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1 /*
2  * Support for SSH connection sharing, i.e. permitting one PuTTY to
3  * open its own channels over the SSH session being run by another.
4  */
5
6 /*
7  * Discussion and technical documentation
8  * ======================================
9  *
10  * The basic strategy for PuTTY's implementation of SSH connection
11  * sharing is to have a single 'upstream' PuTTY process, which manages
12  * the real SSH connection and all the cryptography, and then zero or
13  * more 'downstream' PuTTYs, which never talk to the real host but
14  * only talk to the upstream through local IPC (Unix-domain sockets or
15  * Windows named pipes).
16  *
17  * The downstreams communicate with the upstream using a protocol
18  * derived from SSH itself, which I'll document in detail below. In
19  * brief, though: the downstream->upstream protocol uses a trivial
20  * binary packet protocol (just length/type/data) to encapsulate
21  * unencrypted SSH messages, and downstreams talk to the upstream more
22  * or less as if it was an SSH server itself. (So downstreams can
23  * themselves open multiple SSH channels, for example, by sending
24  * multiple SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_OPENs; they can send CHANNEL_REQUESTs of
25  * their choice within each channel, and they handle their own
26  * WINDOW_ADJUST messages.)
27  *
28  * The upstream would ideally handle these downstreams by just putting
29  * their messages into the queue for proper SSH-2 encapsulation and
30  * encryption and sending them straight on to the server. However,
31  * that's not quite feasible as written, because client-side channel
32  * IDs could easily conflict (between multiple downstreams, or between
33  * a downstream and the upstream). To protect against that, the
34  * upstream rewrites the client-side channel IDs in messages it passes
35  * on to the server, so that it's performing what you might describe
36  * as 'channel-number NAT'. Then the upstream remembers which of its
37  * own channel IDs are channels it's managing itself, and which are
38  * placeholders associated with a particular downstream, so that when
39  * replies come in from the server they can be sent on to the relevant
40  * downstream (after un-NATting the channel number, of course).
41  *
42  * Global requests from downstreams are only accepted if the upstream
43  * knows what to do about them; currently the only such requests are
44  * the ones having to do with remote-to-local port forwarding (in
45  * which, again, the upstream remembers that some of the forwardings
46  * it's asked the server to set up were on behalf of particular
47  * downstreams, and sends the incoming CHANNEL_OPENs to those
48  * downstreams when connections come in).
49  *
50  * Other fiddly pieces of this mechanism are X forwarding and
51  * (OpenSSH-style) agent forwarding. Both of these have a fundamental
52  * problem arising from the protocol design: that the CHANNEL_OPEN
53  * from the server introducing a forwarded connection does not carry
54  * any indication of which session channel gave rise to it; so if
55  * session channels from multiple downstreams enable those forwarding
56  * methods, it's hard for the upstream to know which downstream to
57  * send the resulting connections back to.
58  *
59  * For X forwarding, we can work around this in a really painful way
60  * by using the fake X11 authorisation data sent to the server as part
61  * of the forwarding setup: upstream ensures that every X forwarding
62  * request carries distinguishable fake auth data, and then when X
63  * connections come in it waits to see the auth data in the X11 setup
64  * message before it decides which downstream to pass the connection
65  * on to.
66  *
67  * For agent forwarding, that workaround is unavailable. As a result,
68  * this system (and, as far as I can think of, any other system too)
69  * has the fundamental constraint that it can only forward one SSH
70  * agent - it can't forward two agents to different session channels.
71  * So downstreams can request agent forwarding if they like, but if
72  * they do, they'll get whatever SSH agent is known to the upstream
73  * (if any) forwarded to their sessions.
74  *
75  * Downstream-to-upstream protocol
76  * -------------------------------
77  *
78  * Here I document in detail the protocol spoken between PuTTY
79  * downstreams and upstreams over local IPC. The IPC mechanism can
80  * vary between host platforms, but the protocol is the same.
81  *
82  * The protocol commences with a version exchange which is exactly
83  * like the SSH-2 one, in that each side sends a single line of text
84  * of the form
85  *
86  *   <protocol>-<version>-<softwareversion> [comments] \r\n
87  *
88  * The only difference is that in real SSH-2, <protocol> is the string
89  * "SSH", whereas in this protocol the string is
90  * "SSHCONNECTION@putty.projects.tartarus.org".
91  *
92  * (The SSH RFCs allow many protocol-level identifier namespaces to be
93  * extended by implementors without central standardisation as long as
94  * they suffix "@" and a domain name they control to their new ids.
95  * RFC 4253 does not define this particular name to be changeable at
96  * all, but I like to think this is obviously how it would have done
97  * so if the working group had foreseen the need :-)
98  *
99  * Thereafter, all data exchanged consists of a sequence of binary
100  * packets concatenated end-to-end, each of which is of the form
101  *
102  *     uint32     length of packet, N
103  *     byte[N]    N bytes of packet data
104  *
105  * and, since these are SSH-2 messages, the first data byte is taken
106  * to be the packet type code.
107  *
108  * These messages are interpreted as those of an SSH connection, after
109  * userauth completes, and without any repeat key exchange.
110  * Specifically, any message from the SSH Connection Protocol is
111  * permitted, and also SSH_MSG_IGNORE, SSH_MSG_DEBUG,
112  * SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT and SSH_MSG_UNIMPLEMENTED from the SSH Transport
113  * Protocol.
114  *
115  * This protocol imposes a few additional requirements, over and above
116  * those of the standard SSH Connection Protocol:
117  *
118  * Message sizes are not permitted to exceed 0x4010 (16400) bytes,
119  * including their length header.
120  *
121  * When the server (i.e. really the PuTTY upstream) sends
122  * SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN with channel type "x11", and the client
123  * (downstream) responds with SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION, that
124  * confirmation message MUST include an initial window size of at
125  * least 256. (Rationale: this is a bit of a fudge which makes it
126  * easier, by eliminating the possibility of nasty edge cases, for an
127  * upstream to arrange not to pass the CHANNEL_OPEN on to downstream
128  * until after it's seen the X11 auth data to decide which downstream
129  * it needs to go to.)
130  */
131
132 #include <stdio.h>
133 #include <stdlib.h>
134 #include <assert.h>
135 #include <limits.h>
136 #include <errno.h>
137
138 #include "putty.h"
139 #include "tree234.h"
140 #include "ssh.h"
141
142 struct ssh_sharing_state {
143     const struct plug_function_table *fn;
144     /* the above variable absolutely *must* be the first in this structure */
145
146     char *sockname;                  /* the socket name, kept for cleanup */
147     Socket listensock;               /* the master listening Socket */
148     tree234 *connections;            /* holds ssh_sharing_connstates */
149     unsigned nextid;                 /* preferred id for next connstate */
150     Ssh ssh;                         /* instance of the ssh backend */
151     char *server_verstring;          /* server version string after "SSH-" */
152 };
153
154 struct share_globreq;
155
156 struct ssh_sharing_connstate {
157     const struct plug_function_table *fn;
158     /* the above variable absolutely *must* be the first in this structure */
159
160     unsigned id;    /* used to identify this downstream in log messages */
161
162     Socket sock;                     /* the Socket for this connection */
163     struct ssh_sharing_state *parent;
164
165     int crLine;                        /* coroutine state for share_receive */
166
167     int sent_verstring, got_verstring, curr_packetlen;
168
169     unsigned char recvbuf[0x4010];
170     int recvlen;
171
172     /*
173      * Assorted state we have to remember about this downstream, so
174      * that we can clean it up appropriately when the downstream goes
175      * away.
176      */
177
178     /* Channels which don't have a downstream id, i.e. we've passed a
179      * CHANNEL_OPEN down from the server but not had an
180      * OPEN_CONFIRMATION or OPEN_FAILURE back. If downstream goes
181      * away, we respond to all of these with OPEN_FAILURE. */
182     tree234 *halfchannels;         /* stores 'struct share_halfchannel' */
183
184     /* Channels which do have a downstream id. We need to index these
185      * by both server id and upstream id, so we can find a channel
186      * when handling either an upward or a downward message referring
187      * to it. */
188     tree234 *channels_by_us;       /* stores 'struct share_channel' */
189     tree234 *channels_by_server;   /* stores 'struct share_channel' */
190
191     /* Another class of channel which doesn't have a downstream id.
192      * The difference between these and halfchannels is that xchannels
193      * do have an *upstream* id, because upstream has already accepted
194      * the channel request from the server. This arises in the case of
195      * X forwarding, where we have to accept the request and read the
196      * X authorisation data before we know whether the channel needs
197      * to be forwarded to a downstream. */
198     tree234 *xchannels_by_us;     /* stores 'struct share_xchannel' */
199     tree234 *xchannels_by_server; /* stores 'struct share_xchannel' */
200
201     /* Remote port forwarding requests in force. */
202     tree234 *forwardings;          /* stores 'struct share_forwarding' */
203
204     /* Global requests we've sent on to the server, pending replies. */
205     struct share_globreq *globreq_head, *globreq_tail;
206 };
207
208 struct share_halfchannel {
209     unsigned server_id;
210 };
211
212 /* States of a share_channel. */
213 enum {
214     OPEN,
215     SENT_CLOSE,
216     RCVD_CLOSE,
217     /* Downstream has sent CHANNEL_OPEN but server hasn't replied yet.
218      * If downstream goes away when a channel is in this state, we
219      * must wait for the server's response before starting to send
220      * CLOSE. Channels in this state are also not held in
221      * channels_by_server, because their server_id field is
222      * meaningless. */
223     UNACKNOWLEDGED
224 };
225
226 struct share_channel {
227     unsigned downstream_id, upstream_id, server_id;
228     int downstream_maxpkt;
229     int state;
230     /*
231      * Some channels (specifically, channels on which downstream has
232      * sent "x11-req") have the additional function of storing a set
233      * of downstream X authorisation data and a handle to an upstream
234      * fake set.
235      */
236     struct X11FakeAuth *x11_auth_upstream;
237     int x11_auth_proto;
238     char *x11_auth_data;
239     int x11_auth_datalen;
240     int x11_one_shot;
241 };
242
243 struct share_forwarding {
244     char *host;
245     int port;
246     int active;             /* has the server sent REQUEST_SUCCESS? */
247 };
248
249 struct share_xchannel_message {
250     struct share_xchannel_message *next;
251     int type;
252     unsigned char *data;
253     int datalen;
254 };
255
256 struct share_xchannel {
257     unsigned upstream_id, server_id;
258
259     /*
260      * xchannels come in two flavours: live and dead. Live ones are
261      * waiting for an OPEN_CONFIRMATION or OPEN_FAILURE from
262      * downstream; dead ones have had an OPEN_FAILURE, so they only
263      * exist as a means of letting us conveniently respond to further
264      * channel messages from the server until such time as the server
265      * sends us CHANNEL_CLOSE.
