/* Unix SMB/Netbios implementation. Version 1.9. Samba utility functions Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 1992-1998 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 2 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, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ #include "includes.h" /* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ** * Defines... * * FORMAT_BUFR_MAX - Index of the last byte of the format buffer; * format_bufr[FORMAT_BUFR_MAX] should always be reserved * for a terminating nul byte. */ #define FORMAT_BUFR_MAX ( sizeof( format_bufr ) - 1 ) /* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ** * This module implements Samba's debugging utility. * * The syntax of a debugging log file is represented as: * * :== { } * * :== '\n' * * :== '[' TIME ',' LEVEL ']' [ [FILENAME ':'] [FUNCTION '()'] ] * * :== { } * * :== TEXT '\n' * * TEXT is a string of characters excluding the newline character. * LEVEL is the DEBUG level of the message (an integer in the range 0..10). * TIME is a timestamp. * FILENAME is the name of the file from which the debug message was generated. * FUNCTION is the function from which the debug message was generated. * * Basically, what that all means is: * * - A debugging log file is made up of debug messages. * * - Each debug message is made up of a header and text. The header is * separated from the text by a newline. * * - The header begins with the timestamp and debug level of the message * enclosed in brackets. The filename and function from which the * message was generated may follow. The filename is terminated by a * colon, and the function name is terminated by parenthesis. * * - The message text is made up of zero or more lines, each terminated by * a newline. */ /* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ** * External variables. * * dbf - Global debug file handle. * debugf - Debug file name. * append_log - If True, then the output file will be opened in append * mode. * DEBUGLEVEL - System-wide debug message limit. Messages with message- * levels higher than DEBUGLEVEL will not be processed. */ XFILE *dbf = NULL; pstring debugf = ""; BOOL append_log = False; int DEBUGLEVEL_CLASS[DBGC_LAST]; BOOL DEBUGLEVEL_CLASS_ISSET[DBGC_LAST]; int DEBUGLEVEL = DEBUGLEVEL_CLASS; /* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ** * Internal variables. * * stdout_logging - Default False, if set to True then dbf will be set to * stdout and debug output will go to dbf only, and not * to syslog. Set in setup_logging() and read in Debug1(). * * debug_count - Number of debug messages that have been output. * Used to check log size. * * syslog_level - Internal copy of the message debug level. Written by * dbghdr() and read by Debug1(). * * format_bufr - Used to format debug messages. The dbgtext() function * prints debug messages to a string, and then passes the * string to format_debug_text(), which uses format_bufr * to build the formatted output. * * format_pos - Marks the first free byte of the format_bufr. * * * log_overflow - When this variable is True, never attempt to check the * size of the log. This is a hack, so that we can write * a message using DEBUG, from open_logs() when we * are unable to open a new log file for some reason. */ static BOOL stdout_logging = False; static int debug_count = 0; #ifdef WITH_SYSLOG static int syslog_level = 0; #endif static pstring format_bufr = { '\0' }; static size_t format_pos = 0; static BOOL log_overflow = False; /* * Define all the debug class selection names here. Names *MUST NOT* contain * white space. There must be one name for each DBGC_, and they * must be in the table in the order of DBGC_.. */ char *classname_table[] = { "all", /* DBGC_ALL; index refs traditional DEBUGLEVEL */ "tdb", /* DBGC_TDB */ "printdrivers", /* DBGC_PRINTDRIVERS */ "lanman", /* DBGC_LANMAN */ "smb", /* DBGC_SMB */ "rpc", /* DBGC_RPC */ "rpc_hdr", /* DBGC_RPC_HDR */ "bdc", /* DBGC_BDC */ }; /* -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ** * Functions... */ /**************************************************************************** utility access to debug class names's ****************************************************************************/ char* debug_classname_from_index(int ndx) { return classname_table[ndx]; } /**************************************************************************** utility