git/credential.c

413 строки
9.0 KiB
C
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#include "cache.h"
#include "config.h"
#include "credential.h"
#include "string-list.h"
#include "run-command.h"
#include "url.h"
#include "prompt.h"
void credential_init(struct credential *c)
{
memset(c, 0, sizeof(*c));
c->helpers.strdup_strings = 1;
}
void credential_clear(struct credential *c)
{
free(c->protocol);
free(c->host);
free(c->path);
free(c->username);
free(c->password);
string_list_clear(&c->helpers, 0);
credential_init(c);
}
int credential_match(const struct credential *want,
const struct credential *have)
{
#define CHECK(x) (!want->x || (have->x && !strcmp(want->x, have->x)))
return CHECK(protocol) &&
CHECK(host) &&
CHECK(path) &&
CHECK(username);
#undef CHECK
}
static int credential_config_callback(const char *var, const char *value,
void *data)
{
struct credential *c = data;
const char *key, *dot;
if (!skip_prefix(var, "credential.", &key))
return 0;
if (!value)
return config_error_nonbool(var);
dot = strrchr(key, '.');
if (dot) {
struct credential want = CREDENTIAL_INIT;
char *url = xmemdupz(key, dot - key);
int matched;
credential_from_url(&want, url);
matched = credential_match(&want, c);
credential_clear(&want);
free(url);
if (!matched)
return 0;
key = dot + 1;
}
if (!strcmp(key, "helper")) {
if (*value)
string_list_append(&c->helpers, value);
else
string_list_clear(&c->helpers, 0);
} else if (!strcmp(key, "username")) {
if (!c->username)
c->username = xstrdup(value);
}
credential: make relevance of http path configurable When parsing a URL into a credential struct, we carefully record each part of the URL, including the path on the remote host, and use the result as part of the credential context. This had two practical implications: 1. Credential helpers which store a credential for later access are likely to use the "path" portion as part of the storage key. That means that a request to https://example.com/foo.git would not use the same credential that was stored in an earlier request for: https://example.com/bar.git 2. The prompt shown to the user includes all relevant context, including the path. In most cases, however, users will have a single password per host. The behavior in (1) will be inconvenient, and the prompt in (2) will be overly long. This patch introduces a config option to toggle the relevance of http paths. When turned on, we use the path as before. When turned off, we drop the path component from the context: helpers don't see it, and it does not appear in the prompt. This is nothing you couldn't do with a clever credential helper at the start of your stack, like: [credential "http://"] helper = "!f() { grep -v ^path= ; }; f" helper = your_real_helper But doing this: [credential] useHttpPath = false is way easier and more readable. Furthermore, since most users will want the "off" behavior, that is the new default. Users who want it "on" can set the variable (either for all credentials, or just for a subset using credential.*.useHttpPath). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-12-10 14:31:34 +04:00
else if (!strcmp(key, "usehttppath"))
c->use_http_path = git_config_bool(var, value);
return 0;
}
credential: make relevance of http path configurable When parsing a URL into a credential struct, we carefully record each part of the URL, including the path on the remote host, and use the result as part of the credential context. This had two practical implications: 1. Credential helpers which store a credential for later access are likely to use the "path" portion as part of the storage key. That means that a request to https://example.com/foo.git would not use the same credential that was stored in an earlier request for: https://example.com/bar.git 2. The prompt shown to the user includes all relevant context, including the path. In most cases, however, users will have a single password per host. The behavior in (1) will be inconvenient, and the prompt in (2) will be overly long. This patch introduces a config option to toggle the relevance of http paths. When turned on, we use the path as before. When turned off, we drop the path component from the context: helpers don't see it, and it does not appear in the prompt. This is nothing you couldn't do with a clever credential helper at the start of your stack, like: [credential "http://"] helper = "!f() { grep -v ^path= ; }; f" helper = your_real_helper But doing this: [credential] useHttpPath = false is way easier and more readable. Furthermore, since most users will want the "off" behavior, that is the new default. Users who want it "on" can set the variable (either for all credentials, or just for a subset using credential.*.useHttpPath). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-12-10 14:31:34 +04:00
static int proto_is_http(const char *s)
{
if (!s)
return 0;
return !strcmp(s, "https") || !strcmp(s, "http");
}
static void credential_apply_config(struct credential *c)
{
