}
@@ -2440,14 +2477,14 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
if (am_server) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"The --files-from sent to the server cannot specify a host.\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
files_from = p;
filesfrom_host = h;
if (strcmp(files_from, "-") == 0) {
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"Invalid --files-from remote filename\n");
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
} else {
if (sanitize_paths)
@@ -2466,7 +2503,7 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"failed to open files-from file %s: %s\n",
files_from, strerror(errno));
return 0;
goto cleanup;
}
}
}
@@ -2483,6 +2520,9 @@ int parse_arguments(int *argc_p, const char ***argv_p)
options_rejected:
snprintf(err_buf, sizeof err_buf,
"Your options have been rejected by the server.\n");
cleanup:
if (pc)
poptFreeContext(pc);
return 0;
}
@@ -2498,7 +2538,7 @@ static char SPLIT_ARG_WHEN_OLD[1];
**/
char *safe_arg(const char *opt, const char *arg)
{
#define SHELL_CHARS "!#$&;|<>(){}\"' \t\\"
#define SHELL_CHARS "!#$&;|<>(){}\"'` \t\\"
#define WILD_CHARS "*?[]" /* We don't allow remote brace expansion */
BOOL is_filename_arg = !opt;
char *escapes = is_filename_arg ? SHELL_CHARS : WILD_CHARS SHELL_CHARS;
@@ -2510,7 +2550,7 @@ char *safe_arg(const char *opt, const char *arg)
char *ret;
if (!protect_args && old_style_args < 2 && (!old_style_args || (!is_filename_arg && opt != SPLIT_ARG_WHEN_OLD))) {
const char *f;
if (!trust_sender_args && *arg == '~'
if (*arg == '~' && is_filename_arg && !am_sender && !trust_sender_args
&& ((relative_paths && !strstr(arg, "/./"))
|| !strchr(arg, '/'))) {
extras++;
@@ -2541,7 +2581,7 @@ char *safe_arg(const char *opt, const char *arg)
if (escape_leading_tilde)
*t++ = '\\';
while (*f) {
if (*f == '\\') {
if (*f == '\\') {
if (!is_filename_arg || !strchr(WILD_CHARS, f[1]))
*t++ = '\\';
} else if (strchr(escapes, *f))

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
TARGETS := all install install-ssl-daemon install-all install-strip conf gen gensend reconfigure restatus \
TARGETS := all install install-ssl-daemon install-all install-strip conf gen reconfigure restatus \
proto man clean cleantests distclean test check check29 check30 installcheck splint \
doxygen doxygen-upload finddead rrsync

View File

@@ -1,174 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env -S python3 -B
# This script turns one or more diff files in the patches dir (which is
# expected to be a checkout of the rsync-patches git repo) into a branch
# in the main rsync git checkout. This allows the applied patch to be
# merged with the latest rsync changes and tested. To update the diff
# with the resulting changes, see the patch-update script.
import os, sys, re, argparse, glob
sys.path = ['packaging'] + sys.path
from pkglib import *
def main():
global created, info, local_branch
cur_branch, args.base_branch = check_git_state(args.base_branch, not args.skip_check, args.patches_dir)
local_branch = get_patch_branches(args.base_branch)
if args.delete_local_branches:
for name in sorted(local_branch):
branch = f"patch/{args.base_branch}/{name}"
cmd_chk(['git', 'branch', '-D', branch])
local_branch = set()
if args.add_missing:
for fn in sorted(glob.glob(f"{args.patches_dir}/*.diff")):
name = re.sub(r'\.diff$', '', re.sub(r'.+/', '', fn))
if name not in local_branch and fn not in args.patch_files:
args.patch_files.append(fn)
if not args.patch_files:
return
for fn in args.patch_files:
if not fn.endswith('.diff'):
die(f"Filename is not a .diff file: {fn}")
if not os.path.isfile(fn):
die(f"File not found: {fn}")
scanned = set()
info = { }
patch_list = [ ]
for fn in args.patch_files:
m = re.match(r'^(?P<dir>.*?)(?P<name>[^/]+)\.diff$', fn)
patch = argparse.Namespace(**m.groupdict())
if patch.name in scanned:
continue
patch.fn = fn
lines = [ ]
commit_hash = None
with open(patch.fn, 'r', encoding='utf-8') as fh:
for line in fh:
m = re.match(r'^based-on: (\S+)', line)
if m:
commit_hash = m[1]
break
if (re.match(r'^index .*\.\..* \d', line)
or re.match(r'^diff --git ', line)
or re.match(r'^--- (old|a)/', line)):
break
lines.append(re.sub(r'\s*\Z', "\n", line, 1))
info_txt = ''.join(lines).strip() + "\n"
lines = None
parent = args.base_branch
patches = re.findall(r'patch -p1 <%s/(\S+)\.diff' % args.patches_dir, info_txt)
if patches:
last = patches.pop()
if last != patch.name:
warn(f"No identity patch line in {patch.fn}")
patches.append(last)
if patches:
parent = patches.pop()
if parent not in scanned:
diff_fn = patch.dir + parent + '.diff'
if not os.path.isfile(diff_fn):
die(f"Failed to find parent of {patch.fn}: {parent}")
# Add parent to args.patch_files so that we will look for the
# parent's parent. Any duplicates will be ignored.
args.patch_files.append(diff_fn)
else:
warn(f"No patch lines found in {patch.fn}")
info[patch.name] = [ parent, info_txt, commit_hash ]
patch_list.append(patch)
created = set()
for patch in patch_list:
create_branch(patch)
cmd_chk(['git', 'checkout', args.base_branch])
def create_branch(patch):
if patch.name in created:
return
created.add(patch.name)
parent, info_txt, commit_hash = info[patch.name]
parent = argparse.Namespace(dir=patch.dir, name=parent, fn=patch.dir + parent + '.diff')
if parent.name == args.base_branch:
parent_branch = commit_hash if commit_hash else args.base_branch
else:
create_branch(parent)
parent_branch = '/'.join(['patch', args.base_branch, parent.name])
branch = '/'.join(['patch', args.base_branch, patch.name])
print("\n" + '=' * 64)
print(f"Processing {branch} ({parent_branch})")
if patch.name in local_branch:
cmd_chk(['git', 'branch', '-D', branch])
cmd_chk(['git', 'checkout', '-b', branch, parent_branch])
info_fn = 'PATCH.' + patch.name
with open(info_fn, 'w', encoding='utf-8') as fh:
fh.write(info_txt)
cmd_chk(['git', 'add', info_fn])
with open(patch.fn, 'r', encoding='utf-8') as fh:
patch_txt = fh.read()
cmd_run('patch -p1'.split(), input=patch_txt)
for fn in glob.glob('*.orig') + glob.glob('*/*.orig'):
os.unlink(fn)
pos = 0
new_file_re = re.compile(r'\nnew file mode (?P<mode>\d+)\s+--- /dev/null\s+\+\+\+ b/(?P<fn>.+)')
while True:
m = new_file_re.search(patch_txt, pos)
if not m:
break
os.chmod(m['fn'], int(m['mode'], 8))
cmd_chk(['git', 'add', m['fn']])
pos = m.end()
while True:
cmd_chk('git status'.split())
ans = input('Press Enter to commit, Ctrl-C to abort, or type a wild-name to add a new file: ')
if ans == '':
break
cmd_chk("git add " + ans, shell=True)
while True:
s = cmd_run(['git', 'commit', '-a', '-m', f"Creating branch from {patch.name}.diff."])
if not s.returncode:
break
s = cmd_run(['/bin/zsh'])
if s.returncode:
die('Aborting due to shell error code')
if __name__ == '__main__':
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Create a git patch branch from an rsync patch file.", add_help=False)
parser.add_argument('--branch', '-b', dest='base_branch', metavar='BASE_BRANCH', default='master', help="The branch the patch is based on. Default: master.")
parser.add_argument('--add-missing', '-a', action='store_true', help="Add a branch for every patches/*.diff that doesn't have a branch.")
parser.add_argument('--skip-check', action='store_true', help="Skip the check that ensures starting with a clean branch.")
parser.add_argument('--delete', dest='delete_local_branches', action='store_true', help="Delete all the local patch/BASE/* branches, not just the ones that are being recreated.")
parser.add_argument('--patches-dir', '-p', metavar='DIR', default='patches', help="Override the location of the rsync-patches dir. Default: patches.")
parser.add_argument('patch_files', metavar='patches/DIFF_FILE', nargs='*', help="Specify what patch diff files to process. Default: all of them.")
parser.add_argument("--help", "-h", action="help", help="Output this help message and exit.")
args = parser.parse_args()
main()
# vim: sw=4 et ft=python

2
packaging/ftp.filt Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
- /generated-files/
- /binaries/

View File

@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
Summary: A fast, versatile, remote (and local) file-copying tool
Name: rsync
Version: 3.2.7
%define fullversion %{version}pre1
Release: 0.1.pre1
%define srcdir src-previews
Version: 3.4.3
%define fullversion %{version}
Release: 1
%define srcdir src
Group: Applications/Internet
License: GPL
Source0: https://rsync.samba.org/ftp/rsync/%{srcdir}/rsync-%{fullversion}.tar.gz
@@ -79,9 +79,5 @@ rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT
%dir /etc/rsync-ssl/certs
%changelog
* Fri Sep 30 2022 Wayne Davison <wayne@opencoder.net>
Released 3.2.7pre1.
* Fri Mar 21 2008 Wayne Davison <wayne@opencoder.net>
Added installation of /etc/xinetd.d/rsync file and some commented-out
lines that demonstrate how to use the rsync-patches tar file.
* Wed May 20 2026 Rsync Project <rsync.project@gmail.com>
Released 3.4.3.

View File

@@ -1,244 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env -S python3 -B
# This script is used to turn one or more of the "patch/BASE/*" branches
# into one or more diffs in the "patches" directory. Pass the option
# --gen if you want generated files in the diffs. Pass the name of
# one or more diffs if you want to just update a subset of all the
# diffs.
import os, sys, re, argparse, time, shutil
sys.path = ['packaging'] + sys.path
from pkglib import *
MAKE_GEN_CMDS = [
'./prepare-source'.split(),
'cd build && if test -f config.status ; then ./config.status ; else ../configure ; fi',
'make -C build gen'.split(),
]
TMP_DIR = "patches.gen"
os.environ['GIT_MERGE_AUTOEDIT'] = 'no'
def main():
global master_commit, parent_patch, description, completed, last_touch
if not os.path.isdir(args.patches_dir):
die(f'No "{args.patches_dir}" directory was found.')
if not os.path.isdir('.git'):
die('No ".git" directory present in the current dir.')
starting_branch, args.base_branch = check_git_state(args.base_branch, not args.skip_check, args.patches_dir)
master_commit = latest_git_hash(args.base_branch)
if cmd_txt_chk(['packaging/prep-auto-dir']).out == '':
die('You must setup an auto-build-save dir to use this script.')
if args.gen:
if os.path.lexists(TMP_DIR):
die(f'"{TMP_DIR}" must not exist in the current directory.')
gen_files = get_gen_files()
os.mkdir(TMP_DIR, 0o700)
for cmd in MAKE_GEN_CMDS:
cmd_chk(cmd)
cmd_chk(['rsync', '-a', *gen_files, f'{TMP_DIR}/master/'])
last_touch = int(time.time())
# Start by finding all patches so that we can load all possible parents.
patches = sorted(list(get_patch_branches(args.base_branch)))
parent_patch = { }
description = { }
for patch in patches:
branch = f"patch/{args.base_branch}/{patch}"
desc = ''
proc = cmd_pipe(['git', 'diff', '-U1000', f"{args.base_branch}...{branch}", '--', f"PATCH.{patch}"])
in_diff = False
for line in proc.stdout:
if in_diff:
if not re.match(r'^[ +]', line):
continue
line = line[1:]
m = re.search(r'patch -p1 <patches/(\S+)\.diff', line)
if m and m[1] != patch:
parpat = parent_patch[patch] = m[1]
if not parpat in patches:
die(f"Parent of {patch} is not a local branch: {parpat}")
desc += line
elif re.match(r'^@@ ', line):
in_diff = True
description[patch] = desc
proc.communicate()
if args.patch_files: # Limit the list of patches to actually process
valid_patches = patches
patches = [ ]
for fn in args.patch_files:
name = re.sub(r'\.diff$', '', re.sub(r'.+/', '', fn))
if name not in valid_patches:
die(f"Local branch not available for patch: {name}")
patches.append(name)
completed = set()
for patch in patches:
if patch in completed:
continue
if not update_patch(patch):
break
if args.gen:
shutil.rmtree(TMP_DIR)
while last_touch >= int(time.time()):
time.sleep(1)
cmd_chk(['git', 'checkout', starting_branch])
cmd_chk(['packaging/prep-auto-dir'], discard='output')
def update_patch(patch):
global last_touch
completed.add(patch) # Mark it as completed early to short-circuit any (bogus) dependency loops.
parent = parent_patch.get(patch, None)
if parent:
if parent not in completed:
if not update_patch(parent):
return 0
based_on = parent = f"patch/{args.base_branch}/{parent}"
else:
parent = args.base_branch
based_on = master_commit
print(f"======== {patch} ========")
while args.gen and last_touch >= int(time.time()):
time.sleep(1)
branch = f"patch/{args.base_branch}/{patch}"
s = cmd_run(['git', 'checkout', branch])
if s.returncode != 0:
return 0
s = cmd_run(['git', 'merge', based_on])
ok = s.returncode == 0
skip_shell = False
if not ok or args.cmd or args.make or args.shell:
cmd_chk(['packaging/prep-auto-dir'], discard='output')
if not ok:
print(f'"git merge {based_on}" incomplete -- please fix.')
if not run_a_shell(parent, patch):
return 0
if not args.make and not args.cmd:
skip_shell = True
if args.make:
if cmd_run(['packaging/smart-make']).returncode != 0:
if not run_a_shell(parent, patch):
return 0
if not args.cmd:
skip_shell = True
if args.cmd:
if cmd_run(args.cmd).returncode != 0:
if not run_a_shell(parent, patch):
return 0
skip_shell = True
if args.shell and not skip_shell:
if not run_a_shell(parent, patch):
return 0
with open(f"{args.patches_dir}/{patch}.diff", 'w', encoding='utf-8') as fh:
fh.write(description[patch])
fh.write(f"\nbased-on: {based_on}\n")
if args.gen:
gen_files = get_gen_files()
for cmd in MAKE_GEN_CMDS:
cmd_chk(cmd)
cmd_chk(['rsync', '-a', *gen_files, f"{TMP_DIR}/{patch}/"])
else:
gen_files = [ ]
last_touch = int(time.time())
proc = cmd_pipe(['git', 'diff', based_on])
skipping = False
for line in proc.stdout:
if skipping:
if not re.match(r'^diff --git a/', line):
continue
skipping = False
elif re.match(r'^diff --git a/PATCH', line):
skipping = True
continue
if not re.match(r'^index ', line):
fh.write(line)
proc.communicate()
if args.gen:
e_tmp_dir = re.escape(TMP_DIR)
diff_re = re.compile(r'^(diff -Nurp) %s/[^/]+/(.*?) %s/[^/]+/(.*)' % (e_tmp_dir, e_tmp_dir))
minus_re = re.compile(r'^\-\-\- %s/[^/]+/([^\t]+)\t.*' % e_tmp_dir)
plus_re = re.compile(r'^\+\+\+ %s/[^/]+/([^\t]+)\t.*' % e_tmp_dir)
if parent == args.base_branch:
parent_dir = 'master'
else:
m = re.search(r'([^/]+)$', parent)
parent_dir = m[1]
proc = cmd_pipe(['diff', '-Nurp', f"{TMP_DIR}/{parent_dir}", f"{TMP_DIR}/{patch}"])
for line in proc.stdout:
line = diff_re.sub(r'\1 a/\2 b/\3', line)
line = minus_re.sub(r'--- a/\1', line)
line = plus_re.sub(r'+++ b/\1', line)
fh.write(line)
proc.communicate()
return 1
def run_a_shell(parent, patch):
m = re.search(r'([^/]+)$', parent)
parent_dir = m[1]
os.environ['PS1'] = f"[{parent_dir}] {patch}: "
while True:
s = cmd_run([os.environ.get('SHELL', '/bin/sh')])
if s.returncode != 0:
ans = input("Abort? [n/y] ")
if re.match(r'^y', ans, flags=re.I):
return False
continue
cur_branch, is_clean, status_txt = check_git_status(0)
if is_clean:
break
print(status_txt, end='')
cmd_run('rm -f build/*.o build/*/*.o')
return True
if __name__ == '__main__':
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Turn a git branch back into a diff files in the patches dir.", add_help=False)
parser.add_argument('--branch', '-b', dest='base_branch', metavar='BASE_BRANCH', default='master', help="The branch the patch is based on. Default: master.")
parser.add_argument('--skip-check', action='store_true', help="Skip the check that ensures starting with a clean branch.")
parser.add_argument('--make', '-m', action='store_true', help="Run the smart-make script in every patch branch.")
parser.add_argument('--cmd', '-c', help="Run a command in every patch branch.")
parser.add_argument('--shell', '-s', action='store_true', help="Launch a shell for every patch/BASE/* branch updated, not just when a conflict occurs.")
parser.add_argument('--gen', metavar='DIR', nargs='?', const='', help='Include generated files. Optional DIR value overrides the default of using the "patches" dir.')
parser.add_argument('--patches-dir', '-p', metavar='DIR', default='patches', help="Override the location of the rsync-patches dir. Default: patches.")
parser.add_argument('patch_files', metavar='patches/DIFF_FILE', nargs='*', help="Specify what patch diff files to process. Default: all of them.")
parser.add_argument("--help", "-h", action="help", help="Output this help message and exit.")
args = parser.parse_args()
if args.gen == '':
args.gen = args.patches_dir
elif args.gen is not None:
args.patches_dir = args.gen
main()
# vim: sw=4 et ft=python

View File

@@ -170,17 +170,6 @@ def get_patch_branches(base_branch):
return branches
def mandate_gensend_hook():
hook = '.git/hooks/pre-push'
if not os.path.exists(hook):
print('Creating hook file:', hook)
cmd_chk(['./rsync', '-a', 'packaging/pre-push', hook])
else:
ct = cmd_txt(['fgrep', 'make gensend', hook], discard='output')
if ct.rc:
die('Please add a "make gensend" into your', hook, 'script.')
# Snag the GENFILES values out of the Makefile file and return them as a list.
def get_gen_files(want_dir_plus_list=False):
cont_re = re.compile(r'\\\n')

View File

@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash -e
cat >/dev/null # Just discard stdin data
if [[ -f /proc/$PPID/cmdline ]]; then
while read -d $'\0' arg ; do
if [[ "$arg" == '--tags' ]] ; then
exit 0
fi
done </proc/$PPID/cmdline
fi
branch=`git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD`
if [[ "$branch" = master && "$*" == *github* ]]; then
make gensend
fi

