diff options
author | SoniEx2 <endermoneymod@gmail.com> | 2021-04-09 07:19:03 -0300 |
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committer | SoniEx2 <endermoneymod@gmail.com> | 2021-04-09 07:19:03 -0300 |
commit | 0e752a6e215aee21dc73da097c3225495d54a5b6 (patch) | |
tree | b81be02cbf2f06aebf322ac4a5d014b44176bba5 /libotr/libgcrypt-1.8.7/random/rndunix.c | |
parent | 7754076c715285173311a1b6811ce377950e18a6 (diff) |
Add libotr/etc sources
Diffstat (limited to 'libotr/libgcrypt-1.8.7/random/rndunix.c')
-rw-r--r-- | libotr/libgcrypt-1.8.7/random/rndunix.c | 937 |
1 files changed, 937 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/libotr/libgcrypt-1.8.7/random/rndunix.c b/libotr/libgcrypt-1.8.7/random/rndunix.c new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fcb45b7 --- /dev/null +++ b/libotr/libgcrypt-1.8.7/random/rndunix.c @@ -0,0 +1,937 @@ +/**************************************************************************** + * * + * * + * Unix Randomness-Gathering Code * + * * + * Copyright Peter Gutmann, Paul Kendall, and Chris Wedgwood 1996-1999. * + * Heavily modified for GnuPG by Werner Koch * + * * + * * + ****************************************************************************/ + +/* This module is part of the cryptlib continuously seeded pseudorandom + number generator. For usage conditions, see lib_rand.c + + [Here is the notice from lib_rand.c:] + + This module and the misc/rnd*.c modules represent the cryptlib + continuously seeded pseudorandom number generator (CSPRNG) as described in + my 1998 Usenix Security Symposium paper "The generation of random numbers + for cryptographic purposes". + + The CSPRNG code is copyright Peter Gutmann (and various others) 1996, + 1997, 1998, 1999, all rights reserved. Redistribution of the CSPRNG + modules and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, + are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: + + 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice + and this permission notice in its entirety. + + 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the copyright notice in + the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. + + 3. A copy of any bugfixes or enhancements made must be provided to the + author, <pgut001@cs.auckland.ac.nz> to allow them to be added to the + baseline version of the code. + + ALTERNATIVELY, the code may be distributed under the terms of the + GNU Lesser General Public License, version 2.1 or any later version + published by the Free Software Foundation, in which case the + provisions of the GNU LGPL are required INSTEAD OF the above + restrictions. + + Although not required under the terms of the LGPL, it would still be + nice if you could make any changes available to the author to allow + a consistent code base to be maintained. */ +/************************************************************************* + The above alternative was changed from GPL to LGPL on 2007-08-22 with + permission from Peter Gutmann: + ========== + From: pgut001 <pgut001@cs.auckland.ac.nz> + Subject: Re: LGPL for the windows entropy gatherer + To: wk@gnupg.org + Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2007 03:05:42 +1200 + + Hi, + + >As of now libgcrypt is GPL under Windows due to that module and some people + >would really like to see it under LGPL too. Can you do such a license change + >to LGPL version 2? Note that LGPL give the user the option to relicense it + >under GPL, so the change would be pretty easy and backwar compatible. + + Sure. I assumed that since GPG was GPLd, you'd prefer the GPL for the entropy + code as well, but Ian asked for LGPL as an option so as of the next release + I'll have LGPL in there. You can consider it to be retroactive, so your + current version will be LGPLd as well. + + Peter. + ========== + From: pgut001 <pgut001@cs.auckland.ac.nz> + Subject: Re: LGPL for the windows entropy gatherer + To: wk@gnupg.org + Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2007 20:50:08 +1200 + + >Would you mind to extend this also to the Unix entropy gatherer which is + >still used on systems without /dev/random and when EGD is not installed? That + >would be the last GPLed piece in Libgcrypt. + + Sure, it covers the entire entropy-gathering subsystem. + + Peter. + ========= +*/ + +/* General includes */ + +#include <config.h> +#include <stdlib.h> +#include <stdio.h> +#ifdef HAVE_STDINT_H +# include <stdint.h> +#endif +#include <string.h> + +/* OS-specific includes */ + +#ifdef __osf__ + /* Somewhere in the morass of system-specific cruft which OSF/1 pulls in + * via the following includes are various endianness defines, so we + * undefine the cryptlib ones, which aren't really needed for this module + * anyway */ +#undef BIG_ENDIAN +#undef LITTLE_ENDIAN +#endif /* __osf__ */ + +#include <unistd.h> +#include <fcntl.h> +#include <pwd.h> +#ifndef __QNX__ +#include <sys/errno.h> +#include <sys/ipc.h> +#endif /* __QNX__ */ +#include <sys/time.h> /* SCO and SunOS need this before resource.h */ +#ifndef __QNX__ +#include <sys/resource.h> +#endif /* __QNX__ */ +#if defined( _AIX ) || defined( __QNX__ ) +#include <sys/select.h> +#endif /* _AIX */ +#ifndef __QNX__ +#include <sys/shm.h> +#include <signal.h> +#include <sys/signal.h> +#endif /* __QNX__ */ +#include <sys/stat.h> +#include <sys/types.h> /* Verschiedene komische Typen */ +#if defined( __hpux ) && ( OS_VERSION == 9 ) +#include <vfork.h> +#endif /* __hpux 9.x, after that it's in unistd.h */ +#include <sys/wait.h> +/* #include <kitchensink.h> */ +#ifdef __QNX__ +#include <signal.h> +#include <process.h> +#endif /* __QNX__ */ +#include <errno.h> + +#include "types.h" /* for byte and u32 typedefs */ +#include "g10lib.h" +#include "rand-internal.h" + +#ifndef EAGAIN +#define EAGAIN EWOULDBLOCK +#endif +#ifndef STDIN_FILENO +#define STDIN_FILENO 0 +#endif +#ifndef STDOUT_FILENO +#define STDOUT_FILENO 1 +#endif +#ifndef STDERR_FILENO +#define STDERR_FILENO 2 +#endif + +#define GATHER_BUFSIZE 49152 /* Usually about 25K are filled */ + +/* The structure containing information on random-data sources. Each + * record contains the source and a relative estimate of its usefulness + * (weighting) which is used to scale the number of kB of output from the + * source (total = data_bytes / usefulness). Usually the weighting is in the + * range 1-3 (or 0 for especially useless sources), resulting in a usefulness + * rating of 1...3 for each kB of source output (or 0 for the useless + * sources). + * + * If the source is constantly changing (certain types of network statistics + * have this characteristic) but the amount of output is small, the weighting + * is given as a negative value to indicate that the output should be treated + * as if a minimum of 1K of output had been obtained. If the source produces + * a lot of output then the scale factor is fractional, resulting in a + * usefulness rating of < 1 for each kB of source output. + * + * In order to provide enough randomness to satisfy the requirements for a + * slow poll, we need to accumulate at least 20 points of usefulness (a + * typical system should get about 30 points). + * + * Some potential options are missed out because of special considerations. + * pstat -i and pstat -f can produce amazing amounts of output (the record + * is 600K on an Oracle server) which floods the buffer and doesn't yield + * anything useful (apart from perhaps increasing the entropy of the vmstat + * output a bit), so we don't bother with this. pstat in general produces + * quite a bit of output, but it doesn't change much over time, so it gets + * very low weightings. netstat -s produces constantly-changing output but + * also produces quite a bit of it, so it only gets a weighting of 2 rather + * than 3. The same holds for netstat -in, which gets 1 rather than 2. + * + * Some binaries are stored in different locations on different systems so + * alternative paths are given for them. The code sorts out which one to + * run by itself, once it finds an exectable somewhere it moves on to the + * next source. The sources are arranged roughly in their order of + * usefulness, occasionally sources which provide a tiny amount of + * relatively useless data are placed ahead of ones which provide a large + * amount of possibly useful data because another 100 bytes can't hurt, and + * it means the buffer won't be swamped by one or two high-output sources. + * All the high-output sources are clustered towards the end of the list + * for this reason. Some binaries are checked for in a certain order, for + * example under Slowaris /usr/ucb/ps understands aux as an arg, but the + * others