blob: e087bc7523db482d15a090aacb1542fe3637d7f9 [file] [log] [blame]
Bug-Debian: http://bugs.debian.org/584162
Reported-By: Christoph Biedl <debian.axhn@manchmal.in-ulm.de>
Forwarded: not-needed
Reviewed-By: Anibal Monsalve Salazar <anibal@debian.org>
Last-Update: 2014-08-15
From: "Daniel Richard G." <skunk@iSKUNK.ORG>
Subject: Re: ssmtp: Partial loss of message body, sending message to wrong recipicients
Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2014 14:44:30 -0400
Attached is a patch against the original 2.64 source that should address
this bug, and hopefully not break anything. An overview of my changes:
* Added code to standarise() to drop the trailing '\r' if the line
originally ended with "\r\n".
* Added a check to header_parse() that effectively converts an "\r\n" in
the input into '\n'.
* Added a conditional so that header_parse() doesn't pass the empty
string to header_save()---a behavior I observed in testing, at the end
of a header block with "\r\n" line endings.
* Simplified the last if(in_header) conditional in header_parse(),
because it erroneously assumes that if in_header == True, then c could
have some value other than EOF. (See the condition on the previous
"while" loop, and the lack of any other way to exit said loop.)
header_parse() will now properly grab a header if fed a message
without a body (i.e. no "\n\n" ending the header block), although this
code will still drop a header if there is no newline at the end.
Christoph, thank you for your excellent analysis, and the test cases. I
made use of them, and with my changes sSMTP appears to do the right
thing.
Debian patch from: https://sources.debian.net/patches/ssmtp/2.64-8/
Upstream-Status: Backport [debian]
Signed-off-by: Andre McCurdy <armccurdy@gmail.com>
Index: ssmtp-2.64/ssmtp.c
===================================================================
--- ssmtp-2.64.orig/ssmtp.c
+++ ssmtp-2.64/ssmtp.c
@@ -375,6 +375,12 @@ bool_t standardise(char *str, bool_t *li
if((p = strchr(str, '\n'))) {
*p = (char)NULL;
*linestart = True;
+
+ /* If the line ended in "\r\n", then drop the '\r' too */
+ sl = strlen(str);
+ if(sl >= 1 && str[sl - 1] == '\r') {
+ str[sl - 1] = (char)NULL;
+ }
}
return(leadingdot);
}
@@ -768,6 +774,14 @@ void header_parse(FILE *stream)
}
len++;
+ if(l == '\r' && c == '\n') {
+ /* Properly handle input that already has "\r\n"
+ line endings; see https://bugs.debian.org/584162 */
+ l = (len >= 2 ? *(q - 2) : '\n');
+ q--;
+ len--;
+ }
+
if(l == '\n') {
switch(c) {
case ' ':
@@ -790,7 +804,9 @@ void header_parse(FILE *stream)
if((q = strrchr(p, '\n'))) {
*q = (char)NULL;
}
- header_save(p);
+ if(len > 0) {
+ header_save(p);
+ }
q = p;
len = 0;
@@ -800,35 +816,12 @@ void header_parse(FILE *stream)
l = c;
}
- if(in_header) {
- if(l == '\n') {
- switch(c) {
- case ' ':
- case '\t':
- /* Must insert '\r' before '\n's embedded in header
- fields otherwise qmail won't accept our mail
- because a bare '\n' violates some RFC */
-
- *(q - 1) = '\r'; /* Replace previous \n with \r */
- *q++ = '\n'; /* Insert \n */
- len++;
-
- break;
-
- case '\n':
- in_header = False;
-
- default:
- *q = (char)NULL;
- if((q = strrchr(p, '\n'))) {
- *q = (char)NULL;
- }
- header_save(p);
-
- q = p;
- len = 0;
- }
+ if(in_header && l == '\n') {
+ /* Got EOF while reading the header */
+ if((q = strrchr(p, '\n'))) {
+ *q = (char)NULL;
}
+ header_save(p);
}
(void)free(p);
}