View File

@@ -1,399 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env -S python3 -B
# This script expects the directory ~/samba-rsync-ftp to exist and to be a
# copy of the /home/ftp/pub/rsync dir on samba.org. When the script is done,
# the git repository in the current directory will be updated, and the local
# ~/samba-rsync-ftp dir will be ready to be rsynced to samba.org.
import os, sys, re, argparse, glob, shutil, signal
from datetime import datetime
from getpass import getpass
sys.path = ['packaging'] + sys.path
from pkglib import *
os.environ['LESS'] = 'mqeiXR'; # Make sure that -F is turned off and -R is turned on.
dest = os.environ['HOME'] + '/samba-rsync-ftp'
ORIGINAL_PATH = os.environ['PATH']
def main():
if not os.path.isfile('packaging/release-rsync'):
die('You must run this script from the top of your rsync checkout.')
now = datetime.now()
cl_today = now.strftime('* %a %b %d %Y')
year = now.strftime('%Y')
ztoday = now.strftime('%d %b %Y')
today = ztoday.lstrip('0')
mandate_gensend_hook()
curdir = os.getcwd()
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, signal_handler)
if cmd_txt_chk(['packaging/prep-auto-dir']).out == '':
die('You must setup an auto-build-save dir to use this script.');
auto_dir, gen_files = get_gen_files(True)
gen_pathnames = [ os.path.join(auto_dir, fn) for fn in gen_files ]
dash_line = '=' * 74
print(f"""\
{dash_line}
== This will release a new version of rsync onto an unsuspecting world. ==
{dash_line}
""")
with open('build/rsync.1') as fh:
for line in fh:
if line.startswith(r'.\" prefix='):
doc_prefix = line.split('=')[1].strip()
if doc_prefix != '/usr':
warn(f"*** The documentation was built with prefix {doc_prefix} instead of /usr ***")
die("*** Read the md2man script for a way to override this. ***")
break
if line.startswith('.P'):
die("Failed to find the prefix comment at the start of the rsync.1 manpage.")
if not os.path.isdir(dest):
die(dest, "dest does not exist")
if not os.path.isdir('.git'):
die("There is no .git dir in the current directory.")
if os.path.lexists('a'):
die('"a" must not exist in the current directory.')
if os.path.lexists('b'):
die('"b" must not exist in the current directory.')
if os.path.lexists('patches.gen'):
die('"patches.gen" must not exist in the current directory.')
check_git_state(args.master_branch, True, 'patches')
curversion = get_rsync_version()
# All version values are strings!
lastversion, last_protocol_version, pdate = get_NEWS_version_info()
protocol_version, subprotocol_version = get_protocol_versions()
version = curversion
m = re.search(r'pre(\d+)', version)
if m:
version = re.sub(r'pre\d+', 'pre' + str(int(m[1]) + 1), version)
else:
version = version.replace('dev', 'pre1')
ans = input(f"Please enter the version number of this release: [{version}] ")
if ans == '.':
version = re.sub(r'pre\d+', '', version)
elif ans != '':
version = ans
if not re.match(r'^[\d.]+(pre\d+)?$', version):
die(f'Invalid version: "{version}"')
v_ver = 'v' + version
rsync_ver = 'rsync-' + version
if os.path.lexists(rsync_ver):
die(f'"{rsync_ver}" must not exist in the current directory.')
out = cmd_txt_chk(['git', 'tag', '-l', v_ver]).out
if out != '':
print(f"Tag {v_ver} already exists.")
ans = input("\nDelete tag or quit? [Q/del] ")
if not re.match(r'^del', ans, flags=re.I):
die("Aborted")
cmd_chk(['git', 'tag', '-d', v_ver])
if os.path.isdir('patches/.git'):
cmd_chk(f"cd patches && git tag -d '{v_ver}'")
version = re.sub(r'[-.]*pre[-.]*', 'pre', version)
if 'pre' in version and not curversion.endswith('dev'):
lastversion = curversion
ans = input(f"Enter the previous version to produce a patch against: [{lastversion}] ")
if ans != '':
lastversion = ans
lastversion = re.sub(r'[-.]*pre[-.]*', 'pre', lastversion)
rsync_lastver = 'rsync-' + lastversion
if os.path.lexists(rsync_lastver):
die(f'"{rsync_lastver}" must not exist in the current directory.')
m = re.search(r'(pre\d+)', version)
pre = m[1] if m else ''
release = '0.1' if pre else '1'
ans = input(f"Please enter the RPM release number of this release: [{release}] ")
if ans != '':
release = ans
if pre:
release += '.' + pre
finalversion = re.sub(r'pre\d+', '', version)
proto_changed = protocol_version != last_protocol_version
if proto_changed:
if finalversion in pdate:
proto_change_date = pdate[finalversion]
else:
while True:
ans = input("On what date did the protocol change to {protocol_version} get checked in? (dd Mmm yyyy) ")
if re.match(r'^\d\d \w\w\w \d\d\d\d$', ans):
break
proto_change_date = ans
else:
proto_change_date = ' ' * 11
if 'pre' in lastversion:
if not pre:
die("You should not diff a release version against a pre-release version.")
srcdir = srcdiffdir = lastsrcdir = 'src-previews'
skipping = ' ** SKIPPING **'
elif pre:
srcdir = srcdiffdir = 'src-previews'
lastsrcdir = 'src'
skipping = ' ** SKIPPING **'
else:
srcdir = lastsrcdir = 'src'
srcdiffdir = 'src-diffs'
skipping = ''
print(f"""
{dash_line}
version is "{version}"
lastversion is "{lastversion}"
dest is "{dest}"
curdir is "{curdir}"
srcdir is "{srcdir}"
srcdiffdir is "{srcdiffdir}"
lastsrcdir is "{lastsrcdir}"
release is "{release}"
About to:
- tweak SUBPROTOCOL_VERSION in rsync.h, if needed
- tweak the version in version.h and the spec files
- tweak NEWS.md to ensure header values are correct
- generate configure.sh, config.h.in, and proto.h
- page through the differences
""")
ans = input("<Press Enter to continue> ")
specvars = {
'Version:': finalversion,
'Release:': release,
'%define fullversion': f'%{{version}}{pre}',
'Released': version + '.',
'%define srcdir': srcdir,
}
tweak_files = 'version.h rsync.h NEWS.md'.split()
tweak_files += glob.glob('packaging/*.spec')
tweak_files += glob.glob('packaging/*/*.spec')
for fn in tweak_files:
with open(fn, 'r', encoding='utf-8') as fh:
old_txt = txt = fh.read()
if fn == 'version.h':
x_re = re.compile(r'^(#define RSYNC_VERSION).*', re.M)
msg = f"Unable to update RSYNC_VERSION in {fn}"
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, r'\1 "%s"' % version, txt, msg)
elif '.spec' in fn:
for var, val in specvars.items():
x_re = re.compile(r'^%s .*' % re.escape(var), re.M)
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, var + ' ' + val, txt, f"Unable to update {var} in {fn}")
x_re = re.compile(r'^\* \w\w\w \w\w\w \d\d \d\d\d\d (.*)', re.M)
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, r'%s \1' % cl_today, txt, f"Unable to update ChangeLog header in {fn}")
elif fn == 'rsync.h':
x_re = re.compile('(#define\s+SUBPROTOCOL_VERSION)\s+(\d+)')
repl = lambda m: m[1] + ' ' + ('0' if not pre or not proto_changed else '1' if m[2] == '0' else m[2])
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, repl, txt, f"Unable to find SUBPROTOCOL_VERSION define in {fn}")
elif fn == 'NEWS.md':
efv = re.escape(finalversion)
x_re = re.compile(r'^# NEWS for rsync %s \(UNRELEASED\)\s+## Changes in this version:\n' % efv
+ r'(\n### PROTOCOL NUMBER:\s+- The protocol number was changed to \d+\.\n)?')
rel_day = 'UNRELEASED' if pre else today
repl = (f'# NEWS for rsync {finalversion} ({rel_day})\n\n'
+ '## Changes in this version:\n')
if proto_changed:
repl += f'\n### PROTOCOL NUMBER:\n\n - The protocol number was changed to {protocol_version}.\n'
good_top = re.sub(r'\(.*?\)', '(UNRELEASED)', repl, 1)
msg = f"The top lines of {fn} are not in the right format. It should be:\n" + good_top
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, repl, txt, msg)
x_re = re.compile(r'^(\| )(\S{2} \S{3} \d{4})(\s+\|\s+%s\s+\| ).{11}(\s+\| )\S{2}(\s+\|+)$' % efv, re.M)
repl = lambda m: m[1] + (m[2] if pre else ztoday) + m[3] + proto_change_date + m[4] + protocol_version + m[5]
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, repl, txt, f'Unable to find "| ?? ??? {year} | {finalversion} | ... |" line in {fn}')
else:
die(f"Unrecognized file in tweak_files: {fn}")
if txt != old_txt:
print(f"Updating {fn}")
with open(fn, 'w', encoding='utf-8') as fh:
fh.write(txt)
cmd_chk(['packaging/year-tweak'])
print(dash_line)
cmd_run("git diff".split())
srctar_name = f"{rsync_ver}.tar.gz"
pattar_name = f"rsync-patches-{version}.tar.gz"
diff_name = f"{rsync_lastver}-{version}.diffs.gz"
srctar_file = os.path.join(dest, srcdir, srctar_name)
pattar_file = os.path.join(dest, srcdir, pattar_name)
diff_file = os.path.join(dest, srcdiffdir, diff_name)
lasttar_file = os.path.join(dest, lastsrcdir, rsync_lastver + '.tar.gz')
print(f"""\
{dash_line}
About to:
- git commit all changes
- run a full build, ensuring that the manpages & configure.sh are up-to-date
- merge the {args.master_branch} branch into the patch/{args.master_branch}/* branches
- update the files in the "patches" dir and OPTIONALLY (if you type 'y') to
run patch-update with the --make option (which opens a shell on error)
""")
ans = input("<Press Enter OR 'y' to continue> ")
s = cmd_run(['git', 'commit', '-a', '-m', f'Preparing for release of {version}'])
if s.returncode:
die('Aborting')
cmd_chk('touch configure.ac && packaging/smart-make && make gen')
print('Creating any missing patch branches.')
s = cmd_run(f'packaging/branch-from-patch --branch={args.master_branch} --add-missing')
if s.returncode:
die('Aborting')
print('Updating files in "patches" dir ...')
s = cmd_run(f'packaging/patch-update --branch={args.master_branch}')
if s.returncode:
die('Aborting')
if re.match(r'^y', ans, re.I):
print(f'\nRunning smart-make on all "patch/{args.master_branch}/*" branches ...')
cmd_run(f"packaging/patch-update --branch={args.master_branch} --skip-check --make")
if os.path.isdir('patches/.git'):
s = cmd_run(f"cd patches && git commit -a -m 'The patches for {version}.'")
if s.returncode:
die('Aborting')
print(f"""\
{dash_line}
About to:
- create signed tag for this release: {v_ver}
- create release diffs, "{diff_name}"
- create release tar, "{srctar_name}"
- generate {rsync_ver}/patches/* files
- create patches tar, "{pattar_name}"
- update top-level README.md, NEWS.md, TODO, and ChangeLog
- update top-level rsync*.html manpages
- gpg-sign the release files
- update hard-linked top-level release files{skipping}
""")
ans = input("<Press Enter to continue> ")
# TODO: is there a better way to ensure that our passphrase is in the agent?
cmd_run("touch TeMp; gpg --sign TeMp; rm TeMp*")
out = cmd_txt(f"git tag -s -m 'Version {version}.' {v_ver}", capture='combined').out
print(out, end='')
if 'bad passphrase' in out or 'failed' in out:
die('Aborting')
if os.path.isdir('patches/.git'):
out = cmd_txt(f"cd patches && git tag -s -m 'Version {version}.' {v_ver}", capture='combined').out
print(out, end='')
if 'bad passphrase' in out or 'failed' in out:
die('Aborting')
os.environ['PATH'] = ORIGINAL_PATH
# Extract the generated files from the old tar.
tweaked_gen_files = [ os.path.join(rsync_lastver, fn) for fn in gen_files ]
cmd_run(['tar', 'xzf', lasttar_file, *tweaked_gen_files])
os.rename(rsync_lastver, 'a')
print(f"Creating {diff_file} ...")
cmd_chk(['rsync', '-a', *gen_pathnames, 'b/'])
sed_script = r's:^((---|\+\+\+) [ab]/[^\t]+)\t.*:\1:' # CAUTION: must not contain any single quotes!
cmd_chk(f"(git diff v{lastversion} {v_ver} -- ':!.github'; diff -upN a b | sed -r '{sed_script}') | gzip -9 >{diff_file}")
shutil.rmtree('a')
os.rename('b', rsync_ver)
print(f"Creating {srctar_file} ...")
cmd_chk(f"git archive --format=tar --prefix={rsync_ver}/ {v_ver} | tar xf -")
cmd_chk(f"support/git-set-file-times --quiet --prefix={rsync_ver}/")
cmd_chk(['fakeroot', 'tar', 'czf', srctar_file, '--exclude=.github', rsync_ver])
shutil.rmtree(rsync_ver)
print(f'Updating files in "{rsync_ver}/patches" dir ...')
os.mkdir(rsync_ver, 0o755)
os.mkdir(f"{rsync_ver}/patches", 0o755)
cmd_chk(f"packaging/patch-update --skip-check --branch={args.master_branch} --gen={rsync_ver}/patches".split())
print(f"Creating {pattar_file} ...")
cmd_chk(['fakeroot', 'tar', 'chzf', pattar_file, rsync_ver + '/patches'])
shutil.rmtree(rsync_ver)
print(f"Updating the other files in {dest} ...")
md_files = 'README.md NEWS.md INSTALL.md'.split()
html_files = [ fn for fn in gen_pathnames if fn.endswith('.html') ]
cmd_chk(['rsync', '-a', *md_files, *html_files, dest])
cmd_chk(["./md-convert", "--dest", dest, *md_files])
cmd_chk(f"git log --name-status | gzip -9 >{dest}/ChangeLog.gz")
for fn in (srctar_file, pattar_file, diff_file):
asc_fn = fn + '.asc'
if os.path.lexists(asc_fn):
os.unlink(asc_fn)
res = cmd_run(['gpg', '--batch', '-ba', fn])
if res.returncode != 0 and res.returncode != 2:
die("gpg signing failed")
if not pre:
for find in f'{dest}/rsync-*.gz {dest}/rsync-*.asc {dest}/src-previews/rsync-*diffs.gz*'.split():
for fn in glob.glob(find):
os.unlink(fn)
top_link = [
srctar_file, f"{srctar_file}.asc",
pattar_file, f"{pattar_file}.asc",
diff_file, f"{diff_file}.asc",
]
for fn in top_link:
os.link(fn, re.sub(r'/src(-\w+)?/', '/', fn))
print(f"""\
{dash_line}
Local changes are done. When you're satisfied, push the git repository
and rsync the release files. Remember to announce the release on *BOTH*
rsync-announce@lists.samba.org and rsync@lists.samba.org (and the web)!
""")
def replace_or_die(regex, repl, txt, die_msg):
m = regex.search(txt)
if not m:
die(die_msg)
return regex.sub(repl, txt, 1)
def signal_handler(sig, frame):
die("\nAborting due to SIGINT.")
if __name__ == '__main__':
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Prepare a new release of rsync in the git repo & ftp dir.", add_help=False)
parser.add_argument('--branch', '-b', dest='master_branch', default='master', help="The branch to release. Default: master.")
parser.add_argument("--help", "-h", action="help", help="Output this help message and exit.")
args = parser.parse_args()
main()
# vim: sw=4 et ft=python

705
packaging/release.py Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,705 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python3
# Step-based release script for rsync. Each step is a separate invocation
# selected by a --step-N-XX option, so the maintainer drives the release
# manually one piece at a time.
#
# All persistent state and working files live in ../release/ (a sibling of
# the rsync git checkout):
#
# ../release/rsync-ftp/ mirror of samba.org:/home/ftp/pub/rsync
# ../release/rsync-html/ release-time snapshot of the html site
# ../release/work/ scratch space for tarball / diff staging
# ../release/release-state.json info shared between steps
#
# The rsync-patches archive is no longer maintained and has been dropped.
#
# Run "packaging/release.py --list" to see the step list.
import os, sys, re, argparse, glob, shutil, json, signal, subprocess
from datetime import datetime
sys.path = ['packaging'] + sys.path
from pkglib import (
warn, die, cmd_run, cmd_chk, cmd_txt, cmd_txt_chk, cmd_pipe,
check_git_state, get_rsync_version,
get_NEWS_version_info, get_protocol_versions,
)
# ---------- Paths ----------
RELEASE_DIR = os.path.realpath('../release')
FTP_DIR = os.path.join(RELEASE_DIR, 'rsync-ftp')
HTML_DIR = os.path.join(RELEASE_DIR, 'rsync-html')
WORK_DIR = os.path.join(RELEASE_DIR, 'work')
STATE_FILE = os.path.join(RELEASE_DIR, 'release-state.json')
# The rsync-web/ subdirectory in the rsync source tree is the source-of-truth
# for the git-tracked html content. step-1-fetch snapshots it into HTML_DIR
# for the release flow, where it can be edited or augmented with server-side
# content before step-11-push-html sends it to samba.org.
HTML_SRC = os.path.realpath('rsync-web')
FTP_REMOTE_PATH = '/home/ftp/pub/rsync'
HTML_REMOTE_PATH = '/home/httpd/html/rsync'
# Files that ./configure + make produce and that the release tarball / diff
# need to bundle alongside the git-tracked source. Mirrors the GENFILES
# definition in Makefile.in (with rrsync.1{,.html} since we always configure
# --with-rrsync in --step-4-build).
GEN_FILES = [
'configure.sh',
'aclocal.m4',
'config.h.in',
'rsync.1', 'rsync.1.html',
'rsync-ssl.1', 'rsync-ssl.1.html',
'rsyncd.conf.5', 'rsyncd.conf.5.html',
'rrsync.1', 'rrsync.1.html',
]
# ---------- Step registry ----------
STEPS = [
('step-1-fetch', 'mirror ../release/rsync-ftp from samba.org and snapshot ../release/rsync-html from rsync-web/'),
('step-2-prepare', 'gather release info interactively and write release-state.json'),
('step-3-tweak', 'update version.h, rsync.h, NEWS.md, and packaging/*.spec'),
('step-4-build', 'run smart-make + make gen'),
('step-5-commit', 'git commit -a (commit the prepared release changes)'),
('step-6-tag', 'create the gpg-signed git tag'),
('step-7-tarball', 'build the source tarball and diffs.gz against the previous release'),
('step-8-update-ftp', 'refresh README/NEWS/INSTALL/html in the ftp dir, regen ChangeLog.gz, gpg-sign tarballs'),
('step-9-toplinks', 'hard-link top-level release files (final releases only)'),
('step-10-push-ftp', 'rsync ../release/rsync-ftp/ to samba.org'),
('step-11-push-html', 'rsync ../release/rsync-html/ to samba.org (after any manual edits)'),
('step-12-push-git', 'print the git push commands for you to run'),
]
STEP_FLAGS = [s[0] for s in STEPS]
DASH_LINE = '=' * 74
# ---------- State helpers ----------
def load_state():
if not os.path.isfile(STATE_FILE):
die(f"{STATE_FILE} not found. Run --step-2-prepare first.")
with open(STATE_FILE, 'r', encoding='utf-8') as fh:
return json.load(fh)
def save_state(state):
os.makedirs(RELEASE_DIR, exist_ok=True)
with open(STATE_FILE, 'w', encoding='utf-8') as fh:
json.dump(state, fh, indent=2, sort_keys=True)
fh.write('\n')
def require_samba_host():
host = os.environ.get('RSYNC_SAMBA_HOST', '')
if not host.endswith('.samba.org'):
die("Set RSYNC_SAMBA_HOST in your environment to the samba hostname (e.g. hr3.samba.org).")
return host
def require_top_of_checkout():
if not os.path.isfile('packaging/release.py'):
die("Run this script from the top of your rsync checkout.")
if not os.path.isdir('.git'):
die("There is no .git dir in the current directory.")
def replace_or_die(regex, repl, txt, die_msg):
m = regex.search(txt)
if not m:
die(die_msg)
return regex.sub(repl, txt, 1)
def section(title):
print(f"\n{DASH_LINE}\n== {title}\n{DASH_LINE}")
def confirm(prompt, default_no=True):
suffix = '[n] ' if default_no else '[y] '
ans = input(f"{prompt} {suffix}").strip().lower()
if default_no:
return ans.startswith('y')
return ans == '' or ans.startswith('y')
# ---------- Step 1: fetch ftp + html ----------
def step_1_fetch(args):
host = require_samba_host()
os.makedirs(RELEASE_DIR, exist_ok=True)
os.makedirs(WORK_DIR, exist_ok=True)
section(f"Fetching ftp dir into {FTP_DIR}")
if not os.path.isdir(FTP_DIR):
os.makedirs(FTP_DIR)
# packaging/ftp.filt is the authoritative copy of the .filt filter file
# that controls which subtrees rsync excludes from the FTP mirror.
# Seed FTP_DIR/.filt from it so the bundled version is what step-1's
# rsync uses here, and so step-10-push-ftp propagates it back to the
# server. --exclude=/.filt below stops the server's copy from
# overwriting our bundled one on the way down.
filt = os.path.join(FTP_DIR, '.filt')
bundled_filt = os.path.realpath('packaging/ftp.filt')
if not os.path.isfile(bundled_filt):
die(f"{bundled_filt} not found; cannot seed .filt for the FTP pull.")
shutil.copyfile(bundled_filt, filt)
cmd_chk(['rsync', '-aivOHP', f'-f:_{filt}', '--exclude=/.filt',
f'{host}:{FTP_REMOTE_PATH}/', f'{FTP_DIR}/'])
section(f"Snapshotting html dir from {HTML_SRC} into {HTML_DIR}")
if not os.path.isdir(HTML_SRC):
die(f"{HTML_SRC} not found. This should be the in-tree rsync-web/ "
f"subdirectory; something is wrong with your checkout.")
os.makedirs(HTML_DIR, exist_ok=True)
cmd_chk(['rsync', '-aiv', f'{HTML_SRC}/', f'{HTML_DIR}/'])
# Then mirror non-git html content from the server, skipping files that
# the html git already provides (driven by the 'filt' file in HTML_DIR).
filt = os.path.join(HTML_DIR, 'filt')
if os.path.exists(filt):
tmp_filt = os.path.join(HTML_DIR, 'tmp-filt')
cmd_chk(f"sed -n -e 's/[-P]/H/p' '{filt}' >'{tmp_filt}'")
cmd_chk(['rsync', '-aivOHP', f'-f._{tmp_filt}',
f'{host}:{HTML_REMOTE_PATH}/', f'{HTML_DIR}/'])
os.unlink(tmp_filt)
print(f"\nFetch complete. Local dirs are now in {RELEASE_DIR}.")
# ---------- Step 2: prepare ----------
def step_2_prepare(args):
require_top_of_checkout()
os.makedirs(RELEASE_DIR, exist_ok=True)
if not os.path.isdir(FTP_DIR):
die(f"{FTP_DIR} does not exist. Run --step-1-fetch first.")
now = datetime.now().astimezone()
cl_today = now.strftime('* %a %b %d %Y')
year = now.strftime('%Y')
ztoday = now.strftime('%d %b %Y')
today = ztoday.lstrip('0')
tz_now = now.strftime('%z')
tz_num = tz_now[0:1].replace('+', '') + str(float(tz_now[1:3]) + float(tz_now[3:]) / 60)
curversion = get_rsync_version()
lastversion, last_protocol_version, pdate = get_NEWS_version_info()
protocol_version, subprotocol_version = get_protocol_versions()
# Default next version: bump preN, or move dev -> pre1.
version = curversion
m = re.search(r'pre(\d+)', version)
if m:
version = re.sub(r'pre\d+', 'pre' + str(int(m[1]) + 1), version)
else:
version = version.replace('dev', 'pre1')
print(f"\nCurrent version (version.h): {curversion}")
print(f"Last released version (NEWS.md): {lastversion}")
print(f"Current protocol version: {protocol_version} (last released: {last_protocol_version})")
ans = input(f"\nVersion to release [{version}, '.' to drop the preN suffix]: ").strip()
if ans == '.':
version = re.sub(r'pre\d+', '', version)
elif ans:
version = ans
if not re.match(r'^[\d.]+(pre\d+)?$', version):
die(f'Invalid version: "{version}"')
version = re.sub(r'[-.]*pre[-.]*', 'pre', version)
if 'pre' in version and not curversion.endswith('dev'):
lastversion = curversion
ans = input(f"Previous version to diff against [{lastversion}]: ").strip()
if ans:
lastversion = ans
lastversion = re.sub(r'[-.]*pre[-.]*', 'pre', lastversion)
m = re.search(r'(pre\d+)', version)
pre = m[1] if m else ''
finalversion = re.sub(r'pre\d+', '', version)
release = '0.1' if pre else '1'
ans = input(f"RPM release number [{release}]: ").strip()
if ans:
release = ans
if pre:
release += '.' + pre
proto_changed = protocol_version != last_protocol_version
if proto_changed:
if finalversion in pdate:
proto_change_date = pdate[finalversion]
else:
while True:
ans = input(f"Date the protocol changed to {protocol_version} (dd Mmm yyyy): ").strip()
if re.match(r'^\d\d \w\w\w \d\d\d\d$', ans):
break
proto_change_date = ans
else:
proto_change_date = ' ' * 11
if 'pre' in lastversion:
if not pre:
die("Refusing to diff a release version against a pre-release version.")
srcdir = srcdiffdir = lastsrcdir = 'src-previews'
elif pre:
srcdir = srcdiffdir = 'src-previews'
lastsrcdir = 'src'
else:
srcdir = lastsrcdir = 'src'
srcdiffdir = 'src-diffs'
state = {
'version': version,
'lastversion': lastversion,
'finalversion': finalversion,
'pre': pre,
'release': release,
'protocol_version': protocol_version,
'subprotocol_version': subprotocol_version,
'proto_changed': proto_changed,
'proto_change_date': proto_change_date,
'srcdir': srcdir,
'srcdiffdir': srcdiffdir,
'lastsrcdir': lastsrcdir,
'today': today,
'ztoday': ztoday,
'cl_today': cl_today,
'year': year,
'tz_num': tz_num,
'master_branch': args.master_branch,
}
save_state(state)
section("Release info")
for k in ('version', 'lastversion', 'release', 'srcdir', 'srcdiffdir', 'lastsrcdir',
'protocol_version', 'proto_changed', 'proto_change_date'):
print(f" {k}: {state[k]}")
print(f"\nWrote {STATE_FILE}. Re-run --step-2-prepare to change anything.")
# ---------- Step 3: tweak version files ----------
def step_3_tweak(args):
require_top_of_checkout()
state = load_state()
version = state['version']
finalversion = state['finalversion']
pre = state['pre']
release = state['release']
today = state['today']
ztoday = state['ztoday']
cl_today = state['cl_today']
year = state['year']
tz_num = state['tz_num']
proto_changed = state['proto_changed']
proto_change_date = state['proto_change_date']
protocol_version = state['protocol_version']
srcdir = state['srcdir']
specvars = {
'Version:': finalversion,
'Release:': release,
'%define fullversion': f'%{{version}}{pre}',
'Released': version + '.',
'%define srcdir': srcdir,
}
tweak_files = ['version.h', 'rsync.h', 'NEWS.md']
tweak_files += glob.glob('packaging/*.spec')
tweak_files += glob.glob('packaging/*/*.spec')
for fn in tweak_files:
with open(fn, 'r', encoding='utf-8') as fh:
old_txt = txt = fh.read()
if fn == 'version.h':
x_re = re.compile(r'^(#define RSYNC_VERSION).*', re.M)
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, r'\1 "%s"' % version, txt,
f"Unable to update RSYNC_VERSION in {fn}")
x_re = re.compile(r'^(#define MAINTAINER_TZ_OFFSET).*', re.M)
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, r'\1 ' + tz_num, txt,
f"Unable to update MAINTAINER_TZ_OFFSET in {fn}")
elif fn == 'rsync.h':
x_re = re.compile(r'(#define\s+SUBPROTOCOL_VERSION)\s+(\d+)')
repl = lambda m: m[1] + ' ' + (
'0' if not pre or not proto_changed
else '1' if m[2] == '0'
else m[2])
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, repl, txt,
f"Unable to find SUBPROTOCOL_VERSION in {fn}")
elif fn == 'NEWS.md':
efv = re.escape(finalversion)
x_re = re.compile(
r'^# NEWS for rsync %s \(UNRELEASED\)\s+## Changes in this version:\n' % efv
+ r'(\n### PROTOCOL NUMBER:\s+- The protocol number was changed to \d+\.\n)?')
rel_day = 'UNRELEASED' if pre else today
repl = (f'# NEWS for rsync {finalversion} ({rel_day})\n\n'
+ '## Changes in this version:\n')
if proto_changed:
repl += f'\n### PROTOCOL NUMBER:\n\n - The protocol number was changed to {protocol_version}.\n'
good_top = re.sub(r'\(.*?\)', '(UNRELEASED)', repl, 1)
msg = (f"The top of {fn} is not in the right format. It should be:\n" + good_top)
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, repl, txt, msg)
x_re = re.compile(
r'^(\| )(\S{2} \S{3} \d{4})(\s+\|\s+%s\s+\| ).{11}(\s+\| )\S{2}(\s+\|+)$' % efv,
re.M)
repl = lambda m: (m[1] + (m[2] if pre else ztoday) + m[3]
+ proto_change_date + m[4] + protocol_version + m[5])
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, repl, txt,
f'Unable to find "| ?? ??? {year} | {finalversion} | ... |" line in {fn}')
elif '.spec' in fn:
for var, val in specvars.items():
x_re = re.compile(r'^%s .*' % re.escape(var), re.M)
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, var + ' ' + val, txt,
f"Unable to update {var} in {fn}")
x_re = re.compile(r'^\* \w\w\w \w\w\w \d\d \d\d\d\d (.*)', re.M)
txt = replace_or_die(x_re, r'%s \1' % cl_today, txt,
f"Unable to update ChangeLog header in {fn}")
else:
die(f"Unrecognized file in tweak_files: {fn}")
if txt != old_txt:
print(f"Updating {fn}")
with open(fn, 'w', encoding='utf-8') as fh:
fh.write(txt)
cmd_chk(['packaging/year-tweak'])
section("git diff after tweaks")
cmd_run(['git', '--no-pager', 'diff'])
# ---------- Step 4: build ----------
def step_4_build(args):
require_top_of_checkout()
load_state() # just to ensure we've prepared
section("Running prepare-source + configure --prefix=/usr --with-rrsync + make + make gen")
# Always re-prepare so configure.sh is current; we run configure ourselves
# with the release-required flags rather than relying on the cached
# config.status (which may have been produced with different options).
if os.path.isfile('.fetch'):
cmd_chk(['./prepare-source', 'fetch'])
else:
cmd_chk(['./prepare-source'])
cmd_chk(['./configure', '--prefix=/usr', '--with-rrsync'])
cmd_chk(['make'])
cmd_chk(['make', 'gen'])
# ---------- Step 5: commit ----------
def step_5_commit(args):
require_top_of_checkout()
state = load_state()
version = state['version']
section("git status")
cmd_run(['git', 'status'])
if not confirm("Commit all current changes with the release message?"):
die("Aborted.")
cmd_chk(['git', 'commit', '-a', '-m', f'Preparing for release of {version} [buildall]'])
# ---------- Step 6: tag ----------
def step_6_tag(args):
require_top_of_checkout()
state = load_state()
version = state['version']
v_ver = 'v' + version
out = cmd_txt_chk(['git', 'tag', '-l', v_ver]).out
if out.strip():
if not confirm(f"Tag {v_ver} already exists. Delete and recreate?"):
die("Aborted.")
cmd_chk(['git', 'tag', '-d', v_ver])
# Prime the gpg agent so the actual tag signing won't prompt.
section("Priming gpg agent")
cmd_run("touch TeMp; gpg --sign TeMp; rm -f TeMp TeMp.gpg")
section(f"Creating signed tag {v_ver}")
out = cmd_txt(['git', 'tag', '-s', '-m', f'Version {version}.', v_ver],
capture='combined').out
print(out, end='')
if 'bad passphrase' in out.lower() or 'failed' in out.lower():
die("Tag creation failed.")
# ---------- Step 7: tarball + diff ----------
def step_7_tarball(args):
require_top_of_checkout()
state = load_state()
version = state['version']
lastversion = state['lastversion']
pre = state['pre']
srcdir = state['srcdir']
srcdiffdir = state['srcdiffdir']
lastsrcdir = state['lastsrcdir']
rsync_ver = 'rsync-' + version
rsync_lastver = 'rsync-' + lastversion
v_ver = 'v' + version
srctar_name = f"{rsync_ver}.tar.gz"
diff_name = f"{rsync_lastver}-{version}.diffs.gz"
srctar_file = os.path.join(FTP_DIR, srcdir, srctar_name)
diff_file = os.path.join(FTP_DIR, srcdiffdir, diff_name)
lasttar_file = os.path.join(FTP_DIR, lastsrcdir, rsync_lastver + '.tar.gz')
for d in (os.path.dirname(srctar_file), os.path.dirname(diff_file)):
os.makedirs(d, exist_ok=True)
if not os.path.isfile(lasttar_file):
die(f"Previous tarball not found: {lasttar_file}")
# Stage in ../release/work to keep the source checkout clean.
if os.path.isdir(WORK_DIR):
shutil.rmtree(WORK_DIR)
os.makedirs(WORK_DIR)
a_dir = os.path.join(WORK_DIR, 'a')
b_dir = os.path.join(WORK_DIR, 'b')
# Extract gen files from the previous tarball into work/a/.
tweaked_gen_files = [os.path.join(rsync_lastver, fn) for fn in GEN_FILES]
cmd_chk(['tar', '-C', WORK_DIR, '-xzf', lasttar_file, *tweaked_gen_files])
os.rename(os.path.join(WORK_DIR, rsync_lastver), a_dir)
# Copy current gen files (built in the top-level checkout) into work/b/.
os.makedirs(b_dir)
cmd_chk(['rsync', '-a', *GEN_FILES, b_dir + '/'])
section(f"Creating {diff_file}")
sed_script = r's:^((---|\+\+\+) [ab]/[^\t]+)\t.*:\1:' # no single quotes!
cmd_chk(
f"(git diff v{lastversion} {v_ver} -- ':!.github'; "
f"diff -upN {a_dir} {b_dir} | sed -r '{sed_script}') | gzip -9 >{diff_file}")
section(f"Creating {srctar_file}")
# Reuse work/b/ (which already holds the fresh gen files) as the release
# staging dir, then let "git archive" overlay the git-tracked source files
# on top. That way the tarball ends up with both gen files and source.
rsync_ver_dir = os.path.join(WORK_DIR, rsync_ver)
shutil.rmtree(a_dir)
os.rename(b_dir, rsync_ver_dir)
cmd_chk(f"git archive --format=tar --prefix={rsync_ver}/ {v_ver} | "
f"tar -C {WORK_DIR} -xf -")
cmd_chk(f"support/git-set-file-times --quiet --prefix={rsync_ver_dir}/")
cmd_chk(['fakeroot', 'tar', '-C', WORK_DIR, '-czf', srctar_file,
'--exclude=.github', rsync_ver])
# Leave staging in place; --step-8-update-ftp does its own thing.
print(f"\nCreated:\n {srctar_file}\n {diff_file}")
# ---------- Step 8: update ftp ----------
def step_8_update_ftp(args):
require_top_of_checkout()
state = load_state()
version = state['version']
lastversion = state['lastversion']
srcdir = state['srcdir']
srcdiffdir = state['srcdiffdir']
rsync_ver = 'rsync-' + version
rsync_lastver = 'rsync-' + lastversion
srctar_file = os.path.join(FTP_DIR, srcdir, f"{rsync_ver}.tar.gz")
diff_file = os.path.join(FTP_DIR, srcdiffdir,
f"{rsync_lastver}-{version}.diffs.gz")
section(f"Refreshing top-of-tree files in {FTP_DIR}")
md_files = ['README.md', 'NEWS.md', 'INSTALL.md']
html_files = [fn for fn in GEN_FILES if fn.endswith('.html')]
cmd_chk(['rsync', '-a', *md_files, *html_files, FTP_DIR + '/'])
cmd_chk(['./md-convert', '--dest', FTP_DIR, *md_files])
section(f"Regenerating {FTP_DIR}/ChangeLog.gz")
cmd_chk(f"git log --name-status | gzip -9 >{FTP_DIR}/ChangeLog.gz")
# Prime gpg agent and then sign the tar + diff.
section("Priming gpg agent")
cmd_run("touch TeMp; gpg --sign TeMp; rm -f TeMp TeMp.gpg")
for fn in (srctar_file, diff_file):
if not os.path.isfile(fn):
die(f"Missing file to sign: {fn}. Did --step-7-tarball run successfully?")
asc_fn = fn + '.asc'
if os.path.lexists(asc_fn):
os.unlink(asc_fn)
section(f"GPG-signing {fn}")
res = cmd_run(['gpg', '--batch', '-ba', fn])
if res.returncode not in (0, 2):
die("gpg signing failed.")
# ---------- Step 9: top-level hard links ----------
def step_9_toplinks(args):
require_top_of_checkout()
state = load_state()
pre = state['pre']
if pre:
print("Skipping: pre-releases do not get top-level hard links.")
return
version = state['version']
lastversion = state['lastversion']
srcdir = state['srcdir']
srcdiffdir = state['srcdiffdir']
rsync_ver = 'rsync-' + version
rsync_lastver = 'rsync-' + lastversion
srctar_file = os.path.join(FTP_DIR, srcdir, f"{rsync_ver}.tar.gz")
diff_file = os.path.join(FTP_DIR, srcdiffdir,
f"{rsync_lastver}-{version}.diffs.gz")
section("Removing stale top-level rsync-* files")
for find in [f'{FTP_DIR}/rsync-*.gz',
f'{FTP_DIR}/rsync-*.asc',
f'{FTP_DIR}/src-previews/rsync-*diffs.gz*']:
for fn in glob.glob(find):
os.unlink(fn)
top_link = [
srctar_file, srctar_file + '.asc',
diff_file, diff_file + '.asc',
]
for fn in top_link:
target = re.sub(r'/src(-\w+)?/', '/', fn)
if os.path.lexists(target):
os.unlink(target)
os.link(fn, target)
print(f" linked {target}")
# ---------- Step 10: push ftp ----------
def step_10_push_ftp(args):
host = require_samba_host()
if not os.path.isdir(FTP_DIR):
die(f"{FTP_DIR} does not exist. Run --step-1-fetch first.")
section(f"rsync ftp dir to {host}")
rsync_with_confirm(['-aivOHP', '--chown=:rsync', '--del',
f'-f._{os.path.join(FTP_DIR, ".filt")}',
f'{FTP_DIR}/', f'{host}:{FTP_REMOTE_PATH}/'])
# ---------- Step 11: push html ----------
def step_11_push_html(args):
host = require_samba_host()
if not os.path.isdir(HTML_DIR):
die(f"{HTML_DIR} does not exist. Run --step-1-fetch first.")
section(f"rsync html dir to {host}")
filt = os.path.join(HTML_DIR, 'filt')
rsync_with_confirm(['-aivOHP', '--chown=:rsync', '--del',
f'-f._{filt}',
f'{HTML_DIR}/', f'{host}:{HTML_REMOTE_PATH}/'])
# ---------- Step 12: print push-git instructions ----------
def step_12_push_git(args):
state = load_state()
version = state['version']
master_branch = state['master_branch']
v_ver = 'v' + version
print(f"""\
{DASH_LINE}
Run these from the rsync-git checkout (this script does not push for you):
git push origin {master_branch}
git push origin {v_ver}
If you have a 'samba' remote configured (git.samba.org:/data/git/rsync.git):
git push samba {master_branch}
git push samba {v_ver}
Then upload the tarball + .asc to the GitHub release for {v_ver},
and announce on rsync-announce@, rsync@, and Discord.
""")
# ---------- shared rsync-with-confirm ----------
def rsync_with_confirm(rsync_args):
"""Run an rsync command in dry-run mode, then ask before running for real."""
cmd_run(['rsync', '--dry-run', *rsync_args])
if confirm("Run without --dry-run?"):
cmd_run(['rsync', *rsync_args])
# ---------- dispatch ----------
STEP_FUNCS = {
'step-1-fetch': step_1_fetch,
'step-2-prepare': step_2_prepare,
'step-3-tweak': step_3_tweak,
'step-4-build': step_4_build,
'step-5-commit': step_5_commit,
'step-6-tag': step_6_tag,
'step-7-tarball': step_7_tarball,
'step-8-update-ftp': step_8_update_ftp,
'step-9-toplinks': step_9_toplinks,
'step-10-push-ftp': step_10_push_ftp,
'step-11-push-html': step_11_push_html,
'step-12-push-git': step_12_push_git,
}
def signal_handler(sig, frame):
die("\nAborting due to SIGINT.")
def main():
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
description="Step-based release script for rsync.",
formatter_class=argparse.RawDescriptionHelpFormatter,
epilog="Run --list to see the steps. Each invocation runs exactly one --step-* option.")
parser.add_argument('--branch', '-b', dest='master_branch', default='master',
help="The branch to release (default: master).")
parser.add_argument('--list', action='store_true',
help="List all release steps and exit.")
grp = parser.add_mutually_exclusive_group()
for flag, descr in STEPS:
grp.add_argument('--' + flag, dest='step', action='store_const',
const=flag, help=descr)
args = parser.parse_args()
if args.list:
print("Release steps:")
for flag, descr in STEPS:
print(f" --{flag:18s} {descr}")
return
if not args.step:
parser.error("pick one --step-N-XX option (or --list to see them).")
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, signal_handler)
os.environ['LESS'] = 'mqeiXR'
STEP_FUNCS[args.step](args)
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
# vim: sw=4 et ft=python

