xref: /openssl/util/perl/OpenSSL/Util.pm (revision da1c088f)
1#! /usr/bin/env perl
2# Copyright 2018-2023 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
3#
4# Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License").  You may not use
5# this file except in compliance with the License.  You can obtain a copy
6# in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
7# https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
8
9package OpenSSL::Util;
10
11use strict;
12use warnings;
13use Carp;
14
15use Exporter;
16use vars qw($VERSION @ISA @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK %EXPORT_TAGS);
17$VERSION = "0.1";
18@ISA = qw(Exporter);
19@EXPORT = qw(cmp_versions quotify1 quotify_l fixup_cmd_elements fixup_cmd
20             dump_data);
21@EXPORT_OK = qw();
22
23=head1 NAME
24
25OpenSSL::Util - small OpenSSL utilities
26
27=head1 SYNOPSIS
28
29  use OpenSSL::Util;
30
31  $versiondiff = cmp_versions('1.0.2k', '3.0.1');
32  # $versiondiff should be -1
33
34  $versiondiff = cmp_versions('1.1.0', '1.0.2a');
35  # $versiondiff should be 1
36
37  $versiondiff = cmp_versions('1.1.1', '1.1.1');
38  # $versiondiff should be 0
39
40=head1 DESCRIPTION
41
42=over
43
44=item B<cmp_versions "VERSION1", "VERSION2">
45
46Compares VERSION1 with VERSION2, paying attention to OpenSSL versioning.
47
48Returns 1 if VERSION1 is greater than VERSION2, 0 if they are equal, and
49-1 if VERSION1 is less than VERSION2.
50
51=back
52
53=cut
54
55# Until we're rid of everything with the old version scheme,
56# we need to be able to handle older style x.y.zl versions.
57# In terms of comparison, the x.y.zl and the x.y.z schemes
58# are compatible...  mostly because the latter starts at a
59# new major release with a new major number.
60sub _ossl_versionsplit {
61    my $textversion = shift;
62    return $textversion if $textversion eq '*';
63    my ($major,$minor,$edit,$letter) =
64        $textversion =~ /^(\d+)\.(\d+)\.(\d+)([a-z]{0,2})$/;
65
66    return ($major,$minor,$edit,$letter);
67}
68
69sub cmp_versions {
70    my @a_split = _ossl_versionsplit(shift);
71    my @b_split = _ossl_versionsplit(shift);
72    my $verdict = 0;
73
74    while (@a_split) {
75        # The last part is a letter sequence (or a '*')
76        if (scalar @a_split == 1) {
77            $verdict = $a_split[0] cmp $b_split[0];
78        } else {
79            $verdict = $a_split[0] <=> $b_split[0];
80        }
81        shift @a_split;
82        shift @b_split;
83        last unless $verdict == 0;
84    }
85
86    return $verdict;
87}
88
89# It might be practical to quotify some strings and have them protected
90# from possible harm.  These functions primarily quote things that might
91# be interpreted wrongly by a perl eval.
92
93=over 4
94
95=item quotify1 STRING
96
97This adds quotes (") around the given string, and escapes any $, @, \,
98" and ' by prepending a \ to them.
99
100=back
101
102=cut
103
104sub quotify1 {
105    my $s = shift @_;
106    $s =~ s/([\$\@\\"'])/\\$1/g;
107    '"'.$s.'"';
108}
109
110=over 4
111
112=item quotify_l LIST
113
114For each defined element in LIST (i.e. elements that aren't undef), have
115it quotified with 'quotify1'.
116Undefined elements are ignored.
117
118=cut
119
120sub quotify_l {
121    map {
122        if (!defined($_)) {
123            ();
124        } else {
125            quotify1($_);
126        }
127    } @_;
128}
129
130=over 4
131
132=item fixup_cmd_elements LIST
133
134Fixes up the command line elements given by LIST in a platform specific
135manner.
136
137The result of this function is a copy of LIST with strings where quotes and
138escapes have been injected as necessary depending on the content of each
139LIST string.
140
141This can also be used to put quotes around the executable of a command.
142I<This must never ever be done on VMS.>
143
144=back
145
146=cut
147
148sub fixup_cmd_elements {
149    # A formatter for the command arguments, defaulting to the Unix setup
150    my $arg_formatter =
151        sub { $_ = shift;
152              ($_ eq '' || /\s|[\{\}\\\$\[\]\*\?\|\&:;<>]/) ? "'$_'" : $_ };
153
154    if ( $^O eq "VMS") {        # VMS setup
155        $arg_formatter = sub {
156            $_ = shift;
157            if ($_ eq '' || /\s|[!"[:upper:]]/) {
158                s/"/""/g;
159                '"'.$_.'"';
160            } else {
161                $_;
162            }
163        };
164    } elsif ( $^O eq "MSWin32") { # MSWin setup
165        $arg_formatter = sub {
166            $_ = shift;
167            if ($_ eq '' || /\s|["\|\&\*\;<>]/) {
168                s/(["\\])/\\$1/g;
169                '"'.$_.'"';
170            } else {
171                $_;
172            }
173        };
174    }
175
176    return ( map { $arg_formatter->($_) } @_ );
177}
178
179=over 4
180
181=item fixup_cmd LIST
182
183This is a sibling of fixup_cmd_elements() that expects the LIST to be a
184complete command line.  It does the same thing as fixup_cmd_elements(),
185expect that it treats the first LIST element specially on VMS.
