I am working on a C program which makes a connection to a database, grabs a list of devices, then forks the requests and creates an SSH connection to that device. The issue I am having is that, the query, which has 700 results, is always starting from the beginning after it hits 5 forks.
Essentially, I've looked into pthread and glibc to handle threading, but some of the examples I found did not work as desired, or added too much complexity.
The problem I am having is, it will stop at 5 children, and stop, instead of finishing the rest of the 700 devices.
Example code:
#include <libssh2.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <sys/select.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#ifdef HAVE_ARPA_INET_H
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#endif
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <mysql.h>
/********************************
*
* gcc -o confmgr cfgmgr.c -Wall -lpthread -lz -lm -lrt -ldl -lssh2 $(mysql_config --cflags) $(mysql_config --libs) -std=gnu99
*
********************************/
static int waitsocket(int socket_fd, LIBSSH2_SESSION *session)
{
struct timeval timeout;
int rc;
fd_set fd;
fd_set *writefd = NULL;
fd_set *readfd = NULL;
int dir;
timeout.tv_sec = 10;
timeout.tv_usec = 0;
FD_ZERO(&fd);
FD_SET(socket_fd, &fd);
/* now make sure we wait in the correct direction */
dir = libssh2_session_block_directions(session);
if(dir & LIBSSH2_SESSION_BLOCK_INBOUND)
readfd = &fd;
if(dir & LIBSSH2_SESSION_BLOCK_OUTBOUND)
writefd = &fd;
rc = select(socket_fd + 1, readfd, writefd, NULL, &timeout);
return rc;
}
int *connect_to_device(MYSQL_RES** args){
printf("%s", args[2]);
const char *hostname = "1.1.1.1";
const char *commandline = "command_to_run ";
const char *username = "static_user";
const char *password = "static_pass";
unsigned long hostaddr;
int sock;
struct sockaddr_in sin;
const char *fingerprint;
LIBSSH2_SESSION *session;
LIBSSH2_CHANNEL *channel;
int rc;
int exitcode;
char *exitsignal=(char *)"none";
int bytecount = 0;
size_t len;
LIBSSH2_KNOWNHOSTS *nh;
int type;
rc = libssh2_init (0);
if (rc != 0) {
fprintf (stderr, "libssh2 initialization failed (%d)\n", rc);
return 1;
}
hostaddr = inet_addr(hostname);
/* Ultra basic "connect to port 22 on localhost"
* Your code is responsible for creating the socket establishing the
* connection
*/
sock = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
sin.sin_family = AF_INET;
sin.sin_port = htons(22);
sin.sin_addr.s_addr = hostaddr;
if (connect(sock, (struct sockaddr*)(&sin),
sizeof(struct sockaddr_in)) != 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "failed to connect!\n");
return -1;
}
/* Create a session instance */
session = libssh2_session_init();
if (!session)
return -1;
/* tell libssh2 we want it all done non-blocking */
libssh2_session_set_blocking(session, 0);
/* ... start it up. This will trade welcome banners, exchange keys,
* and setup crypto, compression, and MAC layers
*/
while ((rc = libssh2_session_handshake(session, sock)) ==
LIBSSH2_ERROR_EAGAIN);
if (rc) {
fprintf(stderr, "Failure establishing SSH session: %d\n", rc);
return -1;
}
/* We could authenticate via password */
while ((rc = libssh2_userauth_password(session, username, password)) == LIBSSH2_ERROR_EAGAIN);
if (rc) {
fprintf(stderr, "Authentication by password failed.\n");
goto shutdown;
}
libssh2_trace(session, LIBSSH2_TRACE_TRANS | LIBSSH2_TRACE_KEX | LIBSSH2_TRACE_AUTH | LIBSSH2_TRACE_CONN | LIBSSH2_TRACE_SCP | LIBSSH2_TRACE_SFTP | LIBSSH2_TRACE_ERROR | LIBSSH2_TRACE_PUBLICKEY );
/* Exec non-blocking on the remove host */
while( (channel = libssh2_channel_open_session(session)) == NULL &&
libssh2_session_last_error(session,NULL,NULL,0) == LIBSSH2_ERROR_EAGAIN )
{
waitsocket(sock, session);
}
if( channel == NULL )
{
fprintf(stderr,"Error\n");
exit( 1 );
}
while( (rc = libssh2_channel_exec(channel, commandline)) == LIBSSH2_ERROR_EAGAIN )
{
waitsocket(sock, session);
}
if( rc != 0 )
{
fprintf(stderr,"Error\n");
exit( 1 );
}
for( ;; )
{
// loop until we block
int rc;
do
{
char buffer[0x4000];
/* strange thing */
sleep( 1 );
rc = libssh2_channel_read( channel, buffer, sizeof(buffer) );
if( rc > 0 )
{
int i;
for( i=0; i < rc; ++i )
putchar( buffer[i] );
}
}
while( rc > 0 );
// this is due to blocking that would occur otherwise so we loop on this condition
if( rc == LIBSSH2_ERROR_EAGAIN )
{
waitsocket(sock, session);
}
else if( rc == 0 )
break;
}
while( (rc = libssh2_channel_close(channel)) == LIBSSH2_ERROR_EAGAIN )
;
if( rc == 0 )
{
//does-not-work if( libssh2_channel_wait_closed(channel) == 0 )
exitcode = libssh2_channel_get_exit_status( channel );
}
printf("\n%d\n", 221 );
libssh2_channel_free(channel);
channel = NULL;
/***********************/
shutdown:
libssh2_session_disconnect(session, "Normal Shutdown, Thank you for playing");
libssh2_session_free(session);
close(sock);
fprintf(stderr, "\n----------------------\nScript Finished\n\n");
libssh2_exit();
return 7;
}
/********************************
*
*
*
*
********************************/
int main(int argc, char *argv[]){
pid_t childPID;
int children = 0;
MYSQL *conn;
MYSQL_RES *res;
MYSQL_ROW row;
char *mySQLserver = "localhost";
char *mySQLuser = "root";
char *mySQLpassword = ""; /* set me first */
char *mySQLdatabase = "Devices";
conn = mysql_init(NULL);
/* Connect to database */
if (!mysql_real_connect(conn, mySQLserver,
mySQLuser, mySQLpassword, mySQLdatabase, 0, NULL, 0)) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", mysql_error(conn));
exit(1);
}
/* send SQL query */
if (mysql_query(conn, "SELECT Hostname,Descr,IP,Username,Password FROM All_Active_Devices")) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", mysql_error(conn));
exit(1);
}
res = mysql_use_result(conn);
/* output table name */
printf("MySQL Tables in mysql database:\n");
while ((row = mysql_fetch_row(res)) != NULL){
printf("%s \n", row[0]);
children++; // Last fork() was successful
while (children >= 5)
{
int status;
// Wait for one child to exit
if (wait(&status) == 7)
{
children--;
}
}
childPID = fork ();
if (childPID < 0) {
printf("Fork Error \n");
} else if (childPID == 0) {
printf("\tCreating Fork for %s: pid %d \n", row[0], childPID);
connect_to_device ( &row );
}
else{
printf("\tDid not create Fork for %s \n", row[0]);
}
}
/* close connection */
mysql_free_result(res);
mysql_close(conn);
return 0;
}
Your child processes are exitting - in particular not with exit status 7 - you have a return in your connect_to_device function, but that is ignored, and each child starts going round the loop, creating more children.
