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6b9f772914
* common/mbox-util.c (mailbox_from_userid): Add arg subaddress and implement. Change all callers to pass false for it. * common/t-mbox-util.c (run_mbox_no_sub_test): New. (run_filter): Add arg no_sub. (main): Call new test and add option --no-sub. -- Some stats: In the about 5300000 keys on the SKS servers we found 3055 unique mailboxes with a '+' in it. After removing leading and trailing '+' as well as multiple '+' (e.g. "c++" or "foo+bar+baz") 2697 were left which seem to be valid sub-addresses. To filter mailboxes out from a line delimited list with user-ids (e.g. an SQL output), the command t-mbox-util --verbose --filter can be used; to output w/o sub-addresses add --no-sub. GnuPG-bug-id: 4200 Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
307 lines
8.4 KiB
C
307 lines
8.4 KiB
C
/* mbox-util.c - Mail address helper functions
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* Copyright (C) 1998-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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* Copyright (C) 1998-2015 Werner Koch
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*
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* This file is part of GnuPG.
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*
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* This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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* it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as
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* published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of
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* the License, or (at your option) any later version.
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*
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* This file is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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* GNU General Public License for more details.
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*
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* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
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* along with this program; if not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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*/
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/* NB: GPGME uses the same code to reflect our idea on how to extract
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* a mail address from a user id.
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*/
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#include <config.h>
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <stdlib.h>
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#include <string.h>
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#include <unistd.h>
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#include <errno.h>
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#include "util.h"
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#include "mbox-util.h"
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static int
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string_count_chr (const char *string, int c)
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{
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int count;
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for (count=0; *string; string++ )
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if ( *string == c )
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count++;
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return count;
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}
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static int
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mem_count_chr (const void *buffer, int c, size_t length)
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{
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const char *s = buffer;
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int count;
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for (count=0; length; length--, s++)
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if (*s == c)
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count++;
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return count;
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}
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/* This is a case-sensitive version of our memistr. I wonder why no
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standard function memstr exists but I better do not use the name
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memstr to avoid future conflicts. */
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static const char *
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my_memstr (const void *buffer, size_t buflen, const char *sub)
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{
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const unsigned char *buf = buffer;
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const unsigned char *t = (const unsigned char *)buf;
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const unsigned char *s = (const unsigned char *)sub;
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size_t n = buflen;
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for ( ; n ; t++, n-- )
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{
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if (*t == *s)
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{
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for (buf = t++, buflen = n--, s++; n && *t ==*s; t++, s++, n--)
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;
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if (!*s)
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return (const char*)buf;
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t = (const unsigned char *)buf;
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s = (const unsigned char *)sub ;
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n = buflen;
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}
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}
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return NULL;
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}
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static int
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string_has_ctrl_or_space (const char *string)
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{
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for (; *string; string++ )
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if (!(*string & 0x80) && *string <= 0x20)
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return 1;
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return 0;
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}
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/* Return true if STRING has two consecutive '.' after an '@'
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sign. */
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static int
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has_dotdot_after_at (const char *string)
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{
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string = strchr (string, '@');
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if (!string)
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return 0; /* No at-sign. */
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string++;
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return !!strstr (string, "..");
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}
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/* Check whether BUFFER has characters not valid in an RFC-822
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address. LENGTH gives the length of BUFFER.
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To cope with OpenPGP we ignore non-ascii characters so that for
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example umlauts are legal in an email address. An OpenPGP user ID
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must be utf-8 encoded but there is no strict requirement for
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RFC-822. Thus to avoid IDNA encoding we put the address verbatim
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as utf-8 into the user ID under the assumption that mail programs
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handle IDNA at a lower level and take OpenPGP user IDs as utf-8.
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Note that we can't do an utf-8 encoding checking here because in
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keygen.c this function is called with the native encoding and
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native to utf-8 encoding is only done later. */
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int
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has_invalid_email_chars (const void *buffer, size_t length)
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{
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const unsigned char *s = buffer;
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int at_seen=0;
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const char *valid_chars=
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"01234567890_-.abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ";
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for ( ; length && *s; length--, s++ )
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{
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if ((*s & 0x80))
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continue; /* We only care about ASCII. */
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if (*s == '@')
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at_seen=1;
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else if (!at_seen && !(strchr (valid_chars, *s)
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|| strchr ("!#$%&'*+/=?^`{|}~", *s)))
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return 1;
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else if (at_seen && !strchr (valid_chars, *s))
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return 1;
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}
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return 0;
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}
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/* Same as is_valid_mailbox (see below) but operates on non-nul
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terminated buffer. */
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int
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is_valid_mailbox_mem (const void *name_arg, size_t namelen)
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{
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const char *name = name_arg;
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return !( !name
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|| !namelen
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|| has_invalid_email_chars (name, namelen)
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|| mem_count_chr (name, '@', namelen) != 1
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|| *name == '@'
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|| name[namelen-1] == '@'
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|| name[namelen-1] == '.'