don't. Some systems have conditional defines enabling alternatives + * to commands which don't understand the usual options but will provide + * enough output (in the form of error messages) to look like they're the + * real thing, causing alternative options to be skipped (we can't check the + * return either because some commands return peculiar, non-zero status even + * when they're working correctly). + * + * In order to maximise use of the buffer, the code performs a form of run- + * length compression on its input where a repeated sequence of bytes is + * replaced by the occurrence count mod 256. Some commands output an awful + * lot of whitespace, this measure greatly increases the amount of data we + * can fit in the buffer. + * + * When we scale the weighting using the SC() macro, some preprocessors may + * give a division by zero warning for the most obvious expression + * 'weight ? 1024 / weight : 0' (and gcc 2.7.2.2 dies with a division by zero + * trap), so we define a value SC_0 which evaluates to zero when fed to + * '1024 / SC_0' */ + +#define SC( weight ) ( 1024 / weight ) /* Scale factor */ +#define SC_0 16384 /* SC( SC_0 ) evaluates to 0 */ + +static struct RI { + const char *path; /* Path to check for existence of source */ + const char *arg; /* Args for source */ + const int usefulness; /* Usefulness of source */ + FILE *pipe; /* Pipe to source as FILE * */ + int pipeFD; /* Pipe to source as FD */ + pid_t pid; /* pid of child for waitpid() */ + int length; /* Quantity of output produced */ + const int hasAlternative; /* Whether source has alt.location */ +} dataSources[] = { + + { "/bin/vmstat", "-s", SC(-3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bin/vmstat", "-s", SC(-3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0}, + { "/bin/vmstat", "-c", SC(-3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bin/vmstat", "-c", SC(-3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0}, + { "/usr/bin/pfstat", NULL, SC(-2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0}, + { "/bin/vmstat", "-i", SC(-2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bin/vmstat", "-i", SC(-2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0}, + { "/usr/ucb/netstat", "-s", SC(2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bin/netstat", "-s", SC(2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/sbin/netstat", "-s", SC(2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1}, + { "/usr/etc/netstat", "-s", SC(2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0}, + { "/usr/bin/nfsstat", NULL, SC(2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0}, + { "/usr/ucb/netstat", "-m", SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bin/netstat", "-m", SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/sbin/netstat", "-m", SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/etc/netstat", "-m", SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/bin/netstat", "-in", SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/ucb/netstat", "-in", SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bin/netstat", "-in", SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/sbin/netstat", "-in", SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1}, + { "/usr/etc/netstat", "-in", SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0}, + { "/usr/sbin/snmp_request", "localhost public get 1.3.6.1.2.1.7.1.0", + SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, /* UDP in */ + { "/usr/sbin/snmp_request", "localhost public get 1.3.6.1.2.1.7.4.0", + SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, /* UDP out */ + { "/usr/sbin/snmp_request", "localhost public get 1.3.6.1.2.1.4.3.0", + SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, /* IP ? */ + { "/usr/sbin/snmp_request", "localhost public get 1.3.6.1.2.1.6.10.0", + SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, /* TCP ? */ + { "/usr/sbin/snmp_request", "localhost public get 1.3.6.1.2.1.6.11.0", + SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, /* TCP ? */ + { "/usr/sbin/snmp_request", "localhost public get 1.3.6.1.2.1.6.13.0", + SC(-1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, /* TCP ? */ + { "/usr/bin/mpstat", NULL, SC(1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/usr/bin/w", NULL, SC(1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bsd/w", NULL, SC(1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/usr/bin/df", NULL, SC(1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/bin/df", NULL, SC(1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/usr/sbin/portstat", NULL, SC(1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/usr/bin/iostat", NULL, SC(SC_0), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/usr/bin/uptime", NULL, SC(SC_0), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bsd/uptime", NULL, SC(SC_0), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/bin/vmstat", "-f", SC(SC_0), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bin/vmstat", "-f", SC(SC_0), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/bin/vmstat", NULL, SC(SC_0), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bin/vmstat", NULL, SC(SC_0), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/usr/ucb/netstat", "-n", SC(0.5), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bin/netstat", "-n", SC(0.5), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/sbin/netstat", "-n", SC(0.5), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/etc/netstat", "-n", SC(0.5), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, +#if defined( __sgi ) || defined( __hpux ) + { "/bin/ps", "-el", SC(0.3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, +#endif /* __sgi || __hpux */ + { "/usr/ucb/ps", "aux", SC(0.3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bin/ps", "aux", SC(0.3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/bin/ps", "aux", SC(0.3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/bin/ps", "-A", SC(0.3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, /*QNX*/ + { "/usr/bin/ipcs", "-a", SC(0.5), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/bin/ipcs", "-a", SC(0.5), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + /* Unreliable source, depends on system usage */ + { "/etc/pstat", "-p", SC(0.5), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/bin/pstat", "-p", SC(0.5), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/etc/pstat", "-S", SC(0.2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/bin/pstat", "-S", SC(0.2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/etc/pstat", "-v", SC(0.2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/bin/pstat", "-v", SC(0.2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/etc/pstat", "-x", SC(0.2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/bin/pstat", "-x", SC(0.2), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/etc/pstat", "-t", SC(0.1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/bin/pstat", "-t", SC(0.1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + /* pstat is your friend */ + { "/usr/bin/last", "-n 50", SC(0.3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, +#ifdef __sgi + { "/usr/bsd/last", "-50", SC(0.3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, +#endif /* __sgi */ +#ifdef __hpux + { "/etc/last", "-50", SC(0.3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, +#endif /* __hpux */ + { "/usr/bsd/last", "-n 50", SC(0.3), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/usr/sbin/snmp_request", "localhost public get 1.3.6.1.2.1.5.1.0", + SC(0.1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, /* ICMP ? */ + { "/usr/sbin/snmp_request", "localhost public get 1.3.6.1.2.1.5.3.0", + SC(0.1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, /* ICMP ? */ + { "/etc/arp", "-a", SC(0.1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/etc/arp", "-a", SC(0.1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bin/arp", "-a", SC(0.1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/sbin/arp", "-a", SC(0.1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/usr/sbin/ripquery", "-nw 1 127.0.0.1", + SC(0.1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/bin/lpstat", "-t", SC(0.1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/bin/lpstat", "-t", SC(0.1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 1 }, + { "/usr/ucb/lpstat", "-t", SC(0.1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/usr/bin/tcpdump", "-c 5 -efvvx", SC(1), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + /* This is very environment-dependent. If network traffic is low, it'll + * probably time out before