| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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We shall not prevent programs from starting if their configuration
files contain deprecated 'logging level ...' commands. Just print
a warning and return CMD_SUCCESS instead of CMD_WARNING.
While writing a unit test, another funny bug has been uncovered.
Parsing of a deprecated command indeed triggers a deprecation
warning, originated from libosmovty's log_deprecated_func().
This function simply calls vty_out(), but...
Since the invocation of the vty_out() happens _before_ the VTY
is initialized, the process is actually writing that warning
to its own stdin! Most likely, because we use talloc_zero()
to allocate a new instance of struct 'vty'.
As a side effect, the evil warning magically appears in the output
of 'make check', breaking the test statistics. Let's work around
this bug for now by redirecting stdin to /dev/null.
Change-Id: Ia934581410cd41594791d4e14ee74c16abe1009a
Fixes: Ic9c1b566ec4a459f03e6319cf369691903cf9d00
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Otherwise bad configurations can easily sneak in and produce unexpected
behavior.
Change-Id: Ic9c1b566ec4a459f03e6319cf369691903cf9d00
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incomplete to vty func
For instance, take command "single0 [one]":
If user executes "single0 on", VTY func will receive argv[0]="one"
instead of argv[0]="on".
Related: OS#4045
Change-Id: I5f4e2d16c62a2d22717989c6acc77450957168cb
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vty func
For instance, take command "multi0 (one|two|three)":
If user executes "multi0 tw", VTY func will receive argv[0]="two"
instead of argv[0]="tw".
Fixes: OS#4045
Change-Id: I91b6621ac3d87fda5412a9b415e7bfb4736c8a9a
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The test shows that in the case were "single0 on" is executed, VTY
function should return complete "single0 one" but it doesn't.
Related: OS#4045
Change-Id: Ib5b9dc07e2b280dc95011b3926afb1d490cadd81
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inner block defined variable "enum match_type ret" was being masking
outter block variable "int ret = 0". The ret variable was being given
non zero values only inside the inner block, so that change was done on
the inner variable and not the outer one, which is returned.
Fixes: 5314c513f23688462d7f7937e5ae5e0d5cd4548e
Change-Id: Iec87d7db49a096d07e38ff8a060b923a52bfd6ba
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This patch is a result of discussion we had in [1]. The key idea
is that libosmovty should properly auto-complete the commands
containing choice, such as the following one:
multi0 (one|two|three)
[1] If9b0c0d031477ca87786aab5c269d00748e896c8
Right now, sending the following command:
(osmo-foo-bar)# multi0 th
would basically match the following vector:
multi0 three
however the resulting argv would be:
["multi0", "th"]
Moreover, sending the following command:
(osmo-foo-bar)# multi0 t
would basically match the following vectors:
multi0 two
multi0 three
because both start from 't', so the resulting argv would be:
["multi0", "t"]
which is ambiguous!
The expected output is:
(osmo-foo-bar)# multi0 th
ok argc=1 three
(osmo-foo-bar)# multi0 t
% Ambiguous command.
This is going to be fixed in the follow up patches.
Change-Id: I83c3aef813173952641035862c534ef16384780e
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Since very recently we sensibly handle commands like
cmd ([one]|[two]|[three])
as optional multi-choice arguments. In addition, support the more obvious
syntax of
cmd [(one|two|three)]
Internally, the tokens are mangled to [one] [two] and [three], which is how the
rest of the code detects optional args, and makes sense in terms of UI:
> cmd ?
[one]
[two]
[three]
(i.e. optional arguments are always shown in braces in '?' listings)
Before this patch, commands defined with a syntax like [(one|two)], would lead
to an assertion (shows as "multiple") during program startup.
Change-Id: I952b3c00f97e2447f2308b0ec6f5f1714692b5b2
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Add basic optional multi-choice argument support.
The VTY detects optional arguments by square braces.
> cmd ?