credential: refuse to operate when missing host or protocol The credential helper protocol was designed to be very flexible: the fields it takes as input are treated as a pattern, and any missing fields are taken as wildcards. This allows unusual things like: echo protocol=https | git credential reject to delete all stored https credentials (assuming the helpers themselves treat the input that way). But when helpers are invoked automatically by Git, this flexibility works against us. If for whatever reason we don't have a "host" field, then we'd match _any_ host. When you're filling a credential to send to a remote server, this is almost certainly not what you want. Prevent this at the layer that writes to the credential helper. Add a check to the credential API that the host and protocol are always passed in, and add an assertion to the credential_write function that speaks credential helper protocol to be doubly sure. There are a few ways this can be triggered in practice: - the "git credential" command passes along arbitrary credential parameters it reads from stdin. - until the previous patch, when the host field of a URL is empty, we would leave it unset (rather than setting it to the empty string) - a URL like "example.com/foo.git" is treated by curl as if "http://" was present, but our parser sees it as a non-URL and leaves all fields unset - the recent fix for URLs with embedded newlines blanks the URL but otherwise continues. Rather than having the desired effect of looking up no credential at all, many helpers will return _any_ credential Our earlier test for an embedded newline didn't catch this because it only checked that the credential was cleared, but didn't configure an actual helper. Configuring the "verbatim" helper in the test would show that it is invoked (it's obviously a silly helper which doesn't look at its input, but the point is that it shouldn't be run at all). Since we're switching this case to die(), we don't need to bother with a helper. We can see the new behavior just by checking that the operation fails. We'll add new tests covering partial input as well (these can be triggered through various means with url-parsing, but it's simpler to just check them directly, as we know we are covered even if the url parser changes behavior in the future). [jn: changed to die() instead of logging and showing a manual username/password prompt] Reported-by: Carlo Arenas <carenas@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19 06:50:48 +03:00
if (!c->host)
die(_("refusing to work with credential missing host field"));
if (!c->protocol)
die(_("refusing to work with credential missing protocol field"));
if (c->configured)
return;
git_config(credential_config_callback, c);
c->configured = 1;
credential: make relevance of http path configurable When parsing a URL into a credential struct, we carefully record each part of the URL, including the path on the remote host, and use the result as part of the credential context. This had two practical implications: 1. Credential helpers which store a credential for later access are likely to use the "path" portion as part of the storage key. That means that a request to https://example.com/foo.git would not use the same credential that was stored in an earlier request for: https://example.com/bar.git 2. The prompt shown to the user includes all relevant context, including the path. In most cases, however, users will have a single password per host. The behavior in (1) will be inconvenient, and the prompt in (2) will be overly long. This patch introduces a config option to toggle the relevance of http paths. When turned on, we use the path as before. When turned off, we drop the path component from the context: helpers don't see it, and it does not appear in the prompt. This is nothing you couldn't do with a clever credential helper at the start of your stack, like: [credential "http://"] helper = "!f() { grep -v ^path= ; }; f" helper = your_real_helper But doing this: [credential] useHttpPath = false is way easier and more readable. Furthermore, since most users will want the "off" behavior, that is the new default. Users who want it "on" can set the variable (either for all credentials, or just for a subset using credential.*.useHttpPath). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-12-10 14:31:34 +04:00
if (!c->use_http_path && proto_is_http(c->protocol)) {
FREE_AND_NULL(c->path);