View File

@@ -6,9 +6,10 @@
import os, sys, re, argparse, glob
VARS_RE = re.compile(r'^(?!(?:extern|enum)\s)([a-zA-Z]\S*\s+.*);', re.M)
VARS_RE = re.compile(r'^(?!(?:extern|enum)\s)([a-zA-Z][^ \n\t:]*\s+.*);', re.M)
EXTERNS_RE = re.compile(r'^extern\s+(.*);', re.M)
types = { }
sizes = { }
def main():
@@ -68,19 +69,44 @@ def parse_vars(fn, lines):
for line in lines:
line = re.sub(r'\s*\{.*\}', '', line)
line = re.sub(r'\s*\(.*\)', '', line)
for item in re.split(r'\s*,\s*', line):
item = re.sub(r'\s*=.*', '', item)
m = re.search(r'(?P<var>\w+)(?P<sz>\[.*?\])?$', item)
line = re.sub(r'\s*=\s*[^,]*', '', line)
m = re.search(r'^(?:(?:static|extern)\s+)?(?P<type>[^\[,]+?)(?P<vars>\w+([\[,].+)?)$', line)
if not m:
print(f"Bogus match? ({line})")
continue
items = m['vars']
main_type = m['type'].strip()
mt_len = len(main_type)
main_type = main_type.rstrip('*')
first_stars = '*' * (mt_len - len(main_type))
if first_stars:
main_type = main_type.rstrip()
items = first_stars + items
for item in re.split(r'\s*,\s*', items):
m = re.search(r'(?P<stars>\*+\s*)?(?P<var>\w+)(?P<sz>\[.*?\])?$', item)
if not m:
print(f"Bogus match? ({item})")
continue
if m['sz']:
if m['var'] in sizes:
if sizes[m['var']] != m['sz']:
typ = main_type
if m['stars']:
typ = typ + m['stars'].strip()
chk = [
'type', typ, types,
'size', m['sz'], sizes,
]
while chk:
label = chk.pop(0)
new = chk.pop(0)
lst = chk.pop(0)
if label == 'type':
new = ' '.join(new.split()).replace(' *', '*')
if m['var'] in lst:
old = lst[m['var']]
if new != old:
var = m['var']
print(fn, f'has inconsistent size for "{var}":', m['sz'], 'vs', sizes[var])
print(fn, f'has inconsistent {label} for "{var}":', new, 'vs', old)
else:
sizes[m['var']] = m['sz']
lst[m['var']] = new
ret.append(m['var'])
return ret

View File

@@ -7,9 +7,6 @@
import sys, os, re, argparse, subprocess
from datetime import datetime
MAINTAINER_NAME = 'Wayne Davison'
MAINTAINER_SUF = ' ' + MAINTAINER_NAME + "\n"
def main():
latest_year = '2000'
@@ -22,10 +19,6 @@ def main():
m = argparse.Namespace(**m.groupdict())
if m.year > latest_year:
latest_year = m.year
if m.fn.startswith('zlib/') or m.fn.startswith('popt/'):
continue
if re.search(r'\.(c|h|sh|test)$', m.fn):
maybe_edit_copyright_year(m.fn, m.year)
proc.communicate()
fn = 'latest-year.h'
@@ -39,55 +32,8 @@ def main():
fh.write(txt)
def maybe_edit_copyright_year(fn, year):
opening_lines = [ ]
copyright_line = None
with open(fn, 'r', encoding='utf-8') as fh:
for lineno, line in enumerate(fh):
opening_lines.append(line)
if lineno > 3 and not re.search(r'\S', line):
break
m = re.match(r'^(?P<pre>.*Copyright\s+\S+\s+)(?P<year>\d\d\d\d(?:-\d\d\d\d)?(,\s+\d\d\d\d)*)(?P<suf>.+)', line)
if not m:
continue
copyright_line = argparse.Namespace(**m.groupdict())
copyright_line.lineno = len(opening_lines)
copyright_line.is_maintainer_line = MAINTAINER_NAME in copyright_line.suf
copyright_line.txt = line
if copyright_line.is_maintainer_line:
break
if not copyright_line:
return
if copyright_line.is_maintainer_line:
cyears = copyright_line.year.split('-')
if year == cyears[0]:
cyears = [ year ]
else:
cyears = [ cyears[0], year ]
txt = copyright_line.pre + '-'.join(cyears) + MAINTAINER_SUF
if txt == copyright_line.txt:
return
opening_lines[copyright_line.lineno - 1] = txt
else:
if fn.startswith('lib/') or fn.startswith('testsuite/'):
return
txt = copyright_line.pre + year + MAINTAINER_SUF
opening_lines[copyright_line.lineno - 1] += txt
remaining_txt = fh.read()
print(f"Updating {fn} with year {year}")
with open(fn, 'w', encoding='utf-8') as fh:
fh.write(''.join(opening_lines))
fh.write(remaining_txt)
if __name__ == '__main__':
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Grab the year of last mod for our c & h files and make sure the Copyright comment is up-to-date.")
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Grab the year of the last mod for our c & h files and make sure the LATEST_YEAR value is accurate.")
args = parser.parse_args()
main()

View File

@@ -1,55 +0,0 @@
/** \ingroup popt
* \file popt/findme.c
*/
/* (C) 1998-2002 Red Hat, Inc. -- Licensing details are in the COPYING
file accompanying popt source distributions, available from
ftp://ftp.rpm.org/pub/rpm/dist. */
#include "system.h"
#include "findme.h"
const char * findProgramPath(const char * argv0)
{
char * path = getenv("PATH");
char * pathbuf;
char * start, * chptr;
char * buf;
size_t bufsize;
if (argv0 == NULL) return NULL; /* XXX can't happen */
/* If there is a / in the argv[0], it has to be an absolute path */
if (strchr(argv0, '/'))
return xstrdup(argv0);
if (path == NULL) return NULL;
bufsize = strlen(path) + 1;
start = pathbuf = alloca(bufsize);
if (pathbuf == NULL) return NULL; /* XXX can't happen */
strlcpy(pathbuf, path, bufsize);
bufsize += sizeof "/" - 1 + strlen(argv0);
buf = malloc(bufsize);
if (buf == NULL) return NULL; /* XXX can't happen */
chptr = NULL;
/*@-branchstate@*/
do {
if ((chptr = strchr(start, ':')))
*chptr = '\0';
snprintf(buf, bufsize, "%s/%s", start, argv0);
if (!access(buf, X_OK))
return buf;
if (chptr)
start = chptr + 1;
else
start = NULL;
} while (start && *start);
/*@=branchstate@*/
free(buf);
return NULL;
}

View File

@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
/** \ingroup popt
* \file popt/findme.h
*/
/* (C) 1998-2000 Red Hat, Inc. -- Licensing details are in the COPYING
file accompanying popt source distributions, available from
ftp://ftp.rpm.org/pub/rpm/dist. */
#ifndef H_FINDME
#define H_FINDME
/**
* Return absolute path to executable by searching PATH.
* @param argv0 name of executable
* @return (malloc'd) absolute path to executable (or NULL)
*/
/*@null@*/ const char * findProgramPath(/*@null@*/ const char * argv0)
/*@*/;
#endif