266      */
267     int live;
268
269     /*
270      * When we receive OPEN_CONFIRMATION, we will need to send a
271      * WINDOW_ADJUST to the server to synchronise the windows. For
272      * this purpose we need to know what window we have so far offered
273      * the server. We record this as exactly the value in the
274      * OPEN_CONFIRMATION that upstream sent us, adjusted by the amount
275      * by which the two X greetings differed in length.
276      */
277     int window;
278
279     /*
280      * Linked list of SSH messages from the server relating to this
281      * channel, which we queue up until downstream sends us an
282      * OPEN_CONFIRMATION and we can belatedly send them all on.
283      */
284     struct share_xchannel_message *msghead, *msgtail;
285 };
286
287 enum {
288     GLOBREQ_TCPIP_FORWARD,
289     GLOBREQ_CANCEL_TCPIP_FORWARD
290 };
291
292 struct share_globreq {
293     struct share_globreq *next;
294     int type;
295     int want_reply;
296     struct share_forwarding *fwd;
297 };
298
299 static int share_connstate_cmp(void *av, void *bv)
300 {
301     const struct ssh_sharing_connstate *a =
302         (const struct ssh_sharing_connstate *)av;
303     const struct ssh_sharing_connstate *b =
304         (const struct ssh_sharing_connstate *)bv;
305
306     if (a->id < b->id)
307         return -1;
308     else if (a->id > b->id)
309         return +1;
310     else
311         return 0;
312 }
313
314 static unsigned share_find_unused_id
315 (struct ssh_sharing_state *sharestate, unsigned first)
316 {
317     int low_orig, low, mid, high, high_orig;
318     struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs;
319     unsigned ret;
320
321     /*
322      * Find the lowest unused downstream ID greater or equal to
323      * 'first'.
324      *
325      * Begin by seeing if 'first' itself is available. If it is, we'll
326      * just return it; if it's already in the tree, we'll find the
327      * tree index where it appears and use that for the next stage.
328      */
329     {
330         struct ssh_sharing_connstate dummy;
331         dummy.id = first;
332         cs = findrelpos234(sharestate->connections, &dummy, NULL,
333                            REL234_GE, &low_orig);
334         if (!cs)
335             return first;
336     }
337
338     /*
339      * Now binary-search using the counted B-tree, to find the largest
340      * ID which is in a contiguous sequence from the beginning of that
341      * range.
342      */
343     low = low_orig;
344     high = high_orig = count234(sharestate->connections);
345     while (high - low > 1) {
346         mid = (high + low) / 2;
347         cs = index234(sharestate->connections, mid);
348         if (cs->id == first + (mid - low_orig))
349             low = mid;                 /* this one is still in the sequence */
350         else
351             high = mid;                /* this one is past the end */
352     }
353
354     /*
355      * Now low is the tree index of the largest ID in the initial
356      * sequence. So the return value is one more than low's id, and we
357      * know low's id is given by the formula in the binary search loop
358      * above.
359      *
360      * (If an SSH connection went on for _enormously_ long, we might
361      * reach a point where all ids from 'first' to UINT_MAX were in
362      * use. In that situation the formula below would wrap round by
363      * one and return zero, which is conveniently the right way to
364      * signal 'no id available' from this function.)
365      */
366     ret = first + (low - low_orig) + 1;
367     {
368         struct ssh_sharing_connstate dummy;
369         dummy.id = ret;
370         assert(NULL == find234(sharestate->connections, &dummy, NULL));
371     }
372     return ret;
373 }
374
375 static int share_halfchannel_cmp(void *av, void *bv)
376 {
377     const struct share_halfchannel *a = (const struct share_halfchannel *)av;
378     const struct share_halfchannel *b = (const struct share_halfchannel *)bv;
379
380     if (a->server_id < b->server_id)
381         return -1;
382     else if (a->server_id > b->server_id)
383         return +1;
384     else
385         return 0;
386 }
387
388 static int share_channel_us_cmp(void *av, void *bv)
389 {
390     const struct share_channel *a = (const struct share_channel *)av;
391     const struct share_channel *b = (const struct share_channel *)bv;
392
393     if (a->upstream_id < b->upstream_id)
394         return -1;
395     else if (a->upstream_id > b->upstream_id)
396         return +1;
397     else
398         return 0;
399 }
400
401 static int share_channel_server_cmp(void *av, void *bv)
402 {
403     const struct share_channel *a = (const struct share_channel *)av;
404     const struct share_channel *b = (const struct share_channel *)bv;
405
406     if (a->server_id < b->server_id)
407         return -1;
408     else if (a->server_id > b->server_id)
409         return +1;
410     else
411         return 0;
412 }
413
414 static int share_xchannel_us_cmp(void *av, void *bv)
415 {
416     const struct share_xchannel *a = (const struct share_xchannel *)av;
417     const struct share_xchannel *b = (const struct share_xchannel *)bv;
418
419     if (a->upstream_id < b->upstream_id)
420         return -1;
421     else if (a->upstream_id > b->upstream_id)
422         return +1;
423     else
424         return 0;
425 }
426
427 static int share_xchannel_server_cmp(void *av, void *bv)
428 {
429     const struct share_xchannel *a = (const struct share_xchannel *)av;
430     const struct share_xchannel *b = (const struct share_xchannel *)bv;
431
432     if (a->server_id < b->server_id)
433         return -1;
434     else if (a->server_id > b->server_id)
435         return +1;
436     else
437         return 0;
438 }
439
440 static int share_forwarding_cmp(void *av, void *bv)
441 {
442     const struct share_forwarding *a = (const struct share_forwarding *)av;
443     const struct share_forwarding *b = (const struct share_forwarding *)bv;
444     int i;
445
446     if ((i = strcmp(a->host, b->host)) != 0)
447         return i;
448     else if (a->port < b->port)
449         return -1;
450     else if (a->port > b->port)
451         return +1;
452     else
453         return 0;
454 }
455
456 static void share_xchannel_free(struct share_xchannel *xc)
457 {
458     while (xc->msghead) {
459         struct share_xchannel_message *tmp = xc->msghead;
460         xc->msghead = tmp->next;
461         sfree(tmp);
462     }
463     sfree(xc);
464 }
465
466 static void share_connstate_free(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs)
467 {
468     struct share_halfchannel *hc;
469     struct share_xchannel *xc;
470     struct share_channel *chan;
471     struct share_forwarding *fwd;
472
473     while ((hc = (struct share_halfchannel *)
474             delpos234(cs->halfchannels, 0)) != NULL)
475         sfree(hc);
476     freetree234(cs->halfchannels);
477
478     /* All channels live in 'channels_by_us' but only some in
479      * 'channels_by_server', so we use the former to find the list of
480      * ones to free */
481     freetree234(cs->channels_by_server);
482     while ((chan = (struct share_channel *)
483             delpos234(cs->channels_by_us, 0)) != NULL)
484         sfree(chan);
485     freetree234(cs->channels_by_us);
486
487     /* But every xchannel is in both trees, so it doesn't matter which
488      * we use to free them. */
489     while ((xc = (struct share_xchannel *)
490             delpos234(cs->xchannels_by_us, 0)) != NULL)
491         share_xchannel_free(xc);
492     freetree234(cs->xchannels_by_us);
493     freetree234(cs->xchannels_by_server);
494
495     while ((fwd = (struct share_forwarding *)
496             delpos234(cs->forwardings, 0)) != NULL)
497         sfree(fwd);
498     freetree234(cs->forwardings);
499
500     while (cs->globreq_head) {
501         struct share_globreq *globreq = cs->globreq_head;
502         cs->globreq_head = cs->globreq_head->next;
503         sfree(globreq);
504     }
505
506     if (cs->sock)
507         sk_close(cs->sock);
508
509     sfree(cs);
510 }
511
512 void sharestate_free(void *v)
513 {
514     struct ssh_sharing_state *sharestate = (struct ssh_sharing_state *)v;
515     struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs;
516
517     platform_ssh_share_cleanup(sharestate->sockname);
518
519     while ((cs = (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *)
520             delpos234(sharestate->connections, 0)) != NULL) {
521         share_connstate_free(cs);
522     }
523     freetree234(sharestate->connections);
524     if (sharestate->listensock) {
525         sk_close(sharestate->listensock);
526         sharestate->listensock = NULL;
527     }
528     sfree(sharestate->server_verstring);
529     sfree(sharestate->sockname);
530     sfree(sharestate);
531 }
532
533 static struct share_halfchannel *share_add_halfchannel
534     (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs, unsigned server_id)
535 {
536     struct share_halfchannel *hc = snew(struct share_halfchannel);
537     hc->server_id = server_id;
538     if (add234(cs->halfchannels, hc) != hc) {
539         /* Duplicate?! */
540         sfree(hc);
541         return NULL;
542     } else {
543         return hc;
544     }
545 }
546
547 static struct share_halfchannel *share_find_halfchannel
548     (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs, unsigned server_id)
549 {
550     struct share_halfchannel dummyhc;
551     dummyhc.server_id = server_id;
552     return find234(cs->halfchannels, &dummyhc, NULL);
553 }
554
555 static void share_remove_halfchannel(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
556                                      struct share_halfchannel *hc)
557 {
558     del234(cs->halfchannels, hc);
559     sfree(hc);
560 }
561
562 static struct share_channel *share_add_channel
563     (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs, unsigned downstream_id,
564      unsigned upstream_id, unsigned server_id, int state, int maxpkt)
565 {
566     struct share_channel *chan = snew(struct share_channel);
567     chan->downstream_id = downstream_id;
568     chan->upstream_id = upstream_id;
569     chan->server_id = server_id;
570     chan->state = state;
571     chan->downstream_maxpkt = maxpkt;
572     chan->x11_auth_upstream = NULL;
573     chan->x11_auth_data = NULL;
574     chan->x11_auth_proto = -1;
575     chan->x11_auth_datalen = 0;
576     chan->x11_one_shot = 0;
577     if (add234(cs->channels_by_us, chan) != chan) {
578         sfree(chan);
579         return NULL;
580     }
581     if (chan->state != UNACKNOWLEDGED) {
582         if (add234(cs->channels_by_server, chan) != chan) {
583             del234(cs->channels_by_us, chan);
584             sfree(chan);            
585             return NULL;
586         }
587     }
588     return chan;
589 }
590
591 static void share_channel_set_server_id(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
592                                         struct share_channel *chan,
593                                         unsigned server_id, int newstate)
594 {
595     chan->server_id = server_id;
596     chan->state = newstate;
597     assert(newstate != UNACKNOWLEDGED);
598     add234(cs->channels_by_server, chan);
599 }
600
601 static struct share_channel *share_find_channel_by_upstream
602     (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs, unsigned upstream_id)