You probably want: return connect_to_device ( &row ); instead.
wait() returns the child PID that died, not its status - which is in WEXITSTATUS(status).
What happens after connect_to_device returns? It looks like that thread will also start in on the while loop as I don't see that child process exiting, sitting you in the while children >=5 loop. The 5 in your condition and 5 threads isn't a coincidence.
Some output from a run would be helpful, also paring down the code.
Try to get your scaffolding working, without the ssh code. Just getting the processes to stop and start shouldn't need ssh. Then add in the application logic once you're sure the underlying support works.
Perhaps ServerAliveCountMax is getting in the way:
EDIT FROM NETCODER BELOW
ServerAliveCountMax
Sets the number of server alive messages (see
below) which may be sent without ssh(1) receiving any messages back
from the server. If this threshold is reached while server alive
messages are being sent, ssh will disconnect from the server,
terminating the session. It is important to note that the use of
server alive messages is very different from TCPKeepAlive (below). The
server alive messages are sent through the encrypted channel and
therefore will not be spoofable. The TCP keepalive option enabled by
TCPKeepAlive is spoofable. The server alive mechanism is valuable when
the client or server depend on knowing when a connection has become
inactive.
The default value is 3. If, for example, ServerAliveInterval (see
below) is set to 15 and ServerAliveCountMax is left at the default, if
the server becomes unresponsive, ssh will disconnect after
approximately 45 seconds. This option applies to protocol version 2
only.
See the man page for ssh_config (man 5 ssh_config) for details.
Related
I've been tearing my hair out for a while on this one. The C code is called from a bash script, which loops through a command's output in a while loop and passes variables to the C script as args. It goes through a list and partitions data properly. I've been using the C MySQL api, and up until now everything has been relatively straight forward. It tries to run a SELECT(EXISTS) command to dictate whether to input a new row, or update an existing one.
I have typed the command into MySQL terminal and it works perfectly. I have even printf'd it and copied the command directly into the terminal. It works....
So why then, am I getting Syntax errors? I've tried escaping fields and input using backticks, single quotes and double quotes and I'm still getting this dumbounding error. I thought maybe it was something to do with the null space? But I'm at my witts end. Here's the code, any advice would be greatly appreciated :)
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <mysql/mysql.h>
const int MAXLEN = 100;
/* Compile with:
gcc db.connect.c `mysql_config --libs` -O1
for the best results
*/
/* Function definitions for later */
void finish_with_error(MYSQL *con);
int send_query(MYSQL *con, char query[MAXLEN]);
/* If any SQL commands fail, return an error message */
void finish_with_error(MYSQL *con)
{
fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", mysql_error(con));
mysql_close(con);
exit(1);
}
/* Helper function to send queries to MySQL database */
int send_query(MYSQL *con, char query[MAXLEN])
{
if (mysql_query(con, query)) {
finish_with_error(con);
}
return 0;
}
int main(int argc, char ** argv)
{
// Establish MySQL API connection, if not- fail with err
MYSQL *con = mysql_init(NULL);
if (con == NULL) {
finish_with_error(con);
}
// Connection string.
if (mysql_real_connect(con, "localhost", "user", "password",
NULL, 0, NULL, 0) == NULL){
finish_with_error(con);
}
if (argv[1] == NULL){
printf("No query passed, terminating script \n");
return 1;
}
if (argv[1] != NULL) {
if( strcmp( argv[1], "--help" ) == 0 ) {
printf("This program was created to interact with MySQL, by checking and updating live network stats\n");
printf("It has 2 parameters, an IP address to look in the database for and a value to update a field by, \
if that IP address is found. ");
printf("If the value is not found, the program will insert a new row.");
return 1;
}
// Works out how much memory to allocate to buffer for snprintf
// Originally cmd_len was 65- as this was the amount of bits needed by the address string.