to translate names to debug class index's ****************************************************************************/ int debug_lookup_classname(char* classname) { int i; if (!classname) return -1; for (i=0; idebuglevel_class, sizeof(dm->debuglevel_class)); memcpy(DEBUGLEVEL_CLASS_ISSET, dm->debuglevel_class_isset, sizeof(dm->debuglevel_class_isset)); DEBUG(3,("INFO: Debug class %s level = %d (pid %u from pid %u)\n", classname_table[DBGC_ALL], DEBUGLEVEL_CLASS[DBGC_ALL], (unsigned int)getpid(), (unsigned int)src)); for (i=1; i maxlog ) { (void)reopen_logs(); if( dbf && get_file_size( debugf ) > maxlog ) { pstring name; slprintf( name, sizeof(name)-1, "%s.old", debugf ); (void)rename( debugf, name ); if (!reopen_logs()) { /* We failed to reopen a log - continue using the old name. */ (void)rename(name, debugf); } } } /* * Here's where we need to panic if dbf == NULL.. */ if(dbf == NULL) { /* This code should only be reached in very strange circumstances. If we merely fail to open the new log we should stick with the old one. ergo this should only be reached when opening the logs for the first time: at startup or when the log level is increased from zero. -dwg 6 June 2000 */ dbf = x_fopen( "/dev/console", O_WRONLY, 0); if(dbf) { DEBUG(0,("check_log_size: open of debug file %s failed - using console.\n", debugf )); } else { /* * We cannot continue without a debug file handle. */ abort(); } } debug_count = 0; } /* check_log_size */ /* ************************************************************************** ** * Write an debug message on the debugfile. * This is called by dbghdr() and format_debug_text(). * ************************************************************************** ** */ int Debug1( char *format_str, ... ) { va_list ap; int old_errno = errno; if( stdout_logging ) { va_start( ap, format_str ); if(dbf) (void)x_vfprintf( dbf, format_str, ap ); va_end( ap ); errno = old_errno; return( 0 ); } #ifdef WITH_SYSLOG if( !lp_syslog_only() ) #endif { if( !dbf ) { mode_t oldumask = umask( 022 ); if( append_log ) dbf = x_fopen( debugf, O_WRONLY|O_APPEND|O_CREAT, 0644 ); else dbf = x_fopen( debugf, O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_TRUNC, 0644 ); (void)umask( oldumask ); if( dbf ) { x_setbuf( dbf, NULL ); } else { errno = old_errno; return(0); } } } #ifdef WITH_SYSLOG if( syslog_level < lp_syslog() ) { /* map debug levels to syslog() priorities * note that not all DEBUG(0, ...) calls are * necessarily errors */ static int priority_map[] = { LOG_ERR, /* 0 */ LOG_WARNING, /* 1 */ LOG_NOTICE, /* 2 */ LOG_INFO, /* 3 */ }; int priority; pstring msgbuf; if( syslog_level >= ( sizeof(priority_map) / sizeof(priority_map[0]) ) || syslog_level < 0) priority = LOG_DEBUG; else priority = priority_map[syslog_level]; va_start( ap, format_str ); vslprintf( msgbuf, sizeof(msgbuf)-1, format_str, ap ); va_end( ap ); msgbuf[255] = '\0'; syslog( priority, "%s", msgbuf ); } #endif check_log_size(); #ifdef WITH_SYSLOG if( !lp_syslog_only() ) #endif { va_start( ap, format_str ); if(dbf) (void)x_vfprintf( dbf, format_str, ap ); va_end( ap ); if(dbf) (void)x_fflush( dbf ); } errno = old_errno; return( 0 ); } /* Debug1 */ /* ************************************************************************** ** * Print the buffer content via Debug1(), then reset the buffer. * * Input: none * Output: none * * ************************************************************************** ** */ static void bufr_print( void ) { format_bufr[format_pos] = '\0'; (void)Debug1( "%s", format_bufr ); format_pos = 0; } /* bufr_print */ /* ************************************************************************** ** * Format the debug message text. * * Input: msg - Text to be added to the "current" debug message text. * * Output: none. * * Notes: The purpose of this is two-fold. First, each call to syslog() * (used by Debug1(), see above) generates a new line of syslog * output. This is fixed by storing the partial lines until the * newline character is encountered. Second, printing the debug * message lines when a newline is encountered allows us to add * spaces, thus indenting the body of the message and making it * more readable. * * ************************************************************************** ** */ static void format_debug_text( char *msg ) { size_t i; BOOL timestamp = (!stdout_logging && (lp_timestamp_logs() || !