# Copyright 2020 VyOS maintainers and contributors # # This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or # modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public # License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either # version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. # # This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU # Lesser General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public # License along with this library. If not, see . import os import re import sys # # NOTE: Do not import full classes here, move your import to the function # where it is used so it is as local as possible to the execution # def _need_sudo(command): return os.path.basename(command.split()[0]) in ('systemctl', ) def _add_sudo(command): if _need_sudo(command): return 'sudo ' + command return command from subprocess import Popen from subprocess import PIPE from subprocess import STDOUT from subprocess import DEVNULL def popen(command, flag='', shell=None, input=None, timeout=None, env=None, stdout=PIPE, stderr=PIPE, decode='utf-8', autosudo=True): """ popen is a wrapper helper aound subprocess.Popen with it default setting it will return a tuple (out, err) out: the output of the program run err: the error code returned by the program it can be affected by the following flags: shell: do not try to auto-detect if a shell is required for example if a pipe (|) or redirection (>, >>) is used input: data to sent to the child process via STDIN the data should be bytes but string will be converted timeout: time after which the command will be considered to have failed env: mapping that defines the environment variables for the new process stdout: define how the output of the program should be handled - PIPE (default), sends stdout to the output - DEVNULL, discard the output stderr: define how the output of the program should be handled - None (default), send/merge the data to/with stderr - PIPE, popen will append it to output - STDOUT, send the data to be merged with stdout - DEVNULL, discard the output decode: specify the expected text encoding (utf-8, ascii, ...) the default is explicitely utf-8 which is python's own default usage: get both stdout and stderr: popen('command', stdout=PIPE, stderr=STDOUT) discard stdout and get stderr: popen('command', stdout=DEVNUL, stderr=PIPE) """ # airbag must be left as an import in the function as otherwise we have a # a circual import dependency from vyos import debug from vyos import airbag # log if the flag is set, otherwise log if command is set if not debug.enabled(flag): flag = 'command' if autosudo: command = _add_sudo(command) cmd_msg = f"cmd '{command}'" debug.message(cmd_msg, flag) use_shell = shell stdin = None if shell is None: use_shell = False if ' ' in command: use_shell = True if env: use_shell = True if input: stdin = PIPE input = input.encode() if type(input) is str else input p = Popen( command, stdin=stdin, stdout=stdout, stderr=stderr, env=env, shell=use_shell, ) pipe = p.communicate(input, timeout) pipe_out = b'' if stdout == PIPE: pipe_out = pipe[0] pipe_err = b'' if stderr == PIPE: pipe_err = pipe[1] str_out = pipe_out.decode(decode).replace('\r\n', '\n').strip() str_err = pipe_err.decode(decode).replace('\r\n', '\n').strip() out_msg = f"returned (out):\n{str_out}" if str_out: debug.message(out_msg, flag) if str_err: err_msg = f"returned (err):\n{str_err}" # this message will also be send to syslog via airbag debug.message(err_msg, flag, destination=sys.stderr) # should something go wrong, report this too via airbag airbag.noteworthy(cmd_msg) airbag.noteworthy(out_msg) airbag.noteworthy(err_msg) return str_out, p.returncode def run(command, flag='', shell=None, input=None, timeout=None, env=None, stdout=DEVNULL, stderr=PIPE, decode='utf-8', autosudo=True): """ A wrapper around popen, which discard the stdout and will return the error code of a command """ _, code = popen( command, flag, stdout=stdout, stderr=stderr, input=input, timeout=timeout, env=env, shell=shell, decode=decode, ) return code def cmd(command, flag='', shell=None, input=None, timeout=None, env=None, stdout=PIPE, stderr=PIPE, decode='utf-8', autosudo=True, raising=None, message='', expect=[0]): """ A wrapper around popen, which returns the stdout and will raise the error code of a command raising: specify which call should be used when raising the class should only require a string as parameter (default is OSError) with the error code expect: a list of error codes to consider as normal """ decoded, code = popen( command, flag, stdout=stdout, stderr=stderr, input=input, timeout=timeout, env=env, shell=shell, decode=decode, ) if code not in expect: feedback = message + '\n' if message else '' feedback += f'failed to run command: {command}\n' feedback += f'returned: {decoded}\n' feedback += f'exit code: {code}' if raising is None: # error code can be recovered with .errno raise OSError(code, feedback) else: raise raising(feedback) return decoded def call(command, flag='', shell=None, input=None, timeout=None, env=None, stdout=PIPE, stderr=PIPE, decode='utf-8', autosudo=True): """ A wrapper around popen, which print the stdout and will return the error code of a command """ out, code = popen( command, flag, stdout=stdout, stderr=stderr, input=input, timeout=timeout, env=env, shell=shell, decode=decode, ) if