// This was changed to MAXLEN to prevent SEGFAULTS and give the function breathing room.
size_t cmd_len = MAXLEN;
size_t param_len = sizeof(argv[2]);
size_t q_len = cmd_len + param_len;
// Allocates that memory to a buffer, referenced as query
char *query = malloc(sizeof(char) * q_len);
snprintf(query, q_len, "SELECT EXISTS(SELECT * FROM `analytics`.`live` WHERE `foreign_addr` = `%s`)", argv[1]);
printf("%s\n", query);
send_query(con, query);
free(query);
// Used to store the result of the MySQL select commands
MYSQL_RES *result = mysql_store_result(con);
if (result == NULL) {
finish_with_error(con);
}
// num_fields stores the number of fields, i and x are counters, answer is 1 or 0
int num_fields = mysql_num_fields(result);
int i = 0;
// Loops through each row in the answer statement.
// There will only be one row in the answer, which will be 1 or 0
// Basically, if the IP is found.
MYSQL_ROW row;
while ((row = mysql_fetch_row(result))){
for (i=0; i<num_fields; i++) {
// If the IP isn't in the table
if(!atoi(row[i]))
send_query(con, argv[1]);
// If the IP is already in the table
if(atoi(row[i])) {
snprintf(query, q_len, "UPDATE analytics.live SET count=count+1 WHERE foreign_addr = '%s'", argv[1]);
printf("%s\n", query);
free(query);
snprintf(query, q_len, "UPDATE analytics.live SET dat_sent = dat_sent + %s", argv[2]);
printf("%s\n", query);
free(query);
}
}
}
mysql_close(con);
return 1;
}
mysql_close(con);
return 0;
}
I'm attempting to use a local server made in C with an HTML page run on this server that will be able to interact with a program i made to be able to run bash commands which works perfectly outside of the html page but needs to be able to receive input from the user via text box on the web page, display the command entered as well as the output on the html page. Right now when i click the submit button on the html page it goes to localhost:PORT/pexec.cgi but shows absolutely no display at all, just white space. What am i doing wrong and how can i get this to work so that it will correctly display output?
WCServer.c
#include <sys/socket.h> // socket definitions
#include <sys/types.h> // socket types
#include <arpa/inet.h> // inet (3) funtions
#include <unistd.h> // misc. UNIX functions
#include <signal.h> // signal handling
#include <stdlib.h> // standard library
#include <stdio.h> // input/output library
#include <string.h> // string library
#include <errno.h> // error number library
#include <fcntl.h> // for O_* constants
#include <sys/mman.h> // mmap library
#include <sys/types.h> // various type definitions
#include <sys/stat.h> // more constants
// global constants
#define PORT 3838 // port to connect on
#define LISTENQ 10 // number of connections
int list_s; // listening socket
// structure to hold the return code and the filepath to serve to client.
typedef struct {
int returncode;
char *filename;
} httpRequest;
// Structure to hold variables that will be placed in shared memory
typedef struct {
pthread_mutex_t mutexlock;
int totalbytes;
} sharedVariables;
// headers to send to clients
char *header200 = "HTTP/1.0 200 OK\nServer: CS241Serv v0.1\nContent-Type: text/html\n\n";
char *header400 = "HTTP/1.0 400 Bad Request\nServer: CS241Serv v0.1\nContent-Type: text/html\n\n";
char *header404 = "HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found\nServer: CS241Serv v0.1\nContent-Type: text/html\n\n";
// get a message from the socket until a blank line is recieved
char *getMessage(int fd) {
// A file stream
FILE *sstream;
// Try to open the socket to the file stream and handle any failures
if( (sstream = fdopen(fd, "r")) == NULL)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Error opening file descriptor in getMessage()\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Size variable for passing to getline
size_t size = 1;
char *block;
// Allocate some memory for block and check it went ok
if( (block = malloc(sizeof(char) * size)) == NULL )
{
fprintf(stderr, "Error allocating memory to block in getMessage\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Set block to null
*block = '\0';
// Allocate some memory for tmp and check it went ok
char *tmp;
if( (tmp = malloc(sizeof(char) * size)) == NULL )
{
fprintf(stderr, "Error allocating memory to tmp in getMessage\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Set tmp to null
*tmp = '\0';
// Int to keep track of what getline returns
int end;
// Int to help use resize block
int oldsize = 1;
// While getline is still getting data
while( (end = getline( &tmp, &size, sstream)) > 0)
{
// If the line its read is a caridge return and a new line were at the end of the header so break
if( strcmp(tmp, "\r\n") == 0)
{
break;
}
// Resize block
block = realloc(block, size+oldsize);
// Set the value of oldsize to the current size of block
oldsize += size;
// Append the latest line we got to block
strcat(block, tmp);
}
// Free tmp a we no longer need it
free(tmp);
// Return the header
return block;
}
// send a message to a socket file descripter
int sendMessage(int fd, char *msg) {
return write(fd, msg, strlen(msg));
}
// Extracts the filename needed from a GET request and adds public_html to the front of it
char * getFileName(char* msg)
{
// Variable to store the filename in
char * file;
// Allocate some memory for the filename and check it went OK
if( (file = malloc(sizeof(char) * strlen(msg))) == NULL)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Error allocating memory to file in getFileName()\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Get the filename from the header
sscanf(msg, "GET %s HTTP/1.1", file);
// Allocate some memory not in read only space to store "public_html"
char *base;
if( (base = malloc(sizeof(char) * (strlen(file) + 18))) == NULL)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Error allocating memory to base in getFileName()\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
char* ph = "public_html";
// Copy public_html to the non read only memory
strcpy(base, ph);
// Append the filename after public_html