959
popt/lookup3.c Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,959 @@
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/*
* lookup3.c, by Bob Jenkins, May 2006, Public Domain.
*
* These are functions for producing 32-bit hashes for hash table lookup.
* jlu32w(), jlu32l(), jlu32lpair(), jlu32b(), _JLU3_MIX(), and _JLU3_FINAL()
* are externally useful functions. Routines to test the hash are included
* if SELF_TEST is defined. You can use this free for any purpose. It's in
* the public domain. It has no warranty.
*
* You probably want to use jlu32l(). jlu32l() and jlu32b()
* hash byte arrays. jlu32l() is is faster than jlu32b() on
* little-endian machines. Intel and AMD are little-endian machines.
* On second thought, you probably want jlu32lpair(), which is identical to
* jlu32l() except it returns two 32-bit hashes for the price of one.
* You could implement jlu32bpair() if you wanted but I haven't bothered here.
*
* If you want to find a hash of, say, exactly 7 integers, do
* a = i1; b = i2; c = i3;
* _JLU3_MIX(a,b,c);
* a += i4; b += i5; c += i6;
* _JLU3_MIX(a,b,c);
* a += i7;
* _JLU3_FINAL(a,b,c);
* then use c as the hash value. If you have a variable size array of
* 4-byte integers to hash, use jlu32w(). If you have a byte array (like
* a character string), use jlu32l(). If you have several byte arrays, or
* a mix of things, see the comments above jlu32l().
*
* Why is this so big? I read 12 bytes at a time into 3 4-byte integers,
* then mix those integers. This is fast (you can do a lot more thorough
* mixing with 12*3 instructions on 3 integers than you can with 3 instructions
* on 1 byte), but shoehorning those bytes into integers efficiently is messy.
*/
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#include <stdint.h>
#if defined(_JLU3_SELFTEST)
# define _JLU3_jlu32w 1
# define _JLU3_jlu32l 1
# define _JLU3_jlu32lpair 1
# define _JLU3_jlu32b 1
#endif
static const union _dbswap {
const uint32_t ui;
const unsigned char uc[4];
} endian = { .ui = 0x11223344 };
# define HASH_LITTLE_ENDIAN (endian.uc[0] == (unsigned char) 0x44)
# define HASH_BIG_ENDIAN (endian.uc[0] == (unsigned char) 0x11)
#ifndef ROTL32
# define ROTL32(x, s) (((x) << (s)) | ((x) >> (32 - (s))))
#endif
/* NOTE: The _size parameter should be in bytes. */
#define _JLU3_INIT(_h, _size) (0xdeadbeef + ((uint32_t)(_size)) + (_h))
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/*
* _JLU3_MIX -- mix 3 32-bit values reversibly.
*
* This is reversible, so any information in (a,b,c) before _JLU3_MIX() is
* still in (a,b,c) after _JLU3_MIX().
*
* If four pairs of (a,b,c) inputs are run through _JLU3_MIX(), or through
* _JLU3_MIX() in reverse, there are at least 32 bits of the output that
* are sometimes the same for one pair and different for another pair.
* This was tested for:
* * pairs that differed by one bit, by two bits, in any combination
* of top bits of (a,b,c), or in any combination of bottom bits of
* (a,b,c).
* * "differ" is defined as +, -, ^, or ~^. For + and -, I transformed
* the output delta to a Gray code (a^(a>>1)) so a string of 1's (as
* is commonly produced by subtraction) look like a single 1-bit
* difference.
* * the base values were pseudorandom, all zero but one bit set, or
* all zero plus a counter that starts at zero.
*
* Some k values for my "a-=c; a^=ROTL32(c,k); c+=b;" arrangement that
* satisfy this are
* 4 6 8 16 19 4
* 9 15 3 18 27 15
* 14 9 3 7 17 3
* Well, "9 15 3 18 27 15" didn't quite get 32 bits diffing
* for "differ" defined as + with a one-bit base and a two-bit delta. I
* used http://burtleburtle.net/bob/hash/avalanche.html to choose
* the operations, constants, and arrangements of the variables.
*
* This does not achieve avalanche. There are input bits of (a,b,c)
* that fail to affect some output bits of (a,b,c), especially of a. The
* most thoroughly mixed value is c, but it doesn't really even achieve
* avalanche in c.
*
* This allows some parallelism. Read-after-writes are good at doubling
* the number of bits affected, so the goal of mixing pulls in the opposite
* direction as the goal of parallelism. I did what I could. Rotates
* seem to cost as much as shifts on every machine I could lay my hands
* on, and rotates are much kinder to the top and bottom bits, so I used
* rotates.
*/
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#define _JLU3_MIX(a,b,c) \
{ \
a -= c; a ^= ROTL32(c, 4); c += b; \
b -= a; b ^= ROTL32(a, 6); a += c; \
c -= b; c ^= ROTL32(b, 8); b += a; \
a -= c; a ^= ROTL32(c,16); c += b; \
b -= a; b ^= ROTL32(a,19); a += c; \
c -= b; c ^= ROTL32(b, 4); b += a; \
}
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/**
* _JLU3_FINAL -- final mixing of 3 32-bit values (a,b,c) into c
*
* Pairs of (a,b,c) values differing in only a few bits will usually
* produce values of c that look totally different. This was tested for
* * pairs that differed by one bit, by two bits, in any combination
* of top bits of (a,b,c), or in any combination of bottom bits of
* (a,b,c).
* * "differ" is defined as +, -, ^, or ~^. For + and -, I transformed
* the output delta to a Gray code (a^(a>>1)) so a string of 1's (as
* is commonly produced by subtraction) look like a single 1-bit
* difference.
* * the base values were pseudorandom, all zero but one bit set, or
* all zero plus a counter that starts at zero.
*
* These constants passed:
* 14 11 25 16 4 14 24
* 12 14 25 16 4 14 24
* and these came close:
* 4 8 15 26 3 22 24
* 10 8 15 26 3 22 24
* 11 8 15 26 3 22 24
*/
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
#define _JLU3_FINAL(a,b,c) \
{ \
c ^= b; c -= ROTL32(b,14); \
a ^= c; a -= ROTL32(c,11); \
b ^= a; b -= ROTL32(a,25); \
c ^= b; c -= ROTL32(b,16); \
a ^= c; a -= ROTL32(c,4); \
b ^= a; b -= ROTL32(a,14); \
c ^= b; c -= ROTL32(b,24); \
}
#if defined(_JLU3_jlu32w)
uint32_t jlu32w(uint32_t h, const uint32_t *k, size_t size);
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/**
* This works on all machines. To be useful, it requires
* -- that the key be an array of uint32_t's, and
* -- that the size be the number of uint32_t's in the key
*
* The function jlu32w() is identical to jlu32l() on little-endian
* machines, and identical to jlu32b() on big-endian machines,
* except that the size has to be measured in uint32_ts rather than in
* bytes. jlu32l() is more complicated than jlu32w() only because
* jlu32l() has to dance around fitting the key bytes into registers.
*
* @param h the previous hash, or an arbitrary value
* @param *k the key, an array of uint32_t values
* @param size the size of the key, in uint32_ts
* @return the lookup3 hash
*/
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
uint32_t jlu32w(uint32_t h, const uint32_t *k, size_t size)
{
uint32_t a = _JLU3_INIT(h, (size * sizeof(*k)));
uint32_t b = a;
uint32_t c = a;
if (k == NULL)
goto exit;
/*----------------------------------------------- handle most of the key */
while (size > 3) {
a += k[0];
b += k[1];
c += k[2];
_JLU3_MIX(a,b,c);
size -= 3;
k += 3;
}
/*----------------------------------------- handle the last 3 uint32_t's */
switch (size) {
case 3 : c+=k[2];
case 2 : b+=k[1];
case 1 : a+=k[0];
_JLU3_FINAL(a,b,c);
/* fallthrough */
case 0:
break;
}
/*---------------------------------------------------- report the result */
exit:
return c;
}
#endif /* defined(_JLU3_jlu32w) */
#if defined(_JLU3_jlu32l)
uint32_t jlu32l(uint32_t h, const void *key, size_t size);
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/*
* jlu32l() -- hash a variable-length key into a 32-bit value
* h : can be any 4-byte value
* k : the key (the unaligned variable-length array of bytes)
* size : the size of the key, counting by bytes
* Returns a 32-bit value. Every bit of the key affects every bit of
* the return value. Two keys differing by one or two bits will have
* totally different hash values.
*
* The best hash table sizes are powers of 2. There is no need to do
* mod a prime (mod is sooo slow!). If you need less than 32 bits,
* use a bitmask. For example, if you need only 10 bits, do
* h = (h & hashmask(10));
* In which case, the hash table should have hashsize(10) elements.
*
* If you are hashing n strings (uint8_t **)k, do it like this:
* for (i=0, h=0; i<n; ++i) h = jlu32l(h, k[i], len[i]);
*
* By Bob Jenkins, 2006. bob_jenkins@burtleburtle.net. You may use this
* code any way you wish, private, educational, or commercial. It's free.
*
* Use for hash table lookup, or anything where one collision in 2^^32 is
* acceptable. Do NOT use for cryptographic purposes.
*
* @param h the previous hash, or an arbitrary value
* @param *k the key, an array of uint8_t values
* @param size the size of the key
* @return the lookup3 hash
*/
/* -------------------------------------------------------------------- */
uint32_t jlu32l(uint32_t h, const void *key, size_t size)
{
union { const void *ptr; size_t i; } u;
uint32_t a = _JLU3_INIT(h, size);
uint32_t b = a;
uint32_t c = a;
if (key == NULL)
goto exit;
u.ptr = key;
if (HASH_LITTLE_ENDIAN && ((u.i & 0x3) == 0)) {
const uint32_t *k = (const uint32_t *)key; /* read 32-bit chunks */
#ifdef VALGRIND
const uint8_t *k8;
#endif
/*------ all but last block: aligned reads and affect 32 bits of (a,b,c) */
while (size > 12) {
a += k[0];
b += k[1];
c += k[2];
_JLU3_MIX(a,b,c);
size -= 12;
k += 3;
}
/*------------------------- handle the last (probably partial) block */
/*
* "k[2]&0xffffff" actually reads beyond the end of the string, but
* then masks off the part it's not allowed to read. Because the
* string is aligned, the masked-off tail is in the same word as the
* rest of the string. Every machine with memory protection I've seen
* does it on word boundaries, so is OK with this. But VALGRIND will
* still catch it and complain. The masking trick does make the hash
* noticeably faster for short strings (like English words).
*/
#ifndef VALGRIND
switch (size) {
case 12: c += k[2]; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 11: c += k[2]&0xffffff; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 10: c += k[2]&0xffff; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 9: c += k[2]&0xff; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 8: b += k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 7: b += k[1]&0xffffff; a+=k[0]; break;
case 6: b += k[1]&0xffff; a+=k[0]; break;
case 5: b += k[1]&0xff; a+=k[0]; break;
case 4: a += k[0]; break;
case 3: a += k[0]&0xffffff; break;
case 2: a += k[0]&0xffff; break;
case 1: a += k[0]&0xff; break;
case 0: goto exit;
}
#else /* make valgrind happy */
k8 = (const uint8_t *)k;
switch (size) {
case 12: c += k[2]; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0] break;
case 11: c += ((uint32_t)k8[10])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 10: c += ((uint32_t)k8[9])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 9: c += k8[8]; /* fallthrough */
case 8: b += k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 7: b += ((uint32_t)k8[6])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 6: b += ((uint32_t)k8[5])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 5: b += k8[4]; /* fallthrough */
case 4: a += k[0]; break;
case 3: a += ((uint32_t)k8[2])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 2: a += ((uint32_t)k8[1])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 1: a += k8[0]; break;
case 0: goto exit;
}
#endif /* !valgrind */
} else if (HASH_LITTLE_ENDIAN && ((u.i & 0x1) == 0)) {
const uint16_t *k = (const uint16_t *)key; /* read 16-bit chunks */
const uint8_t *k8;
/*----------- all but last block: aligned reads and different mixing */
while (size > 12) {
a += k[0] + (((uint32_t)k[1])<<16);
b += k[2] + (((uint32_t)k[3])<<16);
c += k[4] + (((uint32_t)k[5])<<16);
_JLU3_MIX(a,b,c);
size -= 12;
k += 6;
}
/*------------------------- handle the last (probably partial) block */
k8 = (const uint8_t *)k;
switch (size) {
case 12:
c += k[4]+(((uint32_t)k[5])<<16);
b += k[2]+(((uint32_t)k[3])<<16);
a += k[0]+(((uint32_t)k[1])<<16);
break;
case 11:
c += ((uint32_t)k8[10])<<16;
/* fallthrough */
case 10:
c += (uint32_t)k[4];
b += k[2]+(((uint32_t)k[3])<<16);
a += k[0]+(((uint32_t)k[1])<<16);
break;
case 9:
c += (uint32_t)k8[8];
/* fallthrough */
case 8:
b += k[2]+(((uint32_t)k[3])<<16);
a += k[0]+(((uint32_t)k[1])<<16);
break;
case 7:
b += ((uint32_t)k8[6])<<16;
/* fallthrough */
case 6:
b += (uint32_t)k[2];
a += k[0]+(((uint32_t)k[1])<<16);
break;
case 5:
b += (uint32_t)k8[4];
/* fallthrough */
case 4:
a += k[0]+(((uint32_t)k[1])<<16);
break;
case 3:
a += ((uint32_t)k8[2])<<16;
/* fallthrough */
case 2:
a += (uint32_t)k[0];
break;
case 1:
a += (uint32_t)k8[0];
break;
case 0:
goto exit;
}
} else { /* need to read the key one byte at a time */
const uint8_t *k = (const uint8_t *)key;
/*----------- all but the last block: affect some 32 bits of (a,b,c) */
while (size > 12) {
a += (uint32_t)k[0];
a += ((uint32_t)k[1])<<8;
a += ((uint32_t)k[2])<<16;
a += ((uint32_t)k[3])<<24;
b += (uint32_t)k[4];
b += ((uint32_t)k[5])<<8;
b += ((uint32_t)k[6])<<16;
b += ((uint32_t)k[7])<<24;
c += (uint32_t)k[8];
c += ((uint32_t)k[9])<<8;
c += ((uint32_t)k[10])<<16;
c += ((uint32_t)k[11])<<24;
_JLU3_MIX(a,b,c);
size -= 12;
k += 12;
}
/*---------------------------- last block: affect all 32 bits of (c) */
switch (size) {
case 12: c += ((uint32_t)k[11])<<24; /* fallthrough */
case 11: c += ((uint32_t)k[10])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 10: c += ((uint32_t)k[9])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 9: c += (uint32_t)k[8]; /* fallthrough */
case 8: b += ((uint32_t)k[7])<<24; /* fallthrough */
case 7: b += ((uint32_t)k[6])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 6: b += ((uint32_t)k[5])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 5: b += (uint32_t)k[4]; /* fallthrough */
case 4: a += ((uint32_t)k[3])<<24; /* fallthrough */
case 3: a += ((uint32_t)k[2])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 2: a += ((uint32_t)k[1])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 1: a += (uint32_t)k[0];
break;
case 0:
goto exit;
}
}
_JLU3_FINAL(a,b,c);
exit:
return c;
}
#endif /* defined(_JLU3_jlu32l) */
#if defined(_JLU3_jlu32lpair)
/**
* jlu32lpair: return 2 32-bit hash values.
*
* This is identical to jlu32l(), except it returns two 32-bit hash
* values instead of just one. This is good enough for hash table
* lookup with 2^^64 buckets, or if you want a second hash if you're not
* happy with the first, or if you want a probably-unique 64-bit ID for
* the key. *pc is better mixed than *pb, so use *pc first. If you want
* a 64-bit value do something like "*pc + (((uint64_t)*pb)<<32)".
*
* @param h the previous hash, or an arbitrary value
* @param *key the key, an array of uint8_t values
* @param size the size of the key in bytes
* @retval *pc, IN: primary initval, OUT: primary hash
* *retval *pb IN: secondary initval, OUT: secondary hash
*/
void jlu32lpair(const void *key, size_t size, uint32_t *pc, uint32_t *pb)
{
union { const void *ptr; size_t i; } u;
uint32_t a = _JLU3_INIT(*pc, size);
uint32_t b = a;
uint32_t c = a;
if (key == NULL)
goto exit;
c += *pb; /* Add the secondary hash. */
u.ptr = key;
if (HASH_LITTLE_ENDIAN && ((u.i & 0x3) == 0)) {
const uint32_t *k = (const uint32_t *)key; /* read 32-bit chunks */
#ifdef VALGRIND
const uint8_t *k8;
#endif
/*-- all but last block: aligned reads and affect 32 bits of (a,b,c) */
while (size > (size_t)12) {
a += k[0];
b += k[1];
c += k[2];
_JLU3_MIX(a,b,c);
size -= 12;
k += 3;
}
/*------------------------- handle the last (probably partial) block */
/*
* "k[2]&0xffffff" actually reads beyond the end of the string, but
* then masks off the part it's not allowed to read. Because the
* string is aligned, the masked-off tail is in the same word as the
* rest of the string. Every machine with memory protection I've seen
* does it on word boundaries, so is OK with this. But VALGRIND will
* still catch it and complain. The masking trick does make the hash
* noticeably faster for short strings (like English words).
*/
#ifndef VALGRIND
switch (size) {
case 12: c += k[2]; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 11: c += k[2]&0xffffff; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 10: c += k[2]&0xffff; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 9: c += k[2]&0xff; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 8: b += k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 7: b += k[1]&0xffffff; a+=k[0]; break;
case 6: b += k[1]&0xffff; a+=k[0]; break;
case 5: b += k[1]&0xff; a+=k[0]; break;
case 4: a += k[0]; break;
case 3: a += k[0]&0xffffff; break;
case 2: a += k[0]&0xffff; break;
case 1: a += k[0]&0xff; break;
case 0: goto exit;
}
#else /* make valgrind happy */
k8 = (const uint8_t *)k;
switch (size) {
case 12: c += k[2]; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 11: c += ((uint32_t)k8[10])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 10: c += ((uint32_t)k8[9])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 9: c += k8[8]; /* fallthrough */
case 8: b += k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 7: b += ((uint32_t)k8[6])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 6: b += ((uint32_t)k8[5])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 5: b += k8[4]; /* fallthrough */
case 4: a += k[0]; break;
case 3: a += ((uint32_t)k8[2])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 2: a += ((uint32_t)k8[1])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 1: a += k8[0]; break;
case 0: goto exit;
}
#endif /* !valgrind */
} else if (HASH_LITTLE_ENDIAN && ((u.i & 0x1) == 0)) {
const uint16_t *k = (const uint16_t *)key; /* read 16-bit chunks */
const uint8_t *k8;
/*----------- all but last block: aligned reads and different mixing */
while (size > (size_t)12) {
a += k[0] + (((uint32_t)k[1])<<16);
b += k[2] + (((uint32_t)k[3])<<16);
c += k[4] + (((uint32_t)k[5])<<16);
_JLU3_MIX(a,b,c);
size -= 12;
k += 6;
}
/*------------------------- handle the last (probably partial) block */
k8 = (const uint8_t *)k;
switch (size) {
case 12:
c += k[4]+(((uint32_t)k[5])<<16);
b += k[2]+(((uint32_t)k[3])<<16);
a += k[0]+(((uint32_t)k[1])<<16);
break;
case 11:
c += ((uint32_t)k8[10])<<16;
/* fallthrough */
case 10:
c += k[4];
b += k[2]+(((uint32_t)k[3])<<16);
a += k[0]+(((uint32_t)k[1])<<16);
break;
case 9:
c += k8[8];
/* fallthrough */
case 8:
b += k[2]+(((uint32_t)k[3])<<16);
a += k[0]+(((uint32_t)k[1])<<16);
break;
case 7:
b += ((uint32_t)k8[6])<<16;
/* fallthrough */
case 6:
b += k[2];
a += k[0]+(((uint32_t)k[1])<<16);
break;
case 5:
b += k8[4];
/* fallthrough */
case 4:
a += k[0]+(((uint32_t)k[1])<<16);
break;
case 3:
a += ((uint32_t)k8[2])<<16;
/* fallthrough */
case 2:
a += k[0];
break;
case 1:
a += k8[0];
break;
case 0:
goto exit;
}
} else { /* need to read the key one byte at a time */
const uint8_t *k = (const uint8_t *)key;
/*----------- all but the last block: affect some 32 bits of (a,b,c) */
while (size > (size_t)12) {
a += k[0];
a += ((uint32_t)k[1])<<8;
a += ((uint32_t)k[2])<<16;
a += ((uint32_t)k[3])<<24;
b += k[4];
b += ((uint32_t)k[5])<<8;
b += ((uint32_t)k[6])<<16;
b += ((uint32_t)k[7])<<24;
c += k[8];
c += ((uint32_t)k[9])<<8;
c += ((uint32_t)k[10])<<16;
c += ((uint32_t)k[11])<<24;
_JLU3_MIX(a,b,c);
size -= 12;
k += 12;
}
/*---------------------------- last block: affect all 32 bits of (c) */
switch (size) {
case 12: c += ((uint32_t)k[11])<<24; /* fallthrough */
case 11: c += ((uint32_t)k[10])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 10: c += ((uint32_t)k[9])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 9: c += k[8]; /* fallthrough */
case 8: b += ((uint32_t)k[7])<<24; /* fallthrough */
case 7: b += ((uint32_t)k[6])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 6: b += ((uint32_t)k[5])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 5: b += k[4]; /* fallthrough */
case 4: a += ((uint32_t)k[3])<<24; /* fallthrough */
case 3: a += ((uint32_t)k[2])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 2: a += ((uint32_t)k[1])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 1: a += k[0];
break;
case 0:
goto exit;
}
}
_JLU3_FINAL(a,b,c);
exit:
*pc = c;
*pb = b;
return;
}
#endif /* defined(_JLU3_jlu32lpair) */
#if defined(_JLU3_jlu32b)
uint32_t jlu32b(uint32_t h, const void *key, size_t size);
/*
* jlu32b():
* This is the same as jlu32w() on big-endian machines. It is different
* from jlu32l() on all machines. jlu32b() takes advantage of
* big-endian byte ordering.
*
* @param h the previous hash, or an arbitrary value
* @param *k the key, an array of uint8_t values
* @param size the size of the key
* @return the lookup3 hash
*/
uint32_t jlu32b(uint32_t h, const void *key, size_t size)
{
union { const void *ptr; size_t i; } u;
uint32_t a = _JLU3_INIT(h, size);
uint32_t b = a;
uint32_t c = a;
if (key == NULL)
return h;
u.ptr = key;
if (HASH_BIG_ENDIAN && ((u.i & 0x3) == 0)) {
const uint32_t *k = (const uint32_t *)key; /* read 32-bit chunks */
#ifdef VALGRIND
const uint8_t *k8;
#endif
/*-- all but last block: aligned reads and affect 32 bits of (a,b,c) */
while (size > 12) {
a += k[0];
b += k[1];
c += k[2];
_JLU3_MIX(a,b,c);
size -= 12;
k += 3;
}
/*------------------------- handle the last (probably partial) block */
/*
* "k[2]<<8" actually reads beyond the end of the string, but
* then shifts out the part it's not allowed to read. Because the
* string is aligned, the illegal read is in the same word as the
* rest of the string. Every machine with memory protection I've seen
* does it on word boundaries, so is OK with this. But VALGRIND will
* still catch it and complain. The masking trick does make the hash
* noticeably faster for short strings (like English words).
*/
#ifndef VALGRIND
switch (size) {
case 12: c += k[2]; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 11: c += k[2]&0xffffff00; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 10: c += k[2]&0xffff0000; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 9: c += k[2]&0xff000000; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 8: b += k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 7: b += k[1]&0xffffff00; a+=k[0]; break;
case 6: b += k[1]&0xffff0000; a+=k[0]; break;
case 5: b += k[1]&0xff000000; a+=k[0]; break;
case 4: a += k[0]; break;
case 3: a += k[0]&0xffffff00; break;
case 2: a += k[0]&0xffff0000; break;
case 1: a += k[0]&0xff000000; break;
case 0: goto exit;
}
#else /* make valgrind happy */
k8 = (const uint8_t *)k;
switch (size) { /* all the case statements fall through */
case 12: c += k[2]; b+=k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 11: c += ((uint32_t)k8[10])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 10: c += ((uint32_t)k8[9])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 9: c += ((uint32_t)k8[8])<<24; /* fallthrough */
case 8: b += k[1]; a+=k[0]; break;
case 7: b += ((uint32_t)k8[6])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 6: b += ((uint32_t)k8[5])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 5: b += ((uint32_t)k8[4])<<24; /* fallthrough */
case 4: a += k[0]; break;
case 3: a += ((uint32_t)k8[2])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 2: a += ((uint32_t)k8[1])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 1: a += ((uint32_t)k8[0])<<24; break;
case 0: goto exit;
}
#endif /* !VALGRIND */
} else { /* need to read the key one byte at a time */
const uint8_t *k = (const uint8_t *)key;
/*----------- all but the last block: affect some 32 bits of (a,b,c) */
while (size > 12) {
a += ((uint32_t)k[0])<<24;
a += ((uint32_t)k[1])<<16;
a += ((uint32_t)k[2])<<8;
a += ((uint32_t)k[3]);
b += ((uint32_t)k[4])<<24;
b += ((uint32_t)k[5])<<16;
b += ((uint32_t)k[6])<<8;
b += ((uint32_t)k[7]);
c += ((uint32_t)k[8])<<24;
c += ((uint32_t)k[9])<<16;
c += ((uint32_t)k[10])<<8;
c += ((uint32_t)k[11]);
_JLU3_MIX(a,b,c);
size -= 12;
k += 12;
}
/*---------------------------- last block: affect all 32 bits of (c) */
switch (size) { /* all the case statements fall through */
case 12: c += k[11]; /* fallthrough */
case 11: c += ((uint32_t)k[10])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 10: c += ((uint32_t)k[9])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 9: c += ((uint32_t)k[8])<<24; /* fallthrough */
case 8: b += k[7]; /* fallthrough */
case 7: b += ((uint32_t)k[6])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 6: b += ((uint32_t)k[5])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 5: b += ((uint32_t)k[4])<<24; /* fallthrough */
case 4: a += k[3]; /* fallthrough */
case 3: a += ((uint32_t)k[2])<<8; /* fallthrough */
case 2: a += ((uint32_t)k[1])<<16; /* fallthrough */
case 1: a += ((uint32_t)k[0])<<24; /* fallthrough */
break;
case 0:
goto exit;
}
}
_JLU3_FINAL(a,b,c);
exit:
return c;
}
#endif /* defined(_JLU3_jlu32b) */
#if defined(_JLU3_SELFTEST)
/* used for timings */
static void driver1(void)
{
uint8_t buf[256];
uint32_t i;
uint32_t h=0;
time_t a,z;
time(&a);
for (i=0; i<256; ++i) buf[i] = 'x';
for (i=0; i<1; ++i) {
h = jlu32l(h, &buf[0], sizeof(buf[0]));
}
time(&z);
if (z-a > 0) printf("time %d %.8x\n", (int)(z-a), h);
}
/* check that every input bit changes every output bit half the time */
#define HASHSTATE 1
#define HASHLEN 1
#define MAXPAIR 60
#define MAXLEN 70
static void driver2(void)
{
uint8_t qa[MAXLEN+1], qb[MAXLEN+2], *a = &qa[0], *b = &qb[1];
uint32_t c[HASHSTATE], d[HASHSTATE], i=0, j=0, k, l, m=0, z;
uint32_t e[HASHSTATE],f[HASHSTATE],g[HASHSTATE],h[HASHSTATE];
uint32_t x[HASHSTATE],y[HASHSTATE];
uint32_t hlen;
printf("No more than %d trials should ever be needed \n",MAXPAIR/2);
for (hlen=0; hlen < MAXLEN; ++hlen) {
z=0;
for (i=0; i<hlen; ++i) { /*-------------- for each input byte, */
for (j=0; j<8; ++j) { /*--------------- for each input bit, */
for (m=1; m<8; ++m) { /*---- for several possible initvals, */
for (l=0; l<HASHSTATE; ++l)
e[l]=f[l]=g[l]=h[l]=x[l]=y[l]=~((uint32_t)0);
/* check that every output bit is affected by that input bit */
for (k=0; k<MAXPAIR; k+=2) {
uint32_t finished=1;
/* keys have one bit different */
for (l=0; l<hlen+1; ++l) {a[l] = b[l] = (uint8_t)0;}
/* have a and b be two keys differing in only one bit */
a[i] ^= (k<<j);
a[i] ^= (k>>(8-j));
c[0] = jlu32l(m, a, hlen);
b[i] ^= ((k+1)<<j);
b[i] ^= ((k+1)>>(8-j));
d[0] = jlu32l(m, b, hlen);
/* check every bit is 1, 0, set, and not set at least once */
for (l=0; l<HASHSTATE; ++l) {
e[l] &= (c[l]^d[l]);
f[l] &= ~(c[l]^d[l]);
g[l] &= c[l];
h[l] &= ~c[l];
x[l] &= d[l];
y[l] &= ~d[l];
if (e[l]|f[l]|g[l]|h[l]|x[l]|y[l]) finished=0;
}
if (finished) break;
}
if (k>z) z=k;
if (k == MAXPAIR) {
printf("Some bit didn't change: ");
printf("%.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x ",
e[0],f[0],g[0],h[0],x[0],y[0]);
printf("i %u j %u m %u len %u\n", i, j, m, hlen);
}
if (z == MAXPAIR) goto done;
}
}
}
done:
if (z < MAXPAIR) {
printf("Mix success %2u bytes %2u initvals ",i,m);
printf("required %u trials\n", z/2);
}
}
printf("\n");
}
/* Check for reading beyond the end of the buffer and alignment problems */
static void driver3(void)
{
uint8_t buf[MAXLEN+20], *b;
uint32_t len;
uint8_t q[] = "This is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country...";
uint32_t h;
uint8_t qq[] = "xThis is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country...";
uint32_t i;
uint8_t qqq[] = "xxThis is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country...";
uint32_t j;
uint8_t qqqq[] = "xxxThis is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country...";
uint32_t ref,x,y;
uint8_t *p;
uint32_t m = 13;
printf("Endianness. These lines should all be the same (for values filled in):\n");
printf("%.8x %.8x %.8x\n",
jlu32w(m, (const uint32_t *)q, (sizeof(q)-1)/4),
jlu32w(m, (const uint32_t *)q, (sizeof(q)-5)/4),
jlu32w(m, (const uint32_t *)q, (sizeof(q)-9)/4));
p = q;
printf("%.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x\n",
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-1), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-2),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-3), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-4),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-5), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-6),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-7), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-8),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-9), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-10),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-11), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-12));
p = &qq[1];
printf("%.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x\n",
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-1), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-2),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-3), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-4),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-5), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-6),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-7), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-8),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-9), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-10),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-11), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-12));
p = &qqq[2];
printf("%.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x\n",
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-1), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-2),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-3), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-4),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-5), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-6),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-7), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-8),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-9), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-10),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-11), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-12));
p = &qqqq[3];
printf("%.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x %.8x\n",
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-1), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-2),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-3), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-4),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-5), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-6),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-7), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-8),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-9), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-10),
jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-11), jlu32l(m, p, sizeof(q)-12));
printf("\n");
for (h=0, b=buf+1; h<8; ++h, ++b) {
for (i=0; i<MAXLEN; ++i) {
len = i;
for (j=0; j<i; ++j)
*(b+j)=0;
/* these should all be equal */
m = 1;
ref = jlu32l(m, b, len);
*(b+i)=(uint8_t)~0;
*(b-1)=(uint8_t)~0;
x = jlu32l(m, b, len);
y = jlu32l(m, b, len);
if ((ref != x) || (ref != y))
printf("alignment error: %.8x %.8x %.8x %u %u\n",ref,x,y, h, i);
}
}
}
/* check for problems with nulls */
static void driver4(void)
{
uint8_t buf[1];
uint32_t h;
uint32_t i;
uint32_t state[HASHSTATE];
buf[0] = ~0;
for (i=0; i<HASHSTATE; ++i)
state[i] = 1;
printf("These should all be different\n");
h = 0;
for (i=0; i<8; ++i) {
h = jlu32l(h, buf, 0);
printf("%2ld 0-byte strings, hash is %.8x\n", (long)i, h);
}
}
int main(int argc, char ** argv)
{
driver1(); /* test that the key is hashed: used for timings */
driver2(); /* test that whole key is hashed thoroughly */
driver3(); /* test that nothing but the key is hashed */
driver4(); /* test hashing multiple buffers (all buffers are null) */
return 1;
}
#endif /* _JLU3_SELFTEST */