603 {
604     struct share_channel dummychan;
605     dummychan.upstream_id = upstream_id;
606     return find234(cs->channels_by_us, &dummychan, NULL);
607 }
608
609 static struct share_channel *share_find_channel_by_server
610     (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs, unsigned server_id)
611 {
612     struct share_channel dummychan;
613     dummychan.server_id = server_id;
614     return find234(cs->channels_by_server, &dummychan, NULL);
615 }
616
617 static void share_remove_channel(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
618                                  struct share_channel *chan)
619 {
620     del234(cs->channels_by_us, chan);
621     del234(cs->channels_by_server, chan);
622     if (chan->x11_auth_upstream)
623         ssh_sharing_remove_x11_display(cs->parent->ssh,
624                                        chan->x11_auth_upstream);
625     sfree(chan->x11_auth_data);
626     sfree(chan);
627 }
628
629 static struct share_xchannel *share_add_xchannel
630     (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
631      unsigned upstream_id, unsigned server_id)
632 {
633     struct share_xchannel *xc = snew(struct share_xchannel);
634     xc->upstream_id = upstream_id;
635     xc->server_id = server_id;
636     xc->live = TRUE;
637     xc->msghead = xc->msgtail = NULL;
638     if (add234(cs->xchannels_by_us, xc) != xc) {
639         sfree(xc);
640         return NULL;
641     }
642     if (add234(cs->xchannels_by_server, xc) != xc) {
643         del234(cs->xchannels_by_us, xc);
644         sfree(xc);
645         return NULL;
646     }
647     return xc;
648 }
649
650 static struct share_xchannel *share_find_xchannel_by_upstream
651     (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs, unsigned upstream_id)
652 {
653     struct share_xchannel dummyxc;
654     dummyxc.upstream_id = upstream_id;
655     return find234(cs->xchannels_by_us, &dummyxc, NULL);
656 }
657
658 static struct share_xchannel *share_find_xchannel_by_server
659     (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs, unsigned server_id)
660 {
661     struct share_xchannel dummyxc;
662     dummyxc.server_id = server_id;
663     return find234(cs->xchannels_by_server, &dummyxc, NULL);
664 }
665
666 static void share_remove_xchannel(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
667                                  struct share_xchannel *xc)
668 {
669     del234(cs->xchannels_by_us, xc);
670     del234(cs->xchannels_by_server, xc);
671     share_xchannel_free(xc);
672 }
673
674 static struct share_forwarding *share_add_forwarding
675     (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
676      const char *host, int port)
677 {
678     struct share_forwarding *fwd = snew(struct share_forwarding);
679     fwd->host = dupstr(host);
680     fwd->port = port;
681     fwd->active = FALSE;
682     if (add234(cs->forwardings, fwd) != fwd) {
683         /* Duplicate?! */
684         sfree(fwd);
685         return NULL;
686     }
687     return fwd;
688 }
689
690 static struct share_forwarding *share_find_forwarding
691     (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs, const char *host, int port)
692 {
693     struct share_forwarding dummyfwd, *ret;
694     dummyfwd.host = dupstr(host);
695     dummyfwd.port = port;
696     ret = find234(cs->forwardings, &dummyfwd, NULL);
697     sfree(dummyfwd.host);
698     return ret;
699 }
700
701 static void share_remove_forwarding(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
702                                     struct share_forwarding *fwd)
703 {
704     del234(cs->forwardings, fwd);
705     sfree(fwd);
706 }
707
708 static void send_packet_to_downstream(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
709                                       int type, const void *pkt, int pktlen,
710                                       struct share_channel *chan)
711 {
712     if (!cs->sock) /* throw away all packets destined for a dead downstream */
713         return;
714
715     if (type == SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA) {
716         /*
717          * Special case which we take care of at a low level, so as to
718          * be sure to apply it in all cases. On rare occasions we
719          * might find that we have a channel for which the
720          * downstream's maximum packet size exceeds the max packet
721          * size we presented to the server on its behalf. (This can
722          * occur in X11 forwarding, where we have to send _our_
723          * CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION before we discover which if any
724          * downstream the channel is destined for, so if that
725          * downstream turns out to present a smaller max packet size
726          * then we're in this situation.)
727          *
728          * If that happens, we just chop up the packet into pieces and
729          * send them as separate CHANNEL_DATA packets.
730          */
731         const char *upkt = (const char *)pkt;
732         char header[13]; /* 4 length + 1 type + 4 channel id + 4 string len */
733
734         int len = toint(GET_32BIT(upkt + 4));
735         upkt += 8;                /* skip channel id + length field */
736
737         if (len < 0 || len > pktlen - 8)
738             len = pktlen - 8;
739
740         do {
741             int this_len = (len > chan->downstream_maxpkt ?
742                             chan->downstream_maxpkt : len);
743             PUT_32BIT(header, this_len + 9);
744             header[4] = type;
745             PUT_32BIT(header + 5, chan->downstream_id);
746             PUT_32BIT(header + 9, this_len);
747             sk_write(cs->sock, header, 13);
748             sk_write(cs->sock, upkt, this_len);
749             len -= this_len;
750             upkt += this_len;
751         } while (len > 0);
752     } else {
753         /*
754          * Just do the obvious thing.
755          */
756         char header[9];
757
758         PUT_32BIT(header, pktlen + 1);
759         header[4] = type;
760         sk_write(cs->sock, header, 5);
761         sk_write(cs->sock, pkt, pktlen);
762     }
763 }
764
765 static void share_try_cleanup(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs)
766 {
767     int i;
768     struct share_halfchannel *hc;
769     struct share_channel *chan;
770     struct share_forwarding *fwd;
771
772     /*
773      * Any half-open channels, i.e. those for which we'd received
774      * CHANNEL_OPEN from the server but not passed back a response
775      * from downstream, should be responded to with OPEN_FAILURE.
776      */
777     while ((hc = (struct share_halfchannel *)
778             index234(cs->halfchannels, 0)) != NULL) {
779         static const char reason[] = "PuTTY downstream no longer available";
780         static const char lang[] = "en";
781         unsigned char packet[256];
782         int pos = 0;
783
784         PUT_32BIT(packet + pos, hc->server_id); pos += 4;
785         PUT_32BIT(packet + pos, SSH2_OPEN_CONNECT_FAILED); pos += 4;
786         PUT_32BIT(packet + pos, strlen(reason)); pos += 4;
787         memcpy(packet + pos, reason, strlen(reason)); pos += strlen(reason);
788         PUT_32BIT(packet + pos, strlen(lang)); pos += 4;
789         memcpy(packet + pos, lang, strlen(lang)); pos += strlen(lang);
790         ssh_send_packet_from_downstream(cs->parent->ssh, cs->id,
791                                         SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE,
792                                         packet, pos, "cleanup after"
793                                         " downstream went away");
794
795         share_remove_halfchannel(cs, hc);
796     }
797
798     /*
799      * Any actually open channels should have a CHANNEL_CLOSE sent for
800      * them, unless we've already done so. We won't be able to
801      * actually clean them up until CHANNEL_CLOSE comes back from the
802      * server, though (unless the server happens to have sent a CLOSE
803      * already).
804      *
805      * Another annoying exception is UNACKNOWLEDGED channels, i.e.
806      * we've _sent_ a CHANNEL_OPEN to the server but not received an
807      * OPEN_CONFIRMATION or OPEN_FAILURE. We must wait for a reply
808      * before closing the channel, because until we see that reply we
809      * won't have the server's channel id to put in the close message.
810      */
811     for (i = 0; (chan = (struct share_channel *)
812                  index234(cs->channels_by_us, i)) != NULL; i++) {
813         unsigned char packet[256];
814         int pos = 0;
815
816         if (chan->state != SENT_CLOSE && chan->state != UNACKNOWLEDGED) {
817             PUT_32BIT(packet + pos, chan->server_id); pos += 4;
818             ssh_send_packet_from_downstream(cs->parent->ssh, cs->id,
819                                             SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE,
820                                             packet, pos, "cleanup after"
821                                             " downstream went away");
822             if (chan->state != RCVD_CLOSE) {
823                 chan->state = SENT_CLOSE;
824             } else {
825                 /* In this case, we _can_ clear up the channel now. */
826                 ssh_delete_sharing_channel(cs->parent->ssh, chan->upstream_id);
827                 share_remove_channel(cs, chan);
828                 i--;    /* don't accidentally skip one as a result */
829             }
830         }
831     }
832
833     /*
834      * Any remote port forwardings we're managing on behalf of this
835      * downstream should be cancelled. Again, we must defer those for
836      * which we haven't yet seen REQUEST_SUCCESS/FAILURE.
837      *
838      * We take a fire-and-forget approach during cleanup, not
839      * bothering to set want_reply.
840      */
841     for (i = 0; (fwd = (struct share_forwarding *)
842                  index234(cs->forwardings, i)) != NULL; i++) {
843         if (fwd->active) {
844             static const char request[] = "cancel-tcpip-forward";
845             char *packet = snewn(256 + strlen(fwd->host), char);
846             int pos = 0;
847
848             PUT_32BIT(packet + pos, strlen(request)); pos += 4;
849             memcpy(packet + pos, request, strlen(request));
850             pos += strlen(request);
851
852             packet[pos++] = 0;         /* !want_reply */
853
854             PUT_32BIT(packet + pos, strlen(fwd->host)); pos += 4;
855             memcpy(packet + pos, fwd->host, strlen(fwd->host));
856             pos += strlen(fwd->host);
857
858             PUT_32BIT(packet + pos, fwd->port); pos += 4;
859
860             ssh_send_packet_from_downstream(cs->parent->ssh, cs->id,
861                                             SSH2_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST,
862                                             packet, pos, "cleanup after"
863                                             " downstream went away");
864             sfree(packet);
865
866             share_remove_forwarding(cs, fwd);
867             i--;    /* don't accidentally skip one as a result */
868         }
869     }
870
871     if (count234(cs->halfchannels) == 0 &&
872         count234(cs->channels_by_us) == 0 &&
873         count234(cs->forwardings) == 0) {
874         /*
875          * Now we're _really_ done, so we can get rid of cs completely.