strcat(base, file);
// Free file as we now have the file name in base
free(file);
// Return public_html/filetheywant.html
return base;
}
// parse a HTTP request and return an object with return code and filename
httpRequest parseRequest(char *msg){
httpRequest ret;
// A variable to store the name of the file they want
char* filename;
// Allocate some memory to filename and check it goes OK
if( (filename = malloc(sizeof(char) * strlen(msg))) == NULL)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Error allocating memory to filename in parseRequest()\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Find out what page they want
filename = getFileName(msg);
// Check if its a directory traversal attack
char *badstring = "..";
char *test = strstr(filename, badstring);
// Check if they asked for / and give them input.html
int test2 = strcmp(filename, "public_html/");
// Check if the page they want exists
FILE *exists = fopen(filename, "r" );
// If the badstring is found in the filename
if( test != NULL )
{
// Return a 400 header and 400.html
ret.returncode = 400;
ret.filename = "400.html";
}
// If they asked for / return input.html
else if(test2 == 0)
{
ret.returncode = 200;
ret.filename = "public_html/input.html";
}
// If they asked for a specific page and it exists because we opened it sucessfully return it
else if( exists != NULL )
{
ret.returncode = 200;
ret.filename = filename;
// Close the file stream
fclose(exists);
}
// If we get here the file they want doesn't exist so return a 404
else
{
ret.returncode = 404;
ret.filename = "404.html";
}
// Return the structure containing the details
return ret;
}
// print a file out to a socket file descriptor
int printFile(int fd, char *filename) {
/* Open the file filename and echo the contents from it to the file descriptor fd */
// Attempt to open the file
FILE *read;
if( (read = fopen(filename, "r")) == NULL)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Error opening file in printFile()\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Get the size of this file for printing out later on
int totalsize;
struct stat st;
stat(filename, &st);
totalsize = st.st_size;
// Variable for getline to write the size of the line its currently printing to
size_t size = 1;
// Get some space to store each line of the file in temporarily
char *temp;
if( (temp = malloc(sizeof(char) * size)) == NULL )
{
fprintf(stderr, "Error allocating memory to temp in printFile()\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Int to keep track of what getline returns
int end;
// While getline is still getting data
while( (end = getline( &temp, &size, read)) > 0)
{
sendMessage(fd, temp);
}
// Final new line
sendMessage(fd, "\n");
// Free temp as we no longer need it
free(temp);
// Return how big the file we sent out was
return totalsize;
}
// clean up listening socket on ctrl-c
void cleanup(int sig) {
printf("Cleaning up connections and exiting.\n");
// try to close the listening socket
if (close(list_s) < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error calling close()\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Close the shared memory we used
shm_unlink("/sharedmem");
// exit with success
exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
int printHeader(int fd, int returncode)
{
// Print the header based on the return code
switch (returncode)
{
case 200:
sendMessage(fd, header200);
return strlen(header200);
break;
case 400:
sendMessage(fd, header400);
return strlen(header400);
break;
case 404:
sendMessage(fd, header404);
return strlen(header404);
break;
}
}
// Increment the global count of data sent out
int recordTotalBytes(int bytes_sent, sharedVariables *mempointer)
{
// Lock the mutex
pthread_mutex_lock(&(*mempointer).mutexlock);
// Increment bytes_sent
(*mempointer).totalbytes += bytes_sent;
// Unlock the mutex
pthread_mutex_unlock(&(*mempointer).mutexlock);
// Return the new byte count
return (*mempointer).totalbytes;
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
int conn_s; // connection socket
short int port = PORT; // port number
struct sockaddr_in servaddr; // socket address structure
// set up signal handler for ctrl-c
(void) signal(SIGINT, cleanup);
// create the listening socket
if ((list_s = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0)) < 0 ) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error creating listening socket.\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// set all bytes in socket address structure to zero, and fill in the relevant data members
memset(&servaddr, 0, sizeof(servaddr));
servaddr.sin_family = AF_INET;
servaddr.sin_addr.s_addr = htonl(INADDR_ANY);
servaddr.sin_port = htons(port);
// bind to the socket address
if (bind(list_s, (struct sockaddr *) &servaddr, sizeof(servaddr)) < 0 ) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error calling bind()\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Listen on socket list_s
if( (listen(list_s, 10)) == -1)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Error Listening\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Set up some shared memory to store our shared variables in
// Close the shared memory we use just to be safe
shm_unlink("/sharedmem");
int sharedmem;
// Open the memory
if( (sharedmem = shm_open("/sharedmem", O_RDWR | O_CREAT | O_EXCL, S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR)) == -1)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Error opening sharedmem in main() errno is: %s ", strerror(errno));
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Set the size of the shared memory to the size of my structure
ftruncate(sharedmem, sizeof(sharedVariables) );
// Map the shared memory into our address space
sharedVariables *mempointer;
// Set mempointer to point at the shared memory
mempointer = mmap(NULL, sizeof(sharedVariables), PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED, sharedmem, 0);
// Check the memory allocation went OK
if( mempointer == MAP_FAILED )
{