[optional-arg]
> cmd optional-arg
ok
> cmd
ok
However, within multi-choice args, these braces were so far not treated as
optional:
> list
cmd2 ([one]|[two]|[three])
> cmd2
% Command incomplete
In preparation for I952b3c00f97e2447f2308b0ec6f5f1714692b5b2 which will enable
the more obvious syntax of
cmd [(one|two)]
for reasons of internal implementation, first support a syntax of
cmd ([one]|[two])
The internal vty implementation always needs square braces around each option.
There is currently no good way to prevent developers from defining braces
inside multi-arguments, so it is easiest to allow and handle them:
> list
cmd2 ([one]|[two]|[three])
> cmd2
ok
The VTY doesn't guard against a mix like
cmd (one|[two])
With this patch, a multi-choice command is treated as optional iff the first
element is in square brackets. The remaining elements' square brackets have no
effect besides confusing the user. This is not explicitly checked against.
In general, I would prefer to check all of these details, but the current VTY
code with its endless code duplication and obscure string mangling just doesn't
provide that luxury. There are numerous worse errors hidden in there.
Change-Id: I9a8474bd89ddc2155c58bfca7bd038d586aaa60a
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I want to tweak general VTY features and need to cover with a transcript test
to show the differences. Start by showing the current situation of optional
and multi-choice arguments.
Change-Id: I5a79c83fabd02aba6406b6e0d620969c4bd0cc1d
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vty_test: add test against ambiguous cmd causing use-after-free and memory
leaks. Add this test along with the fix, because the new test triggers the
memory use-after-free and leaks, causing build failures.
Add cmd_deopt_with_ctx() to allow passing a specific talloc ctx.
is_cmd_ambiguous(): keep all cmd_deopt() allocations until the function exits.
Add a comment explaining why. Before this, if a command matched an optional
"[arg]" with square brackets, we would keep it in local var 'matched', but we
would free the string it points to at the end of that loop iteration; upon
encountering another match, we would attempt to strcmp against the freed
'matched'. Instead of adding hard-to-read and -verify free/alloc dances to keep
the 'matched' accurately freed/non-freed/..., just keep all cmd_deopt() string
allocated until done.
Needless to say that this should have been implemented on a lower level upon
inventing optional args, but at least this is fixing a program crash.
Related: OS#33903390
Change-Id: Ia71ba742108b5ff020997bfb612ad5eb30d04fcd
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Ironically, when deprecating osmo_init_logging() in
I216837780e9405fdaec8059c63d10699c695b360, I forgot to change the callers
within libosmocore itself, i.e. in the various regression tests.
Change-Id: Ia36c248f99353d5baaa2533f46a2f60a8579bdf8
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Let's fix some erroneous/accidential references to wrong license,
update copyright information where applicable and introduce a
SPDX-License-Identifier to all files.
Change-Id: I39af26c6aaaf5c926966391f6565fc5936be21af
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In many callers of the VTY API, we are lacking the vty_install_default() step
at certain node levels. This creates nodes that lack the 'exit' command, and
hence the only way to exit such a node is to restart the telnet session.
Historically, the VTY looked for missing commands on the immediate parent node,
and hence possibly found the parent's 'exit' command when the local node was
missing it. That is why we so far did not notice the missing default commands.
Furthermore, some callers call install_default() instead of
vty_install_default(). Only vty_install_default() also includes the 'exit' and
'end' commands. There is no reason why there are two sets of default commands.
To end this confusion, to catch all missing 'exit' commands and to prevent this
from re-appearing in the future, simply *always* install all default commands
implicitly when calling install_node().
In cmd_init(), there are some top-level nodes that apparently do not want the
default commands installed. Keep those the way they are, by changing the
invocation to new install_node_bare() ({VIEW,AUTH,AUTH_ENABLE}_NODE).
Make both install_default() and vty_install_default() no-ops so that users of
the API may still call them without harm. Do not yet deprecate yet, which
follows in Icf5d83f641e838cebcccc635a043e94ba352abff.