876          */
877         del234(cs->parent->connections, cs);
878         ssh_sharing_downstream_disconnected(cs->parent->ssh, cs->id);
879         share_connstate_free(cs);
880     }
881 }
882
883 static void share_begin_cleanup(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs)
884 {
885
886     sk_close(cs->sock);
887     cs->sock = NULL;
888
889     share_try_cleanup(cs);
890 }
891
892 static void share_disconnect(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
893                              const char *message)
894 {
895     static const char lang[] = "en";
896     int msglen = strlen(message);
897     char *packet = snewn(msglen + 256, char);
898     int pos = 0;
899
900     PUT_32BIT(packet + pos, SSH2_DISCONNECT_PROTOCOL_ERROR); pos += 4;
901
902     PUT_32BIT(packet + pos, msglen); pos += 4;
903     memcpy(packet + pos, message, msglen);
904     pos += msglen;
905
906     PUT_32BIT(packet + pos, strlen(lang)); pos += 4;
907     memcpy(packet + pos, lang, strlen(lang)); pos += strlen(lang);
908
909     send_packet_to_downstream(cs, SSH2_MSG_DISCONNECT, packet, pos, NULL);
910
911     share_begin_cleanup(cs);
912 }
913
914 static int share_closing(Plug plug, const char *error_msg, int error_code,
915                          int calling_back)
916 {
917     struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs = (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *)plug;
918
919     if (error_msg) {
920 #ifdef BROKEN_PIPE_ERROR_CODE
921         /*
922          * Most of the time, we log what went wrong when a downstream
923          * disappears with a socket error. One exception, though, is
924          * receiving EPIPE when we haven't received a protocol version
925          * string from the downstream, because that can happen as a result
926          * of plink -shareexists (opening the connection and instantly
927          * closing it again without bothering to read our version string).
928          * So that one case is not treated as a log-worthy error.
929          */
930         if (error_code == BROKEN_PIPE_ERROR_CODE && !cs->got_verstring)
931             /* do nothing */;
932         else
933 #endif
934             ssh_sharing_logf(cs->parent->ssh, cs->id,
935                              "Socket error: %s", error_msg);
936     }
937     share_begin_cleanup(cs);
938     return 1;
939 }
940
941 static int getstring_inner(const void *vdata, int datalen,
942                            char **out, int *outlen)
943 {
944     const unsigned char *data = (const unsigned char *)vdata;
945     int len;
946
947     if (datalen < 4)
948         return FALSE;
949
950     len = toint(GET_32BIT(data));
951     if (len < 0 || len > datalen - 4)
952         return FALSE;
953
954     if (outlen)
955         *outlen = len + 4;         /* total size including length field */
956     if (out)
957         *out = dupprintf("%.*s", len, (char *)data + 4);
958     return TRUE;
959 }
960
961 static char *getstring(const void *data, int datalen)
962 {
963     char *ret;
964     if (getstring_inner(data, datalen, &ret, NULL))
965         return ret;
966     else
967         return NULL;
968 }
969
970 static int getstring_size(const void *data, int datalen)
971 {
972     int ret;
973     if (getstring_inner(data, datalen, NULL, &ret))
974         return ret;
975     else
976         return -1;
977 }
978
979 /*
980  * Append a message to the end of an xchannel's queue, with the length
981  * and type code filled in and the data block allocated but
982  * uninitialised.
983  */
984 struct share_xchannel_message *share_xchannel_add_message
985 (struct share_xchannel *xc, int type, int len)
986 {
987     unsigned char *block;
988     struct share_xchannel_message *msg;
989
990     /*
991      * Be a little tricksy here by allocating a single memory block
992      * containing both the 'struct share_xchannel_message' and the
993      * actual data. Simplifies freeing it later.
994      */
995     block = smalloc(sizeof(struct share_xchannel_message) + len);
996     msg = (struct share_xchannel_message *)block;
997     msg->data = block + sizeof(struct share_xchannel_message);
998     msg->datalen = len;
999     msg->type = type;
1000
1001     /*
1002      * Queue it in the xchannel.
1003      */
1004     if (xc->msgtail)
1005         xc->msgtail->next = msg;
1006     else
1007         xc->msghead = msg;
1008     msg->next = NULL;
1009     xc->msgtail = msg;
1010
1011     return msg;
1012 }
1013
1014 void share_dead_xchannel_respond(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
1015                                  struct share_xchannel *xc)
1016 {
1017     /*
1018      * Handle queued incoming messages from the server destined for an
1019      * xchannel which is dead (i.e. downstream sent OPEN_FAILURE).
1020      */
1021     int delete = FALSE;
1022     while (xc->msghead) {
1023         struct share_xchannel_message *msg = xc->msghead;
1024         xc->msghead = msg->next;
1025
1026         if (msg->type == SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST && msg->datalen > 4) {
1027             /*
1028              * A CHANNEL_REQUEST is responded to by sending
1029              * CHANNEL_FAILURE, if it has want_reply set.
1030              */
1031             int wantreplypos = getstring_size(msg->data, msg->datalen);
1032             if (wantreplypos > 0 && wantreplypos < msg->datalen &&
1033                 msg->data[wantreplypos] != 0) {
1034                 unsigned char id[4];
1035                 PUT_32BIT(id, xc->server_id);
1036                 ssh_send_packet_from_downstream
1037                     (cs->parent->ssh, cs->id, SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE, id, 4,
1038                      "downstream refused X channel open");
1039             }
1040         } else if (msg->type == SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE) {
1041             /*
1042              * On CHANNEL_CLOSE we can discard the channel completely.
1043              */
1044             delete = TRUE;
1045         }
1046
1047         sfree(msg);
1048     }
1049     xc->msgtail = NULL;
1050     if (delete) {
1051         ssh_delete_sharing_channel(cs->parent->ssh, xc->upstream_id);
1052         share_remove_xchannel(cs, xc);
1053     }
1054 }
1055
1056 void share_xchannel_confirmation(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
1057                                  struct share_xchannel *xc,
1058                                  struct share_channel *chan,
1059                                  unsigned downstream_window)
1060 {
1061     unsigned char window_adjust[8];
1062
1063     /*
1064      * Send all the queued messages downstream.
1065      */
1066     while (xc->msghead) {
1067         struct share_xchannel_message *msg = xc->msghead;
1068         xc->msghead = msg->next;
1069
1070         if (msg->datalen >= 4)
1071             PUT_32BIT(msg->data, chan->downstream_id);
1072         send_packet_to_downstream(cs, msg->type,
1073                                   msg->data, msg->datalen, chan);
1074
1075         sfree(msg);
1076     }
1077
1078     /*
1079      * Send a WINDOW_ADJUST back upstream, to synchronise the window
1080      * size downstream thinks it's presented with the one we've
1081      * actually presented.
1082      */
1083     PUT_32BIT(window_adjust, xc->server_id);
1084     PUT_32BIT(window_adjust + 4, downstream_window - xc->window);
1085     ssh_send_packet_from_downstream(cs->parent->ssh, cs->id,
1086                                     SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_WINDOW_ADJUST,
1087                                     window_adjust, 8, "window adjustment after"
1088                                     " downstream accepted X channel");
1089 }
1090
1091 void share_xchannel_failure(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
1092                             struct share_xchannel *xc)
1093 {
1094     /*
1095      * If downstream refuses to open our X channel at all for some
1096      * reason, we must respond by sending an emergency CLOSE upstream.
1097      */
1098     unsigned char id[4];
1099     PUT_32BIT(id, xc->server_id);
1100     ssh_send_packet_from_downstream
1101         (cs->parent->ssh, cs->id, SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE, id, 4,
1102          "downstream refused X channel open");
1103
1104     /*
1105      * Now mark the xchannel as dead, and respond to anything sent on
1106      * it until we see CLOSE for it in turn.
1107      */
1108     xc->live = FALSE;
1109     share_dead_xchannel_respond(cs, xc);
1110 }
1111
1112 void share_setup_x11_channel(void *csv, void *chanv,
1113                              unsigned upstream_id, unsigned server_id,
1114                              unsigned server_currwin, unsigned server_maxpkt,
1115                              unsigned client_adjusted_window,
1116                              const char *peer_addr, int peer_port, int endian,
1117                              int protomajor, int protominor,
1118                              const void *initial_data, int initial_len)
1119 {
1120     struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs = (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *)csv;
1121     struct share_channel *chan = (struct share_channel *)chanv;
1122     struct share_xchannel *xc;
1123     struct share_xchannel_message *msg;
1124     void *greeting;
1125     int greeting_len;
1126     unsigned char *pkt;
1127     int pktlen;
1128
1129     /*
1130      * Create an xchannel containing data we've already received from
1131      * the X client, and preload it with a CHANNEL_DATA message
1132      * containing our own made-up authorisation greeting and any
1133      * additional data sent from the server so far.
1134      */
1135     xc = share_add_xchannel(cs, upstream_id, server_id);
1136     greeting = x11_make_greeting(endian, protomajor, protominor,
1137                                  chan->x11_auth_proto,
1138                                  chan->x11_auth_data, chan->x11_auth_datalen,
1139                                  peer_addr, peer_port, &greeting_len);
1140     msg = share_xchannel_add_message(xc, SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA,
1141                                      8 + greeting_len + initial_len);
1142     /* leave the channel id field unfilled - we don't know the
1143      * downstream id yet, of course */
1144     PUT_32BIT(msg->data + 4, greeting_len + initial_len);
1145     memcpy(msg->data + 8, greeting, greeting_len);
1146     memcpy(msg->data + 8 + greeting_len, initial_data, initial_len);
1147     sfree(greeting);
1148
1149     xc->window = client_adjusted_window + greeting_len;
1150
1151     /*
1152      * Send on a CHANNEL_OPEN to downstream.