fprintf(stderr, "Error setting shared memory for sharedVariables in recordTotalBytes() error is %d \n ", errno);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
// Initalise the mutex
pthread_mutex_init(&(*mempointer).mutexlock, NULL);
// Set total bytes sent to 0
(*mempointer).totalbytes = 0;
// Size of the address
int addr_size = sizeof(servaddr);
// Sizes of data were sending out
int headersize;
int pagesize;
int totaldata;
// Number of child processes we have spawned
int children = 0;
// Variable to store the ID of the process we get when we spawn
pid_t pid;
// Loop infinitly serving requests
while(1)
{
// If we haven't already spawned 10 children fork
if( children <= 10)
{
pid = fork();
children++;
}
// If the pid is -1 the fork failed so handle that
if( pid == -1)
{
fprintf(stderr,"can't fork, error %d\n" , errno);
exit (1);
}
// Have the child process deal with the connection
if ( pid == 0)
{
// Have the child loop infinetly dealing with a connection then getting the next one in the queue
while(1)
{
// Accept a connection
conn_s = accept(list_s, (struct sockaddr *)&servaddr, &addr_size);
// If something went wrong with accepting the connection deal with it
if(conn_s == -1)
{
fprintf(stderr,"Error accepting connection \n");
exit (1);
}
// Get the message from the file descriptor
char * header = getMessage(conn_s);
// Parse the request
httpRequest details = parseRequest(header);
// Free header now were done with it
free(header);
// Print out the correct header
headersize = printHeader(conn_s, details.returncode);
// Print out the file they wanted
pagesize = printFile(conn_s, details.filename);
// Increment our count of total datasent by all processes and get back the new total
totaldata = recordTotalBytes(headersize+pagesize, mempointer);
// Print out which process handled the request and how much data was sent
printf("Process %d served a request of %d bytes. Total bytes sent %d \n", getpid(), headersize+pagesize, totaldata);
// Close the connection now were done
close(conn_s);
}
}
}
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
Pexec.c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
static char* args[512];
pid_t pid;
int command_pipe[2];
#define READ 0
#define WRITE 1
static int command(int input, int first, int last)
{
int pipettes[2];
pipe( pipettes );
pid = fork();
if (pid == 0) {
if (first == 1 && last == 0 && input == 0) {
// First command
dup2( pipettes[WRITE], STDOUT_FILENO );
} else if (first == 0 && last == 0 && input != 0) {
// Middle command
dup2(input, STDIN_FILENO);
dup2(pipettes[WRITE], STDOUT_FILENO);
} else {
// Last command
dup2( input, STDIN_FILENO );
}
if (execvp( args[0], args) == -1)
_exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
if (input != 0)
close(input);
close(pipettes[WRITE]);
if (last == 1)
close(pipettes[READ]);
return pipettes[READ];
}
static void cleanup(int n)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < n; ++i)
wait(NULL);
}
static int run(char* cmd, int input, int first, int last);
static char line[1024];
static int n = 0; /* number of calls to 'command' */
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
while (1) {
// for(int i = 1; i < argc; i++){
// strcat(line, argv[i]);
// strcat(line, " ");
// }
/* Read a command line */
//if (!fgets(line, 1024, stdin))
//return 0;
int InputLength = atoi(getenv("INPUT_LENGTH"));
fread(line, InputLength, 1, stdin);
int input = 0;
int first = 1;
char* cmd = line;
char* next = strchr(cmd, '#'); /* Find first '|' */
while (next != NULL) {
/* 'next' points to '|' */
*next = '\0';
input = run(cmd, input, first, 0);
cmd = next + 1;
next = strchr(cmd, '#'); /* Find next '|' */
first = 0;
}
input = run(cmd, input, first, 1);
cleanup(n);
n = 0;
}
return 0;
}
static void split(char* cmd);
static int run(char* cmd, int input, int first, int last)
{
split(cmd);
if (args[0] != NULL) {
if (strcmp(args[0], "exit") == 0)
exit(0);
n += 1;
return command(input, first, last);
}
return 0;
}
static char* skipwhite(char* s)
{
while (isspace(*s)) ++s;
return s;
}
static void split(char* cmd)
{
cmd = skipwhite(cmd);
char* next = strchr(cmd, ' ');
int i = 0;
while(next != NULL) {
next[0] = '\0';
args[i] = cmd;
++i;
cmd = skipwhite(next + 1);
next = strchr(cmd, ' ');
}
if (cmd[0] != '\0') {
args[i] = cmd;
next = strchr(cmd, '\n');
next[0] = '\0';
++i;
}
args[i] = NULL;
}
input.html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<style>
input[type=text], select {
width: 100%;
padding: 12px 20px;
margin: 8px 0;
display: inline-block;
border: 1px solid #ccc;
border-radius: 4px;
box-sizing: border-box;
}
input[type=submit] {
width: 100%;
background-color: #4CAF50;
color: white;
padding: 14px 20px;
margin: 8px 0;
border: none;
border-radius: 4px;
cursor: pointer;
}
input[type=submit]:hover {
background-color: #45a049;
}
div {
border-radius: 5px;
background-color: #f2f2f2;
padding: 20px;
}
</style>
<body>
<h3><center>The Html Page Title </center></h3>
<div>
<form method="POST" action="pexec.cgi">
<label for="cmmd">Command</label>
<input type="text" id="cmmd" name="firstname" placeholder="Enter your Command here and then hit Run! Below">
<label for="lname">Entered Command </label>
<input type="text" id="lname" name="lastname" placeholder="This is what you entered...">
<label for="lname">Standard Output </label>
<input type="text" id="lname" name="lastname" placeholder="Standard Output will be shown here...">
<label for="lname">Standard Error </label>
<input type="text" id="lname" name="lastname" placeholder="standard error will be shown here...">
<input type="submit" value="Run!">
</form>
</div>
</body>
</html>
It's my first time dabbling with socket programming and I stumbled upon this amazing code from https://dzone.com/articles/web-server-c.
WHAT WE NEED TO DO: implement a simple HTTP web server that uses the web browser(input from the user) as a client
Here it is:
/*
* WebServer.c
*
* Created on: Nov 3, 2012
* Author: pavithra
*
* A web server in C language using only the standard libraries.
* The port number is passed as an argument.