(lp_loaded()))); for( i = 0; msg[i]; i++ ) { /* Indent two spaces at each new line. */ if(timestamp && 0 == format_pos) { format_bufr[0] = format_bufr[1] = ' '; format_pos = 2; } /* If there's room, copy the character to the format buffer. */ if( format_pos < FORMAT_BUFR_MAX ) format_bufr[format_pos++] = msg[i]; /* If a newline is encountered, print & restart. */ if( '\n' == msg[i] ) bufr_print(); /* If the buffer is full dump it out, reset it, and put out a line * continuation indicator. */ if( format_pos >= FORMAT_BUFR_MAX ) { bufr_print(); (void)Debug1( " +>\n" ); } } /* Just to be safe... */ format_bufr[format_pos] = '\0'; } /* format_debug_text */ /* ************************************************************************** ** * Flush debug output, including the format buffer content. * * Input: none * Output: none * * ************************************************************************** ** */ void dbgflush( void ) { bufr_print(); if(dbf) (void)x_fflush( dbf ); } /* dbgflush */ /* ************************************************************************** ** * Print a Debug Header. * * Input: level - Debug level of the message (not the system-wide debug * level. * file - Pointer to a string containing the name of the file * from which this function was called, or an empty string * if the __FILE__ macro is not implemented. * func - Pointer to a string containing the name of the function * from which this function was called, or an empty string * if the __FUNCTION__ macro is not implemented. * line - line number of the call to dbghdr, assuming __LINE__ * works. * * Output: Always True. This makes it easy to fudge a call to dbghdr() * in a macro, since the function can be called as part of a test. * Eg: ( (level <= DEBUGLEVEL) && (dbghdr(level,"",line)) ) * * Notes: This function takes care of setting syslog_level. * * ************************************************************************** ** */ BOOL dbghdr( int level, char *file, char *func, int line ) { /* Ensure we don't lose any real errno value. */ int old_errno = errno; if( format_pos ) { /* This is a fudge. If there is stuff sitting in the format_bufr, then * the *right* thing to do is to call * format_debug_text( "\n" ); * to write the remainder, and then proceed with the new header. * Unfortunately, there are several places in the code at which * the DEBUG() macro is used to build partial lines. That in mind, * we'll work under the assumption that an incomplete line indicates * that a new header is *not* desired. */ return( True ); } #ifdef WITH_SYSLOG /* Set syslog_level. */ syslog_level = level; #endif /* Don't print a header if we're logging to stdout. */ if( stdout_logging ) return( True ); /* Print the header if timestamps are turned on. If parameters are * not yet loaded, then default to timestamps on. */ if( lp_timestamp_logs() || !(lp_loaded()) ) { char header_str[200]; header_str[0] = '\0'; if( lp_debug_pid()) slprintf(header_str,sizeof(header_str)-1,", pid=%u",(unsigned int)sys_getpid()); if( lp_debug_uid()) { size_t hs_len = strlen(header_str); slprintf(header_str + hs_len, sizeof(header_str) - 1 - hs_len, ", effective(%u, %u), real(%u, %u)", (unsigned int)geteuid(), (unsigned int)getegid(), (unsigned int)getuid(), (unsigned int)getgid()); } /* Print it all out at once to prevent split syslog output. */ (void)Debug1( "[%s, %d%s] %s:%s(%d)\n", timestring(lp_debug_hires_timestamp()), level, header_str, file, func, line ); } errno = old_errno; return( True ); } /* ************************************************************************** ** * Add text to the body of the "current" debug message via the format buffer. * * Input: format_str - Format string, as used in printf(), et. al. * ... - Variable argument list. * * ..or.. va_alist - Old style variable parameter list starting point. * * Output: Always True. See dbghdr() for more info, though this is not * likely to be used in the same way. * * ************************************************************************** ** */ BOOL dbgtext( char *format_str, ... ) { va_list ap; pstring msgbuf; va_start( ap, format_str ); vslprintf( msgbuf, sizeof(msgbuf)-1, format_str, ap ); va_end( ap ); format_debug_text( msgbuf ); return( True ); } /* dbgtext */ /* ************************************************************************** */