1153      */
1154     pktlen = 27 + strlen(peer_addr);
1155     pkt = snewn(pktlen, unsigned char);
1156     PUT_32BIT(pkt, 3);                 /* strlen("x11") */
1157     memcpy(pkt+4, "x11", 3);
1158     PUT_32BIT(pkt+7, server_id);
1159     PUT_32BIT(pkt+11, server_currwin);
1160     PUT_32BIT(pkt+15, server_maxpkt);
1161     PUT_32BIT(pkt+19, strlen(peer_addr));
1162     memcpy(pkt+23, peer_addr, strlen(peer_addr));
1163     PUT_32BIT(pkt+23+strlen(peer_addr), peer_port);
1164     send_packet_to_downstream(cs, SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN, pkt, pktlen, NULL);
1165     sfree(pkt);
1166
1167     /*
1168      * If this was a once-only X forwarding, clean it up now.
1169      */
1170     if (chan->x11_one_shot) {
1171         ssh_sharing_remove_x11_display(cs->parent->ssh,
1172                                        chan->x11_auth_upstream);
1173         chan->x11_auth_upstream = NULL;
1174         sfree(chan->x11_auth_data);
1175         chan->x11_auth_proto = -1;
1176         chan->x11_auth_datalen = 0;
1177         chan->x11_one_shot = 0;
1178     }
1179 }
1180
1181 void share_got_pkt_from_server(void *csv, int type,
1182                                unsigned char *pkt, int pktlen)
1183 {
1184     struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs = (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *)csv;
1185     struct share_globreq *globreq;
1186     int id_pos;
1187     unsigned upstream_id, server_id;
1188     struct share_channel *chan;
1189     struct share_xchannel *xc;
1190
1191     switch (type) {
1192       case SSH2_MSG_REQUEST_SUCCESS:
1193       case SSH2_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE:
1194         globreq = cs->globreq_head;
1195         if (globreq->type == GLOBREQ_TCPIP_FORWARD) {
1196             if (type == SSH2_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE) {
1197                 share_remove_forwarding(cs, globreq->fwd);
1198             } else {
1199                 globreq->fwd->active = TRUE;
1200             }
1201         } else if (globreq->type == GLOBREQ_CANCEL_TCPIP_FORWARD) {
1202             if (type == SSH2_MSG_REQUEST_SUCCESS) {
1203                 share_remove_forwarding(cs, globreq->fwd);
1204             }
1205         }
1206         if (globreq->want_reply) {
1207             send_packet_to_downstream(cs, type, pkt, pktlen, NULL);
1208         }
1209         cs->globreq_head = globreq->next;
1210         sfree(globreq);
1211         if (cs->globreq_head == NULL)
1212             cs->globreq_tail = NULL;
1213
1214         if (!cs->sock) {
1215             /* Retry cleaning up this connection, in case that reply
1216              * was the last thing we were waiting for. */
1217             share_try_cleanup(cs);
1218         }
1219
1220         break;
1221
1222       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN:
1223         id_pos = getstring_size(pkt, pktlen);
1224         assert(id_pos >= 0);
1225         server_id = GET_32BIT(pkt + id_pos);
1226         share_add_halfchannel(cs, server_id);
1227
1228         send_packet_to_downstream(cs, type, pkt, pktlen, NULL);
1229         break;
1230
1231       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION:
1232       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE:
1233       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE:
1234       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_WINDOW_ADJUST:
1235       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA:
1236       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_EXTENDED_DATA:
1237       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_EOF:
1238       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST:
1239       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_SUCCESS:
1240       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE:
1241         /*
1242          * All these messages have the recipient channel id as the
1243          * first uint32 field in the packet. Substitute the downstream
1244          * channel id for our one and pass the packet downstream.
1245          */
1246         assert(pktlen >= 4);
1247         upstream_id = GET_32BIT(pkt);
1248         if ((chan = share_find_channel_by_upstream(cs, upstream_id)) != NULL) {
1249             /*
1250              * The normal case: this id refers to an open channel.
1251              */
1252             PUT_32BIT(pkt, chan->downstream_id);
1253             send_packet_to_downstream(cs, type, pkt, pktlen, chan);
1254
1255             /*
1256              * Update the channel state, for messages that need it.
1257              */
1258             if (type == SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION) {
1259                 if (chan->state == UNACKNOWLEDGED && pktlen >= 8) {
1260                     share_channel_set_server_id(cs, chan, GET_32BIT(pkt+4),
1261                                                 OPEN);
1262                     if (!cs->sock) {
1263                         /* Retry cleaning up this connection, so that we
1264                          * can send an immediate CLOSE on this channel for
1265                          * which we now know the server id. */
1266                         share_try_cleanup(cs);
1267                     }
1268                 }
1269             } else if (type == SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE) {
1270                 ssh_delete_sharing_channel(cs->parent->ssh, chan->upstream_id);
1271                 share_remove_channel(cs, chan);
1272             } else if (type == SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE) {
1273                 if (chan->state == SENT_CLOSE) {
1274                     ssh_delete_sharing_channel(cs->parent->ssh,
1275                                                chan->upstream_id);
1276                     share_remove_channel(cs, chan);
1277                     if (!cs->sock) {
1278                         /* Retry cleaning up this connection, in case this
1279                          * channel closure was the last thing we were
1280                          * waiting for. */
1281                         share_try_cleanup(cs);
1282                     }
1283                 } else {
1284                     chan->state = RCVD_CLOSE;
1285                 }
1286             }
1287         } else if ((xc = share_find_xchannel_by_upstream(cs, upstream_id))
1288                    != NULL) {
1289             /*
1290              * The unusual case: this id refers to an xchannel. Add it
1291              * to the xchannel's queue.
1292              */
1293             struct share_xchannel_message *msg;
1294
1295             msg = share_xchannel_add_message(xc, type, pktlen);
1296             memcpy(msg->data, pkt, pktlen);
1297
1298             /* If the xchannel is dead, then also respond to it (which
1299              * may involve deleting the channel). */
1300             if (!xc->live)
1301                 share_dead_xchannel_respond(cs, xc);
1302         }
1303         break;
1304
1305       default:
1306         assert(!"This packet type should never have come from ssh.c");
1307         break;
1308     }
1309 }
1310
1311 static void share_got_pkt_from_downstream(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs,
1312                                           int type,
1313                                           unsigned char *pkt, int pktlen)
1314 {
1315     char *request_name;
1316     struct share_forwarding *fwd;
1317     int id_pos;
1318     unsigned old_id, new_id, server_id;
1319     struct share_globreq *globreq;
1320     struct share_channel *chan;
1321     struct share_halfchannel *hc;
1322     struct share_xchannel *xc;
1323     char *err = NULL;
1324
1325     switch (type) {
1326       case SSH2_MSG_DISCONNECT:
1327         /*
1328          * This message stops here: if downstream is disconnecting
1329          * from us, that doesn't mean we want to disconnect from the
1330          * SSH server. Close the downstream connection and start
1331          * cleanup.
1332          */
1333         share_begin_cleanup(cs);
1334         break;
1335
1336       case SSH2_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST:
1337         /*
1338          * The only global requests we understand are "tcpip-forward"
1339          * and "cancel-tcpip-forward". Since those require us to
1340          * maintain state, we must assume that other global requests
1341          * will probably require that too, and so we don't forward on
1342          * any request we don't understand.
1343          */
1344         request_name = getstring(pkt, pktlen);
1345         if (request_name == NULL) {
1346             err = dupprintf("Truncated GLOBAL_REQUEST packet");
1347             goto confused;
1348         }
1349
1350         if (!strcmp(request_name, "tcpip-forward")) {
1351             int wantreplypos, orig_wantreply, port, ret;
1352             char *host;
1353
1354             sfree(request_name);
1355
1356             /*
1357              * Pick the packet apart to find the want_reply field and
1358              * the host/port we're going to ask to listen on.
1359              */
1360             wantreplypos = getstring_size(pkt, pktlen);
1361             if (wantreplypos < 0 || wantreplypos >= pktlen) {
1362                 err = dupprintf("Truncated GLOBAL_REQUEST packet");
1363                 goto confused;
1364             }
1365             orig_wantreply = pkt[wantreplypos];
1366             port = getstring_size(pkt + (wantreplypos + 1),
1367                                   pktlen - (wantreplypos + 1));
1368             port += (wantreplypos + 1);
1369             if (port < 0 || port > pktlen - 4) {
1370                 err = dupprintf("Truncated GLOBAL_REQUEST packet");
1371                 goto confused;
1372             }
1373             host = getstring(pkt + (wantreplypos + 1),
1374                              pktlen - (wantreplypos + 1));
1375             assert(host != NULL);
1376             port = GET_32BIT(pkt + port);
1377
1378             /*
1379              * See if we can allocate space in ssh.c's tree of remote
1380              * port forwardings. If we can't, it's because another
1381              * client sharing this connection has already allocated
1382              * the identical port forwarding, so we take it on
1383              * ourselves to manufacture a failure packet and send it
1384              * back to downstream.
1385              */
1386             ret = ssh_alloc_sharing_rportfwd(cs->parent->ssh, host, port, cs);
1387             if (!ret) {
1388                 if (orig_wantreply) {
1389                     send_packet_to_downstream(cs, SSH2_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE,
1390                                               "", 0, NULL);
1391                 }
1392             } else {
1393                 /*
1394                  * We've managed to make space for this forwarding
1395                  * locally. Pass the request on to the SSH server, but
1396                  * set want_reply even if it wasn't originally set, so
1397                  * that we know whether this forwarding needs to be
1398                  * cleaned up if downstream goes away.
1399                  */
1400                 int old_wantreply = pkt[wantreplypos];
1401                 pkt[wantreplypos] = 1;
1402                 ssh_send_packet_from_downstream
1403                     (cs->parent->ssh, cs->id, type, pkt, pktlen,
1404                      old_wantreply ? NULL : "upstream added want_reply flag");
1405                 fwd = share_add_forwarding(cs, host, port);
1406                 ssh_sharing_queue_global_request(cs->parent->ssh, cs);
1407
1408                 if (fwd) {
1409                     globreq = snew(struct share_globreq);
1410                     globreq->next = NULL;
1411                     if (cs->globreq_tail)
1412                         cs->globreq_tail->next = globreq;
1413                     else
1414                         cs->globreq_head = globreq;
1415                     globreq->fwd = fwd;
1416                     globreq->want_reply = orig_wantreply;
1417                     globreq->type = GLOBREQ_TCPIP_FORWARD;
1418                 }
1419             }
1420
1421             sfree(host);
1422         } else if (!strcmp(request_name, "cancel-tcpip-forward")) {
1423             int wantreplypos, orig_wantreply, port;
1424             char *host;
1425             struct share_forwarding *fwd;
1426
1427             sfree(request_name);
1428
1429             /*
1430              * Pick the packet apart to find the want_reply field and
1431              * the host/port we're going to ask to listen on.