186
187=back
188
189=cut
190
191sub fixup_cmd {
192    return fixup_cmd_elements(@_) unless $^O eq 'VMS';
193
194    # The rest is VMS specific
195    my $cmd = shift;
196
197    # Prefix to be applied as needed.  Essentially, we need to determine
198    # if the command is an executable file (something.EXE), and invoke it
199    # with the MCR command in that case.  MCR is an old PDP-11 command that
200    # stuck around.
201    my @prefix;
202
203    if ($cmd =~ m|^\@|) {
204        # The command is an invocation of a command procedure (also known as
205        # "script"), no modification needed.
206        @prefix = ();
207    } elsif ($cmd =~ m|^MCR$|) {
208        # The command is MCR, so there's nothing much to do apart from
209        # making sure that the file name following it isn't treated with
210        # fixup_cmd_elements(), 'cause MCR doesn't like strings.
211        @prefix = ( $cmd );
212        $cmd = shift;
213    } else {
214        # All that's left now is to check whether the command is an executable
215        # file, and if it's not, simply assume that it is a DCL command.
216
217        # Make sure we have a proper file name, i.e. add the default
218        # extension '.exe' if there isn't one already.
219        my $executable = ($cmd =~ m|.[a-z0-9\$]*$|) ? $cmd : $cmd . '.exe';
220        if (-e $executable) {
221            # It seems to be an executable, so we make sure to prefix it
222            # with MCR, for proper invocation.  We also make sure that
223            # there's a directory specification, or otherwise, MCR will
224            # assume that the executable is in SYS$SYSTEM:
225            @prefix = ( 'MCR' );
226            $cmd = '[]' . $cmd unless $cmd =~ /^(?:[\$a-z0-9_]+:)?[<\[]/i;
227        } else {
228            # If it isn't an executable, then we assume that it's a DCL
229            # command, and do no further processing, apart from argument
230            # fixup.
231            @prefix = ();
232        }
233    }
234
235    return ( @prefix, $cmd, fixup_cmd_elements(@_) );
236}
237
238=item dump_data REF, OPTS
239
240Dump the data from REF into a string that can be evaluated into the same
241data by Perl.
242
243OPTS is the rest of the arguments, expected to be pairs formed with C<< => >>.
244The following OPTS keywords are understood:
245
246=over 4
247
248=item B<delimiters =E<gt> 0 | 1>
249
250Include the outer delimiter of the REF type in the resulting string if C<1>,
251otherwise not.
252
253=item B<indent =E<gt> num>
254
255The indentation of the caller, i.e. an initial value.  If not given, there
256will be no indentation at all, and the string will only be one line.
257
258=back
259
260=cut
261
262sub dump_data {
263    my $ref = shift;
264    # Available options:
265    # indent           => callers indentation ( undef for no indentation,
266    #                     an integer otherwise )
267    # delimiters       => 1 if outer delimiters should be added
268    my %opts = @_;
269
270    my $indent = $opts{indent} // 1;
271    # Indentation of the whole structure, where applicable
272    my $nlindent1 = defined $opts{indent} ? "\n" . ' ' x $indent : ' ';
273    # Indentation of individual items, where applicable
274    my $nlindent2 = defined $opts{indent} ? "\n" . ' ' x ($indent + 4) : ' ';
275    my %subopts = ();
276
277    $subopts{delimiters} = 1;
278    $subopts{indent} = $opts{indent} + 4 if defined $opts{indent};
279
280    my $product;      # Finished product, or reference to a function that
281                      # produces a string, given $_
282    # The following are only used when $product is a function reference
283    my $delim_l;      # Left delimiter of structure
284    my $delim_r;      # Right delimiter of structure
285    my $separator;    # Item separator
286    my @items;        # Items to iterate over
287
288     if (ref($ref) eq "ARRAY") {
289         if (scalar @$ref == 0) {
290             $product = $opts{delimiters} ? '[]' : '';
291         } else {
292             $product = sub {
293                 dump_data(\$_, %subopts)
294             };
295             $delim_l = ($opts{delimiters} ? '[' : '').$nlindent2;
296             $delim_r = $nlindent1.($opts{delimiters} ? ']' : '');
297             $separator = ",$nlindent2";
298             @items = @$ref;
299         }
300     } elsif (ref($ref) eq "HASH") {
301         if (scalar keys %$ref == 0) {
302             $product = $opts{delimiters} ? '{}' : '';
303         } else {
304             $product = sub {
305                 quotify1($_) . " => " . dump_data($ref->{$_}, %subopts);
306             };
307             $delim_l = ($opts{delimiters} ? '{' : '').$nlindent2;
308             $delim_r = $nlindent1.($opts{delimiters} ? '}' : '');
309             $separator = ",$nlindent2";
310             @items = sort keys %$ref;
311         }
312     } elsif (ref($ref) eq "SCALAR") {
313         $product = defined $$ref ? quotify1 $$ref : "undef";
314     } else {
315         $product = defined $ref ? quotify1 $ref : "undef";
316     }
317
318     if (ref($product) eq "CODE") {
319         $delim_l . join($separator, map { &$product } @items) . $delim_r;
320     } else {
321         $product;
322     }
323}
324
325=back
326
327=cut
328
3291;
330