*
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/sendfile.h>
#define EOL "\r\n"
#define EOL_SIZE 2
typedef struct {
char *ext;
char *mediatype;
} extn;
//Possible media types
extn extensions[] ={
{"gif", "image/gif" },
{"txt", "text/plain" },
{"jpg", "image/jpg" },
{"jpeg","image/jpeg"},
{"png", "image/png" },
{"ico", "image/ico" },
{"zip", "image/zip" },
{"gz", "image/gz" },
{"tar", "image/tar" },
{"htm", "text/html" },
{"html","text/html" },
{"php", "text/html" },
{"pdf","application/pdf"},
{"zip","application/octet-stream"},
{"rar","application/octet-stream"},
{0,0} };
//find webroot, add design
/*
A helper function
*/
void error(const char *msg) {
perror(msg);
exit(1);
}
/*
A helper function
*/
int get_file_size(int fd) {
struct stat stat_struct;
if (fstat(fd, &stat_struct) == -1)
return (1);
return (int) stat_struct.st_size;
}
/*
A helper function
*/
void send_new(int fd, char *msg) {
int len = strlen(msg);
if (send(fd, msg, len, 0) == -1) {
printf("Error in send\n");
}
}
/*
This function recieves the buffer
until an "End of line(EOL)" byte is recieved
*/
int recv_new(int fd, char *buffer) {
char *p = buffer; // Use of a pointer to the buffer rather than dealing with the buffer directly
int eol_matched = 0; // Use to check whether the recieved byte is matched with the buffer byte or not
while (recv(fd, p, 1, 0) != 0) // Start receiving 1 byte at a time
{
if (*p == EOL[eol_matched]) // if the byte matches with the first eol byte that is '\r'
{
++eol_matched;
if (eol_matched == EOL_SIZE) // if both the bytes matches with the EOL
{
*(p + 1 - EOL_SIZE) = '\0'; // End the string
return (strlen(buffer)); // Return the bytes recieved
}
} else {
eol_matched = 0;
}
p++; // Increment the pointer to receive next byte
}
return (0);
}
/*
A helper function: Returns the
web root location.
*/
char* webroot() {
// open the file "kill.txt" for reading
FILE *in = fopen("kill.txt", "rt");
// read the first line from the file
char buff[1000];
fgets(buff, 1000, in);
// close the stream
fclose(in);
char* nl_ptr = strrchr(buff, '\n');
if (nl_ptr != NULL)
*nl_ptr = '\0';
return strdup(buff);
}
/*
Handles php requests
*/
void php_cgi(char* script_path, int fd) {
send_new(fd, "HTTP/1.1 200 OK\n Server: Web Server in C\n Connection: close\n");
dup2(fd, STDOUT_FILENO);
char script[500];
strcpy(script, "SCRIPT_FILENAME=");
strcat(script, script_path);
putenv("GATEWAY_INTERFACE=CGI/1.1");
putenv(script);
putenv("QUERY_STRING=");
putenv("REQUEST_METHOD=GET");
putenv("REDIRECT_STATUS=true");
putenv("SERVER_PROTOCOL=HTTP/1.1");
putenv("REMOTE_HOST=127.0.0.1");
execl("/usr/bin/php-cgi", "php-cgi", NULL);
}
/*
This function parses the HTTP requests,
arrange resource locations,
check for supported media types,
serves files in a web root,
sends the HTTP error codes.
*/
int connection(int fd) {
char request[500], resource[500], *ptr;
int fd1, length;
if (recv_new(fd, request) == 0) {
printf("Receive Failed\n");
}
printf("%s\n", request);
// Check for a valid browser request
ptr = strstr(request, " HTTP/");
if (ptr == NULL) {
printf("NOT HTTP !\n");
} else {
*ptr = 0;
ptr = NULL;
if (strncmp(request, "GET ", 4) == 0) {
ptr = request + 4;
}
if (ptr == NULL) {
printf("Unknown Request ! \n");
} else {
if (ptr[strlen(ptr) - 1] == '/') {
strcat(ptr, "test.html");
}
strcpy(resource, webroot());
strcat(resource, ptr);
char* s = strchr(ptr, '.');
int i;
for (i = 0; extensions[i].ext != NULL; i++) {
if (strcmp(s + 1, extensions[i].ext) == 0) {
fd1 = open(resource, O_RDONLY, 0);
printf("Opening \"%s\"\n", resource);
if (fd1 == -1) {
printf("404 File not found Error\n");
send_new(fd, "HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found\r\n");
send_new(fd, "Server : Web Server in C\r\n\r\n");
send_new(fd, "<html><head><title>404 Not Found</head></title>");
send_new(fd, "<body><p>404 Not Found: The requested resource could not be found!</p></body></html>\r\n");
//Handling php requests
} else if (strcmp(extensions[i].ext, "php") == 0) {
php_cgi(resource, fd);
sleep(1);
close(fd);
exit(1);
} else {
printf("200 OK, Content-Type: %s\n\n",
extensions[i].mediatype);
send_new(fd, "HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n");
send_new(fd, "Server : Web Server in C\r\n\r\n");
if (ptr == request + 4) // if it is a GET request
{
if ((length = get_file_size(fd1)) == -1)
printf("Error in getting size !\n");
size_t total_bytes_sent = 0;
ssize_t bytes_sent;
while (total_bytes_sent < length) {
//Zero copy optimization
if ((bytes_sent = sendfile(fd, fd1, 0,
length - total_bytes_sent)) <= 0) {
if (errno == EINTR || errno == EAGAIN) {
continue;
}
perror("sendfile");
return -1;
}
total_bytes_sent += bytes_sent;
}
//why is it not appearing up to 11:30
}
}
break;
}
int size = sizeof(extensions) / sizeof(extensions[0]);
if (i == size - 2) {
printf("415 Unsupported Media Type\n");
send_new(fd, "HTTP/1.1 415 Unsupported Media Type\r\n");
send_new(fd, "Server : Web Server in C\r\n\r\n");
send_new(fd, "<html><head><title>415 Unsupported Media Type</head></title>");
send_new(fd, "<body><p>415 Unsupported Media Type!</p></body></html>");
}
}
close(fd);
}
}
shutdown(fd, SHUT_RDWR);
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
int sockfd, newsockfd, portno, pid;
socklen_t clilen;
struct sockaddr_in serv_addr, cli_addr;
if (argc < 2) {
fprintf(stderr, "ERROR, no port provided\n");
exit(1);
}
sockfd = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
if (sockfd < 0)
error("ERROR opening socket");
bzero((char *) &serv_addr, sizeof(serv_addr));
portno = atoi(argv[1]);
serv_addr.sin_family = AF_INET;
serv_addr.sin_addr.s_addr = INADDR_ANY;
serv_addr.sin_port = htons(portno);
if (bind(sockfd, (struct sockaddr *) &serv_addr, sizeof(serv_addr)) < 0)
error("ERROR on binding");
listen(sockfd, 5);
clilen = sizeof(cli_addr);
/*
Server runs forever, forking off a separate
process for each connection.