1432              */
1433             wantreplypos = getstring_size(pkt, pktlen);
1434             if (wantreplypos < 0 || wantreplypos >= pktlen) {
1435                 err = dupprintf("Truncated GLOBAL_REQUEST packet");
1436                 goto confused;
1437             }
1438             orig_wantreply = pkt[wantreplypos];
1439             port = getstring_size(pkt + (wantreplypos + 1),
1440                                   pktlen - (wantreplypos + 1));
1441             port += (wantreplypos + 1);
1442             if (port < 0 || port > pktlen - 4) {
1443                 err = dupprintf("Truncated GLOBAL_REQUEST packet");
1444                 goto confused;
1445             }
1446             host = getstring(pkt + (wantreplypos + 1),
1447                              pktlen - (wantreplypos + 1));
1448             assert(host != NULL);
1449             port = GET_32BIT(pkt + port);
1450
1451             /*
1452              * Look up the existing forwarding with these details.
1453              */
1454             fwd = share_find_forwarding(cs, host, port);
1455             if (!fwd) {
1456                 if (orig_wantreply) {
1457                     send_packet_to_downstream(cs, SSH2_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE,
1458                                               "", 0, NULL);
1459                 }
1460             } else {
1461                 /*
1462                  * Pass the cancel request on to the SSH server, but
1463                  * set want_reply even if it wasn't originally set, so
1464                  * that _we_ know whether the forwarding has been
1465                  * deleted even if downstream doesn't want to know.
1466                  */
1467                 int old_wantreply = pkt[wantreplypos];
1468                 pkt[wantreplypos] = 1;
1469                 ssh_send_packet_from_downstream
1470                     (cs->parent->ssh, cs->id, type, pkt, pktlen,
1471                      old_wantreply ? NULL : "upstream added want_reply flag");
1472                 ssh_sharing_queue_global_request(cs->parent->ssh, cs);
1473             }
1474
1475             sfree(host);
1476         } else {
1477             /*
1478              * Request we don't understand. Manufacture a failure
1479              * message if an answer was required.
1480              */
1481             int wantreplypos;
1482
1483             sfree(request_name);
1484
1485             wantreplypos = getstring_size(pkt, pktlen);
1486             if (wantreplypos < 0 || wantreplypos >= pktlen) {
1487                 err = dupprintf("Truncated GLOBAL_REQUEST packet");
1488                 goto confused;
1489             }
1490             if (pkt[wantreplypos])
1491                 send_packet_to_downstream(cs, SSH2_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE,
1492                                           "", 0, NULL);
1493         }
1494         break;
1495
1496       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN:
1497         /* Sender channel id comes after the channel type string */
1498         id_pos = getstring_size(pkt, pktlen);
1499         if (id_pos < 0 || id_pos > pktlen - 12) {
1500             err = dupprintf("Truncated CHANNEL_OPEN packet");
1501             goto confused;
1502         }
1503
1504         old_id = GET_32BIT(pkt + id_pos);
1505         new_id = ssh_alloc_sharing_channel(cs->parent->ssh, cs);
1506         share_add_channel(cs, old_id, new_id, 0, UNACKNOWLEDGED,
1507                           GET_32BIT(pkt + id_pos + 8));
1508         PUT_32BIT(pkt + id_pos, new_id);
1509         ssh_send_packet_from_downstream(cs->parent->ssh, cs->id,
1510                                         type, pkt, pktlen, NULL);
1511         break;
1512
1513       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION:
1514         if (pktlen < 16) {
1515             err = dupprintf("Truncated CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION packet");
1516             goto confused;
1517         }
1518
1519         id_pos = 4;  /* sender channel id is 2nd uint32 field in packet */
1520         old_id = GET_32BIT(pkt + id_pos);
1521
1522         server_id = GET_32BIT(pkt);
1523         /* This server id may refer to either a halfchannel or an xchannel. */
1524         hc = NULL, xc = NULL;          /* placate optimiser */
1525         if ((hc = share_find_halfchannel(cs, server_id)) != NULL) {
1526             new_id = ssh_alloc_sharing_channel(cs->parent->ssh, cs);
1527         } else if ((xc = share_find_xchannel_by_server(cs, server_id))
1528                    != NULL) {
1529             new_id = xc->upstream_id;
1530         } else {
1531             err = dupprintf("CHANNEL_OPEN_CONFIRMATION packet cited unknown channel %u", (unsigned)server_id);
1532             goto confused;
1533         }
1534             
1535         PUT_32BIT(pkt + id_pos, new_id);
1536
1537         chan = share_add_channel(cs, old_id, new_id, server_id, OPEN,
1538                                  GET_32BIT(pkt + 12));
1539
1540         if (hc) {
1541             ssh_send_packet_from_downstream(cs->parent->ssh, cs->id,
1542                                             type, pkt, pktlen, NULL);
1543             share_remove_halfchannel(cs, hc);
1544         } else if (xc) {
1545             unsigned downstream_window = GET_32BIT(pkt + 8);
1546             if (downstream_window < 256) {
1547                 err = dupprintf("Initial window size for x11 channel must be at least 256 (got %u)", downstream_window);
1548                 goto confused;
1549             }
1550             share_xchannel_confirmation(cs, xc, chan, downstream_window);
1551             share_remove_xchannel(cs, xc);
1552         }
1553
1554         break;
1555
1556       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE:
1557         if (pktlen < 4) {
1558             err = dupprintf("Truncated CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE packet");
1559             goto confused;
1560         }
1561
1562         server_id = GET_32BIT(pkt);
1563         /* This server id may refer to either a halfchannel or an xchannel. */
1564         if ((hc = share_find_halfchannel(cs, server_id)) != NULL) {
1565             ssh_send_packet_from_downstream(cs->parent->ssh, cs->id,
1566                                             type, pkt, pktlen, NULL);
1567             share_remove_halfchannel(cs, hc);
1568         } else if ((xc = share_find_xchannel_by_server(cs, server_id))
1569                    != NULL) {
1570             share_xchannel_failure(cs, xc);
1571         } else {
1572             err = dupprintf("CHANNEL_OPEN_FAILURE packet cited unknown channel %u", (unsigned)server_id);
1573             goto confused;
1574         }
1575
1576         break;
1577
1578       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_WINDOW_ADJUST:
1579       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA:
1580       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_EXTENDED_DATA:
1581       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_EOF:
1582       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE:
1583       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST:
1584       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_SUCCESS:
1585       case SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE:
1586       case SSH2_MSG_IGNORE:
1587       case SSH2_MSG_DEBUG:
1588         if (type == SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST &&
1589             (request_name = getstring(pkt + 4, pktlen - 4)) != NULL) {
1590             /*
1591              * Agent forwarding requests from downstream are treated
1592              * specially. Because OpenSSHD doesn't let us enable agent
1593              * forwarding independently per session channel, and in
1594              * particular because the OpenSSH-defined agent forwarding
1595              * protocol does not mark agent-channel requests with the
1596              * id of the session channel they originate from, the only
1597              * way we can implement agent forwarding in a
1598              * connection-shared PuTTY is to forward the _upstream_
1599              * agent. Hence, we unilaterally deny agent forwarding
1600              * requests from downstreams if we aren't prepared to
1601              * forward an agent ourselves.
1602              *
1603              * (If we are, then we dutifully pass agent forwarding
1604              * requests upstream. OpenSSHD has the curious behaviour
1605              * that all but the first such request will be rejected,
1606              * but all session channels opened after the first request
1607              * get agent forwarding enabled whether they ask for it or
1608              * not; but that's not our concern, since other SSH
1609              * servers supporting the same piece of protocol might in
1610              * principle at least manage to enable agent forwarding on
1611              * precisely the channels that requested it, even if the
1612              * subsequent CHANNEL_OPENs still can't be associated with
1613              * a parent session channel.)
1614              */
1615             if (!strcmp(request_name, "auth-agent-req@openssh.com") &&
1616                 !ssh_agent_forwarding_permitted(cs->parent->ssh)) {
1617                 unsigned server_id = GET_32BIT(pkt);
1618                 unsigned char recipient_id[4];
1619
1620                 sfree(request_name);
1621
1622                 chan = share_find_channel_by_server(cs, server_id);
1623                 if (chan) {
1624                     PUT_32BIT(recipient_id, chan->downstream_id);
1625                     send_packet_to_downstream(cs, SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE,
1626                                               recipient_id, 4, NULL);
1627                 } else {
1628                     char *buf = dupprintf("Agent forwarding request for "
1629                                           "unrecognised channel %u", server_id);
1630                     share_disconnect(cs, buf);
1631                     sfree(buf);
1632                     return;
1633                 }
1634                 break;
1635             }
1636
1637             /*
1638              * Another thing we treat specially is X11 forwarding
1639              * requests. For these, we have to make up another set of
1640              * X11 auth data, and enter it into our SSH connection's
1641              * list of possible X11 authorisation credentials so that
1642              * when we see an X11 channel open request we can know
1643              * whether it's one to handle locally or one to pass on to
1644              * a downstream, and if the latter, which one.
1645              */
1646             if (!strcmp(request_name, "x11-req")) {
1647                 unsigned server_id = GET_32BIT(pkt);
1648                 int want_reply, single_connection, screen;
1649                 char *auth_proto_str, *auth_data;
1650                 int auth_proto, protolen, datalen;
1651                 int pos;
1652
1653                 sfree(request_name);
1654
1655                 chan = share_find_channel_by_server(cs, server_id);
1656                 if (!chan) {
1657                     char *buf = dupprintf("X11 forwarding request for "
1658                                           "unrecognised channel %u", server_id);
1659                     share_disconnect(cs, buf);
1660                     sfree(buf);
1661                     return;
1662                 }
1663
1664                 /*
1665                  * Pick apart the whole message to find the downstream
1666                  * auth details.