credential: make relevance of http path configurable When parsing a URL into a credential struct, we carefully record each part of the URL, including the path on the remote host, and use the result as part of the credential context. This had two practical implications: 1. Credential helpers which store a credential for later access are likely to use the "path" portion as part of the storage key. That means that a request to https://example.com/foo.git would not use the same credential that was stored in an earlier request for: https://example.com/bar.git 2. The prompt shown to the user includes all relevant context, including the path. In most cases, however, users will have a single password per host. The behavior in (1) will be inconvenient, and the prompt in (2) will be overly long. This patch introduces a config option to toggle the relevance of http paths. When turned on, we use the path as before. When turned off, we drop the path component from the context: helpers don't see it, and it does not appear in the prompt. This is nothing you couldn't do with a clever credential helper at the start of your stack, like: [credential "http://"] helper = "!f() { grep -v ^path= ; }; f" helper = your_real_helper But doing this: [credential] useHttpPath = false is way easier and more readable. Furthermore, since most users will want the "off" behavior, that is the new default. Users who want it "on" can set the variable (either for all credentials, or just for a subset using credential.*.useHttpPath). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-12-10 14:31:34 +04:00
}
}
static void credential_describe(struct credential *c, struct strbuf *out)
{
if (!c->protocol)
return;
strbuf_addf(out, "%s://", c->protocol);
if (c->username && *c->username)
strbuf_addf(out, "%s@", c->username);
if (c->host)
strbuf_addstr(out, c->host);
if (c->path)
strbuf_addf(out, "/%s", c->path);
}
static char *credential_ask_one(const char *what, struct credential *c,
int flags)
{
struct strbuf desc = STRBUF_INIT;
struct strbuf prompt = STRBUF_INIT;
char *r;
credential_describe(c, &desc);
if (desc.len)
strbuf_addf(&prompt, "%s for '%s': ", what, desc.buf);
else
strbuf_addf(&prompt, "%s: ", what);
r = git_prompt(prompt.buf, flags);
strbuf_release(&desc);
strbuf_release(&prompt);
return xstrdup(r);
}
static void credential_getpass(struct credential *c)
{
if (!c->username)
c->username = credential_ask_one("Username", c,
PROMPT_ASKPASS|PROMPT_ECHO);
if (!c->password)
c->password = credential_ask_one("Password", c,
PROMPT_ASKPASS);
}
int credential_read(struct credential *c, FILE *fp)
{
struct strbuf line = STRBUF_INIT;
while (strbuf_getline_lf(&line, fp) != EOF) {
char *key = line.buf;
char *value = strchr(key, '=');
if (!line.len)
break;
if (!value) {
warning("invalid credential line: %s", key);
strbuf_release(&line);
return -1;
}
*value++ = '\0';
if (!strcmp(key, "username")) {
free(c->username);
c->username = xstrdup(value);
} else if (!strcmp(key, "password")) {
free(c->password);
c->password = xstrdup(value);
} else if (!strcmp(key, "protocol")) {
free(c->protocol);
c->protocol = xstrdup(value);
} else if (!strcmp(key, "host")) {
free(c->host);
c->host = xstrdup(value);
} else if (!strcmp(key, "path")) {
free(c->path);
c->path = xstrdup(value);
} else if (!strcmp(key, "url")) {
credential_from_url(c, value);
} else if (!strcmp(key, "quit")) {
c->quit = !!git_config_bool("quit", value);
}
/*
* Ignore other lines; we don't know what they mean, but
* this future-proofs us when later versions of git do
* learn new lines, and the helpers are updated to match.
*/
}
strbuf_release(&line);
return 0;
}
credential: refuse to operate when missing host or protocol The credential helper protocol was designed to be very flexible: the fields it takes as input are treated as a pattern, and any missing fields are taken as wildcards. This allows unusual things like: echo protocol=https | git credential reject to delete all stored https credentials (assuming the helpers themselves treat the input that way). But when helpers are invoked automatically by Git, this flexibility works against us. If for whatever reason we don't have a "host" field, then we'd match _any_ host. When you're filling a credential to send to a remote server, this is almost certainly not what you want. Prevent this at the layer that writes to the credential helper. Add a check to the credential API that the host and protocol are always passed in, and add an assertion to the credential_write function that speaks credential helper protocol to be doubly sure. There are a few ways this can be triggered in practice: - the "git credential" command passes along arbitrary credential parameters it reads from stdin. - until the previous patch, when the host field of a URL is empty, we would leave it unset (rather than setting it to the empty string) - a URL like "example.com/foo.git" is treated by curl as if "http://" was present, but our parser sees it as a non-URL and leaves all fields unset - the recent fix for URLs with embedded newlines blanks the URL but otherwise continues. Rather than having the desired effect of looking up no credential at all, many helpers will return _any_ credential Our earlier test for an embedded newline didn't catch this because it only checked that the credential was cleared, but didn't configure an actual helper. Configuring the "verbatim" helper in the test would show that it is invoked (it's obviously a silly helper which doesn't look at its input, but the point is that it shouldn't be run at all). Since we're switching this case to die(), we don't need to bother with a helper. We can see the new behavior just by checking that the operation fails. We'll add new tests covering partial input as well (these can be triggered through various means with url-parsing, but it's simpler to just check them directly, as we know we are covered even if the url parser changes behavior in the future). [jn: changed to die() instead of logging and showing a manual username/password prompt] Reported-by: Carlo Arenas <carenas@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19 06:50:48 +03:00
