don't treat numeric port strings as servent records in getservby*()

some applications use getservbyport to find port numbers that are not
assigned to a service; if getservbyport always succeeds with a numeric
string as the result, they fail to find any available ports.

POSIX doesn't seem to mandate the behavior one way or another. it
specifies an abstract service database, which an implementation could
define to include numeric port strings, but it makes more sense to
align behavior with traditional implementations.

based on patch by A. Wilcox. the original patch only changed
getservbyport[_r]. to maintain a consistent view of the "service
database", I have also modified getservbyname[_r] to exclude numeric
port strings.
This commit is contained in:
Rich Felker 2017-09-06 21:42:15 -04:00
parent 9e01be6e49
commit 565dbee24d
2 changed files with 10 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -5,6 +5,7 @@
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include "lookup.h"
#define ALIGN (sizeof(struct { char a; char *b; }) - sizeof(char *))
@ -17,6 +18,11 @@ int getservbyname_r(const char *name, const char *prots,
*res = 0;
/* Don't treat numeric port number strings as service records. */
char *end = "";
strtoul(name, &end, 10);
if (!*end) return ENOENT;
/* Align buffer */
align = -(uintptr_t)buf & ALIGN-1;
if (buflen < 2*sizeof(char *)+align)

View File

@ -5,6 +5,7 @@
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int getservbyport_r(int port, const char *prots,
struct servent *se, char *buf, size_t buflen, struct servent **res)
@ -51,6 +52,9 @@ int getservbyport_r(int port, const char *prots,
break;
}
/* A numeric port string is not a service record. */
if (strtol(buf, 0, 10)==ntohs(port)) return ENOENT;
*res = se;
return 0;
}