1667                  */
1668                 /* we have already seen: 4 bytes channel id, 4+7 request name */
1669                 if (pktlen < 17) {
1670                     err = dupprintf("Truncated CHANNEL_REQUEST(\"x11\") packet");
1671                     goto confused;
1672                 }
1673                 want_reply = pkt[15] != 0;
1674                 single_connection = pkt[16] != 0;
1675                 auth_proto_str = getstring(pkt+17, pktlen-17);
1676                 auth_proto = x11_identify_auth_proto(auth_proto_str);
1677                 sfree(auth_proto_str);
1678                 pos = 17 + getstring_size(pkt+17, pktlen-17);
1679                 auth_data = getstring(pkt+pos, pktlen-pos);
1680                 pos += getstring_size(pkt+pos, pktlen-pos);
1681
1682                 if (pktlen < pos+4) {
1683                     err = dupprintf("Truncated CHANNEL_REQUEST(\"x11\") packet");
1684                     sfree(auth_data);
1685                     goto confused;
1686                 }
1687                 screen = GET_32BIT(pkt+pos);
1688
1689                 if (auth_proto < 0) {
1690                     /* Reject due to not understanding downstream's
1691                      * requested authorisation method. */
1692                     unsigned char recipient_id[4];
1693                     PUT_32BIT(recipient_id, chan->downstream_id);
1694                     send_packet_to_downstream(cs, SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE,
1695                                               recipient_id, 4, NULL);
1696                     sfree(auth_data);
1697                     break;
1698                 }
1699
1700                 chan->x11_auth_proto = auth_proto;
1701                 chan->x11_auth_data = x11_dehexify(auth_data,
1702                                                    &chan->x11_auth_datalen);
1703                 sfree(auth_data);
1704                 chan->x11_auth_upstream =
1705                     ssh_sharing_add_x11_display(cs->parent->ssh, auth_proto,
1706                                                 cs, chan);
1707                 chan->x11_one_shot = single_connection;
1708
1709                 /*
1710                  * Now construct a replacement X forwarding request,
1711                  * containing our own auth data, and send that to the
1712                  * server.
1713                  */
1714                 protolen = strlen(chan->x11_auth_upstream->protoname);
1715                 datalen = strlen(chan->x11_auth_upstream->datastring);
1716                 pktlen = 29+protolen+datalen;
1717                 pkt = snewn(pktlen, unsigned char);
1718                 PUT_32BIT(pkt, server_id);
1719                 PUT_32BIT(pkt+4, 7);   /* strlen("x11-req") */
1720                 memcpy(pkt+8, "x11-req", 7);
1721                 pkt[15] = want_reply;
1722                 pkt[16] = single_connection;
1723                 PUT_32BIT(pkt+17, protolen);
1724                 memcpy(pkt+21, chan->x11_auth_upstream->protoname, protolen);
1725                 PUT_32BIT(pkt+21+protolen, datalen);
1726                 memcpy(pkt+25+protolen, chan->x11_auth_upstream->datastring,
1727                        datalen);
1728                 PUT_32BIT(pkt+25+protolen+datalen, screen);
1729                 ssh_send_packet_from_downstream(cs->parent->ssh, cs->id,
1730                                                 SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST,
1731                                                 pkt, pktlen, NULL);
1732                 sfree(pkt);
1733
1734                 break;
1735             }
1736
1737             sfree(request_name);
1738         }
1739
1740         ssh_send_packet_from_downstream(cs->parent->ssh, cs->id,
1741                                         type, pkt, pktlen, NULL);
1742         if (type == SSH2_MSG_CHANNEL_CLOSE && pktlen >= 4) {
1743             server_id = GET_32BIT(pkt);
1744             chan = share_find_channel_by_server(cs, server_id);
1745             if (chan) {
1746                 if (chan->state == RCVD_CLOSE) {
1747                     ssh_delete_sharing_channel(cs->parent->ssh,
1748                                                chan->upstream_id);
1749                     share_remove_channel(cs, chan);
1750                 } else {
1751                     chan->state = SENT_CLOSE;
1752                 }
1753             }
1754         }
1755         break;
1756
1757       default:
1758         err = dupprintf("Unexpected packet type %d\n", type);
1759         goto confused;
1760
1761         /*
1762          * Any other packet type is unexpected. In particular, we
1763          * never pass GLOBAL_REQUESTs downstream, so we never expect
1764          * to see SSH2_MSG_REQUEST_{SUCCESS,FAILURE}.
1765          */
1766       confused:
1767         assert(err != NULL);
1768         share_disconnect(cs, err);
1769         sfree(err);
1770         break;
1771     }
1772 }
1773
1774 /*
1775  * Coroutine macros similar to, but simplified from, those in ssh.c.
1776  */
1777 #define crBegin(v)      { int *crLine = &v; switch(v) { case 0:;
1778 #define crFinish(z)     } *crLine = 0; return (z); }
1779 #define crGetChar(c) do                                         \
1780     {                                                           \
1781         while (len == 0) {                                      \
1782             *crLine =__LINE__; return 1; case __LINE__:;        \
1783         }                                                       \
1784         len--;                                                  \
1785         (c) = (unsigned char)*data++;                           \
1786     } while (0)
1787
1788 static int share_receive(Plug plug, int urgent, char *data, int len)
1789 {
1790     struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs = (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *)plug;
1791     static const char expected_verstring_prefix[] =
1792         "SSHCONNECTION@putty.projects.tartarus.org-2.0-";
1793     unsigned char c;
1794
1795     crBegin(cs->crLine);
1796
1797     /*
1798      * First read the version string from downstream.
1799      */
1800     cs->recvlen = 0;
1801     while (1) {
1802         crGetChar(c);
1803         if (c == '\012')
1804             break;
1805         if (cs->recvlen >= sizeof(cs->recvbuf)) {
1806             char *buf = dupprintf("Version string far too long\n");
1807             share_disconnect(cs, buf);
1808             sfree(buf);
1809             goto dead;
1810         }
1811         cs->recvbuf[cs->recvlen++] = c;
1812     }
1813
1814     /*
1815      * Now parse the version string to make sure it's at least vaguely
1816      * sensible, and log it.
1817      */
1818     if (cs->recvlen < sizeof(expected_verstring_prefix)-1 ||
1819         memcmp(cs->recvbuf, expected_verstring_prefix,
1820                sizeof(expected_verstring_prefix) - 1)) {
1821         char *buf = dupprintf("Version string did not have expected prefix\n");
1822         share_disconnect(cs, buf);
1823         sfree(buf);
1824         goto dead;
1825     }
1826     if (cs->recvlen > 0 && cs->recvbuf[cs->recvlen-1] == '\015')
1827         cs->recvlen--;                 /* trim off \r before \n */
1828     ssh_sharing_logf(cs->parent->ssh, cs->id,
1829                      "Downstream version string: %.*s",
1830                      cs->recvlen, cs->recvbuf);
1831     cs->got_verstring = TRUE;
1832
1833     /*
1834      * Loop round reading packets.
1835      */
1836     while (1) {
1837         cs->recvlen = 0;
1838         while (cs->recvlen < 4) {
1839             crGetChar(c);
1840             cs->recvbuf[cs->recvlen++] = c;
1841         }
1842         cs->curr_packetlen = toint(GET_32BIT(cs->recvbuf) + 4);
1843         if (cs->curr_packetlen < 5 ||
1844             cs->curr_packetlen > sizeof(cs->recvbuf)) {
1845             char *buf = dupprintf("Bad packet length %u\n",
1846                                   (unsigned)cs->curr_packetlen);
1847             share_disconnect(cs, buf);
1848             sfree(buf);
1849             goto dead;
1850         }
1851         while (cs->recvlen < cs->curr_packetlen) {
1852             crGetChar(c);
1853             cs->recvbuf[cs->recvlen++] = c;
1854         }
1855
1856         share_got_pkt_from_downstream(cs, cs->recvbuf[4],
1857                                       cs->recvbuf + 5, cs->recvlen - 5);
1858     }
1859
1860   dead:;
1861     crFinish(1);
1862 }
1863
1864 static void share_sent(Plug plug, int bufsize)
1865 {
1866     /* struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs = (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *)plug; */
1867
1868     /*
1869      * We do nothing here, because we expect that there won't be a
1870      * need to throttle and unthrottle the connection to a downstream.
1871      * It should automatically throttle itself: if the SSH server
1872      * sends huge amounts of data on all channels then it'll run out
1873      * of window until our downstream sends it back some
1874      * WINDOW_ADJUSTs.
1875      */
1876 }
1877
1878 static int share_listen_closing(Plug plug, const char *error_msg,
1879                                 int error_code, int calling_back)
1880 {
1881     struct ssh_sharing_state *sharestate = (struct ssh_sharing_state *)plug;
1882     if (error_msg)
1883         ssh_sharing_logf(sharestate->ssh, 0,
1884                          "listening socket: %s", error_msg);
1885     sk_close(sharestate->listensock);
1886     sharestate->listensock = NULL;
1887     return 1;
1888 }
1889
1890 static void share_send_verstring(struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs)
1891 {
1892     char *fullstring = dupcat("SSHCONNECTION@putty.projects.tartarus.org-2.0-",
1893                               cs->parent->server_verstring, "\015\012", NULL);
1894     sk_write(cs->sock, fullstring, strlen(fullstring));
1895     sfree(fullstring);
1896
1897     cs->sent_verstring = TRUE;
1898 }
1899
1900 int share_ndownstreams(void *state)
1901 {
1902     struct ssh_sharing_state *sharestate = (struct ssh_sharing_state *)state;
1903     return count234(sharestate->connections);
1904 }
1905
1906 void share_activate(void *state, const char *server_verstring)
1907 {
1908     /*
1909      * Indication from ssh.c that we are now ready to begin serving
1910      * any downstreams that have already connected to us.
1911      */
1912     struct ssh_sharing_state *sharestate = (struct ssh_sharing_state *)state;
1913     struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs;
1914     int i;
1915
1916     /*
1917      * Trim the server's version string down to just the software
1918      * version component, removing "SSH-2.0-" or whatever at the
1919      * front.