static void credential_write_item(FILE *fp, const char *key, const char *value,
int required)
{
credential: refuse to operate when missing host or protocol The credential helper protocol was designed to be very flexible: the fields it takes as input are treated as a pattern, and any missing fields are taken as wildcards. This allows unusual things like: echo protocol=https | git credential reject to delete all stored https credentials (assuming the helpers themselves treat the input that way). But when helpers are invoked automatically by Git, this flexibility works against us. If for whatever reason we don't have a "host" field, then we'd match _any_ host. When you're filling a credential to send to a remote server, this is almost certainly not what you want. Prevent this at the layer that writes to the credential helper. Add a check to the credential API that the host and protocol are always passed in, and add an assertion to the credential_write function that speaks credential helper protocol to be doubly sure. There are a few ways this can be triggered in practice: - the "git credential" command passes along arbitrary credential parameters it reads from stdin. - until the previous patch, when the host field of a URL is empty, we would leave it unset (rather than setting it to the empty string) - a URL like "example.com/foo.git" is treated by curl as if "http://" was present, but our parser sees it as a non-URL and leaves all fields unset - the recent fix for URLs with embedded newlines blanks the URL but otherwise continues. Rather than having the desired effect of looking up no credential at all, many helpers will return _any_ credential Our earlier test for an embedded newline didn't catch this because it only checked that the credential was cleared, but didn't configure an actual helper. Configuring the "verbatim" helper in the test would show that it is invoked (it's obviously a silly helper which doesn't look at its input, but the point is that it shouldn't be run at all). Since we're switching this case to die(), we don't need to bother with a helper. We can see the new behavior just by checking that the operation fails. We'll add new tests covering partial input as well (these can be triggered through various means with url-parsing, but it's simpler to just check them directly, as we know we are covered even if the url parser changes behavior in the future). [jn: changed to die() instead of logging and showing a manual username/password prompt] Reported-by: Carlo Arenas <carenas@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19 06:50:48 +03:00
if (!value && required)
BUG("credential value for %s is missing", key);
if (!value)
return;
if (strchr(value, '\n'))
die("credential value for %s contains newline", key);
fprintf(fp, "%s=%s\n", key, value);
}
void credential_write(const struct credential *c, FILE *fp)
{
credential: refuse to operate when missing host or protocol The credential helper protocol was designed to be very flexible: the fields it takes as input are treated as a pattern, and any missing fields are taken as wildcards. This allows unusual things like: echo protocol=https | git credential reject to delete all stored https credentials (assuming the helpers themselves treat the input that way). But when helpers are invoked automatically by Git, this flexibility works against us. If for whatever reason we don't have a "host" field, then we'd match _any_ host. When you're filling a credential to send to a remote server, this is almost certainly not what you want. Prevent this at the layer that writes to the credential helper. Add a check to the credential API that the host and protocol are always passed in, and add an assertion to the credential_write function that speaks credential helper protocol to be doubly sure. There are a few ways this can be triggered in practice: - the "git credential" command passes along arbitrary credential parameters it reads from stdin. - until the previous patch, when the host field of a URL is empty, we would leave it unset (rather than setting it to the empty string) - a URL like "example.com/foo.git" is treated by curl as if "http://" was present, but our parser sees it as a non-URL and leaves all fields unset - the recent fix for URLs with embedded newlines blanks the URL but otherwise continues. Rather than having the desired effect of looking up no credential at all, many helpers will return _any_ credential Our earlier test for an embedded newline didn't catch this because it only checked that the credential was cleared, but didn't configure an actual helper. Configuring the "verbatim" helper in the test would show that it is invoked (it's obviously a silly helper which doesn't look at its input, but the point is that it shouldn't be run at all). Since we're switching this case to die(), we don't need to bother with a helper. We can see the new behavior just by checking that the operation fails. We'll add new tests covering partial input as well (these can be triggered through various means with url-parsing, but it's simpler to just check them directly, as we know we are covered even if the url parser changes behavior in the future). [jn: changed to die() instead of logging and showing a manual username/password prompt] Reported-by: Carlo Arenas <carenas@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19 06:50:48 +03:00
