stored with the contents. This could lead to incorrect output
if the sudoers file had different alias types with the same name.
Normal parsing (ie: not in '-l' mode) is unaffected.
gain us anything to run as the user since an attacker can just have
an setuid(0) in their egg. Running as root solves potential problems
wrt signalling.
get it if we are still running, else let init reap it for us. The extra
time it takes to wait lets the user know that mail is being sent.
Install SIGCHLD handler in main() and for POSIX signals, block everything
*except* SIGCHLD.
possible to express things like "failed to validate because user not listed
for this host". Some thigns that were previously VALIDATE_FOO are now
FLAG_FOO. This may change later on.
Reorganized code in log_auth() and sudo.c to deal with above changes.
Safer versions of push/pushcp with in the do { ... } while (0) style
parse.yacc now saves info on the stack to allow parse.c to determine
if a user was listed, but not for the host he/she tried to run on.
Added --with-mail-if-no-host option
add a flag to specify an auth method is running alone (the only
one). Pass auth methods their sudo_auth pointer, not the data
pointer. This allows us to get at the flags and tell if we are the
only auth method. That, in turn, allows the method to be able to
decide what should/should not be a fatal error. Currently only
rfc1938 uses it this way, which allows us to kill the OTP_ONLY
define and te hackery that went with it. With access to the
sudo_auth struct, methods can also get at a string holding their
cannonical name (useful in error messages).
o real dependencies in the Makefile
o --with-devel option to enable yacc, lex, and -Wall
o style -- "foo -> bar" becomes "foo->bar"
o ALL goes back to being a token, not a string but don't leak memory
o rename hsotspec -> host in parse.yacc
since -ldb includes a bogus snprintf().
o Add forward refs for struct mbuf and struct rtentry for Digital UNIX.
o Reorder some functions in snprintf.c to fix -Wall
o Add missing includes to fix more -Wall
where an alias may be used before it is defined. Only turned on for visudo
and testsudoers.
o Add --disable-authentication option that makes sudo not require
authentication by default. The PASSWD tag can be used to require
authentication for an entry. We no longer overload --without-passwd.
o find_alias() now returns an aliasinfo * instead of boolean
o add_alias() now takes a value parameter to store in the aliasinfo.val
o The cmnd, hostspec, runasuser, and user rules now return:
1) positive match
0) negative match (due to '!')
-1) no match
This means setting $$ explicitly in all cases, which I should have done in
the first place. It also means that we always store a value that is != -1
and when we see a '!' we can set *_matches to !rv if rv != -1.
The upshot of all of this is that '!' now works the way it should in
lists and some of the rules are more uniform and sensible.