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@@ -1,5 +1,4 @@
/** \file popt/popt.h
* \ingroup popt
/** @file
*/
/* (C) 1998-2000 Red Hat, Inc. -- Licensing details are in the COPYING
@@ -13,45 +12,49 @@
#define POPT_OPTION_DEPTH 10
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* \name Arg type identifiers
*/
/*@{*/
#define POPT_ARG_NONE 0 /*!< no arg */
#define POPT_ARG_STRING 1 /*!< arg will be saved as string */
#define POPT_ARG_INT 2 /*!< arg will be converted to int */
#define POPT_ARG_LONG 3 /*!< arg will be converted to long */
#define POPT_ARG_INCLUDE_TABLE 4 /*!< arg points to table */
#define POPT_ARG_CALLBACK 5 /*!< table-wide callback... must be
#define POPT_ARG_NONE 0U /*!< no arg */
#define POPT_ARG_STRING 1U /*!< arg will be saved as string */
#define POPT_ARG_INT 2U /*!< arg ==> int */
#define POPT_ARG_LONG 3U /*!< arg ==> long */
#define POPT_ARG_INCLUDE_TABLE 4U /*!< arg points to table */
#define POPT_ARG_CALLBACK 5U /*!< table-wide callback... must be
set first in table; arg points
to callback, descrip points to
callback data to pass */
#define POPT_ARG_INTL_DOMAIN 6 /*!< set the translation domain
#define POPT_ARG_INTL_DOMAIN 6U /*!< set the translation domain
for this table and any
included tables; arg points
to the domain string */
#define POPT_ARG_VAL 7 /*!< arg should take value val */
#define POPT_ARG_FLOAT 8 /*!< arg will be converted to float */
#define POPT_ARG_DOUBLE 9 /*!< arg will be converted to double */
#define POPT_ARG_VAL 7U /*!< arg should take value val */
#define POPT_ARG_FLOAT 8U /*!< arg ==> float */
#define POPT_ARG_DOUBLE 9U /*!< arg ==> double */
#define POPT_ARG_LONGLONG 10U /*!< arg ==> long long */
#define POPT_ARG_MASK 0x0000FFFF
/*@}*/
#define POPT_ARG_MAINCALL (16U+11U) /*!< EXPERIMENTAL: return (*arg) (argc, argv) */
#define POPT_ARG_ARGV 12U /*!< dupe'd arg appended to realloc'd argv array. */
#define POPT_ARG_SHORT 13U /*!< arg ==> short */
#define POPT_ARG_BITSET (16U+14U) /*!< arg ==> bit set */
/** \ingroup popt
#define POPT_ARG_MASK 0x000000FFU
#define POPT_GROUP_MASK 0x0000FF00U
/**
* \name Arg modifiers
*/
/*@{*/
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_ONEDASH 0x80000000 /*!< allow -longoption */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_DOC_HIDDEN 0x40000000 /*!< don't show in help/usage */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_STRIP 0x20000000 /*!< strip this arg from argv(only applies to long args) */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_OPTIONAL 0x10000000 /*!< arg may be missing */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_ONEDASH 0x80000000U /*!< allow -longoption */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_DOC_HIDDEN 0x40000000U /*!< don't show in help/usage */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_STRIP 0x20000000U /*!< strip this arg from argv(only applies to long args) */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_OPTIONAL 0x10000000U /*!< arg may be missing */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_OR 0x08000000 /*!< arg will be or'ed */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_NOR 0x09000000 /*!< arg will be nor'ed */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_AND 0x04000000 /*!< arg will be and'ed */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_NAND 0x05000000 /*!< arg will be nand'ed */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_XOR 0x02000000 /*!< arg will be xor'ed */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_NOT 0x01000000 /*!< arg will be negated */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_OR 0x08000000U /*!< arg will be or'ed */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_NOR 0x09000000U /*!< arg will be nor'ed */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_AND 0x04000000U /*!< arg will be and'ed */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_NAND 0x05000000U /*!< arg will be nand'ed */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_XOR 0x02000000U /*!< arg will be xor'ed */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_NOT 0x01000000U /*!< arg will be negated */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_LOGICALOPS \
(POPT_ARGFLAG_OR|POPT_ARGFLAG_AND|POPT_ARGFLAG_XOR)
@@ -60,158 +63,126 @@
#define POPT_BIT_CLR (POPT_ARG_VAL|POPT_ARGFLAG_NAND)
/*!< clear arg bit(s) */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_SHOW_DEFAULT 0x00800000 /*!< show default value in --help */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_SHOW_DEFAULT 0x00800000U /*!< show default value in --help */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_RANDOM 0x00400000U /*!< random value in [1,arg] */
#define POPT_ARGFLAG_TOGGLE 0x00200000U /*!< permit --[no]opt prefix toggle */
/*@}*/
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* \name Callback modifiers
*/
/*@{*/
#define POPT_CBFLAG_PRE 0x80000000 /*!< call the callback before parse */
#define POPT_CBFLAG_POST 0x40000000 /*!< call the callback after parse */
#define POPT_CBFLAG_INC_DATA 0x20000000 /*!< use data from the include line,
#define POPT_CBFLAG_PRE 0x80000000U /*!< call the callback before parse */
#define POPT_CBFLAG_POST 0x40000000U /*!< call the callback after parse */
#define POPT_CBFLAG_INC_DATA 0x20000000U /*!< use data from the include line,
not the subtable */
#define POPT_CBFLAG_SKIPOPTION 0x10000000 /*!< don't callback with option */
#define POPT_CBFLAG_CONTINUE 0x08000000 /*!< continue callbacks with option */
/*@}*/
#define POPT_CBFLAG_SKIPOPTION 0x10000000U /*!< don't callback with option */
#define POPT_CBFLAG_CONTINUE 0x08000000U /*!< continue callbacks with option */
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* \name Error return values
*/
/*@{*/
#define POPT_ERROR_NOARG -10 /*!< missing argument */
#define POPT_ERROR_BADOPT -11 /*!< unknown option */
#define POPT_ERROR_UNWANTEDARG -12 /*!< option does not take an argument */
#define POPT_ERROR_OPTSTOODEEP -13 /*!< aliases nested too deeply */
#define POPT_ERROR_BADQUOTE -15 /*!< error in paramter quoting */
#define POPT_ERROR_BADQUOTE -15 /*!< error in parameter quoting */
#define POPT_ERROR_ERRNO -16 /*!< errno set, use strerror(errno) */
#define POPT_ERROR_BADNUMBER -17 /*!< invalid numeric value */
#define POPT_ERROR_OVERFLOW -18 /*!< number too large or too small */
#define POPT_ERROR_BADOPERATION -19 /*!< mutually exclusive logical operations requested */
#define POPT_ERROR_NULLARG -20 /*!< opt->arg should not be NULL */
#define POPT_ERROR_MALLOC -21 /*!< memory allocation failed */
/*@}*/
#define POPT_ERROR_BADCONFIG -22 /*!< config file failed sanity test */
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* \name poptBadOption() flags
*/
/*@{*/
#define POPT_BADOPTION_NOALIAS (1 << 0) /*!< don't go into an alias */
/*@}*/
#define POPT_BADOPTION_NOALIAS (1U << 0) /*!< don't go into an alias */
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* \name poptGetContext() flags
*/
/*@{*/
#define POPT_CONTEXT_NO_EXEC (1 << 0) /*!< ignore exec expansions */
#define POPT_CONTEXT_KEEP_FIRST (1 << 1) /*!< pay attention to argv[0] */
#define POPT_CONTEXT_POSIXMEHARDER (1 << 2) /*!< options can't follow args */
#define POPT_CONTEXT_ARG_OPTS (1 << 4) /*!< return args as options with value 0 */
/*@}*/
#define POPT_CONTEXT_NO_EXEC (1U << 0) /*!< ignore exec expansions */
#define POPT_CONTEXT_KEEP_FIRST (1U << 1) /*!< pay attention to argv[0] */
#define POPT_CONTEXT_POSIXMEHARDER (1U << 2) /*!< options can't follow args */
#define POPT_CONTEXT_ARG_OPTS (1U << 4) /*!< return args as options with value 0 */
/** \ingroup popt
/**
*/
struct poptOption {
/*@observer@*/ /*@null@*/
const char * longName; /*!< may be NULL */
char shortName; /*!< may be NUL */
int argInfo;
/*@shared@*/ /*@null@*/
char shortName; /*!< may be '\0' */
unsigned int argInfo; /*!< type of argument expected after the option */
void * arg; /*!< depends on argInfo */
int val; /*!< 0 means don't return, just update flag */
/*@observer@*/ /*@null@*/
int val; /*!< 0 means don't return, just update arg */
const char * descrip; /*!< description for autohelp -- may be NULL */
/*@observer@*/ /*@null@*/
const char * argDescrip; /*!< argument description for autohelp */
const char * argDescrip; /*!< argument description for autohelp -- may be NULL */
};
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* A popt alias argument for poptAddAlias().
*/
struct poptAlias {
/*@owned@*/ /*@null@*/
const char * longName; /*!< may be NULL */
char shortName; /*!< may be NUL */
int argc;
/*@owned@*/
const char ** argv; /*!< must be free()able */
};
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* A popt alias or exec argument for poptAddItem().
*/
/*@-exporttype@*/
typedef struct poptItem_s {
struct poptOption option; /*!< alias/exec name(s) and description. */
int argc; /*!< (alias) no. of args. */
/*@owned@*/
const char ** argv; /*!< (alias) args, must be free()able. */
} * poptItem;
/*@=exporttype@*/
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* \name Auto-generated help/usage
*/
/*@{*/
/**
* Empty table marker to enable displaying popt alias/exec options.
*/
/*@-exportvar@*/
/*@unchecked@*/ /*@observer@*/
extern struct poptOption poptAliasOptions[];
/*@=exportvar@*/
#define POPT_AUTOALIAS { NULL, '\0', POPT_ARG_INCLUDE_TABLE, poptAliasOptions, \
0, "Options implemented via popt alias/exec:", NULL },
/**
* Auto help table options.
*/
/*@-exportvar@*/
/*@unchecked@*/ /*@observer@*/
extern struct poptOption poptHelpOptions[];
/*@=exportvar@*/
/*@-exportvar@*/
/*@unchecked@*/ /*@observer@*/
extern struct poptOption * poptHelpOptionsI18N;
/*@=exportvar@*/
#define POPT_AUTOHELP { NULL, '\0', POPT_ARG_INCLUDE_TABLE, poptHelpOptions, \
0, "Help options:", NULL },
#define POPT_TABLEEND { NULL, '\0', 0, 0, 0, NULL, NULL }
/*@}*/
#define POPT_TABLEEND { NULL, '\0', 0, NULL, 0, NULL, NULL }
/** \ingroup popt
/**
*/
/*@-exporttype@*/
typedef /*@abstract@*/ struct poptContext_s * poptContext;
/*@=exporttype@*/
typedef struct poptContext_s * poptContext;
/** \ingroup popt
/**
*/
#ifndef __cplusplus
/*@-exporttype -typeuse@*/
typedef struct poptOption * poptOption;
/*@=exporttype =typeuse@*/
#endif
/*@-exportconst@*/
/**
*/
enum poptCallbackReason {
POPT_CALLBACK_REASON_PRE = 0,
POPT_CALLBACK_REASON_POST = 1,
POPT_CALLBACK_REASON_OPTION = 2
};
/*@=exportconst@*/
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
/*@-type@*/
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Table callback prototype.
* @param con context
* @param reason reason for callback
@@ -221,13 +192,18 @@ extern "C" {
*/
typedef void (*poptCallbackType) (poptContext con,
enum poptCallbackReason reason,
/*@null@*/ const struct poptOption * opt,
/*@null@*/ const char * arg,
/*@null@*/ const void * data)
/*@globals internalState @*/
/*@modifies internalState @*/;
const struct poptOption * opt,
const char * arg,
const void * data);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Destroy context.
* @param con context
* @return NULL always
*/
poptContext poptFreeContext( poptContext con);
/**
* Initialize popt context.
* @param name context name (usually argv[0] program name)
* @param argc no. of arguments
@@ -236,97 +212,90 @@ typedef void (*poptCallbackType) (poptContext con,
* @param flags or'd POPT_CONTEXT_* bits
* @return initialized popt context
*/
/*@only@*/ /*@null@*/
poptContext poptGetContext(
/*@dependent@*/ /*@keep@*/ const char * name,
int argc, /*@dependent@*/ /*@keep@*/ const char ** argv,
/*@dependent@*/ /*@keep@*/ const struct poptOption * options,
int flags)
/*@*/;
const char * name,
int argc, const char ** argv,
const struct poptOption * options,
unsigned int flags);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Destroy context (alternative implementation).
* @param con context
* @return NULL always
*/
poptContext poptFini( poptContext con);
/**
* Initialize popt context (alternative implementation).
* This routine does poptGetContext() and then poptReadConfigFiles().
* @param argc no. of arguments
* @param argv argument array
* @param options address of popt option table
* @param configPaths colon separated file path(s) to read.
* @return initialized popt context (NULL on error).
*/
poptContext poptInit(int argc, const char ** argv,
const struct poptOption * options,
const char * configPaths);
/**
* Reinitialize popt context.
* @param con context
*/
/*@unused@*/
void poptResetContext(/*@null@*/poptContext con)
/*@modifies con @*/;
void poptResetContext(poptContext con);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Return value of next option found.
* @param con context
* @return next option val, -1 on last item, POPT_ERROR_* on error
*/
int poptGetNextOpt(/*@null@*/poptContext con)
/*@globals fileSystem, internalState @*/
/*@modifies con, fileSystem, internalState @*/;
int poptGetNextOpt(poptContext con);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Return next option argument (if any).
* @param con context
* @return option argument, NULL if no argument is available
*/
/*@observer@*/ /*@null@*/ /*@unused@*/
const char * poptGetOptArg(/*@null@*/poptContext con)
/*@modifies con @*/;
char * poptGetOptArg(poptContext con);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Return next argument.
* @param con context
* @return next argument, NULL if no argument is available
*/
/*@observer@*/ /*@null@*/ /*@unused@*/
const char * poptGetArg(/*@null@*/poptContext con)
/*@modifies con @*/;
const char * poptGetArg(poptContext con);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Peek at current argument.
* @param con context
* @return current argument, NULL if no argument is available
*/
/*@observer@*/ /*@null@*/ /*@unused@*/
const char * poptPeekArg(/*@null@*/poptContext con)
/*@*/;
const char * poptPeekArg(poptContext con);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Return remaining arguments.
* @param con context
* @return argument array, NULL terminated
*/
/*@observer@*/ /*@null@*/
const char ** poptGetArgs(/*@null@*/poptContext con)
/*@modifies con @*/;
const char ** poptGetArgs(poptContext con);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Return the option which caused the most recent error.
* @param con context
* @param flags
* @return offending option
*/
/*@observer@*/
const char * poptBadOption(/*@null@*/poptContext con, int flags)
/*@*/;
const char * poptBadOption(poptContext con, unsigned int flags);
/** \ingroup popt
* Destroy context.
* @param con context
* @return NULL always
*/
/*@null@*/
poptContext poptFreeContext( /*@only@*/ /*@null@*/ poptContext con)
/*@modifies con @*/;
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Add arguments to context.
* @param con context
* @param argv argument array, NULL terminated
* @return 0 on success, POPT_ERROR_OPTSTOODEEP on failure
*/
/*@unused@*/
int poptStuffArgs(poptContext con, /*@keep@*/ const char ** argv)
/*@modifies con @*/;
int poptStuffArgs(poptContext con, const char ** argv);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Add alias to context.
* @todo Pass alias by reference, not value.
* @deprecated Use poptAddItem instead.
@@ -335,44 +304,64 @@ int poptStuffArgs(poptContext con, /*@keep@*/ const char ** argv)
* @param flags (unused)
* @return 0 on success
*/
/*@unused@*/
int poptAddAlias(poptContext con, struct poptAlias alias, int flags)
/*@modifies con @*/;
int poptAddAlias(poptContext con, struct poptAlias alias, int flags);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Add alias/exec item to context.
* @param con context
* @param newItem alias/exec item to add
* @param flags 0 for alias, 1 for exec
* @return 0 on success
*/
int poptAddItem(poptContext con, poptItem newItem, int flags)
/*@modifies con @*/;
int poptAddItem(poptContext con, poptItem newItem, int flags);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Test path/file for config file sanity (regular file, permissions etc)
* @param fn file name
* @return 1 on OK, 0 on NOTOK.
*/
int poptSaneFile(const char * fn);
/**
* Read a file into a buffer.
* @param fn file name
* @retval *bp buffer (malloc'd) (or NULL)
* @retval *nbp no. of bytes in buffer (including final NUL) (or NULL)
* @param flags 1 to trim escaped newlines
* return 0 on success
*/
int poptReadFile(const char * fn, char ** bp,
size_t * nbp, int flags);
#define POPT_READFILE_TRIMNEWLINES 1
/**
* Read configuration file.
* @param con context
* @param fn file name to read
* @return 0 on success, POPT_ERROR_ERRNO on failure
*/
int poptReadConfigFile(poptContext con, const char * fn)
/*@globals errno, fileSystem, internalState @*/
/*@modifies con->execs, con->numExecs,
errno, fileSystem, internalState @*/;
int poptReadConfigFile(poptContext con, const char * fn);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Read configuration file(s).
* Colon separated files to read, looping over poptReadConfigFile().
* Note that an '@' character preceding a path in the list will
* also perform additional sanity checks on the file before reading.
* @param con context
* @param paths colon separated file name(s) to read
* @return 0 on success, POPT_ERROR_BADCONFIG on failure
*/
int poptReadConfigFiles(poptContext con, const char * paths);
/**
* Read default configuration from /etc/popt and $HOME/.popt.
* @param con context
* @param useEnv (unused)
* @return 0 on success, POPT_ERROR_ERRNO on failure
*/
/*@unused@*/
int poptReadDefaultConfig(poptContext con, /*@unused@*/ int useEnv)
/*@globals fileSystem, internalState @*/
/*@modifies con->execs, con->numExecs,
fileSystem, internalState @*/;
int poptReadDefaultConfig(poptContext con, int useEnv);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Duplicate an argument array.
* @note: The argument array is malloc'd as a single area, so only argv must
* be free'd.
@@ -383,12 +372,11 @@ int poptReadDefaultConfig(poptContext con, /*@unused@*/ int useEnv)
* @retval argvPtr address of returned argument array
* @return 0 on success, POPT_ERROR_NOARG on failure
*/
int poptDupArgv(int argc, /*@null@*/ const char **argv,
/*@null@*/ /*@out@*/ int * argcPtr,
/*@null@*/ /*@out@*/ const char *** argvPtr)
/*@modifies *argcPtr, *argvPtr @*/;
int poptDupArgv(int argc, const char **argv,
int * argcPtr,
const char *** argvPtr);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Parse a string into an argument array.
* The parse allows ', ", and \ quoting, but ' is treated the same as " and
* both may include \ quotes.
@@ -400,10 +388,9 @@ int poptDupArgv(int argc, /*@null@*/ const char **argv,
* @retval argvPtr address of returned argument array
*/
int poptParseArgvString(const char * s,
/*@out@*/ int * argcPtr, /*@out@*/ const char *** argvPtr)
/*@modifies *argcPtr, *argvPtr @*/;
int * argcPtr, const char *** argvPtr);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Parses an input configuration file and returns an string that is a
* command line. For use with popt. You must free the return value when done.
*
@@ -418,8 +405,8 @@ bla=bla
this_is = fdsafdas
bad_line=
reall bad line
reall bad line = again
really bad line
really bad line = again
5555= 55555
test = with lots of spaces
\endverbatim
@@ -449,83 +436,82 @@ this_is = fdsafdas
* @return 0 on success
* @see poptParseArgvString
*/
/*@-fcnuse@*/
int poptConfigFileToString(FILE *fp, /*@out@*/ char ** argstrp, int flags)
/*@globals fileSystem @*/
/*@modifies *fp, *argstrp, fileSystem @*/;
/*@=fcnuse@*/
int poptConfigFileToString(FILE *fp, char ** argstrp, int flags);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Return formatted error string for popt failure.
* @param error popt error
* @return error string
*/
/*@observer@*/
const char * poptStrerror(const int error)
/*@*/;
const char * poptStrerror(const int error);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Limit search for executables.
* @param con context
* @param path single path to search for executables
* @param allowAbsolute absolute paths only?
*/
/*@unused@*/
void poptSetExecPath(poptContext con, const char * path, int allowAbsolute)
/*@modifies con @*/;
void poptSetExecPath(poptContext con, const char * path, int allowAbsolute);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Print detailed description of options.
* @param con context
* @param fp ouput file handle
* @param fp output file handle
* @param flags (unused)
*/
void poptPrintHelp(poptContext con, FILE * fp, /*@unused@*/ int flags)
/*@globals fileSystem @*/
/*@modifies *fp, fileSystem @*/;
void poptPrintHelp(poptContext con, FILE * fp, int flags);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Print terse description of options.
* @param con context
* @param fp ouput file handle
* @param fp output file handle
* @param flags (unused)
*/
void poptPrintUsage(poptContext con, FILE * fp, /*@unused@*/ int flags)
/*@globals fileSystem @*/
/*@modifies *fp, fileSystem @*/;
void poptPrintUsage(poptContext con, FILE * fp, int flags);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Provide text to replace default "[OPTION...]" in help/usage output.
* @param con context
* @param text replacement text
*/
/*@-fcnuse@*/
void poptSetOtherOptionHelp(poptContext con, const char * text)
/*@modifies con @*/;
/*@=fcnuse@*/
void poptSetOtherOptionHelp(poptContext con, const char * text);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Return argv[0] from context.
* @param con context
* @return argv[0]
*/
/*@-fcnuse@*/
/*@observer@*/
const char * poptGetInvocationName(poptContext con)
/*@*/;
/*@=fcnuse@*/
const char * poptGetInvocationName(poptContext con);
/** \ingroup popt
/**
* Shuffle argv pointers to remove stripped args, returns new argc.
* @param con context
* @param argc no. of args
* @param argv arg vector
* @return new argc
*/
/*@-fcnuse@*/
int poptStrippedArgv(poptContext con, int argc, char ** argv)
/*@modifies *argv @*/;
/*@=fcnuse@*/
int poptStrippedArgv(poptContext con, int argc, char ** argv);
/**
* Add a string to an argv array.
* @retval *argvp argv array
* @param argInfo (unused)
* @param val string arg to add (using strdup)
* @return 0 on success, POPT_ERROR_NULLARG/POPT_ERROR_BADOPERATION
*/
int poptSaveString(const char *** argvp, unsigned int argInfo,
const char * val);
/**
* Save a long long, performing logical operation with value.
* @warning Alignment check may be too strict on certain platorms.
* @param arg integer pointer, aligned on int boundary.
* @param argInfo logical operation (see POPT_ARGFLAG_*)
* @param aLongLong value to use
* @return 0 on success, POPT_ERROR_NULLARG/POPT_ERROR_BADOPERATION
*/
int poptSaveLongLong(long long * arg, unsigned int argInfo,
long long aLongLong);
/**
* Save a long, performing logical operation with value.
@@ -535,12 +521,17 @@ int poptStrippedArgv(poptContext con, int argc, char ** argv)
* @param aLong value to use
* @return 0 on success, POPT_ERROR_NULLARG/POPT_ERROR_BADOPERATION
*/
/*@-incondefs@*/
/*@unused@*/
int poptSaveLong(/*@null@*/ long * arg, int argInfo, long aLong)
/*@modifies *arg @*/
/*@requires maxSet(arg) >= 0 /\ maxRead(arg) == 0 @*/;
/*@=incondefs@*/
int poptSaveLong(long * arg, unsigned int argInfo, long aLong);
/**
* Save a short integer, performing logical operation with value.
* @warning Alignment check may be too strict on certain platorms.
* @param arg short pointer, aligned on short boundary.
* @param argInfo logical operation (see POPT_ARGFLAG_*)
* @param aLong value to use
* @return 0 on success, POPT_ERROR_NULLARG/POPT_ERROR_BADOPERATION
*/
int poptSaveShort(short * arg, unsigned int argInfo, long aLong);
/**
* Save an integer, performing logical operation with value.
@@ -550,14 +541,40 @@ int poptSaveLong(/*@null@*/ long * arg, int argInfo, long aLong)
* @param aLong value to use
* @return 0 on success, POPT_ERROR_NULLARG/POPT_ERROR_BADOPERATION
*/
/*@-incondefs@*/
/*@unused@*/
int poptSaveInt(/*@null@*/ int * arg, int argInfo, long aLong)
/*@modifies *arg @*/
/*@requires maxSet(arg) >= 0 /\ maxRead(arg) == 0 @*/;
/*@=incondefs@*/
int poptSaveInt(int * arg, unsigned int argInfo, long aLong);
/* The bit set typedef. */
typedef struct poptBits_s {
unsigned int bits[1];
} * poptBits;
#define _POPT_BITS_N 1024U /*!< estimated population */
#define _POPT_BITS_M ((3U * _POPT_BITS_N) / 2U)
#define _POPT_BITS_K 16U /*!< no. of linear hash combinations */
extern unsigned int _poptBitsN;
extern unsigned int _poptBitsM;
extern unsigned int _poptBitsK;
int poptBitsAdd(poptBits bits, const char * s);
int poptBitsChk(poptBits bits, const char * s);
int poptBitsClr(poptBits bits);
int poptBitsDel(poptBits bits, const char * s);
int poptBitsIntersect(poptBits * ap, const poptBits b);
int poptBitsUnion(poptBits * ap, const poptBits b);
int poptBitsArgs(poptContext con, poptBits * ap);
/**
* Save a string into a bit set (experimental).
* @retval *bits bit set (lazily malloc'd if NULL)
* @param argInfo logical operation (see POPT_ARGFLAG_*)
* @param s string to add to bit set
* @return 0 on success, POPT_ERROR_NULLARG/POPT_ERROR_BADOPERATION
*/
int poptSaveBits(poptBits * bitsp, unsigned int argInfo,
const char * s);
/*@=type@*/
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
/** \ingroup popt
* \file popt/poptconfig.c
* @file
*/
/* (C) 1998-2002 Red Hat, Inc. -- Licensing details are in the COPYING
@@ -8,54 +8,300 @@
#include "system.h"
#include "poptint.h"
/*@access poptContext @*/
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <errno.h>
/*@-compmempass@*/ /* FIX: item->option.longName kept, not dependent. */
static void configLine(poptContext con, char * line)
/*@modifies con @*/
#if defined(HAVE_FNMATCH_H)
#include <fnmatch.h>
#endif
#if defined(HAVE_GLOB_H)
#include <glob.h>
#if !defined(HAVE_GLOB_PATTERN_P)
/* Return nonzero if PATTERN contains any metacharacters.
Metacharacters can be quoted with backslashes if QUOTE is nonzero. */
static int
glob_pattern_p (const char * pattern, int quote)
{
size_t nameLength;
const char * p;
int open = 0;
for (p = pattern; *p != '\0'; ++p)
switch (*p) {
case '?':
case '*':
return 1;
break;
case '\\':
if (quote && p[1] != '\0')
++p;
break;
case '[':
open = 1;
break;
case ']':
if (open)
return 1;
break;
}
return 0;
}
#endif /* !defined(__GLIBC__) */
static int poptGlobFlags = 0;
static int poptGlob_error(UNUSED(const char * epath),
UNUSED(int eerrno))
{
return 1;
}
#endif /* HAVE_GLOB_H */
/**
* Return path(s) from a glob pattern.
* @param con context
* @param pattern glob pattern
* @retval *acp no. of paths
* @retval *avp array of paths
* @return 0 on success
*/
static int poptGlob(UNUSED(poptContext con), const char * pattern,
int * acp, const char *** avp)
{
const char * pat = pattern;
int rc = 0; /* assume success */
#if defined(HAVE_GLOB_H)
if (glob_pattern_p(pat, 0)) {
glob_t _g, *pglob = &_g;
if (!(rc = glob(pat, poptGlobFlags, poptGlob_error, pglob))) {
if (acp) {
*acp = (int) pglob->gl_pathc;
pglob->gl_pathc = 0;
}
if (avp) {
*avp = (const char **) pglob->gl_pathv;
pglob->gl_pathv = NULL;
}
globfree(pglob);
} else if (rc == GLOB_NOMATCH) {
*avp = NULL;
*acp = 0;
rc = 0;
} else
rc = POPT_ERROR_ERRNO;
} else
#endif /* HAVE_GLOB_H */
{
if (acp)
*acp = 1;
if (avp && (*avp = calloc((size_t)(1 + 1), sizeof (**avp))) != NULL)
(*avp)[0] = xstrdup(pat);
}
return rc;
}
int poptSaneFile(const char * fn)
{
struct stat sb;
if (fn == NULL || strstr(fn, ".rpmnew") || strstr(fn, ".rpmsave"))
return 0;
if (stat(fn, &sb) == -1)
return 0;
if (!S_ISREG(sb.st_mode))
return 0;
if (sb.st_mode & (S_IXUSR|S_IXGRP|S_IXOTH))
return 0;
return 1;
}
int poptReadFile(const char * fn, char ** bp, size_t * nbp, int flags)
{
int fdno;
char * b = NULL;
off_t nb = 0;
char * s, * t, * se;
int rc = POPT_ERROR_ERRNO; /* assume failure */
fdno = open(fn, O_RDONLY);
if (fdno < 0)
goto exit;
if ((nb = lseek(fdno, 0, SEEK_END)) == (off_t)-1
|| (uintmax_t)nb >= SIZE_MAX
|| lseek(fdno, 0, SEEK_SET) == (off_t)-1
|| (b = calloc(sizeof(*b), (size_t)nb + 1)) == NULL
|| read(fdno, (char *)b, (size_t)nb) != (ssize_t)nb)
{
int oerrno = errno;
(void) close(fdno);
if (nb != (off_t)-1 && (uintmax_t)nb >= SIZE_MAX)
errno = -EOVERFLOW;
else
errno = oerrno;
goto exit;
}
if (close(fdno) == -1)
goto exit;
if (b == NULL) {
rc = POPT_ERROR_MALLOC;
goto exit;
}
rc = 0;
/* Trim out escaped newlines. */
if (flags & POPT_READFILE_TRIMNEWLINES)
{
for (t = b, s = b, se = b + nb; *s && s < se; s++) {
switch (*s) {
case '\\':
if (s[1] == '\n') {
s++;
continue;
}
/* fallthrough */
default:
*t++ = *s;
break;
}
}
*t++ = '\0';
nb = (off_t)(t - b);
}
exit:
if (rc != 0) {
if (b)
free(b);
b = NULL;
nb = 0;
}
if (bp)
*bp = b;
else if (b)
free(b);
if (nbp)
*nbp = (size_t)nb;
return rc;
}
/**
* Check for application match.
* @param con context
* @param s config application name
* return 0 if config application matches
*/
static int configAppMatch(poptContext con, const char * s)
{
int rc = 1;
if (con->appName == NULL) /* XXX can't happen. */
return rc;
#if defined(HAVE_GLOB_H) && defined(HAVE_FNMATCH_H)
if (glob_pattern_p(s, 1)) {
static int flags = FNM_PATHNAME | FNM_PERIOD;
#ifdef FNM_EXTMATCH
flags |= FNM_EXTMATCH;
#endif
rc = fnmatch(s, con->appName, flags);
} else
#endif
rc = strcmp(s, con->appName);
return rc;
}
static int poptConfigLine(poptContext con, char * line)
{
char *b = NULL;
size_t nb = 0;
char * se = line;
const char * appName;
const char * entryType;
const char * opt;
poptItem item = (poptItem) alloca(sizeof(*item));
struct poptItem_s item_buf;
poptItem item = &item_buf;
int i, j;
int rc = POPT_ERROR_BADCONFIG;
if (con->appName == NULL)
return;
nameLength = strlen(con->appName);
goto exit;
/*@-boundswrite@*/
memset(item, 0, sizeof(*item));
if (strncmp(line, con->appName, nameLength)) return;
appName = se;
while (*se != '\0' && !_isspaceptr(se)) se++;
if (*se == '\0')
goto exit;
else
*se++ = '\0';
line += nameLength;
if (*line == '\0' || !isSpace(line)) return;
if (configAppMatch(con, appName)) goto exit;
while (*line != '\0' && isSpace(line)) line++;
entryType = line;
while (*line == '\0' || !isSpace(line)) line++;
*line++ = '\0';
while (*se != '\0' && _isspaceptr(se)) se++;
entryType = se;
while (*se != '\0' && !_isspaceptr(se)) se++;
if (*se != '\0') *se++ = '\0';
while (*line != '\0' && isSpace(line)) line++;
if (*line == '\0') return;
opt = line;
while (*line == '\0' || !isSpace(line)) line++;
*line++ = '\0';
while (*se != '\0' && _isspaceptr(se)) se++;
if (*se == '\0') goto exit;
opt = se;
while (*se != '\0' && !_isspaceptr(se)) se++;
if (opt[0] == '-' && *se == '\0') goto exit;
if (*se != '\0') *se++ = '\0';
while (*line != '\0' && isSpace(line)) line++;
if (*line == '\0') return;
while (*se != '\0' && _isspaceptr(se)) se++;
if (opt[0] == '-' && *se == '\0') goto exit;
/*@-temptrans@*/ /* FIX: line alias is saved */
if (opt[0] == '-' && opt[1] == '-')
item->option.longName = opt + 2;
else if (opt[0] == '-' && opt[2] == '\0')
item->option.shortName = opt[1];
/*@=temptrans@*/
else {
const char * fn = opt;
if (poptParseArgvString(line, &item->argc, &item->argv)) return;
/* XXX handle globs and directories in fn? */
if ((rc = poptReadFile(fn, &b, &nb, POPT_READFILE_TRIMNEWLINES)) != 0)
goto exit;
if (b == NULL || nb == 0)
goto exit;
/* Append remaining text to the interpolated file option text. */
if (*se != '\0') {
size_t nse = strlen(se) + 1;
if ((b = realloc(b, (nb + nse))) == NULL) /* XXX can't happen */
goto exit;
(void) stpcpy( stpcpy(&b[nb-1], " "), se);
nb += nse;
}
se = b;
/* Use the basename of the path as the long option name. */
{ const char * longName = strrchr(fn, '/');
if (longName != NULL)
longName++;
else
longName = fn;
if (longName == NULL) /* XXX can't happen. */
goto exit;
/* Single character basenames are treated as short options. */
if (longName[1] != '\0')
item->option.longName = longName;
else
item->option.shortName = longName[0];
}
}
if (poptParseArgvString(se, &item->argc, &item->argv)) goto exit;
/*@-modobserver@*/
item->option.argInfo = POPT_ARGFLAG_DOC_HIDDEN;
for (i = 0, j = 0; i < item->argc; i++, j++) {
const char * f;
@@ -81,103 +327,183 @@ static void configLine(poptContext con, char * line)
item->argv[j] = NULL;
item->argc = j;
}
/*@=modobserver@*/
/*@=boundswrite@*/
/*@-nullstate@*/ /* FIX: item->argv[] may be NULL */
if (!strcmp(entryType, "alias"))
(void) poptAddItem(con, item, 0);
rc = poptAddItem(con, item, 0);
else if (!strcmp(entryType, "exec"))
(void) poptAddItem(con, item, 1);
/*@=nullstate@*/
rc = poptAddItem(con, item, 1);
exit:
rc = 0; /* XXX for now, always return success */
if (b)
free(b);
return rc;
}
/*@=compmempass@*/
int poptReadConfigFile(poptContext con, const char * fn)
{
const char * file, * chptr, * end;
char * buf;
/*@dependent@*/ char * dst;
int fd, rc;
off_t fileLength;
fd = open(fn, O_RDONLY);
if (fd < 0)
return (errno == ENOENT ? 0 : POPT_ERROR_ERRNO);
fileLength = lseek(fd, 0, SEEK_END);
if (fileLength == -1 || lseek(fd, 0, 0) == -1) {
rc = errno;
(void) close(fd);
errno = rc;
return POPT_ERROR_ERRNO;
}
file = alloca(fileLength + 1);
if (read(fd, (char *)file, fileLength) != fileLength) {
rc = errno;
(void) close(fd);
errno = rc;
return POPT_ERROR_ERRNO;
}
if (close(fd) == -1)
return POPT_ERROR_ERRNO;
/*@-boundswrite@*/
dst = buf = alloca(fileLength + 1);
chptr = file;
end = (file + fileLength);
/*@-infloops@*/ /* LCL: can't detect chptr++ */
while (chptr < end) {
switch (*chptr) {
case '\n':
*dst = '\0';
dst = buf;
while (*dst && isSpace(dst)) dst++;
if (*dst && *dst != '#')
configLine(con, dst);
chptr++;
/*@switchbreak@*/ break;
case '\\':
*dst++ = *chptr++;
if (chptr < end) {
if (*chptr == '\n')
dst--, chptr++;
/* \ at the end of a line does not insert a \n */
else
*dst++ = *chptr++;
}
/*@switchbreak@*/ break;
default:
*dst++ = *chptr++;
/*@switchbreak@*/ break;
}
}
/*@=infloops@*/
/*@=boundswrite@*/
return 0;
}
int poptReadDefaultConfig(poptContext con, /*@unused@*/ UNUSED(int useEnv))
{
char * fn, * home;
char * b = NULL, *be;
size_t nb = 0;
const char *se;
char *t = NULL, *te;
int rc;
if (con->appName == NULL) return 0;
rc = poptReadConfigFile(con, "/etc/popt");
if (rc) return rc;
if ((home = getenv("HOME"))) {
size_t bufsize = strlen(home) + 20;
fn = alloca(bufsize);
if (fn == NULL) return 0;
snprintf(fn, bufsize, "%s/.popt", home);
rc = poptReadConfigFile(con, fn);
if (rc) return rc;
if ((rc = poptReadFile(fn, &b, &nb, POPT_READFILE_TRIMNEWLINES)) != 0)
return (errno == ENOENT ? 0 : rc);
if (b == NULL || nb == 0) {
rc = POPT_ERROR_BADCONFIG;
goto exit;
}
return 0;
if ((t = malloc(nb + 1)) == NULL)
goto exit;
te = t;
be = (b + nb);
for (se = b; se < be; se++) {
switch (*se) {
case '\n':
*te = '\0';
te = t;
while (*te && _isspaceptr(te)) te++;
if (*te && *te != '#')
if ((rc = poptConfigLine(con, te)) != 0)
goto exit;
break;
case '\\':
*te = *se++;
/* \ at the end of a line does not insert a \n */
if (se < be && *se != '\n') {
te++;
*te++ = *se;
}
break;
default:
*te++ = *se;
break;
}
}
rc = 0;
exit:
free(t);
if (b)
free(b);
return rc;
}
int poptReadConfigFiles(poptContext con, const char * paths)
{
char * buf = (paths ? xstrdup(paths) : NULL);
const char * p;
char * pe;
int rc = 0; /* assume success */
for (p = buf; p != NULL && *p != '\0'; p = pe) {
const char ** av = NULL;
int ac = 0;
int i;
int xx;
/* locate start of next path element */
pe = strchr(p, ':');
if (pe != NULL && *pe == ':')
*pe++ = '\0';
else
pe = (char *) (p + strlen(p));
xx = poptGlob(con, p, &ac, &av);
/* work-off each resulting file from the path element */
for (i = 0; i < ac; i++) {
const char * fn = av[i];
if (!poptSaneFile(fn))
continue;
xx = poptReadConfigFile(con, fn);
if (xx && rc == 0)
rc = xx;
free((void *)av[i]);
av[i] = NULL;
}
free(av);
av = NULL;
}
if (buf)
free(buf);
return rc;
}
int poptReadDefaultConfig(poptContext con, UNUSED(int useEnv))
{
char * home;
struct stat sb;
int rc = 0; /* assume success */
if (con->appName == NULL) goto exit;
rc = poptReadConfigFile(con, POPT_SYSCONFDIR "/popt");
if (rc) goto exit;
#if defined(HAVE_GLOB_H)
if (!stat(POPT_SYSCONFDIR "/popt.d", &sb) && S_ISDIR(sb.st_mode)) {
const char ** av = NULL;
int ac = 0;
int i;
if ((rc = poptGlob(con, POPT_SYSCONFDIR "/popt.d/*", &ac, &av)) == 0) {
for (i = 0; rc == 0 && i < ac; i++) {
const char * fn = av[i];
if (!poptSaneFile(fn))
continue;
rc = poptReadConfigFile(con, fn);
free((void *)av[i]);
av[i] = NULL;
}
free(av);
av = NULL;
}
}
if (rc) goto exit;
#endif
if ((home = getenv("HOME"))) {
char * fn = malloc(strlen(home) + 20);
if (fn != NULL) {
(void) stpcpy(stpcpy(fn, home), "/.popt");
rc = poptReadConfigFile(con, fn);
free(fn);
} else
rc = POPT_ERROR_ERRNO;
if (rc) goto exit;
}
exit:
return rc;
}
poptContext
poptFini(poptContext con)
{
return poptFreeContext(con);
}
poptContext
poptInit(int argc, const char ** argv,
const struct poptOption * options, const char * configPaths)
{
poptContext con = NULL;
const char * argv0;
if (argv == NULL || argv[0] == NULL || options == NULL)
return con;
if ((argv0 = strrchr(argv[0], '/')) != NULL) argv0++;
else argv0 = argv[0];
con = poptGetContext(argv0, argc, (const char **)argv, options, 0);
if (con != NULL&& poptReadConfigFiles(con, configPaths))
con = poptFini(con);
return con;
}