*/
while (1) {
newsockfd = accept(sockfd, (struct sockaddr *) &cli_addr, &clilen);
if (newsockfd < 0)
error("ERROR on accept");
pid = fork();
if (pid < 0)
error("ERROR on fork");
if (pid == 0) {
close(sockfd);
connection(newsockfd);
exit(0);
} else
close(newsockfd);
} /* end of while */
close(sockfd);
return 0; /* we never get here */
}
NOTE: the kill.txt contains the directory of the server, the files(jpegs, gifs, etc.: /home/user/Desktop)
PROBLEM:
1. After I compile the program and execute it on my web browser as "localhost:port number/file" this is what appears on my web browser:
the image "http://localhost.... cannot be displayed because it contains errors.
And this is what appears on my terminal:
GET /sample5.gif HTTP/1.1
Opening "/home/user/Desktop/sample5.gif"
200 OK, Content-Type: image/gif
GET /favicon.ico HTTP/1.1
Opening "/home/user/Desktop/favicon.ico"
404 File not found Error
How do I fix this? Any help/comment would be greatly appreciated! Thanks.
Where is that favicon.ico bit coming from? /I looked this up and apparently having that favicon.ico bit is quite normal (can somebody please confirm this?)/
… I stumbled upon this amazing code from …
It is indeed amazing how bad it is.
At the end of the function int connection(int fd) there's:
close(fd);
}
}
shutdown(fd, SHUT_RDWR);
}
Browsers don't like the connection being reset by peer (due to close()) before it's tidily shut down. Move the close() after the shutdown().
The program neglects to reap child processes, thus a zombie process remains after each request. #include <signal.h> and add sigignore(SIGCHLD); at the start of main().
If the action for the SIGCHLD signal is set to SIG_IGN, child
processes of the calling processes will not be transformed into zombie
processes when they terminate.
I've made a simple web browser using winsock2 and I have it cout the response from the server but it sends sum 21000 bytes and I need to be able to copy and paste the html, javascript, css, etc for testing the gui I made. It always fills up the terminal and I can't see where it starts I just end up in the middle of a lot of javascript. I want it to be like in the cmd where it stops and ask if you want to continue.
#include <windows.h>
#include <winsock2.h>
#include <conio.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
#define SCK_VERSION2 0x0202
#define DEFAULT_BUFLEN 21000
#define DEFAULT_PORT 27015
namespace Globals{
string input = "";
char recvbuf[DEFAULT_BUFLEN];
const char* carf = recvbuf;
}
using namespace Globals;
HWND staticText2 = CreateWindowEx(WS_EX_PALETTEWINDOW, TEXT("Static"), TEXT("Email"), /* email */
WS_CHILD | WS_VISIBLE, 122, 80, 44, 20,
/*hwnd*/NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL);
int sck() {
//----------------------
// Declare and initialize variables.
WSADATA wsaData;
int iResult;
SOCKET ConnectSocket = INVALID_SOCKET;
struct sockaddr_in clientService;
char name[500] = "";
char ipADDRESS[500] = "";
char sPORT[500] = "";
sockaddr_in sName;
int sNameSize = sizeof(sName);
char const* sendbuf = "GET /?gws_rd=ssl HTTP/1.1\r\n"
"Host: www.google.com:80\r\n"
"User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US; rv:1.9.1.5) Gecko/20091102 Firefox/3.5.5 (.NET CLR 3.5.30729)\r\n"
"Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8\r\n"
"Accept-Language: en-us,en;q=0.5\r\n"
//"Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate\r\n"
"Accept-Charset: ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7\r\n"
"Keep-Alive: 300\r\n"
"Connection: keep-alive\r\n"
"Pragma: no-cache\r\n"
"DNT: 1"
"Cookie:
"Cookie:
"Cache-Control: no-cache\r\n\r\n";
char recvbuf[DEFAULT_BUFLEN];
int recvbuflen = DEFAULT_BUFLEN; //23.214.132.132 GoDaddy.com
int WSAERROR = WSAGetLastError(); //190.93.243.15
//system("color 04"); //172.16.100.114 Mrs.Hall
//----------------------
// Initialize Winsock
iResult = WSAStartup(MAKEWORD(2,2), &wsaData);
if (iResult != NO_ERROR) {
printf("WSAStartup failed: %d\n", iResult);
return 1;
}
//----------------------
// Create a SOCKET for connecting to server
ConnectSocket = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, IPPROTO_TCP);
if (ConnectSocket == INVALID_SOCKET) {
printf("Error at socket(): %i\n", WSAGetLastError() );
WSACleanup();
return 1;
}
//----------------------
// The sockaddr_in structure specifies the address family,
// IP address, and port of the server to be connected to.