delivering 5 packets, which is OK because + * it'll probably be fixed stuff like ARP anyway */ + { "/usr/sbin/advfsstat", "-b usr_domain", + SC(SC_0), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0}, + { "/usr/sbin/advfsstat", "-l 2 usr_domain", + SC(0.5), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0}, + { "/usr/sbin/advfsstat", "-p usr_domain", + SC(SC_0), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0}, + /* This is a complex and screwball program. Some systems have things + * like rX_dmn, x = integer, for RAID systems, but the statistics are + * pretty dodgy */ +#ifdef __QNXNTO__ + { "/bin/pidin", "-F%A%B%c%d%E%I%J%K%m%M%n%N%p%P%S%s%T", SC(0.3), + NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, +#endif +#if 0 + /* The following aren't enabled since they're somewhat slow and not very + * unpredictable, however they give an indication of the sort of sources + * you can use (for example the finger might be more useful on a + * firewalled internal network) */ + { "/usr/bin/finger", "@ml.media.mit.edu", SC(0.9), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/usr/local/bin/wget", "-O - http://lavarand.sgi.com/block.html", + SC(0.9), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, + { "/bin/cat", "/usr/spool/mqueue/syslog", SC(0.9), NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, +#endif /* 0 */ + { NULL, NULL, 0, NULL, 0, 0, 0, 0 } +}; + +static byte *gather_buffer; /* buffer for gathering random noise */ +static int gather_buffer_size; /* size of the memory buffer */ +static uid_t gatherer_uid; + +/* The message structure used to communicate with the parent */ +typedef struct { + int usefulness; /* usefulness of data */ + int ndata; /* valid bytes in data */ + char data[500]; /* gathered data */ +} GATHER_MSG; + +#ifndef HAVE_WAITPID +static pid_t +waitpid(pid_t pid, int *statptr, int options) +{ +#ifdef HAVE_WAIT4 + return wait4(pid, statptr, options, NULL); +#else + /* If wait4 is also not available, try wait3 for SVR3 variants */ + /* Less ideal because can't actually request a specific pid */ + /* For that reason, first check to see if pid is for an */ + /* existing process. */ + int tmp_pid, dummystat;; + if (kill(pid, 0) == -1) { + errno = ECHILD; + return -1; + } + if (statptr == NULL) + statptr = &dummystat; + while (((tmp_pid = wait3(statptr, options, 0)) != pid) && + (tmp_pid != -1) && (tmp_pid != 0) && (pid != -1)) + ; + return tmp_pid; +#endif +} +#endif + +/* Under SunOS popen() doesn't record the pid of the child process. When + * pclose() is called, instead of calling waitpid() for the correct child, it + * calls wait() repeatedly until the right child is reaped. The problem is + * that this reaps any other children that happen to have died at that + * moment, and when their pclose() comes along, the process hangs forever. + * The fix is to use a wrapper for popen()/pclose() which saves the pid in + * the dataSources structure (code adapted from GNU-libc's popen() call). + * + * Aut viam inveniam aut faciam */ + +static FILE * +my_popen(struct RI *entry) +{ + int pipedes[2]; + FILE *stream; + + /* Create the pipe */ + if (pipe(pipedes) < 0) + return (NULL); + + /* Fork off the child ("vfork() is like an OS orgasm. All OS's want to + * do it, but most just end up faking it" - Chris Wedgwood). If your OS + * supports it, you should try to use vfork() here because it's somewhat + * more efficient */ +#if defined( sun ) || defined( __ultrix__ ) || defined( __osf__ ) || \ + defined(__hpux) + entry->pid = vfork(); +#else /* */ + entry->pid = fork(); +#endif /* Unixen which have vfork() */ + if (entry->pid == (pid_t) - 1) { + /* The fork failed */ + close(pipedes[0]); + close(pipedes[1]); + return (NULL); + } + + if (entry->pid == (pid_t) 0) { + struct passwd *passwd; + + /* We are the child. Make the read side of the pipe be stdout */ + if (dup2(pipedes[STDOUT_FILENO], STDOUT_FILENO) < 0) + exit(127); + + /* Now that everything is set up, give up our permissions to make + * sure we don't read anything sensitive. If the getpwnam() fails, + * we default to -1, which is usually nobody */ + if (gatherer_uid == (uid_t)-1 && \ + (passwd = getpwnam("nobody")) != NULL) + gatherer_uid = passwd->pw_uid; + + setuid(gatherer_uid); + + /* Close the pipe descriptors */ + close(pipedes[STDIN_FILENO]); + close(pipedes[STDOUT_FILENO]); + + /* Try