Drop all invocations to these two functions found in libosmocore.
Change-Id: I5021c64a787b63314e0f2f1cba0b8fc7bff4f09b
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In vty_test, add three levels of parent nodes (level1, level2, level3) with
each having a leaf child (child1, child2, child3).
Use these to enhance the vty_test cfg files and test more diverse situations.
The current VTY code expects a go_parent_cb() to be present, otherwise it will
bump right back to the CONFIG_NODE, which will not work with more than one node
level below the CONFIG_NODE. Hence provide a minimal go_parent_cb().
Change-Id: Ib9bcf58b655fbd85e196f363fb7d8305d7dfc997
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The recent exit-by-indent patch breaks a VTY case where a node is entered but
directly followed by a sibling or ancestor without listing any child nodes.
Regression introduced by I24cbb3f6de111f2d31110c3c484c066f1153aac9.
An example is a common usage in osmo-bts, where 'phy N' / 'instance N' is a
parent node that is commonly left empty:
phy 0
instance 0
bts 0
band 1800
Before this patch, this case produces the error:
There is no such command.
Error occurred during reading the below line:
bts 0
Fix indentation parsing logic in command.c to accomodate this case.
Add a unit test for empty parent node.
Change-Id: Ia0880a17ae55accb092ae8585cc3a1bec9986891
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Note: This will break users' config files if they do not use consistent
indenting. (see below for a definition of "consistent".)
When reading VTY commands from a file, use indenting as means to implicitly
exit child nodes. Do not look for commands in the parent node implicitly.
The VTY so far implies 'exit' commands if a VTY line cannot be parsed on the
current node, but succeeds on the parent node. That is the mechanism by which
our VTY config files do not need 'exit' at the end of each child node.
We've hit problems with this in the following scenarios, which will show
improved user experience after this patch:
*) When both a parent and its child node have commands with identical names:
cs7 instace 0
point-code 1.2.3
sccp-address osmo-msc
point-code 0.0.1
If I put the parent's command below the child, it is still interpreted in the
context of the child node:
cs7 instace 0
sccp-address osmo-msc
point-code 0.0.1
point-code 1.2.3
Though the indenting lets me assume I am setting the cs7 instance's global PC
to 1.2.3, I'm actually overwriting osmo-msc's PC with 1.2.3 and discarding the
0.0.1.
*) When a software change moves a VTY command from a child to a parent. Say
'timezone' moved from 'bts' to 'network' level:
network
timezone 1 2
Say a user still has an old config file with 'timezone' on the child level:
network
bts 0
timezone 1 2
trx 0
The user would expect an error message that 'timezone' is invalid on the 'bts'
level. Instead, the VTY finds the parent node's 'timezone', steps out of 'bts'
to the 'network' level, and instead says that the 'trx' command does not exist.
Format:
Consistent means that two adjacent indenting lines have the exact
same indenting characters for the common length:
Weird mix if you ask me, but correct and consistent:
ROOT
<space>PARENT
<space><tab><space>CHILD
<space><tab><space><tab><tab>GRANDCHILD
<space><tab><space><tab><tab>GRANDCHILD2
<space>SIBLING
Inconsistent:
ROOT
<space>PARENT
<tab><space>CHILD
<space><space><tab>GRANDCHILD
<space><tab><tab>GRANDCHILD2
<tab>SIBLING
Also, when going back to a parent level, the exact same indenting must be used
as before in that node:
Incorrect:
ROOT
<tab>PARENT
<tab><tab><tab>CHILD
<tab><tab>SIBLING
As not really intended side effect, it is also permitted to indent the entire
file starting from the root level. We could guard against it but there's no
harm:
Correct and consistent:
<tab>ROOT
<tab><tab>PARENT
<tab><tab><tab><tab>CHILD
<tab><tab>SIBLING
Implementation:
Track parent nodes state: whenever a command enters a child node, push a parent
node onto an llist to remember the exact indentation characters used for that
level.