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|| my_memstr (name, namelen, ".."));
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}
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/* Check whether NAME represents a valid mailbox according to
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RFC822. Returns true if so. */
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int
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is_valid_mailbox (const char *name)
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{
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return name? is_valid_mailbox_mem (name, strlen (name)) : 0;
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}
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/* Return the mailbox (local-part@domain) form a standard user id.
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* All plain ASCII characters in the result are converted to
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* lowercase. If SUBADDRESS is 1, '+' denoted sub-addresses are not
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* included in the result. Caller must free the result. Returns NULL
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* if no valid mailbox was found (or we are out of memory). */
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char *
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mailbox_from_userid (const char *userid, int subaddress)
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{
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const char *s, *s_end;
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size_t len;
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char *result = NULL;
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s = strchr (userid, '<');
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if (s)
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{
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/* Seems to be a standard user id. */
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s++;
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s_end = strchr (s, '>');
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if (s_end && s_end > s)
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{
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len = s_end - s;
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result = xtrymalloc (len + 1);
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if (!result)
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return NULL; /* Ooops - out of core. */
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strncpy (result, s, len);
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result[len] = 0;
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/* Apply some basic checks on the address. We do not use
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is_valid_mailbox because those checks are too strict. */
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if (string_count_chr (result, '@') != 1 /* Need exactly one '@. */
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|| *result == '@' /* local-part missing. */
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|| result[len-1] == '@' /* domain missing. */
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|| result[len-1] == '.' /* ends with a dot. */
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|| string_has_ctrl_or_space (result)
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|| has_dotdot_after_at (result))
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{
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xfree (result);
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result = NULL;
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errno = EINVAL;
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}
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}
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else
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errno = EINVAL;
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}
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else if (is_valid_mailbox (userid))
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{
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/* The entire user id is a mailbox. Return that one. Note that
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this fallback method has some restrictions on the valid
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syntax of the mailbox. However, those who want weird
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addresses should know about it and use the regular <...>
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syntax. */
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result = xtrystrdup (userid);
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}
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else
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errno = EINVAL;
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if (result && subaddress == 1)
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{
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char *atsign, *plus;
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if ((atsign = strchr (result, '@')))
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{
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/* We consider a subaddress only if there is a single '+'
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* in the local part and the '+' is not the first or last
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* character. */
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*atsign = 0;
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if ((plus = strchr (result, '+'))
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&& !strchr (plus+1, '+')
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&& result != plus
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&& plus[1] )
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{
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*atsign = '@';
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memmove (plus, atsign, strlen (atsign)+1);
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}
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else
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*atsign = '@';
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}
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}
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return result? ascii_strlwr (result): NULL;
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}
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/* Check whether UID is a valid standard user id of the form
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"Heinrich Heine <heinrichh@duesseldorf.de>"
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and return true if this is the case. */
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int
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is_valid_user_id (const char *uid)
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{
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if (!uid || !*uid)
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return 0;
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return 1;
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}
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/* Returns true if STRING is a valid domain name according to the LDH
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* rule. */
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int
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is_valid_domain_name (const char *string)
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{
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static char const ldh_chars[] =
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"01234567890abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ-";
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const char *s;
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/* Note that we do not check the length limit of a label or the
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* entire name */
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for (s=string; *s; s++)
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if (*s == '.')
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{
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if (string == s)
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return 0; /* Dot at the start of the string. */
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/* (may also be at the end like in ".") */
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if (s[1] == '.')
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return 0; /* No - double dot. */
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}
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else if (!strchr (ldh_chars, *s))
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return 0;
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else if (*s == '-')
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{
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if (string == s)
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return 0; /* Leading hyphen. */
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if (s[-1] == '.')
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return 0; /* Hyphen at begin of a label. */
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if (s[1] == '.')
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return 0; /* Hyphen at start of a label. */
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if (!s[1])
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return 0; /* Trailing hyphen. */
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}
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return !!*string;
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}
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