and exec the program */ + execl(entry->path, entry->path, entry->arg, NULL); + + /* Die if the exec failed */ + exit(127); + } + + /* We are the parent. Close the irrelevant side of the pipe and open + * the relevant side as a new stream. Mark our side of the pipe to + * close on exec, so new children won't see it */ + close(pipedes[STDOUT_FILENO]); + +#ifdef FD_CLOEXEC + fcntl(pipedes[STDIN_FILENO], F_SETFD, FD_CLOEXEC); +#endif + + stream = fdopen(pipedes[STDIN_FILENO], "r"); + + if (stream == NULL) { + int savedErrno = errno; + + /* The stream couldn't be opened or the child structure couldn't be + * allocated. Kill the child and close the other side of the pipe */ + kill(entry->pid, SIGKILL); + if (stream == NULL) + close(pipedes[STDOUT_FILENO]); + else + fclose(stream); + + waitpid(entry->pid, NULL, 0); + + entry->pid = 0; + errno = savedErrno; + return (NULL); + } + + return (stream); +} + +static int +my_pclose(struct RI *entry) +{ + int status = 0; + + if (fclose(entry->pipe)) + return (-1); + + /* We ignore the return value from the process because some + programs return funny values which would result in the input + being discarded even if they executed successfully. This isn't + a problem because the result data size threshold will filter + out any programs which exit with a usage message without + producing useful output. */ + if (waitpid(entry->pid, NULL, 0) != entry->pid) + status = -1; + + entry->pipe = NULL; + entry->pid = 0; + return (status); +} + + +/* Unix slow poll (without special support for Linux) + * + * If a few of the randomness sources create a large amount of output then + * the slowPoll() stops once the buffer has been filled (but before all the + * randomness sources have been sucked dry) so that the 'usefulness' factor + * remains below the threshold. For this reason the gatherer buffer has to + * be fairly sizeable on moderately loaded systems. This is something of a + * bug since the usefulness should be influenced by the amount of output as + * well as the source type */ + + +static int +slow_poll(FILE *dbgfp, int dbgall, size_t *nbytes ) +{ + int moreSources; + struct timeval tv; + fd_set fds; +#if defined( __hpux ) + size_t maxFD = 0; +#else + int maxFD = 0; +#endif /* OS-specific brokenness */ + int bufPos, i, usefulness = 0; + int last_so_far = 0; + int any_need_entropy = 0; + int delay; + int rc; + + /* Fire up each randomness source */ + FD_ZERO(&fds); + for (i = 0; dataSources[i].path != NULL; i++) { + /* Since popen() is a fairly heavy function, we check to see whether + * the executable exists before we try to run it */ + if (access(dataSources[i].path, X_OK)) { + if( dbgfp && dbgall ) + fprintf(dbgfp, "%s not present%s\n", dataSources[i].path, + dataSources[i].hasAlternative ? + ", has alternatives" : ""); + dataSources[i].pipe = NULL; + } + else + dataSources[i].pipe = my_popen(&dataSources[i]); + + if (dataSources[i].pipe != NULL) { + dataSources[i].pipeFD = fileno(dataSources[i].pipe); + if (dataSources[i].pipeFD > maxFD) + maxFD = dataSources[i].pipeFD; + +#ifdef O_NONBLOCK /* Ohhh what a hack (used for Atari) */ + fcntl(dataSources[i].pipeFD, F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK); +#else +#error O_NONBLOCK is missing +#endif + /* FIXME: We need to make sure that the fd is less than + FD_SETSIZE. */ + FD_SET(dataSources[i].pipeFD, &fds); + dataSources[i].length = 0; + + /* If there are alternatives for this command, don't try and + * execute them */ + while (dataSources[i].hasAlternative) { + if( dbgfp && dbgall ) + fprintf(dbgfp, "Skipping %s\n", dataSources[i + 1].path); + i++; + } + } + } + + + /* Suck all the data we can get from each of the sources */ + bufPos = 0; + moreSources = 1; + delay = 0; /* Return immediately (well, after 100ms) the first time. */ + while (moreSources && bufPos <= gather_buffer_size) { + /* Wait for data to become available from any of the sources, with a + * timeout of 10 seconds. This adds even more randomness since data + * becomes available in a nondeterministic fashion. Kudos to HP's QA + * department for managing to ship a select() which breaks its own + * prototype */ + tv.tv_sec = delay; + tv.tv_usec = delay? 