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File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

194
popt/poptint.c Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,194 @@
#include "system.h"
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <errno.h>
#ifdef HAVE_LANGINFO_H
#include <langinfo.h>
#endif
#include "poptint.h"
/* Any pair of 32 bit hashes can be used. lookup3.c generates pairs, will do. */
#define _JLU3_jlu32lpair 1
#define jlu32lpair poptJlu32lpair
#include "lookup3.c"
const char *
POPT_prev_char (const char *str)
{
const char *p = str;
while (1) {
p--;
if (((unsigned)*p & 0xc0) != (unsigned)0x80)
return p;
}
}
const char *
POPT_next_char (const char *str)
{
const char *p = str;
while (*p != '\0') {
p++;
if (((unsigned)*p & 0xc0) != (unsigned)0x80)
break;
}
return p;
}
#if !defined(POPT_fprintf) /* XXX lose all the goop ... */
#if defined(ENABLE_NLS) && defined(HAVE_LIBINTL_H) && defined(HAVE_DCGETTEXT)
/*
* Rebind a "UTF-8" codeset for popt's internal use.
*/
char *
POPT_dgettext(const char * dom, const char * str)
{
char * codeset = NULL;
char * retval = NULL;
if (!dom)
dom = textdomain(NULL);
codeset = bind_textdomain_codeset(dom, NULL);
bind_textdomain_codeset(dom, "UTF-8");
retval = dgettext(dom, str);
bind_textdomain_codeset(dom, codeset);
return retval;
}
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_ICONV
/**
* Return malloc'd string converted from UTF-8 to current locale.
* @param istr input string (UTF-8 encoding assumed)
* @return localized string
*/
static char *
strdup_locale_from_utf8 (char * istr)
{
char * codeset = NULL;
char * ostr = NULL;
iconv_t cd;
if (istr == NULL)
return NULL;
#ifdef HAVE_LANGINFO_H
codeset = nl_langinfo ((nl_item)CODESET);
#endif
if (codeset != NULL && strcmp(codeset, "UTF-8") != 0
&& (cd = iconv_open(codeset, "UTF-8")) != (iconv_t)-1)
{
char * shift_pin = NULL;
size_t db = strlen(istr);
char * dstr = malloc((db + 1) * sizeof(*dstr));
char * dstr_tmp;
char * pin = istr;
char * pout = dstr;
size_t ib = db;
size_t ob = db;
size_t err;
if (dstr == NULL) {
(void) iconv_close(cd);
return NULL;
}
err = iconv(cd, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL);
while (1) {
*pout = '\0';
err = iconv(cd, &pin, &ib, &pout, &ob);
if (err != (size_t)-1) {
if (shift_pin == NULL) {
shift_pin = pin;
pin = NULL;
ib = 0;
continue;
}
} else
switch (errno) {
case E2BIG:
{ size_t used = (size_t)(pout - dstr);
db *= 2;
dstr_tmp = realloc(dstr, (db + 1) * sizeof(*dstr));
if (dstr_tmp == NULL) {
free(dstr);
(void) iconv_close(cd);
return NULL;
}
dstr = dstr_tmp;
pout = dstr + used;
ob = db - used;
continue;
} break;
case EINVAL:
case EILSEQ:
default:
break;
}
break;
}
(void) iconv_close(cd);
*pout = '\0';
ostr = xstrdup(dstr);
free(dstr);
} else
ostr = xstrdup(istr);
return ostr;
}
#endif
int
POPT_fprintf (FILE * stream, const char * format, ...)
{
char * b = NULL, * ob = NULL;
int rc;
va_list ap;
#if defined(HAVE_VASPRINTF)
va_start(ap, format);
if ((rc = vasprintf(&b, format, ap)) < 0)
b = NULL;
va_end(ap);
#else
size_t nb = (size_t)1;
/* HACK: add +1 to the realloc no. of bytes "just in case". */
/* XXX Likely unneeded, the issues wrto vsnprintf(3) return b0rkage have
* to do with whether the final '\0' is counted (or not). The code
* below already adds +1 for the (possibly already counted) trailing NUL.
*/
while ((b = realloc(b, nb+1)) != NULL) {
va_start(ap, format);
rc = vsnprintf(b, nb, format, ap);
va_end(ap);
if (rc > -1) { /* glibc 2.1 */
if ((size_t)rc < nb)
break;
nb = (size_t)(rc + 1); /* precise buffer length known */
} else /* glibc 2.0 */
nb += (nb < (size_t)100 ? (size_t)100 : nb);
ob = b;
}
#endif
rc = 0;
if (b != NULL) {
#ifdef HAVE_ICONV
ob = strdup_locale_from_utf8(b);
if (ob != NULL) {
rc = fprintf(stream, "%s", ob);
free(ob);
} else
#endif
rc = fprintf(stream, "%s", b);
free (b);
}
return rc;
}
#endif /* !defined(POPT_fprintf) */