1920      */
1921     for (i = 0; i < 2; i++) {
1922         server_verstring += strcspn(server_verstring, "-");
1923         if (*server_verstring)
1924             server_verstring++;
1925     }
1926
1927     sharestate->server_verstring = dupstr(server_verstring);
1928
1929     for (i = 0; (cs = (struct ssh_sharing_connstate *)
1930                  index234(sharestate->connections, i)) != NULL; i++) {
1931         assert(!cs->sent_verstring);
1932         share_send_verstring(cs);
1933     }
1934 }
1935
1936 static int share_listen_accepting(Plug plug,
1937                                   accept_fn_t constructor, accept_ctx_t ctx)
1938 {
1939     static const struct plug_function_table connection_fn_table = {
1940         NULL, /* no log function, because that's for outgoing connections */
1941         share_closing,
1942         share_receive,
1943         share_sent,
1944         NULL /* no accepting function, because we've already done it */
1945     };
1946     struct ssh_sharing_state *sharestate = (struct ssh_sharing_state *)plug;
1947     struct ssh_sharing_connstate *cs;
1948     const char *err;
1949     char *peerinfo;
1950
1951     /*
1952      * A new downstream has connected to us.
1953      */
1954     cs = snew(struct ssh_sharing_connstate);
1955     cs->fn = &connection_fn_table;
1956     cs->parent = sharestate;
1957
1958     if ((cs->id = share_find_unused_id(sharestate, sharestate->nextid)) == 0 &&
1959         (cs->id = share_find_unused_id(sharestate, 1)) == 0) {
1960         sfree(cs);
1961         return 1;
1962     }
1963     sharestate->nextid = cs->id + 1;
1964     if (sharestate->nextid == 0)
1965         sharestate->nextid++; /* only happens in VERY long-running upstreams */
1966
1967     cs->sock = constructor(ctx, (Plug) cs);
1968     if ((err = sk_socket_error(cs->sock)) != NULL) {
1969         sfree(cs);
1970         return err != NULL;
1971     }
1972
1973     sk_set_frozen(cs->sock, 0);
1974
1975     add234(cs->parent->connections, cs);
1976
1977     cs->sent_verstring = FALSE;
1978     if (sharestate->server_verstring)
1979         share_send_verstring(cs);
1980
1981     cs->got_verstring = FALSE;
1982     cs->recvlen = 0;
1983     cs->crLine = 0;
1984     cs->halfchannels = newtree234(share_halfchannel_cmp);
1985     cs->channels_by_us = newtree234(share_channel_us_cmp);
1986     cs->channels_by_server = newtree234(share_channel_server_cmp);
1987     cs->xchannels_by_us = newtree234(share_xchannel_us_cmp);
1988     cs->xchannels_by_server = newtree234(share_xchannel_server_cmp);
1989     cs->forwardings = newtree234(share_forwarding_cmp);
1990     cs->globreq_head = cs->globreq_tail = NULL;
1991
1992     peerinfo = sk_peer_info(cs->sock);
1993     ssh_sharing_downstream_connected(sharestate->ssh, cs->id, peerinfo);
1994     sfree(peerinfo);
1995
1996     return 0;
1997 }
1998
1999 /* Per-application overrides for what roles we can take (e.g. pscp
2000  * will never be an upstream) */
2001 extern const int share_can_be_downstream;
2002 extern const int share_can_be_upstream;
2003
2004 /*
2005  * Decide on the string used to identify the connection point between
2006  * upstream and downstream (be it a Windows named pipe or a
2007  * Unix-domain socket or whatever else).
2008  *
2009  * I wondered about making this a SHA hash of all sorts of pieces of
2010  * the PuTTY configuration - essentially everything PuTTY uses to know
2011  * where and how to make a connection, including all the proxy details
2012  * (or rather, all the _relevant_ ones - only including settings that
2013  * other settings didn't prevent from having any effect), plus the
2014  * username. However, I think it's better to keep it really simple:
2015  * the connection point identifier is derived from the hostname and
2016  * port used to index the host-key cache (not necessarily where we
2017  * _physically_ connected to, in cases involving proxies or
2018  * CONF_loghost), plus the username if one is specified.
2019  *
2020  * The per-platform code will quite likely hash or obfuscate this name
2021  * in turn, for privacy from other users; failing that, it might
2022  * transform it to avoid dangerous filename characters and so on. But
2023  * that doesn't matter to us: for us, the point is that two session
2024  * configurations which return the same string from this function will
2025  * be treated as potentially shareable with each other.
2026  */
2027 char *ssh_share_sockname(const char *host, int port, Conf *conf)
2028 {
2029     char *username = get_remote_username(conf);
2030     char *sockname;
2031
2032     if (port == 22) {
2033         if (username)
2034             sockname = dupprintf("%s@%s", username, host);
2035         else
2036             sockname = dupprintf("%s", host);
2037     } else {
2038         if (username)
2039             sockname = dupprintf("%s@%s:%d", username, host, port);
2040         else
2041             sockname = dupprintf("%s:%d", host, port);
2042     }
2043
2044     sfree(username);
2045     return sockname;
2046 }
2047
2048 static void nullplug_socket_log(Plug plug, int type, SockAddr addr, int port,
2049                                 const char *error_msg, int error_code) {}
2050 static int nullplug_closing(Plug plug, const char *error_msg, int error_code,
2051                             int calling_back) { return 0; }
2052 static int nullplug_receive(Plug plug, int urgent, char *data,
2053                             int len) { return 0; }
2054 static void nullplug_sent(Plug plug, int bufsize) {}
2055
2056 int ssh_share_test_for_upstream(const char *host, int port, Conf *conf)
2057 {
2058     static const struct plug_function_table fn_table = {
2059         nullplug_socket_log,
2060         nullplug_closing,
2061         nullplug_receive,
2062         nullplug_sent,
2063         NULL
2064     };
2065     struct nullplug {
2066         const struct plug_function_table *fn;
2067     } np;
2068
2069     char *sockname, *logtext, *ds_err, *us_err;
2070     int result;
2071     Socket sock;
2072
2073     np.fn = &fn_table;
2074
2075     sockname = ssh_share_sockname(host, port, conf);
2076
2077     sock = NULL;
2078     logtext = ds_err = us_err = NULL;
2079     result = platform_ssh_share(sockname, conf, (Plug)&np, (Plug)NULL, &sock,
2080                                 &logtext, &ds_err, &us_err, FALSE, TRUE);
2081
2082     sfree(logtext);
2083     sfree(ds_err);
2084     sfree(us_err);
2085     sfree(sockname);
2086
2087     if (result == SHARE_NONE) {
2088         assert(sock == NULL);
2089         return FALSE;
2090     } else {
2091         assert(result == SHARE_DOWNSTREAM);
2092         sk_close(sock);
2093         return TRUE;
2094     }
2095 }
2096
2097 /*
2098  * Init function for connection sharing. We either open a listening
2099  * socket and become an upstream, or connect to an existing one and
2100  * become a downstream, or do neither. We are responsible for deciding
2101  * which of these to do (including checking the Conf to see if
2102  * connection sharing is even enabled in the first place). If we
2103  * become a downstream, we return the Socket with which we connected
2104  * to the upstream; otherwise (whether or not we have established an
2105  * upstream) we return NULL.
2106  */
2107 Socket ssh_connection_sharing_init(const char *host, int port,
2108                                    Conf *conf, Ssh ssh, void **state)
2109 {
2110     static const struct plug_function_table listen_fn_table = {
2111         NULL, /* no log function, because that's for outgoing connections */
2112         share_listen_closing,
2113         NULL, /* no receive function on a listening socket */
2114         NULL, /* no sent function on a listening socket */
2115         share_listen_accepting
2116     };
2117
2118     int result, can_upstream, can_downstream;
2119     char *logtext, *ds_err, *us_err;
2120     char *sockname;
2121     Socket sock;
2122     struct ssh_sharing_state *sharestate;
2123
2124     if (!conf_get_int(conf, CONF_ssh_connection_sharing))
2125         return NULL;                   /* do not share anything */
2126     can_upstream = share_can_be_upstream &&
2127         conf_get_int(conf, CONF_ssh_connection_sharing_upstream);
2128     can_downstream = share_can_be_downstream &&
2129         conf_get_int(conf, CONF_ssh_connection_sharing_downstream);
2130     if (!can_upstream && !can_downstream)
2131         return NULL;
2132
2133     sockname = ssh_share_sockname(host, port, conf);
2134
2135     /*
2136      * Create a data structure for the listening plug if we turn out
2137      * to be an upstream.
2138      */
2139     sharestate = snew(struct ssh_sharing_state);
2140     sharestate->fn = &listen_fn_table;
2141     sharestate->listensock = NULL;
2142
2143     /*
2144      * Now hand off to a per-platform routine that either connects to
2145      * an existing upstream (using 'ssh' as the plug), establishes our
2146      * own upstream (using 'sharestate' as the plug), or forks off a
2147      * separate upstream and then connects to that. It will return a
2148      * code telling us which kind of socket it put in 'sock'.
2149      */
2150     sock = NULL;
2151     logtext = ds_err = us_err = NULL;
2152     result = platform_ssh_share(sockname, conf, (Plug)ssh,
2153                                 (Plug)sharestate, &sock, &logtext, &ds_err,
2154                                 &us_err, can_upstream, can_downstream);
2155     ssh_connshare_log(ssh, result, logtext, ds_err, us_err);
2156     sfree(logtext);
2157     sfree(ds_err);
2158     sfree(us_err);
2159     switch (result) {
2160       case SHARE_NONE:
2161         /*
2162          * We aren't sharing our connection at all (e.g. something
2163          * went wrong setting the socket up). Free the upstream
2164          * structure and return NULL.
2165          */
2166         assert(sock == NULL);
2167         *state = NULL;
2168         sfree(sharestate);
2169         sfree(sockname);
2170         return NULL;
2171
2172       case SHARE_DOWNSTREAM:
2173         /*
2174          * We are downstream, so free sharestate which it turns out we
2175          * don't need after all, and return the downstream socket as a
2176          * replacement for an ordinary SSH connection.
2177          */
2178         *state = NULL;
2179         sfree(sharestate);
2180         sfree(sockname);
2181         return sock;
2182
2183       case SHARE_UPSTREAM:
2184         /*
2185          * We are upstream. Set up sharestate properly and pass a copy
2186          * to the caller; return NULL, to tell ssh.c that it has to
2187          * make an ordinary connection after all.
2188          */
2189         *state = sharestate;
2190         sharestate->listensock = sock;
2191         sharestate->connections = newtree234(share_connstate_cmp);
2192         sharestate->ssh = ssh;
2193         sharestate->server_verstring = NULL;
2194         sharestate->sockname = sockname;
2195         sharestate->nextid = 1;
2196         return NULL;
2197     }
2198
2199     return NULL;
2200 }