credential_write_item(fp, "protocol", c->protocol, 1);
credential_write_item(fp, "host", c->host, 1);
credential_write_item(fp, "path", c->path, 0);
credential_write_item(fp, "username", c->username, 0);
credential_write_item(fp, "password", c->password, 0);
}
static int run_credential_helper(struct credential *c,
const char *cmd,
int want_output)
{
struct child_process helper = CHILD_PROCESS_INIT;
const char *argv[] = { NULL, NULL };
FILE *fp;
argv[0] = cmd;
helper.argv = argv;
helper.use_shell = 1;
helper.in = -1;
if (want_output)
helper.out = -1;
else
helper.no_stdout = 1;
if (start_command(&helper) < 0)
return -1;
fp = xfdopen(helper.in, "w");
credential_write(c, fp);
fclose(fp);
if (want_output) {
int r;
fp = xfdopen(helper.out, "r");
r = credential_read(c, fp);
fclose(fp);
if (r < 0) {
finish_command(&helper);
return -1;
}
}
if (finish_command(&helper))
return -1;
return 0;
}
static int credential_do(struct credential *c, const char *helper,
const char *operation)
{
struct strbuf cmd = STRBUF_INIT;
int r;
if (helper[0] == '!')
strbuf_addstr(&cmd, helper + 1);
else if (is_absolute_path(helper))
strbuf_addstr(&cmd, helper);
else
strbuf_addf(&cmd, "git credential-%s", helper);
strbuf_addf(&cmd, " %s", operation);
r = run_credential_helper(c, cmd.buf, !strcmp(operation, "get"));
strbuf_release(&cmd);
return r;
}
void credential_fill(struct credential *c)
{
int i;
if (c->username && c->password)
return;
credential_apply_config(c);
for (i = 0; i < c->helpers.nr; i++) {
credential_do(c, c->helpers.items[i].string, "get");
if (c->username && c->password)
return;
if (c->quit)
die("credential helper '%s' told us to quit",
c->helpers.items[i].string);
}
credential_getpass(c);
if (!c->username && !c->password)
die("unable to get password from user");
}
void credential_approve(struct credential *c)
{
int i;
if (c->approved)
return;
if (!c->username || !c->password)
return;
credential_apply_config(c);
for (i = 0; i < c->helpers.nr; i++)
credential_do(c, c->helpers.items[i].string, "store");
c->approved = 1;
}
void credential_reject(struct credential *c)
{
int i;
credential_apply_config(c);
for (i = 0; i < c->helpers.nr; i++)
credential_do(c, c->helpers.items[i].string, "erase");
FREE_AND_NULL(c->username);
FREE_AND_NULL(c->password);
c->approved = 0;
}
credential: detect unrepresentable values when parsing urls The credential protocol can't represent newlines in values, but URLs can embed percent-encoded newlines in various components. A previous commit taught the low-level writing routines to die() when encountering this, but we can be a little friendlier to the user by detecting them earlier and handling them gracefully. This patch teaches credential_from_url() to notice such components, issue a warning, and blank the credential (which will generally result in prompting the user for a username and password). We blank the whole credential in this case. Another option would be to blank only the invalid component. However, we're probably better off not feeding a partially-parsed URL result to a credential helper. We don't know how a given helper would handle it, so we're better off to err on the side of matching nothing rather than something unexpected. The die() call in credential_write() is _probably_ impossible to reach after this patch. Values should end up in credential structs only by URL parsing (which is covered here), or by reading credential protocol input (which by definition cannot read a newline into a value). But we should definitely keep the low-level check, as it's our final and most accurate line of defense against protocol injection attacks. Arguably it could become a BUG(), but it probably doesn't matter much either way. Note that the public interface of credential_from_url() grows a little more than we need here. We'll use the extra flexibility in a future patch to help fsck catch these cases.
2020-03-12 08:31:11 +03:00
static int check_url_component(const char *url, int quiet,
const char *name, const char *value)
{
if (!value)
return 0;
if (!strchr(value, '\n'))
return 0;
if (!quiet)
warning(_("url contains a newline in its %s component: %s"),
name, url);
return -1;
}
int credential_from_url_gently(struct credential *c, const char *url,
int quiet)
{
const char *at, *colon, *cp, *slash, *host, *proto_end;
credential_clear(c);
/*
* Match one of:
* (1) proto://<host>/...