out: print(out) return code def read_file(fname, defaultonfailure=None): """ read the content of a file, stripping any end characters (space, newlines) should defaultonfailure be not None, it is returned on failure to read """ try: """ Read a file to string """ with open(fname, 'r') as f: data = f.read().strip() return data except Exception as e: if defaultonfailure is not None: return defaultonfailure raise e def read_json(fname, defaultonfailure=None): """ read and json decode the content of a file should defaultonfailure be not None, it is returned on failure to read """ import json try: with open(fname, 'r') as f: data = json.load(f) return data except Exception as e: if defaultonfailure is not None: return defaultonfailure raise e def chown(path, user, group): """ change file/directory owner """ from pwd import getpwnam from grp import getgrnam if user is None or group is None: return False if not os.path.exists(path): return False uid = getpwnam(user).pw_uid gid = getgrnam(group).gr_gid os.chown(path, uid, gid) return True def chmod(path, bitmask): if not os.path.exists(path): return if bitmask is None: return os.chmod(path, bitmask) def chmod_600(path): """ make file only read/writable by owner """ from stat import S_IRUSR, S_IWUSR if os.path.exists(path): bitmask = S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR os.chmod(path, bitmask) def chmod_750(path): """ make file/directory only executable to user and group """ from stat import S_IRUSR, S_IWUSR, S_IXUSR, S_IRGRP, S_IXGRP if os.path.exists(path): bitmask = S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR | S_IXUSR | S_IRGRP | S_IXGRP os.chmod(path, bitmask) def chmod_755(path): """ make file executable by all """ from stat import S_IRUSR, S_IWUSR, S_IXUSR, S_IRGRP, S_IXGRP, S_IROTH, S_IXOTH if os.path.exists(path): bitmask = S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR | S_IXUSR | S_IRGRP | S_IXGRP | \ S_IROTH | S_IXOTH os.chmod(path, bitmask) def makedir(path, user=None, group=None): if os.path.exists(path): return os.mkdir(path) chown(path, user, group) def colon_separated_to_dict(data_string, uniquekeys=False): """ Converts a string containing newline-separated entries of colon-separated key-value pairs into a dict. Such files are common in Linux /proc filesystem Args: data_string (str): data string uniquekeys (bool): whether to insist that keys are unique or not Returns: dict Raises: ValueError: if uniquekeys=True and the data string has duplicate keys. Note: If uniquekeys=True, then dict entries are always strings, otherwise they are always lists of strings. """ import re key_value_re = re.compile('([^:]+)\s*\:\s*(.*)') data_raw = re.split('\n', data_string) data = {} for l in data_raw: l = l.strip() if l: match = re.match(key_value_re, l) if match: key = match.groups()[0].strip() value = match.groups()[1].strip() if key in data.keys(): if uniquekeys: raise ValueError("Data string has duplicate keys: {0}".format(key)) else: data[key].append(value) else: if uniquekeys: data[key] = value else: data[key] = [value] else: pass return data def mangle_dict_keys(data, regex, replacement): """ Mangles dict keys according to a regex and replacement character. Some libraries like Jinja2 do not like certain characters in dict keys. This function can be used for replacing all offending characters with something acceptable. Args: data (dict): Original dict to mangle Returns: dict """ new_dict = {} for key in data.keys(): new_key = re.sub(regex, replacement, key) value = data[key] if isinstance(value, dict): new_dict[new_key] = mangle_dict_keys(value, regex, replacement) else: new_dict[new_key] = value return new_dict def _get_sub_dict(d, lpath): k = lpath[0] if k not in d.keys(): return {} c = {k: d[k]} lpath = lpath[1:] if not lpath: return c elif not isinstance(c[k], dict): return {} return _get_sub_dict(c[k], lpath) def get_sub_dict(source, lpath): """ Returns the sub-dict of a nested dict, defined by path of keys. Args: source (dict): Source dict to extract from lpath (list[str]): sequence of keys Returns: source, if lpath is empty, else {key : source[..]..[key]} for key the last element of lpath, if exists {} otherwise """ if not isinstance(source, dict): raise TypeError("source must be of type dict") if not isinstance(lpath, list): raise TypeError("path must be of type list") if not lpath: return source return _get_sub_dict(source, lpath) def process_running(pid_file): """ Checks if a process with PID in pid_file is running """ from psutil import pid_exists if not os.path.isfile(pid_file): return False with open(pid_file, 'r') as f: pid = f.read().strip() return pid_exists(int(pid)) def process_named_running(name): """ Checks if process with given name is running and returns its PID. If Process is not running, return None """ from psutil import process_iter for p in process_iter(): if name in p.name(): return p.pid return None def seconds_to_human(s, separator=""): """ Converts number of seconds passed to a human-readable interval such as 1w4d18h35m59s """ s = int(s) week = 60 * 60 * 24 * 7 day = 60 * 60 * 24 hour = 60 * 60 remainder = 0 result = "" weeks = s // week if weeks > 0: result = "{0}w".format(weeks) s = s % week days = s // day if days > 0: result = "{0}{1}{2}d".format(result, separator, days) s = s % day hours = s // hour if hours > 0: result = "{0}{1}{2}h".format(result, separator, hours) s = s % hour minutes = s // 60 if minutes > 0: result = "{0}{1}{2}m".format(result, separator, minutes) s = s % 60 seconds = s if seconds > 0: result = "{0}{1}{2}s".format(result, separator, seconds) return result def get_cfg_group_id(): from grp import getgrnam from vyos.defaults import cfg_group group_data = getgrnam(cfg_group) return group_data.gr_gid def file_is_persistent(path): import re location = r'^(/config|/opt/vyatta/etc/config)' absolute = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(path)) return re.match(location,absolute) def commit_in_progress(): """ Not to be used in normal op mode scripts! """ # The CStore backend locks the config by opening a file # The file is not removed after commit, so just checking # if it exists is insufficient, we need to know if it's open by anyone # There are two ways to check if any other process keeps a file open. # The first one is to try opening it and see if the OS objects. # That's faster but prone to race conditions and can be intrusive. # The other one is to actually check if any process keeps it open. # It's non-intrusive but needs root permissions, else you can't check # processes of other users. # # Since this will be used in scripts that modify the config outside of the CLI # framework, those knowingly have root permissions. # For everything else, we add a safeguard. from psutil import process_iter, NoSuchProcess from vyos.defaults import commit_lock idu = cmd('/usr/bin/id -u') if idu != '0': raise OSError("This functions needs root permissions to return correct results") for proc in process_iter(): try: files = proc.open_files() if files: for f in files: if f.path == commit_lock: return True except NoSuchProcess as err: # Process died before we could examine it pass # Default case return False def wait_for_commit_lock(): """ Not to be used in normal op mode scripts! """ from time import sleep # Very synchronous approach to multiprocessing while commit_in_progress(): sleep(1) def ask_yes_no(question, default=False) -> bool: """Ask a yes/no question via input() and return their answer.""" from sys import stdout default_msg = "[Y/n]" if default else "[y/N]" while True: stdout.write("%s %s " % (question, default_msg)) c = input().lower() if c == '': return default elif c in ("y", "ye", "yes"): return True elif c in ("n", "no"): return False else: stdout.write("Please respond with yes/y or no/n\n") def is_admin() -> bool: """Look if current user is in sudo group""" from getpass import getuser from grp import getgrnam current_user = getuser() (_, _, _, admin_group_members) = getgrnam('sudo') return current_user in admin_group_members def mac2eui64(mac, prefix=None): """ Convert a MAC address to a EUI64 address or, with prefix provided, a full IPv6 address. Thankfully copied from https://gist.github.com/wido/f5e32576bb57b5cc6f934e177a37a0d3 """ import re from ipaddress import ip_network # http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4291#section-2.5.1 eui64 = re.sub(r'[.:-]', '', mac).lower() eui64 = eui64[0:6] + 'fffe' + eui64[6:] eui64 = hex(int(eui64[0:2], 16) ^ 2)[2:].zfill(2) + eui64[2:] if prefix is None: return ':'.join(re.findall(r'.{4}', eui64)) else: try: net = ip_network(prefix, strict=False) euil = int('0x{0}'.format(eui64), 16) return str(net[euil]) except: # pylint: disable=bare-except return def get_half_cpus(): """ return 1/2 of the numbers of available CPUs """ cpu = os.cpu_count() if cpu > 1: cpu /= 2 return int(cpu) def ifname_from_config(conf): """ Gets interface name with VLANs from current config level. Level must be at the interface whose name we want. Example: >>> from vyos.util import ifname_from_config >>> from vyos.config import Config >>> conf = Config() >>> conf.set_level('interfaces ethernet eth0 vif-s 1 vif-c 2') >>> ifname_from_config(conf) 'eth0.1.2' """ level = conf.get_level() # vlans if level[-2] == 'vif' or level[-2] == 'vif-s': return level[-3] + '.' + level[-1] if level[-2] == 'vif-c': return level[-5] + '.' + level[-3] + '.' + level[-1] # no vlans return level[-1] def get_bridge_member_config(conf, br, intf): """ Gets bridge port (member) configuration Arguments: conf: Config br: bridge name intf: interface name Returns: dict with the configuration False if bridge or bridge port doesn't exist """ old_level = conf.get_level() conf.set_level([]) bridge = f'interfaces bridge {br}' member = f'{bridge} member interface {intf}' if not ( conf.exists(bridge) and conf.exists(member) ): return False # default bridge port configuration # cost and priority initialized with linux defaults # by reading /sys/devices/virtual/net/br0/brif/eth2/{path_cost,priority} # after adding interface to bridge after reboot memberconf = { 'cost': 100, 'priority': 32, 'arp_cache_tmo': 30, 'disable_link_detect': 1, } if conf.exists(f'{member} cost'): memberconf['cost'] = int(conf.return_value(f'{member} cost')) if conf.exists(f'{member} priority'): memberconf['priority'] = int(conf.return_value(f'{member} priority')) if conf.exists(f'{bridge} ip arp-cache-timeout'): memberconf['arp_cache_tmo'] = int(conf.return_value(f'{bridge} ip arp-cache-timeout')) if conf.exists(f'{bridge} disable-link-detect'): memberconf['disable_link_detect'] = 2 conf.set_level(old_level) return memberconf