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
/** \ingroup popt
* \file popt/poptint.h
* @file
*/
/* (C) 1998-2000 Red Hat, Inc. -- Licensing details are in the COPYING
@@ -9,108 +9,145 @@
#ifndef H_POPTINT
#define H_POPTINT
#include <stdint.h>
/**
* Wrapper to free(3), hides const compilation noise, permit NULL, return NULL.
* @param p memory to free
* @retval NULL always
*/
/*@unused@*/ static inline /*@null@*/ void *
_free(/*@only@*/ /*@null@*/ const void * p)
/*@modifies p @*/
static inline void *
_free(const void * p)
{
if (p != NULL) free((void *)p);
return NULL;
}
static inline int
isSpace(const char *ptr)
{
return isspace(*(unsigned char *)ptr);
}
/* Bit mask macros. */
/*@-exporttype -redef @*/
typedef unsigned int __pbm_bits;
/*@=exporttype =redef @*/
#define __PBM_NBITS (8 * sizeof (__pbm_bits))
#define __PBM_IX(d) ((d) / __PBM_NBITS)
#define __PBM_MASK(d) ((__pbm_bits) 1 << (((unsigned)(d)) % __PBM_NBITS))
/*@-exporttype -redef @*/
typedef struct {
__pbm_bits bits[1];
} pbm_set;
/*@=exporttype =redef @*/
#define __PBM_BITS(set) ((set)->bits)
#define PBM_ALLOC(d) calloc(__PBM_IX (d) + 1, sizeof(__pbm_bits))
#define PBM_ALLOC(d) calloc(__PBM_IX (d) + 1, sizeof(pbm_set))
#define PBM_FREE(s) _free(s);
#define PBM_SET(d, s) (__PBM_BITS (s)[__PBM_IX (d)] |= __PBM_MASK (d))
#define PBM_CLR(d, s) (__PBM_BITS (s)[__PBM_IX (d)] &= ~__PBM_MASK (d))
#define PBM_ISSET(d, s) ((__PBM_BITS (s)[__PBM_IX (d)] & __PBM_MASK (d)) != 0)
extern void poptJlu32lpair(const void *key, size_t size,
uint32_t *pc, uint32_t *pb);
/** \ingroup popt
* Typedef's for string and array of strings.
*/
typedef const char * poptString;
typedef poptString * poptArgv;
/** \ingroup popt
* A union to simplify opt->arg access without casting.
*/
typedef union poptArg_u {
void * ptr;
int * intp;
short * shortp;
long * longp;
long long * longlongp;
float * floatp;
double * doublep;
const char ** argv;
poptCallbackType cb;
poptOption opt;
} poptArg;
extern unsigned int _poptArgMask;
extern unsigned int _poptGroupMask;
#define poptArgType(_opt) ((_opt)->argInfo & _poptArgMask)
#define poptGroup(_opt) ((_opt)->argInfo & _poptGroupMask)
#define F_ISSET(_opt, _FLAG) ((_opt)->argInfo & POPT_ARGFLAG_##_FLAG)
#define LF_ISSET(_FLAG) (argInfo & POPT_ARGFLAG_##_FLAG)
#define CBF_ISSET(_opt, _FLAG) ((_opt)->argInfo & POPT_CBFLAG_##_FLAG)
/* XXX sick hack to preserve pretense of a popt-1.x ABI. */
#define poptSubstituteHelpI18N(opt) \
{ if ((opt) == poptHelpOptions) (opt) = poptHelpOptionsI18N; }
struct optionStackEntry {
int argc;
/*@only@*/ /*@null@*/
const char ** argv;
/*@only@*/ /*@null@*/
poptArgv argv;
pbm_set * argb;
int next;
/*@only@*/ /*@null@*/
const char * nextArg;
/*@observer@*/ /*@null@*/
char * nextArg;
const char * nextCharArg;
/*@dependent@*/ /*@null@*/
poptItem currAlias;
int stuffed;
};
struct poptContext_s {
struct optionStackEntry optionStack[POPT_OPTION_DEPTH];
/*@dependent@*/
struct optionStackEntry * os;
/*@owned@*/ /*@null@*/
const char ** leftovers;
poptArgv leftovers;
int numLeftovers;
int allocLeftovers;
int nextLeftover;
/*@keep@*/
const struct poptOption * options;
int restLeftover;
/*@only@*/ /*@null@*/
const char * appName;
/*@only@*/ /*@null@*/
poptItem aliases;
int numAliases;
int flags;
/*@owned@*/ /*@null@*/
unsigned int flags;
poptItem execs;
int numExecs;
/*@only@*/ /*@null@*/
const char ** finalArgv;
char * execFail;
poptArgv finalArgv;
int finalArgvCount;
int finalArgvAlloced;
/*@dependent@*/ /*@null@*/
int (*maincall) (int argc, const char **argv);
poptItem doExec;
/*@only@*/
const char * execPath;
int execAbsolute;
/*@only@*/ /*@relnull@*/
const char * otherHelp;
/*@null@*/
pbm_set * arg_strip;
};
#ifdef HAVE_LIBINTL_H
#if defined(POPT_fprintf)
#define POPT_dgettext dgettext
#else
#ifdef HAVE_ICONV
#include <iconv.h>
#endif
#if defined(HAVE_DCGETTEXT)
char *POPT_dgettext(const char * dom, const char * str);
#endif
FORMAT(printf, 2, 3)
int POPT_fprintf (FILE* stream, const char *format, ...);
#endif /* !defined(POPT_fprintf) */
const char *POPT_prev_char (const char *str);
const char *POPT_next_char (const char *str);
#endif
#if defined(ENABLE_NLS) && defined(HAVE_LIBINTL_H)
#include <libintl.h>
#endif
#if defined(HAVE_GETTEXT) && !defined(__LCLINT__)
#if defined(ENABLE_NLS) && defined(HAVE_GETTEXT)
#define _(foo) gettext(foo)
#else
#define _(foo) foo
#endif
#if defined(HAVE_DCGETTEXT) && !defined(__LCLINT__)
#define D_(dom, str) dgettext(dom, str)
#if defined(ENABLE_NLS) && defined(HAVE_LIBINTL_H) && defined(HAVE_DCGETTEXT)
#define D_(dom, str) POPT_dgettext(dom, str)
#define POPT_(foo) D_("popt", foo)
#else
#define D_(dom, str) str
@@ -119,4 +156,3 @@ struct poptContext_s {
#define N_(foo) foo
#endif

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
/** \ingroup popt
* \file popt/poptparse.c
* @file
*/
/* (C) 1998-2002 Red Hat, Inc. -- Licensing details are in the COPYING
@@ -8,11 +8,8 @@
#include "system.h"
#include "poptint.h"
#define POPT_ARGV_ARRAY_GROW_DELTA 5
/*@-boundswrite@*/
int poptDupArgv(int argc, const char **argv,
int * argcPtr, const char *** argvPtr)
{
@@ -34,13 +31,13 @@ int poptDupArgv(int argc, const char **argv,
return POPT_ERROR_MALLOC;
argv2 = (void *) dst;
dst += (argc + 1) * sizeof(*argv);
*dst = '\0';
/*@-branchstate@*/
for (i = 0; i < argc; i++) {
argv2[i] = dst;
dst += strlcpy(dst, argv[i], nb) + 1;
dst = stpcpy(dst, argv[i]);
dst++; /* trailing NUL */
}
/*@=branchstate@*/
argv2[argc] = NULL;
if (argvPtr) {
@@ -53,21 +50,25 @@ int poptDupArgv(int argc, const char **argv,
*argcPtr = argc;
return 0;
}
/*@=boundswrite@*/
/*@-bounds@*/
int poptParseArgvString(const char * s, int * argcPtr, const char *** argvPtr)
{
const char * src;
char quote = '\0';
int argvAlloced = POPT_ARGV_ARRAY_GROW_DELTA;
const char ** argv = malloc(sizeof(*argv) * argvAlloced);
const char ** argv_tmp;
int argc = 0;
int buflen = strlen(s) + 1;
char * buf = memset(alloca(buflen), 0, buflen);
size_t buflen = strlen(s) + 1;
char * buf, * bufOrig = NULL;
int rc = POPT_ERROR_MALLOC;
if (argv == NULL) return rc;
buf = bufOrig = calloc((size_t)1, buflen);
if (buf == NULL) {
free(argv);
return rc;
}
argv[argc] = buf;
for (src = s; *src != '\0'; src++) {
@@ -83,13 +84,14 @@ int poptParseArgvString(const char * s, int * argcPtr, const char *** argvPtr)
if (*src != quote) *buf++ = '\\';
}
*buf++ = *src;
} else if (isSpace(src)) {
} else if (_isspaceptr(src)) {
if (*argv[argc] != '\0') {
buf++, argc++;
if (argc == argvAlloced) {
argvAlloced += POPT_ARGV_ARRAY_GROW_DELTA;
argv = realloc(argv, sizeof(*argv) * argvAlloced);
if (argv == NULL) goto exit;
argv_tmp = realloc(argv, sizeof(*argv) * argvAlloced);
if (argv_tmp == NULL) goto exit;
argv = argv_tmp;
}
argv[argc] = buf;
}
@@ -97,17 +99,17 @@ int poptParseArgvString(const char * s, int * argcPtr, const char *** argvPtr)
case '"':
case '\'':
quote = *src;
/*@switchbreak@*/ break;
break;
case '\\':
src++;
if (!*src) {
rc = POPT_ERROR_BADQUOTE;
goto exit;
}
/*@fallthrough@*/
/* fallthrough */
default:
*buf++ = *src;
/*@switchbreak@*/ break;
break;
}
}
@@ -118,29 +120,30 @@ int poptParseArgvString(const char * s, int * argcPtr, const char *** argvPtr)
rc = poptDupArgv(argc, argv, argcPtr, argvPtr);
exit:
if (bufOrig) free(bufOrig);
if (argv) free(argv);
return rc;
}
/*@=bounds@*/
/* still in the dev stage.
* return values, perhaps 1== file erro
* return values, perhaps 1== file error
* 2== line to long
* 3== umm.... more?
*/
int poptConfigFileToString(FILE *fp, char ** argstrp, /*@unused@*/ UNUSED(int flags))
int poptConfigFileToString(FILE *fp, char ** argstrp,
UNUSED(int flags))
{
char line[999];
char * argstr;
char * argstr_tmp;
char * p;
char * q;
char * x;
int t;
int argvlen = 0;
size_t t;
size_t argvlen = 0;
size_t maxlinelen = sizeof(line);
size_t linelen;
int maxargvlen = 480;
int linenum = 0;
size_t maxargvlen = (size_t)480;
*argstrp = NULL;
@@ -155,11 +158,10 @@ int poptConfigFileToString(FILE *fp, char ** argstrp, /*@unused@*/ UNUSED(int fl
if (argstr == NULL) return POPT_ERROR_MALLOC;
while (fgets(line, (int)maxlinelen, fp) != NULL) {
linenum++;
p = line;
/* loop until first non-space char or EOL */
while( *p != '\0' && isSpace(p) )
while( *p != '\0' && _isspaceptr(p) )
p++;
linelen = strlen(p);
@@ -173,25 +175,29 @@ int poptConfigFileToString(FILE *fp, char ** argstrp, /*@unused@*/ UNUSED(int fl
q = p;
while (*q != '\0' && (!isSpace(q)) && *q != '=')
while (*q != '\0' && (!_isspaceptr(q)) && *q != '=')
q++;
if (isSpace(q)) {
if (_isspaceptr(q)) {
/* a space after the name, find next non space */
*q++='\0';
while( *q != '\0' && isSpace(q) ) q++;
while( *q != '\0' && _isspaceptr(q) ) q++;
}
if (*q == '\0') {
/* single command line option (ie, no name=val, just name) */
q[-1] = '\0'; /* kill off newline from fgets() call */
argvlen += (t = q - p) + (sizeof(" --")-1);
argvlen += (t = (size_t)(q - p)) + (sizeof(" --")-1);
if (argvlen >= maxargvlen) {
maxargvlen = (t > maxargvlen) ? t*2 : maxargvlen*2;
argstr = realloc(argstr, maxargvlen);
if (argstr == NULL) return POPT_ERROR_MALLOC;
argstr_tmp = realloc(argstr, maxargvlen);
if (argstr_tmp == NULL) {
free(argstr);
return POPT_ERROR_MALLOC;
}
argstr = argstr_tmp;
}
strlcat(argstr, " --", maxargvlen);
strlcat(argstr, p, maxargvlen);
strcat(argstr, " --");
strcat(argstr, p);
continue;
}
if (*q != '=')
@@ -201,29 +207,33 @@ int poptConfigFileToString(FILE *fp, char ** argstrp, /*@unused@*/ UNUSED(int fl
*q++ = '\0';
/* find next non-space letter of value */
while (*q != '\0' && isSpace(q))
while (*q != '\0' && _isspaceptr(q))
q++;
if (*q == '\0')
continue; /* XXX silently ignore missing value */
/* now, loop and strip all ending whitespace */
x = p + linelen;
while (isSpace(--x))
*x = 0; /* null out last char if space (including fgets() NL) */
while (_isspaceptr(--x))
*x = '\0'; /* null out last char if space (including fgets() NL) */
/* rest of line accept */
t = x - p;
t = (size_t)(x - p);
argvlen += t + (sizeof("' --='")-1);
if (argvlen >= maxargvlen) {
maxargvlen = (t > maxargvlen) ? t*2 : maxargvlen*2;
argstr = realloc(argstr, maxargvlen);
if (argstr == NULL) return POPT_ERROR_MALLOC;
argstr_tmp = realloc(argstr, maxargvlen);
if (argstr_tmp == NULL) {
free(argstr);
return POPT_ERROR_MALLOC;
}
argstr = argstr_tmp;
}
strlcat(argstr, " --", maxargvlen);
strlcat(argstr, p, maxargvlen);
strlcat(argstr, "=\"", maxargvlen);
strlcat(argstr, q, maxargvlen);
strlcat(argstr, "\"", maxargvlen);
strcat(argstr, " --");
strcat(argstr, p);
strcat(argstr, "=\"");
strcat(argstr, q);
strcat(argstr, "\"");
}
*argstrp = argstr;

View File

@@ -1,134 +1,70 @@
/**
* @file
*/
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#include "config.h"
#endif
#if defined (__GLIBC__) && defined(__LCLINT__)
/*@-declundef@*/
/*@unchecked@*/
extern __const __int32_t *__ctype_tolower;
/*@unchecked@*/
extern __const __int32_t *__ctype_toupper;
/*@=declundef@*/
#endif
#ifdef __TANDEM
# include <floss.h(floss_execvp,floss_read)>
#endif
#include <ctype.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <limits.h>
/* XXX isspace(3) has i18n encoding signedness issues on Solaris. */
#define _isspaceptr(_chp) isspace((int)(*(unsigned const char *)(_chp)))
#if HAVE_MCHECK_H
#ifdef HAVE_MCHECK_H
#include <mcheck.h>
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H
# include <sys/types.h>
#endif
#ifdef STDC_HEADERS
# include <stdlib.h>
# include <stddef.h>
#else
# ifdef HAVE_STDLIB_H
# include <stdlib.h>
# endif
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_STRING_H
# if !defined STDC_HEADERS && defined HAVE_MEMORY_H
# include <memory.h>
# endif
# include <string.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_STRINGS_H
# include <strings.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
# include <unistd.h>
#endif
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#ifndef __GNUC__
#define __attribute__(x)
#endif
void * xmalloc (size_t size);
#ifdef __NeXT
/* access macros are not declared in non posix mode in unistd.h -
don't try to use posix on NeXTstep 3.3 ! */
#include <libc.h>
#endif
void * xcalloc (size_t nmemb, size_t size);
#if defined(__LCLINT__)
/*@-declundef -incondefs @*/ /* LCL: missing annotation */
/*@only@*/ /*@out@*/
void * alloca (size_t __size)
/*@ensures MaxSet(result) == (__size - 1) @*/
/*@*/;
/*@=declundef =incondefs @*/
#endif
void * xrealloc (void * ptr, size_t size);
/* AIX requires this to be the first thing in the file. */
#ifndef __GNUC__
# if HAVE_ALLOCA_H
# include <alloca.h>
# else
# ifdef _AIX
#pragma alloca
# else
# ifdef HAVE_ALLOCA
# ifndef alloca /* predefined by HP cc +Olibcalls */
char *alloca(size_t size);
# endif
# else
# ifdef alloca
# undef alloca
# endif
# define alloca(sz) malloc(sz) /* Kludge this for now */
# endif
# endif
# endif
#elif !defined(alloca)
#define alloca __builtin_alloca
#endif
char * xstrdup (const char *str);
#ifndef HAVE_STRLCPY
size_t strlcpy(char *d, const char *s, size_t bufsize);
#endif
#if !defined(HAVE_STPCPY)
/* Copy SRC to DEST, returning the address of the terminating '\0' in DEST. */
static inline char * stpcpy (char *dest, const char * src) {
register char *d = dest;
register const char *s = src;
#ifndef HAVE_STRLCAT
size_t strlcat(char *d, const char *s, size_t bufsize);
#endif
#if HAVE_MCHECK_H && defined(__GNUC__)
static inline char *
xstrdup(const char *s)
{
size_t memsize = strlen(s) + 1;
char *ptr = malloc(memsize);
if (!ptr) {
fprintf(stderr, "virtual memory exhausted.\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
strlcpy(ptr, s, memsize);
return ptr;
do
*d++ = *s;
while (*s++ != '\0');
return d - 1;
}
#else
#define xstrdup(_str) strdup(_str)
#endif /* HAVE_MCHECK_H && defined(__GNUC__) */
#endif
#if HAVE___SECURE_GETENV && !defined(__LCLINT__)
/* Memory allocation via macro defs to get meaningful locations from mtrace() */
#if defined(HAVE_MCHECK_H) && defined(__GNUC__)
#define vmefail() (fprintf(stderr, "virtual memory exhausted.\n"), exit(EXIT_FAILURE), NULL)
#define xmalloc(_size) (malloc(_size) ? : vmefail())
#define xcalloc(_nmemb, _size) (calloc((_nmemb), (_size)) ? : vmefail())
#define xrealloc(_ptr, _size) (realloc((_ptr), (_size)) ? : vmefail())
#define xstrdup(_str) (strcpy((malloc(strlen(_str)+1) ? : vmefail()), (_str)))
#else
#define xmalloc(_size) malloc(_size)
#define xcalloc(_nmemb, _size) calloc((_nmemb), (_size))
#define xrealloc(_ptr, _size) realloc((_ptr), (_size))
#define xstrdup(_str) strdup(_str)
#endif /* defined(HAVE_MCHECK_H) && defined(__GNUC__) */
#if defined(HAVE_SECURE_GETENV)
#define getenv(_s) secure_getenv(_s)
#elif defined(HAVE___SECURE_GETENV)
#define getenv(_s) __secure_getenv(_s)
#endif
#if !defined HAVE_SNPRINTF || !defined HAVE_C99_VSNPRINTF
#define snprintf rsync_snprintf
int snprintf(char *str,size_t count,const char *fmt,...);
#if !defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__attribute__)
#define __attribute__(x)
#endif
#define UNUSED(x) x __attribute__((__unused__))
#define PACKAGE "rsync"
#define FORMAT(a, b, c) __attribute__((__format__ (a, b, c)))
#define NORETURN __attribute__((__noreturn__))
#include "popt.h"