0 : 100000; + +#if defined( __hpux ) && ( OS_VERSION == 9 ) + rc = select(maxFD + 1, (int *)&fds, NULL, NULL, &tv); +#else /* */ + rc = select(maxFD + 1, &fds, NULL, NULL, &tv); +#endif /* __hpux */ + if (rc == -1) + break; /* Ooops; select failed. */ + + if (!rc) + { + /* FIXME: Because we run several tools at once it is + unlikely that we will see a block in select at all. */ + if (!any_need_entropy + || last_so_far != (gather_buffer_size - bufPos) ) + { + last_so_far = gather_buffer_size - bufPos; + _gcry_random_progress ("need_entropy", 'X', + last_so_far, + gather_buffer_size); + any_need_entropy = 1; + } + delay = 10; /* Use 10 seconds henceforth. */ + /* Note that the fd_set is setup again at the end of this loop. */ + } + + /* One of the sources has data available, read it into the buffer */ + for (i = 0; dataSources[i].path != NULL; i++) { + if( dataSources[i].pipe && FD_ISSET(dataSources[i].pipeFD, &fds)) { + size_t noBytes; + + if ((noBytes = fread(gather_buffer + bufPos, 1, + gather_buffer_size - bufPos, + dataSources[i].pipe)) == 0) { + if (my_pclose(&dataSources[i]) == 0) { + int total = 0; + + /* Try and estimate how much entropy we're getting + * from a data source */ + if (dataSources[i].usefulness) { + if (dataSources[i].usefulness < 0) + total = (dataSources[i].length + 999) + / -dataSources[i].usefulness; + else + total = dataSources[i].length + / dataSources[i].usefulness; + } + if( dbgfp ) + fprintf(dbgfp, + "%s %s contributed %d bytes, " + "usefulness = %d\n", dataSources[i].path, + (dataSources[i].arg != NULL) ? + dataSources[i].arg : "", + dataSources[i].length, total); + if( dataSources[i].length ) + usefulness += total; + } + dataSources[i].pipe = NULL; + } + else { + int currPos = bufPos; + int endPos = bufPos + noBytes; + + /* Run-length compress the input byte sequence */ + while (currPos < endPos) { + int ch = gather_buffer[currPos]; + + /* If it's a single byte, just copy it over */ + if (ch != gather_buffer[currPos + 1]) { + gather_buffer[bufPos++] = ch; + currPos++; + } + else { + int count = 0; + + /* It's a run of repeated bytes, replace them + * with the byte count mod 256 */ + while ((ch == gather_buffer[currPos]) + && currPos < endPos) { + count++; + currPos++; + } + gather_buffer[bufPos++] = count; + noBytes -= count - 1; + } + } + + /* Remember the number of (compressed) bytes of input we + * obtained */ + dataSources[i].length += noBytes; + } + } + } + + /* Check if there is more input available on any of the sources */ + moreSources = 0; + FD_ZERO(&fds); + for (i = 0; dataSources[i].path != NULL; i++) { + if (dataSources[i].pipe != NULL) { + FD_SET(dataSources[i].pipeFD, &fds); + moreSources = 1; + } + } + } + + if (any_need_entropy) + _gcry_random_progress ("need_entropy", 'X', + gather_buffer_size, + gather_buffer_size); + + if( dbgfp ) { + fprintf(dbgfp, "Got %d bytes, usefulness = %d\n", bufPos, usefulness); + fflush(dbgfp); + } + *nbytes = bufPos; + return usefulness; +} + +/**************** + * Start the gatherer process which writes messages of + * type GATHERER_MSG to pipedes + */ +static void +start_gatherer( int pipefd ) +{ + FILE *dbgfp = NULL; + int dbgall; + + { + const char *s = getenv("GCRYPT_RNDUNIX_DBG"); + if( s ) { + dbgfp = (*s=='-' && !s[1])? stdout : fopen(s, "a"); + if( !dbgfp ) + log_info("can't open debug file `%s': %s\n", + s, strerror(errno) ); + else + fprintf(dbgfp,"\nSTART RNDUNIX DEBUG pid=%d\n", (int)getpid()); + } + dbgall = !!getenv("GCRYPT_RNDUNIX_DBGALL"); + } + /* close all files but the ones we need */ + { int nmax, n1, n2, i; +#ifdef _SC_OPEN_MAX + if( (nmax=sysconf( _SC_OPEN_MAX )) < 0 ) { +# ifdef _POSIX_OPEN_MAX + nmax = _POSIX_OPEN_MAX; +# else + nmax = 20; /* assume a reasonable value */ +# endif + } + /* AIX returns INT32_MAX instead of a proper value. We assume that + * this is always an error and use a reasonable value. */ +# ifdef INT32_MAX + if (nmax == INT32_MAX) + nmax = 20; +# endif +#else /*!_SC_OPEN_MAX*/ + nmax = 20; /* assume a reasonable value */ +#endif /*!