printf("IP ADDRESS: 74.125.196.191 is Google 216.58.208.37 is mail.google.com 129.66.24.10 is iNow\n");
cin >> ipADDRESS;
printf("PORT: \n");
cin >> sPORT;
//system("color 04");
u_short PORT = strtoul(sPORT, NULL, 0);
clientService.sin_family = AF_INET;
clientService.sin_addr.s_addr = inet_addr(ipADDRESS); //74.125.196.191
clientService.sin_port = htons(PORT); //135: msrpc, 445: microsoft-ds, 554: rtsp, 1025: NFS-or-IIS, 1026: LSA-or-nterm
//1027: IIS, 1028: uknown, 1029: ms-lsa, 139: weird behavior
//----------------------
// Connect to server.
iResult = connect( ConnectSocket, (SOCKADDR*) &clientService, sizeof(clientService) );
if ( iResult == SOCKET_ERROR) {
closesocket (ConnectSocket);
printf("Unable to connect to server: %i\n", WSAGetLastError());
WSACleanup();
return 1;
}
//----------------------
//Get local host name
iResult = gethostname(name, sizeof(name));
if (iResult == NO_ERROR) {
printf("Host Name: %s\n", name);
}
else if (iResult == SOCKET_ERROR) {
printf("Could not resolve host name: %i", WSAGetLastError());
}
//------------------------
//Get peer name
iResult = getpeername(ConnectSocket, (struct sockaddr*)&sName, &sNameSize);
if (iResult == NO_ERROR)
printf("Peer Name: %s\n", inet_ntoa(sName.sin_addr));
else if (iResult == SOCKET_ERROR)
printf("Could not get peer name: %i\n", WSAGetLastError());
//-------------------------
// Send an initial buffer
iResult = send( ConnectSocket, sendbuf, (int)strlen(sendbuf), 0 );
if (iResult == SOCKET_ERROR) {
printf("send failed: %d\n", WSAGetLastError());
closesocket(ConnectSocket);
WSACleanup();
return 1;
}
else
printf("Bytes Sent: %i\n", iResult);
//-----------------------------
// shutdown the connection since no more data will be sent
iResult = shutdown(ConnectSocket, SD_SEND);
if (iResult == SOCKET_ERROR) {
printf("shutdown failed: %d\n", WSAGetLastError());
closesocket(ConnectSocket);
WSACleanup();
return 1;
}
// Receive until the peer closes the connection
do {
iResult = recv(ConnectSocket, recvbuf, recvbuflen, 0);
if ( iResult > 0 ) {
printf("Bytes received: %d\n", iResult);
cout << "From Server" << recvbuf << endl;//printf("From server: %s\n", recvbuf);
}
else if ( iResult == 0 )
printf("Connection closed\n");
else if (WSAERROR == WSAETIMEDOUT)
printf("recv failed: WSAETIMEDOUT\n");
} while( iResult > 0 );
// cleanup
closesocket(ConnectSocket);
WSACleanup();
system("PAUSE");
return 0;
}
int main() {
sck();
MessageBox(NULL, "Successful", "Result:", MB_OK);
}
That's my code
Just realized all I have to do is go to the webpage and change the cookie to what I made it in my program using the EditThisCookie plugin, then copy the source. XD
I 'm doing an data logger project where i get data from the sensors and store them in a database . I'm using mysql database which is hosted on Beaglebone (Arm linux based computer ),i'm using C api's to work with the mysql database.
I poll the sensors with a sample time of 5 seconds and get data from them and store them onto the tables as per the below code , the code does what is meant to do i just wanted to know whether there's an efficient way of updating the tables .Below is the code
#include <my_global.h>
#include <mysql.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <string.h>
int main(int argc,char *argv[])
{
/* creates a new mysql object */
MYSQL *con = mysql_init(NULL);
float tempval = 0;
float humidval=0;
char query[100]={0};
if (con == NULL)
{
fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", mysql_error(con));
exit(1);
}
/* connect to db */
if(mysql_real_connect(con,"localhost","root","passwrd12#",0,0,0,0)==NULL)
{
fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", mysql_error(con));
mysql_close(con);
exit(1);
}
/* Select the db */
if(mysql_select_db(con,"TestDb")!=0)
{
fprintf(stderr,"%s \n",mysql_error(con));
mysql_close(con);
exit(1);
}
while(1)
{
//Read temperature and humidity sensors on pin1 and pin2
tempval=Read_Sensordata(1);
humidval=Read_Sensordata(2)
memset(query,0,sizeof query);
/* update the temperature and humidity values */
sprintf(query,"UPDATE Datavalues SET Temperature = %f,Humidity = %f,Time=NOW() WHERE Rownum=0",tempval,humidval);
if (mysql_query(con,query))
{
fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", mysql_error(con));
mysql_close(con);
exit(1);
}
usleep(5000000);
}
mysql_close(con);
exit(0);
}
Rather than execute a fresh query each time, you could prepare the query once and execute it each time with the revised values. For example (without any error checking):
strmov(query, " \
UPDATE Datavalues \
SET Temperature = ?, \
Humidity = ?, \
Time = NOW() \
WHERE Rownum = 0 \
");
MYSQL_STMT *stmt = mysql_stmt_init(con);
mysql_stmt_prepare(stmt, query, strlen(query));
MYSQL_BIND bind[2];
memset(bind, 0, sizeof(bind));
bind[0].buffer_type = bind[1].buffer_type = MYSQL_TYPE_FLOAT;
bind[0].buffer = (char *) &tempval;
bind[1].buffer = (char *) &humidval;
mysql_stmt_bind_param(stmt, bind);
while (1) {
tempval = Read_Sensordata(1);
humidval = Read_Sensordata(2);
mysql_stmt_execute(stmt);
usleep(5000000);
}
mysql_stmt_close(stmt);
Furthermore, you may wish to consider utilising MySQL's Automatic Initialization and Updating for TIMESTAMP and DATETIME to save you having to explicitly set the Time column from within the UPDATE command.