View File

@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
*
* Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Andrew Tridgell
* Copyright (C) 1996 Paul Mackerras
* Copyright (C) 2003-2022 Wayne Davison
* Copyright (C) 2003-2023 Wayne Davison
*
* 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
@@ -66,9 +66,11 @@ extern char sender_file_sum[MAX_DIGEST_LEN];
extern struct file_list *cur_flist, *first_flist, *dir_flist;
extern filter_rule_list daemon_filter_list;
extern OFF_T preallocated_len;
extern int fuzzy_basis;
extern struct name_num_item *xfer_sum_nni;
extern int xfer_sum_len;
extern int use_secure_symlinks;
static struct bitbag *delayed_bits = NULL;
static int phase = 0, redoing = 0;
@@ -81,6 +83,65 @@ static int updating_basis_or_equiv;
#define MAX_UNIQUE_NUMBER 999999
#define MAX_UNIQUE_LOOP 100
/* Open a basis/output path that may legitimately be an operator-trusted
* ABSOLUTE path -- e.g. an absolute --partial-dir ("a directory reserved for
* partial-dir work") or --backup-dir. secure_relative_open() deliberately
* rejects an absolute relpath, so feeding it the whole absolute partialptr
* (with a NULL basedir) returns EINVAL: the basis fd is then -1, no basis is
* mapped, and receive_data() omits every matched block from the whole-file
* verification checksum -> a spurious "failed verification" that strands the
* (correct) data in the partial-dir forever.
*
* The operator's directory is trusted; only the leaf basename is peer-supplied.
* So when basedir is NULL and relpath is absolute, split it into its directory
* (trusted) and leaf and confine just the leaf -- exactly how secure_relative_
* open already trusts an absolute basedir while O_NOFOLLOW-confining the leaf.
* Anything else is a straight pass-through that preserves the strict contract. */
static int secure_basis_open(const char *basedir, const char *relpath, int flags, mode_t mode)
{
extern int am_daemon, am_chrooted;
/* The confined resolver is only needed for the sanitizing daemon
* (am_daemon && !am_chrooted, i.e. use_secure_symlinks). Local /
* remote-shell mode has no module boundary, and "use chroot = yes" makes
* the kernel root the boundary, so there an alt-dest basis like
* --link-dest=../01 must resolve against the cwd as a bare open did before
* the hardening (confining it would reject the legitimate sibling "..",
* #915). */
if (!am_daemon || am_chrooted) {
if (basedir) {
char fullpath[MAXPATHLEN];
if (pathjoin(fullpath, sizeof fullpath, basedir, relpath) >= sizeof fullpath) {
errno = ENAMETOOLONG;
return -1;
}
return do_open(fullpath, flags, mode);
}
return do_open(relpath, flags, mode);
}
if (!basedir && relpath && *relpath == '/') {
const char *slash = strrchr(relpath, '/');
const char *leaf = slash + 1;
char dirbuf[MAXPATHLEN];
const char *dir;
if (slash == relpath)
dir = "/";
else {
size_t dlen = slash - relpath;
if (dlen >= sizeof dirbuf) {
errno = ENAMETOOLONG;
return -1;
}
memcpy(dirbuf, relpath, dlen);
dirbuf[dlen] = '\0';
dir = dirbuf;
}
return secure_relative_open(dir, leaf, flags, mode);
}
return secure_relative_open(basedir, relpath, flags, mode);
}
/* get_tmpname() - create a tmp filename for a given filename
*
* If a tmpdir is defined, use that as the directory to put it in. Otherwise,
@@ -213,7 +274,12 @@ int open_tmpfile(char *fnametmp, const char *fname, struct file_struct *file)
* access to ensure that there is no race condition. They will be
* correctly updated after the right owner and group info is set.
* (Thanks to snabb@epipe.fi for pointing this out.) */
fd = do_mkstemp(fnametmp, (file->mode|added_perms) & INITACCESSPERMS);
/* When use_secure_symlinks is on (non-chroot daemon with munge_symlinks),
* use secure_mkstemp to prevent symlink race attacks on parent directories. */
if (use_secure_symlinks)
fd = secure_mkstemp(fnametmp, (file->mode|added_perms) & INITACCESSPERMS);
else
fd = do_mkstemp(fnametmp, (file->mode|added_perms) & INITACCESSPERMS);
#if 0
/* In most cases parent directories will already exist because their
@@ -311,7 +377,12 @@ static int receive_data(int f_in, char *fname_r, int fd_r, OFF_T size_r,
}
}
while ((i = recv_token(f_in, &data)) != 0) {
while (1) {
data = NULL;
i = recv_token(f_in, &data);
if (i == 0)
break;
if (INFO_GTE(PROGRESS, 1))
show_progress(offset, total_size);
@@ -319,6 +390,10 @@ static int receive_data(int f_in, char *fname_r, int fd_r, OFF_T size_r,
maybe_send_keepalive(time(NULL), MSK_ALLOW_FLUSH | MSK_ACTIVE_RECEIVER);
if (i > 0) {
if (!data) {
rprintf(FERROR, "Invalid literal token with no data [%s]\n", who_am_i());
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
if (DEBUG_GTE(DELTASUM, 3)) {
rprintf(FINFO,"data recv %d at %s\n",
i, big_num(offset));
@@ -336,6 +411,11 @@ static int receive_data(int f_in, char *fname_r, int fd_r, OFF_T size_r,
}
i = -(i+1);
if (i < 0 || i >= sum.count) {
rprintf(FERROR, "Invalid block index %d (count=%ld) [%s]\n",
i, (long)sum.count, who_am_i());
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
offset2 = i * (OFF_T)sum.blength;
len = sum.blength;
if (i == (int)sum.count-1 && sum.remainder != 0)
@@ -343,6 +423,18 @@ static int receive_data(int f_in, char *fname_r, int fd_r, OFF_T size_r,
stats.matched_data += len;
/* A block match can only be honored if we actually mapped the
* basis. If we didn't (basis open failed), the sender should
* never have been told a basis existed -- treat it as a protocol
* inconsistency rather than silently omitting these bytes from
* the verification checksum (which yields a spurious failure) or
* leaving a hole in the output. */
if (!mapbuf) {
rprintf(FERROR, "got a block match with no basis file for %s [%s]\n",
full_fname(fname), who_am_i());
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
if (DEBUG_GTE(DELTASUM, 3)) {
rprintf(FINFO,
"chunk[%d] of size %ld at %s offset=%s%s\n",
@@ -372,7 +464,7 @@ static int receive_data(int f_in, char *fname_r, int fd_r, OFF_T size_r,
if (fd != -1 && offset > 0) {
if (sparse_files > 0) {
if (sparse_end(fd, offset) != 0)
if (sparse_end(fd, offset, updating_basis_or_equiv) != 0)
goto report_write_error;
} else if (flush_write_file(fd) < 0) {
report_write_error:
@@ -435,7 +527,7 @@ static void handle_delayed_updates(char *local_name)
}
/* We don't use robust_rename() here because the
* partial-dir must be on the same drive. */
if (do_rename(partialptr, fname) < 0) {
if (do_rename_at(partialptr, fname) < 0) {
rsyserr(FERROR_XFER, errno,
"rename failed for %s (from %s)",
full_fname(fname), partialptr);
@@ -451,7 +543,10 @@ static void handle_delayed_updates(char *local_name)
static void no_batched_update(int ndx, BOOL is_redo)
{
struct file_list *flist = flist_for_ndx(ndx, "no_batched_update");
struct file_struct *file = flist->files[ndx - flist->ndx_start];
struct file_struct *file;
if (ndx < flist->ndx_start)
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
file = flist->files[ndx - flist->ndx_start];
rprintf(FERROR_XFER, "(No batched update for%s \"%s\")\n",
is_redo ? " resend of" : "", f_name(file, NULL));
@@ -551,6 +646,8 @@ int recv_files(int f_in, int f_out, char *local_name)
progress_init();
while (1) {
const char *basedir = NULL;
cleanup_disable();
/* This call also sets cur_flist. */
@@ -586,6 +683,8 @@ int recv_files(int f_in, int f_out, char *local_name)
if (ndx - cur_flist->ndx_start >= 0)
file = cur_flist->files[ndx - cur_flist->ndx_start];
else if (cur_flist->parent_ndx < 0)
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
else
file = dir_flist->files[cur_flist->parent_ndx];
fname = local_name ? local_name : f_name(file, fbuf);
@@ -716,28 +815,34 @@ int recv_files(int f_in, int f_out, char *local_name)
fnamecmp = get_backup_name(fname);
break;
case FNAMECMP_FUZZY:
if (fuzzy_basis == 0) {
rprintf(FERROR_XFER, "rsync: refusing malicious fuzzy operation for %s\n", xname);
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
}
if (file->dirname) {
pathjoin(fnamecmpbuf, sizeof fnamecmpbuf, file->dirname, xname);
fnamecmp = fnamecmpbuf;
} else
fnamecmp = xname;
basedir = file->dirname;
}
fnamecmp = xname;
break;
default:
if (fnamecmp_type > FNAMECMP_FUZZY && fnamecmp_type-FNAMECMP_FUZZY <= basis_dir_cnt) {
fnamecmp_type -= FNAMECMP_FUZZY + 1;
if (file->dirname) {
stringjoin(fnamecmpbuf, sizeof fnamecmpbuf,
basis_dir[fnamecmp_type], "/", file->dirname, "/", xname, NULL);
} else
pathjoin(fnamecmpbuf, sizeof fnamecmpbuf, basis_dir[fnamecmp_type], xname);
pathjoin(fnamecmpbuf, sizeof fnamecmpbuf, basis_dir[fnamecmp_type], file->dirname);
basedir = fnamecmpbuf;
} else {
basedir = basis_dir[fnamecmp_type];
}
fnamecmp = xname;
} else if (fnamecmp_type >= basis_dir_cnt) {
rprintf(FERROR,
"invalid basis_dir index: %d.\n",
fnamecmp_type);
exit_cleanup(RERR_PROTOCOL);
} else
pathjoin(fnamecmpbuf, sizeof fnamecmpbuf, basis_dir[fnamecmp_type], fname);
fnamecmp = fnamecmpbuf;
} else {
basedir = basis_dir[fnamecmp_type];
fnamecmp = fname;
}
break;
}
if (!fnamecmp || (daemon_filter_list.head
@@ -759,26 +864,33 @@ int recv_files(int f_in, int f_out, char *local_name)
fnamecmp = fname;
}
/* open the file */
fd1 = do_open(fnamecmp, O_RDONLY, 0);
/* open the file (secure_basis_open tolerates an operator-trusted
* absolute fnamecmp, e.g. an absolute --partial-dir basis) */
fd1 = secure_basis_open(basedir, fnamecmp, O_RDONLY, 0);
if (fd1 == -1 && protocol_version < 29) {
if (fnamecmp != fname) {
fnamecmp = fname;
fnamecmp_type = FNAMECMP_FNAME;
fd1 = do_open(fnamecmp, O_RDONLY, 0);
fd1 = do_open_nofollow(fnamecmp, O_RDONLY);
}
if (fd1 == -1 && basis_dir[0]) {
/* pre-29 allowed only one alternate basis */
pathjoin(fnamecmpbuf, sizeof fnamecmpbuf,
basis_dir[0], fname);
fnamecmp = fnamecmpbuf;
basedir = basis_dir[0];
fnamecmp = fname;
fnamecmp_type = FNAMECMP_BASIS_DIR_LOW;
fd1 = do_open(fnamecmp, O_RDONLY, 0);
fd1 = secure_basis_open(basedir, fnamecmp, O_RDONLY, 0);
}
}
if (basedir) {
// for the following code we need the full
// path name as a single string
pathjoin(fnamecmpbuf, sizeof fnamecmpbuf, basedir, fnamecmp);
fnamecmp = fnamecmpbuf;
}
one_inplace = inplace_partial && fnamecmp_type == FNAMECMP_PARTIAL_DIR;
updating_basis_or_equiv = one_inplace
|| (inplace && (fnamecmp == fname || fnamecmp_type == FNAMECMP_BACKUP));
@@ -839,13 +951,52 @@ int recv_files(int f_in, int f_out, char *local_name)
/* We now check to see if we are writing the file "inplace" */
if (inplace || one_inplace) {
fnametmp = one_inplace ? partialptr : fname;
fd2 = do_open(fnametmp, O_WRONLY|O_CREAT, 0600);
/* When use_secure_symlinks is on (non-chroot daemon),
* use secure open to prevent symlink race attacks where an
* attacker could switch a directory to a symlink between
* path validation and file open. */
if (use_secure_symlinks)
fd2 = secure_basis_open(NULL, fnametmp, O_WRONLY|O_CREAT, 0600);
else
fd2 = do_open(fnametmp, O_WRONLY|O_CREAT, 0600);
#ifdef linux
if (fd2 == -1 && errno == EACCES) {
/* Maybe the error was due to protected_regular setting? */
fd2 = do_open(fname, O_WRONLY, 0600);
if (use_secure_symlinks)
fd2 = secure_relative_open(NULL, fnametmp, O_WRONLY, 0600);
else
fd2 = do_open(fnametmp, O_WRONLY, 0600);
}
#endif
if (fd2 == -1 && errno == EACCES) {
/* A read-only existing file: make it writable, then retry
* (its mode is restored after the transfer). On a
* non-chroot daemon fchmod() a no-follow fd rather than
* chmod the path, so a symlink raced into fnametmp can't
* redirect the chmod (do_chmod_at follows the final link). */
int errno_save = errno, chmod_ok;
if (use_secure_symlinks) {
#ifdef O_NOFOLLOW
int cfd = secure_relative_open(NULL, fnametmp, O_RDONLY|O_NOFOLLOW, 0);
chmod_ok = cfd != -1 && fchmod(cfd, 0600) == 0;
if (cfd != -1)
close(cfd);
#else
/* Without O_NOFOLLOW the resolver's oldest fallback would
* follow a raced symlink, so fail closed rather than
* chmod through it. */
chmod_ok = 0;
#endif
} else
chmod_ok = do_chmod_at(fnametmp, 0600) == 0;
if (chmod_ok) {
if (use_secure_symlinks)
fd2 = secure_relative_open(NULL, fnametmp, O_WRONLY, 0600);
else
fd2 = do_open(fnametmp, O_WRONLY, 0600);
} else
errno = errno_save;
}
if (fd2 == -1) {
rsyserr(FERROR_XFER, errno, "open %s failed",
full_fname(fnametmp));
@@ -895,7 +1046,7 @@ int recv_files(int f_in, int f_out, char *local_name)
recv_ok = -1;
else if (fnamecmp == partialptr) {
if (!one_inplace)
do_unlink(partialptr);
do_unlink_at(partialptr);
handle_partial_dir(partialptr, PDIR_DELETE);
}
} else if (keep_partial && partialptr && (!one_inplace || delay_updates)) {
@@ -904,7 +1055,7 @@ int recv_files(int f_in, int f_out, char *local_name)
"Unable to create partial-dir for %s -- discarding %s.\n",
local_name ? local_name : f_name(file, NULL),
recv_ok ? "completed file" : "partial file");
do_unlink(fnametmp);
do_unlink_at(fnametmp);
recv_ok = -1;
} else if (!finish_transfer(partialptr, fnametmp, fnamecmp, NULL,
file, recv_ok, !partial_dir))
@@ -915,7 +1066,7 @@ int recv_files(int f_in, int f_out, char *local_name)
} else
partialptr = NULL;
} else if (!one_inplace)
do_unlink(fnametmp);
do_unlink_at(fnametmp);
cleanup_disable();

11
rsync-web/.gitignore vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
/.xvpics
/doxygen/
/tech_report/IMG_PARAMS.dir
/tech_report/IMG_PARAMS.pag
/upload
/netware
/pre-change
/index.html-*
/rsync-and-debian/rsync-and-debian.html
/rsync-and-debian/rsync-and-debian.ps
/badge.svg

674
rsync-web/COPYING.html Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,674 @@
GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 3, 29 June 2007
Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;<a href="https://fsf.org/">https://fsf.org/</a>&gt;
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
Preamble
The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for
software and other kinds of works.
The licenses for most software and other practical works are designed
to take away your freedom to share and change the works. By contrast,
the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to
share and change all versions of a program--to make sure it remains free
software for all its users. We, the Free Software Foundation, use the
GNU General Public License for most of our software; it applies also to
any other work released this way by its authors. You can apply it to
your programs, too.
When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not
price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you
have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for
them if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it if you
want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new
free programs, and that you know you can do these things.
To protect your rights, we need to prevent others from denying you
these rights or asking you to surrender the rights. Therefore, you have
certain responsibilities if you distribute copies of the software, or if
you modify it: responsibilities to respect the freedom of others.
For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether
gratis or for a fee, you must pass on to the recipients the same
freedoms that you received. You must make sure that they, too, receive
or can get the source code. And you must show them these terms so they
know their rights.
Developers that use the GNU GPL protect your rights with two steps:
(1) assert copyright on the software, and (2) offer you this License
giving you legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify it.
For the developers' and authors' protection, the GPL clearly explains
that there is no warranty for this free software. For both users' and
authors' sake, the GPL requires that modified versions be marked as
changed, so that their problems will not be attributed erroneously to
authors of previous versions.
Some devices are designed to deny users access to install or run
modified versions of the software inside them, although the manufacturer
can do so. This is fundamentally incompatible with the aim of
protecting users' freedom to change the software. The systematic
pattern of such abuse occurs in the area of products for individuals to
use, which is precisely where it is most unacceptable. Therefore, we
have designed this version of the GPL to prohibit the practice for those
products. If such problems arise substantially in other domains, we
stand ready to extend this provision to those domains in future versions
of the GPL, as needed to protect the freedom of users.
Finally, every program is threatened constantly by software patents.
States should not allow patents to restrict development and use of
software on general-purpose computers, but in those that do, we wish to
avoid the special danger that patents applied to a free program could
make it effectively proprietary. To prevent this, the GPL assures that
patents cannot be used to render the program non-free.
The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and
modification follow.
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
0. Definitions.
"This License" refers to version 3 of the GNU General Public License.
"Copyright" also means copyright-like laws that apply to other kinds of
works, such as semiconductor masks.
"The Program" refers to any copyrightable work licensed under this
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"recipients" may be individuals or organizations.
To "modify" a work means to copy from or adapt all or part of the work
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A "covered work" means either the unmodified Program or a work based
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To "propagate" a work means to do anything with it that, without
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To "convey" a work means any kind of propagation that enables other
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An interactive user interface displays "Appropriate Legal Notices"
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The "System Libraries" of an executable work include anything, other
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The Corresponding Source need not include anything that users
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The Corresponding Source for a work in source code form is that
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2. Basic Permissions.
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Notwithstanding any other provision of this License, you have
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THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY
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IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
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17. Interpretation of Sections 15 and 16.
If the disclaimer of warranty and limitation of liability provided
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END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
&lt;one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.&gt;
Copyright (C) &lt;year&gt; &lt;name of author&gt;
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 3 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, see &lt;<a href="https://www.gnu.org/licenses/">https://www.gnu.org/licenses/</a>&gt;.
Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short
notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode:
&lt;program&gt; Copyright (C) &lt;year&gt; &lt;name of author&gt;
This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands
might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box".
You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school,
if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary.
For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see
&lt;<a href="https://www.gnu.org/licenses/">https://www.gnu.org/licenses/</a>&gt;.
The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program
into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you
may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with
the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General
Public License instead of this License. But first, please read
&lt;<a href="https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html">https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html</a>&gt;.

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GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 2, June 1991
Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
Preamble
The licenses for most software are designed to take away your
freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public
License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free
software--to make sure the software is free for all its users. This
General Public License applies to most of the Free Software
Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to
using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by
the GNU Library General Public License instead.) You can apply it to
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When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not
price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you
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To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid
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We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and
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Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software
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The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and
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<hr>
GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
0. This License applies to any program or other work which contains
a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed
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Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not
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conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate
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notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty;
and give any other recipients of the Program a copy of this License
along with the Program.
You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and
you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee.
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of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and
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above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
a) You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices
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whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any
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when run, you must cause it, when started running for such
interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an
announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a
notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide
a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under
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does not normally print such an announcement, your work based on
the Program is not required to print an announcement.)
<hr>
These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If
identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program,
and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in
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sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you
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Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest
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collective works based on the Program.
In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program
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the scope of this License.
3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it,
under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of
Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following:
a) Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable
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customarily used for software interchange; or,
c) Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer
to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is
allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you
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<hr>
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<hr>
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How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
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To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
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convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
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&lt;one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.&gt;
Copyright (C) &lt;year&gt; &lt;name of author&gt;
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
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Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
when it starts in an interactive mode:
Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) year name of author
Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may
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You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
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necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
`Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
&lt;signature of Ty Coon&gt;, 1 April 1989
Ty Coon, President of Vice
This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
Public License instead of this License.

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<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN">
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<TITLE>rsync FAQ</TITLE>
</HEAD>
<!--#include virtual="header.html" -->
<H2 align="center">Frequently Asked Questions</H2>
<table><tr valign=top><td><ul>
<li><a href="#1">the transfer fails to finish</a><br>
<li><a href="#2">rsync recopies the same files</a><br>
<li><a href="#3">is your shell clean</a><br>
<li><a href="#4">memory usage</a><br>
<li><a href="#5">out of memory</a><br>
<li><a href="#6">rsync through a firewall</a><br>
<li><a href="#7">rsync and cron</a><br>
</ul></td><td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td><ul>
<li><a href="#8">rsync: Command not found</a><br>
<li><a href="#9">spaces in filenames</a><br>
<li><a href="#10">ignore "vanished files" warning</a><br>
<li><a href="#11">read-only file system</a><br>
<li><a href="#12">multiplexing overflow 101:7104843</a><br>
<li><a href="#13">inflate (token) returned -5</a><br>
</ul></td></tr></table>
<hr>
<h3><a name=1>the transfer fails to finish</a></h3>
<p>If you get an error like one of these:
<pre>rsync: error writing 4 unbuffered bytes - exiting: Broken pipe
rsync error: error in rsync protocol data stream (code 12) at io.c(463)
</pre>
<p>or
<pre>rsync: connection unexpectedly closed (24 bytes read so far)
rsync error: error in rsync protocol data stream (code 12) at io.c(342)
</pre>
<p>please read the <a href="issues.html">issues and debugging page</a>
for details on how you can try to figure out what is going wrong.
<hr>
<h3><a name=2>rsync recopies the same files</a></h3>
<p>Some people occasionally report that rsync copies too many files when
they expect it to copy only a few. In most cases the explanation is
that you forgot to include the --times (-t) option in the original copy,
so rsync is forced to (efficiently) transfer every file that differs in
its modified time to discover what data (if any) has changed.
<p>Another common cause involves sending files to an Microsoft filesystem:
if the file's modified time is an odd value but the receiving filesystem
can only store even values, then rsync will re-transfer too many files.
You can avoid this by specifying the --modify-window=1 option.
<p>Yet another periodic case can happen when daylight-savings time
changes if your OS+filesystem saves file times in local time instead of
UTC. For a full explanation of this and some suggestions on how to
avoid them problem, see <a href="daylight-savings.html">this document</a>.
<p>Something else that can trip up rsync is a filesystem changeing the
filename behind the scenes. This can happen when a filesystem changes
an all-uppercase name into lowercase, or when it decomposes UTF-8 behind
your back.
<blockquote>
<p>An example of the latter can occur with HFS+ on Mac OS X: if you
copy a directory with a file that has a UTF-8 character sequence in it,
say a 2-byte umlaut-u (\0303\0274), the file will get that character
stored by the filesystem using 3 bytes (\0165\0314\0210), and rsync will
not know that these differing filenames are the same file (it will, in
fact, remove a prior copy of the file if --delete is enabled, and then
recreate it).
<p>You can avoid a charset problem by passing an appropriate --iconv
option to rsync that tells it what character-set the source files are,
and what character-set the destination files get stored in. For
instance, the above Mac OS X problem would be dealt with by using
--iconv=UTF-8,UTF8-MAC (UTF8-MAC is a pseudo-charset recognized by Mac
OS X iconv in which all characters are decomposed).
</blockquote>
<p>If you think that rsync is copying too many files, look at the
itemized output (-i) to see why rsync is doing the update (e.g. the 't'
flag indicates that the time differs, or all pluses indicates that rsync
thinks the file doesn't exist). You can also look at the stats produced
with -v and see if rsync is really sending all the data. See also the
--checksum (-c) option for one way to avoid the extra copying of files
that don't have synchronized modified times (but keep in mind that the
-c option eats lots of disk I/O, and can be rather slow).
<hr>
<h3><a name=3>is your shell clean</a></h3>
<p>The "is your shell clean" message and the "protocol mismatch" message
are usually caused by having some sort of program in your .cshrc, .profile,
.bashrc or equivalent file that writes a message every time you connect
using a remote-shell program (such as ssh or rsh). Data written in this
way corrupts the rsync data stream. rsync detects this at startup and
produces those error messages. However, if you are using rsync-daemon
syntax (host::path or rsync://) without using a remote-shell program (no
--rsh or -e option), there is not remote-shell program involved, and the
problem is probably caused by an error on the daemon side (so check the
daemon logs).
<p>A good way to test if your remote-shell connection is clean is to try
something like this (use ssh or rsh, as appropriate):
<blockquote><pre>ssh remotesystem /bin/true &gt; test.dat</pre></blockquote>
<p>That should create a file called test.dat with nothing in it. If
test.dat is not of zero length then your shell is not clean. Look at the
contents of test.dat to see what was sent. Look at all the startup files on
remotesystem to try and find the problem.
<hr>
<h3><a name=4>memory usage</a></h3>
<p>Rsync versions before 3.0.0 always build the entire list of files to be
transferred at the beginning and hold it in memory for the entire run. Rsync
needs about 100 bytes to store all the relevant information for one file,
so (for example) a run with 800,000 files would consume about 80M of
memory. -H and --delete increase the memory usage further.
<p>Version 3.0.0 slightly reduced the memory used per file by not storing fields
not needed for a particular file. It also introduced an incremental recursion
mode that builds the file list in chunks and holds each chunk in memory only as
long as it is needed. This mode dramatically reduces memory usage, but it
only works provided that both sides are 3.0.0 or newer and certain options that
rsync currently can't handle in this mode are not being used.
<hr>
<h3><a name=5>out of memory</a></h3>
<p>The usual reason for "out of memory" when running rsync is that you are
transferring a _very_ large number of files. The size of the files doesn't
matter, only the total number of files. If memory is a problem, first try to
use the incremental recursion mode: upgrade both sides to rsync 3.0.0 or
newer and avoid options that disable incremental recursion (e.g., use
<tt>--delete-delay</tt> instead of <tt>--delete-after</tt>). If this is not
possible, you can break the rsync run into smaller chunks operating on
individual subdirectories using <tt>--relative</tt> and/or exclude rules.
<hr>
<h3><a name=6>rsync through a firewall</a></h3>
<p>If you have a setup where there is no way to directly connect two
systems for an rsync transfer, there are several ways to get a firewall
system to act as an intermediary in the transfer. You'll find full details
on the <a href="firewall.html">firewall methods</a> page.
<hr>
<h3><a name=7>rsync and cron</a></h3>
<p>On some systems (notably SunOS4) cron supplies what looks like a socket
to rsync, so rsync thinks that stdin is a socket. This means that if you
start rsync with the --daemon switch from a cron job you end up rsync
thinking it has been started from inetd. The fix is simple&mdash;just
redirect stdin from /dev/null in your cron job.
<hr>
<h3><a name=8>rsync: Command not found</a></h3>
<p>This error is produced when the remote shell is unable to locate the rsync
binary in your path. There are 3 possible solutions:
<ol>
<li>install rsync in a "standard" location that is in your remote path.
<li>modify your .cshrc, .bashrc etc on the remote system to include the path
that rsync is in
<li>use the --rsync-path option to explicitly specify the path on the
remote system where rsync is installed
</ol>
<p>You may echo find the command:
<blockquote><pre>ssh host 'echo $PATH'</pre></blockquote>
<p>for determining what your remote path is.
<hr>
<h3><a name=9>spaces in filenames</a></h3>
<p>Can rsync copy files with spaces in them?
<p>Short answer: Yes, rsync can handle filenames with spaces.
<p>Long answer:
<p>Rsync handles spaces just like any other unix command line application.
Within the code spaces are treated just like any other character so a
filename with a space is no different from a filename with any other
character in it.
<p>The problem of spaces is in the argv processing done to interpret the
command line. As with any other unix application you have to escape spaces
in some way on the command line or they will be used to separate arguments.
<p>It is slightly trickier in rsync (and other remote-copy programs like
scp) because rsync sends a command line to the remote system to launch the
peer copy of rsync (this assumes that we're not talking about daemon mode,
which is not affected by this problem because no remote shell is involved
in the reception of the filenames). The command line is interpreted by the
remote shell and thus the spaces need to arrive on the remote system
escaped so that the shell doesn't split such filenames into multiple
arguments.
<p>For example:
<blockquote><pre>rsync -av host:'a long filename' /tmp/</pre></blockquote>
<p>This is usually a request for rsync to copy 3 files from the remote
system, "a", "long", and "filename" (the only exception to this is for a
system running a shell that does not word-split arguments in its commands,
and that is exceedingly rare). If you wanted to request a single file with
spaces, you need to get some kind of space-quoting characters to the remote
shell that is running the remote rsync command. The following commands
should all work:
<blockquote><pre>rsync -av host:'"a long filename"' /tmp/
rsync -av host:'a\ long\ filename' /tmp/
rsync -av host:a\\\ long\\\ filename /tmp/</pre></blockquote>
<p>You might also like to use a '?' in place of a space as long as there
are no other matching filenames than the one with spaces (since '?' matches
any character):
<blockquote><pre>rsync -av host:a?long?filename /tmp/</pre></blockquote>
<p>As long as you know that the remote filenames on the command line
are interpreted by the remote shell then it all works fine.
<hr>
<h3><a name=10>ignore "vanished files" warning</a></h3>
<p>Some folks would like to ignore the "vanished files" warning, which
manifests as an exit-code 24. The easiest way to do this is to create
a shell script wrapper. For instance, name this something like
"rsync-no24":
<blockquote><pre>#!/bin/sh
rsync "$@"
e=$?
if test $e = 24; then
exit 0
fi
exit $e</pre></blockquote>
<hr>
<h3><a name=11>read-only file system</a></h3>
<p>If you get "Read-only file system" as an error when sending to a rsync
daemon then you probably forgot to set "read only = no" for that module.
<hr>
<h3><a name=12>multiplexing overflow 101:7104843</a></h3>
<p>This mysterious error, or the similar "invalid message 101:7104843", can
happen if one of the rsync processes is killed for some reason and a message
beginning with the four characters "Kill" gets inserted into the protocol
stream as a result. To solve the problem, you'll need to figure out why rsync
is being killed.
<hr>
<h3><a name=13>inflate (token) returned -5</a></h3>
This error means that rsync failed to handle an expected error from the
compression code for a file that happened to be transferred with a block size
of 32816 bytes. You can avoid this issue for the affected file by transferring
it with a manually-set block size (e.g. --block-size=33000), or by upgrading
the receiving side to rsync 3.0.7.
<hr>
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