_SC_OPEN_MAX*/ + n1 = fileno( stderr ); + n2 = dbgfp? fileno( dbgfp ) : -1; + for(i=0; i < nmax; i++ ) { + if( i != n1 && i != n2 && i != pipefd ) + close(i); + } + errno = 0; + } + + + /* Set up the buffer. Not ethat we use a plain standard malloc here. */ + gather_buffer_size = GATHER_BUFSIZE; + gather_buffer = malloc( gather_buffer_size ); + if( !gather_buffer ) { + log_error("out of core while allocating the gatherer buffer\n"); + exit(2); + } + + /* Reset the SIGC(H)LD handler to the system default. This is necessary + * because if the program which cryptlib is a part of installs its own + * SIGC(H)LD handler, it will end up reaping the cryptlib children before + * cryptlib can. As a result, my_pclose() will call waitpid() on a + * process which has already been reaped by the installed handler and + * return an error, so the read data won't be added to the randomness + * pool. There are two types of SIGC(H)LD naming, the SysV SIGCLD and + * the BSD/Posix SIGCHLD, so we need to handle either possibility */ +#ifdef SIGCLD + signal(SIGCLD, SIG_DFL); +#else + signal(SIGCHLD, SIG_DFL); +#endif + + fclose(stderr); /* Arrghh!! It's Stuart code!! */ + + /* Mary goes to Berkeley: NetBSD emits warnings if the standard + descriptors are not open when running setuid program. Thus we + connect them to the bitbucket if they are not already open. */ + { + struct stat statbuf; + + if (fstat (STDIN_FILENO, &statbuf) == -1 && errno == EBADF) + open ("/dev/null",O_RDONLY); + if (fstat (STDOUT_FILENO, &statbuf) == -1 && errno == EBADF) + open ("/dev/null",O_WRONLY); + if (fstat (STDERR_FILENO, &statbuf) == -1 && errno == EBADF) + open ("/dev/null",O_WRONLY); + } + + for(;;) { + GATHER_MSG msg; + size_t nbytes; + const char *p; + + msg.usefulness = slow_poll( dbgfp, dbgall, &nbytes ); + p = (const char*)gather_buffer; + while( nbytes ) { + msg.ndata = nbytes > sizeof(msg.data)? sizeof(msg.data) : nbytes; + memcpy( msg.data, p, msg.ndata ); + nbytes -= msg.ndata; + p += msg.ndata; + + while( write( pipefd, &msg, sizeof(msg) ) != sizeof(msg) ) { + if( errno == EINTR ) + continue; + if( errno == EAGAIN ) { + struct timeval tv; + tv.tv_sec = 0; + tv.tv_usec = 50000; + select(0, NULL, NULL, NULL, &tv); + continue; + } + if( errno == EPIPE ) /* parent has exited, so give up */ + exit(0); + + /* we can't do very much here because stderr is closed */ + if( dbgfp ) + fprintf(dbgfp, "gatherer can't write to pipe: %s\n", + strerror(errno) ); + /* we start a new poll to give the system some time */ + nbytes = 0; + break; + } + } + } + /* we are killed when the parent dies */ +} + + +static int +read_a_msg( int fd, GATHER_MSG *msg ) +{ + char *buffer = (char*)msg; + size_t length = sizeof( *msg ); + int n; + + do { + do { + n = read(fd, buffer, length ); + } while( n == -1 && errno == EINTR ); + if( n == -1 ) + return -1; + buffer += n; + length -= n; + } while( length ); + return 0; +} + + +/**************** + * Using a level of 0 should never block and better add nothing + * to the pool. So this is just a dummy for this gatherer. + */ +int +_gcry_rndunix_gather_random (void (*add)(const void*, size_t, + enum random_origins), + enum random_origins origin, + size_t length, int level ) +{ + static pid_t gatherer_pid = 0; + static int pipedes[2]; + GATHER_MSG msg; + size_t n; + + if( !level ) + return 0; + + if( !gatherer_pid ) { + /* Make sure we are not setuid. */ + if ( getuid() != geteuid() ) + BUG(); + /* time to start the gatherer process */ + if( pipe( pipedes ) ) { + log_error("pipe() failed: %s\n", strerror(errno)); + return -1; + } + gatherer_pid = fork(); + if( gatherer_pid == -1 ) { + log_error("can't for gatherer process: %s\n", strerror(errno)); + return -1; + } + if( !gatherer_pid ) { + start_gatherer( pipedes[1] ); + /* oops, can't happen */ + return -1; + } + } + + /* now read from the gatherer */ + while( length ) { + int goodness; + ulong subtract; + + if( read_a_msg( pipedes[0], &msg ) ) { + log_error("reading from gatherer pipe failed: %s\n", + strerror(errno)); + return -1; + } + + + if( level > 1 ) { + if( msg.usefulness > 30 ) + goodness = 100; + else if ( msg.usefulness ) + goodness = msg.usefulness * 100 / 30; + else + goodness = 0; + } + else if( level ) { + if( msg.usefulness > 15 ) + goodness = 100; + else if ( msg.usefulness ) + goodness = msg.usefulness * 100 / 15; + else + goodness = 0; + } + else + goodness = 100; /* goodness of level 0 is always 100 % */ + + n = msg.ndata; + if( n > length ) + n = length; + (*add)( msg.data, n, origin ); + + /* this is the trick how we cope with the goodness */ + subtract = (ulong)n * goodness / 100; + /* subtract at least 1 byte to avoid infinite loops */ + length -= subtract ? subtract : 1; + } + + return 0; +} |