As soon as the first line on a child node is parsed, remember this new
indentation (which must have a longer strlen() than its parent level) to apply
to all remaining child siblings and grandchildren.
If the amount of spaces that indent a following VTY command are less than this
expected indentation, call vty_go_parent() until it matches up.
At any level, if the common length of indentation characters mismatch, abort
parsing in error.
Transitions to child node are spread across VTY implementations and are hard to
change. But transitions to the parent node are all handled by vty_go_parent().
By popping a parent from the list of parents in vty_go_parent(), we can also
detect that a command has changed the node without changing the parent, hence
it must have stepped into a child node, and we can push a parent frame.
The behavior on the interactive telnet VTY remains unchanged.
Change-Id: I24cbb3f6de111f2d31110c3c484c066f1153aac9
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For interactive telnet VTY, remove the implicit move up to the parent node when
a command did not succeed on the current node level.
When reading config files, this behavior was useful to allow skipping explicit
'exit' commands. (A different patch deals with that.)
In the telnet VTY, this behavior was never necessary. Explicit 'exit' commands
can move to the parent node, and typically uninformed users expect to require
that.
On a telnet VTY, counting indents like for reading config files is not an
option: a user will always type from the first column or may paste some leading
spaces without intended meaning.
After this patch, it is thus no longer possible to paste a complete config
across several node levels directly to a telnet session, unless it contains
'exit' commands.
Change-Id: Id73cba2dd34676bad8a130e9c45e67a272f19588
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* remove unused parameter from logging_vty_add_cmds()
* mark log level descriptors static
* change internal static function int check_log_to_target() to more
appropriate bool should_log_to_target()
* deprecate log_vty_command_*() from public API as it should only be
used by logging_vty_add_cmds()
Change-Id: I0e9ddd7ba3ce211302d99a3494eb408907a2916e
Related: OS#71
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This commit adds tests to verify the stats related VTY configuration
commands.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
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Currently this is part of the only test function that uses the
vty directly.
In preperation for more such test cases, this commit moves this code
into separate functions.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
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This commit provides stats configuration similar to the log
configuration.
The following vty commands are added to the config node:
stats reporter statsd Create/Modify a statsd reporter
no stats reporter statsd Remove a statsd reporter
To actually configure a reporter, the config-stats node is entered
when the "stats reporter" command has succeeded. The following new
vty commands are available there:
local-ip ADDR Set the IP address to which we bind locally
no local-ip Do not bind to a certain IP address
remote-ip ADDR Set the remote IP address to which we connect
remote-port <1-65535> Set the remote port to which we connect
prefix PREFIX Set the item/counter name prefix
no prefix Do not use a prefix
enable Enable the reporter
disable Disable the reporter
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
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The testcase didn't work on Ubuntu 12.04 because vty_create will
directly call vty_event (e.g. not through the plt). This means
that the approach to override vty_event in the testcase failed.
Use the signal interface of libosmocore and make the testcase
use it. The signals can be generally useful as well.
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This adds the vty_install_default() function that is basically the
install_default() function plus the registration of the commands
'exit' and 'end'. The latter is only provided in subnodes of
ENABLED_NODE and CONFIG_NONE.
The VTY test program is extended to check these commands.
Ticket: OW#952
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In vty_cmd_string_from_valstr() include the real string lengths of
the sep and end arguments into the buffer size calculation.
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Compiled with ubuntu 1204 (precise), where -Wformat-security is enabled by
-Wall.
Test yields ok, but the current implementation doesn't properly support
multi-character separators and end strings. So the test output is truncated.
Addresses:
utils.c: In function 'vty_cmd_string_from_valstr':
utils.c:84:2: warning: format not a string literal and no format arguments [-Wformat-security]
utils.c:84:2: warning: format not a string literal and no format arguments [-Wformat-security]
utils.c:108:2: warning: format not a string literal and no format arguments [-Wformat-security]
utils.c:108:2: warning: format not a string literal and no format arguments [-Wformat-security]
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