* (2) proto://<user>@<host>/...
* (3) proto://<user>:<pass>@<host>/...
*/
proto_end = strstr(url, "://");
if (!proto_end)
credential: detect unrepresentable values when parsing urls The credential protocol can't represent newlines in values, but URLs can embed percent-encoded newlines in various components. A previous commit taught the low-level writing routines to die() when encountering this, but we can be a little friendlier to the user by detecting them earlier and handling them gracefully. This patch teaches credential_from_url() to notice such components, issue a warning, and blank the credential (which will generally result in prompting the user for a username and password). We blank the whole credential in this case. Another option would be to blank only the invalid component. However, we're probably better off not feeding a partially-parsed URL result to a credential helper. We don't know how a given helper would handle it, so we're better off to err on the side of matching nothing rather than something unexpected. The die() call in credential_write() is _probably_ impossible to reach after this patch. Values should end up in credential structs only by URL parsing (which is covered here), or by reading credential protocol input (which by definition cannot read a newline into a value). But we should definitely keep the low-level check, as it's our final and most accurate line of defense against protocol injection attacks. Arguably it could become a BUG(), but it probably doesn't matter much either way. Note that the public interface of credential_from_url() grows a little more than we need here. We'll use the extra flexibility in a future patch to help fsck catch these cases.
2020-03-12 08:31:11 +03:00
return 0;
cp = proto_end + 3;
at = strchr(cp, '@');
colon = strchr(cp, ':');
slash = strchrnul(cp, '/');
if (!at || slash <= at) {
/* Case (1) */
host = cp;
}
else if (!colon || at <= colon) {
/* Case (2) */
c->username = url_decode_mem(cp, at - cp);
host = at + 1;
} else {
/* Case (3) */
c->username = url_decode_mem(cp, colon - cp);
c->password = url_decode_mem(colon + 1, at - (colon + 1));
host = at + 1;
}
if (proto_end - url > 0)
c->protocol = xmemdupz(url, proto_end - url);
c->host = url_decode_mem(host, slash - host);
/* Trim leading and trailing slashes from path */
while (*slash == '/')
slash++;
if (*slash) {
char *p;
c->path = url_decode(slash);
p = c->path + strlen(c->path) - 1;
while (p > c->path && *p == '/')
*p-- = '\0';
}
credential: detect unrepresentable values when parsing urls The credential protocol can't represent newlines in values, but URLs can embed percent-encoded newlines in various components. A previous commit taught the low-level writing routines to die() when encountering this, but we can be a little friendlier to the user by detecting them earlier and handling them gracefully. This patch teaches credential_from_url() to notice such components, issue a warning, and blank the credential (which will generally result in prompting the user for a username and password). We blank the whole credential in this case. Another option would be to blank only the invalid component. However, we're probably better off not feeding a partially-parsed URL result to a credential helper. We don't know how a given helper would handle it, so we're better off to err on the side of matching nothing rather than something unexpected. The die() call in credential_write() is _probably_ impossible to reach after this patch. Values should end up in credential structs only by URL parsing (which is covered here), or by reading credential protocol input (which by definition cannot read a newline into a value). But we should definitely keep the low-level check, as it's our final and most accurate line of defense against protocol injection attacks. Arguably it could become a BUG(), but it probably doesn't matter much either way. Note that the public interface of credential_from_url() grows a little more than we need here. We'll use the extra flexibility in a future patch to help fsck catch these cases.
2020-03-12 08:31:11 +03:00
if (check_url_component(url, quiet, "username", c->username) < 0 ||
check_url_component(url, quiet, "password", c->password) < 0 ||
check_url_component(url, quiet, "protocol", c->protocol) < 0 ||
check_url_component(url, quiet, "host", c->host) < 0 ||
check_url_component(url, quiet, "path", c->path) < 0)
return -1;
return 0;
}
void credential_from_url(struct credential *c, const char *url)
{
if (credential_from_url_gently(c, url, 0) < 0) {
warning(_("skipping credential lookup for url: %s"), url);
credential_clear(c);
}
}