Recipe 16.11 Making a Process Look Like a File with Named Pipes

16.11.1 Problem

You want a process to intercept all access to a file. For instance, you want to make your ~/.plan file a program that returns a random quote.

16.11.2 Solution

Use named pipes. First create one, probably from your shell:

% mkfifo /path/to/named.pipe

Here's a reader for it:

open($fifo, "<", "/path/to/named.pipe")      or die $!; while (<$fifo>) {     print "Got: $_"; } close $fifo;

Here's a writer for it:

open($fifo, ">", "/path/to/named.pipe")      or die $!; print $fifo "Smoke this.\n"; close $fifo;

16.11.3 Discussion

A named pipe, or FIFO as they are also known, is a special file that acts as a buffer to connect processes on the same machine. Ordinary pipes also allow processes to communicate, but those processes must have inherited the filehandles from their parents. To use a named pipe, a process need know only the named pipe's filename. In most cases, processes don't even need to be aware that they're reading from a FIFO.

Named pipes can be read from and written to just as though they were ordinary files (unlike Unix-domain sockets as discussed in Chapter 17). Data written into the FIFO is buffered up by the operating system, then read back in the order it was written in. Because a FIFO acts as a buffer to connect processes, opening one for reading will block until another process opens it for writing, and vice versa. If you open for read and write using the +< mode to open, you won't block (on most systems), because your process could be both reader and writer.

Let's examine how to use a named pipe so people will get a different file each time they finger you. To create a named pipe, use mkfifo or mknod to create a named pipe called .plan in your home directory:

% mkfifo ~/.plan                    # isn't this everywhere yet? % mknod  ~/.plan p                  # in case you don't have mkfifo

On some systems, you must use mknod(8). The location and names of these programs aren't uniform or necessarily obvious, so consult your system documentation to find out where these programs are.

The next step is to create a program to feed data to the programs that read from your ~/.plan file. We'll just print the date and time, as shown in Example 16-9.

Example 16-9. dateplan
  #!/usr/bin/perl -w   # dateplan - place current date and time in .plan file   while (1) {       open($fifo, "> $ENV{HOME}/.plan")           or die "Couldn't open $ENV{HOME}/.plan for writing: $!\n";       print $fifo "The current time is ", scalar(localtime), "\n";       close $fifo;       sleep 1;   }

Unfortunately, this won't always work, because some finger programs and their attendant daemons check the size of the .plan file before trying to read it. Because named pipes appear as special files of zero size on the filesystem, such clients and servers will not try to open or read from our named pipe, and the trick will fail.

In our .plan example, the writer was a daemon. It's not uncommon for readers to be daemons as well. Take, for instance, the use of a named pipe to centralize logging from many processes. The log server reads log messages from the named pipe and can send them to a database or file. Clients write their messages to the named pipe. This removes the distribution logic from the clients, making changes to message distribution easy to implement.

Example 16-10 is a simple program to read two-line messages where the first line is the name of the service and the second line is the message being logged. All messages from httpd are ignored, while all messages from login are saved to /var/log/login.

Example 16-10. fifolog
  #!/usr/bin/perl -w   # fifolog - read and record log msgs from fifo      $SIG{ALRM} = sub { close(FIFO) };   # move on to the next queued process      while (1) {       alarm(0);                       # turn off alarm for blocking open       open($fifo, "</tmp/log")        or die "Can't open /tmp/log : $!\n";       alarm(1);                       # you have 1 second to log          $service = <$fifo>;       next unless defined $service;   # interrupted or nothing logged       chomp $service;          $message = <$fifo>;       next unless defined $message;   # interrupted or nothing logged       chomp $message;          alarm(0);                       # turn off alarms for message processing          if ($service eq "http") {           # ignoring       } elsif ($service eq "login") {           # log to /var/log/login           if ( open($log, ">> /tmp/login") ) {               print $log scalar(localtime), " $service $message\n";               close $log;           } else {               warn "Couldn't log $service $message to /var/log/login : $!\n";           }       }   }

This program is more complicated than the .plan program for several reasons. First and foremost, we don't want our logging server to block would-be writers for long. It's easy to imagine a situation where an attacker or misbehaving writer opens the named pipe for writing, but doesn't send a complete message. To prevent this, we use alarm and SIGALRM to signal us if we get stuck reading.

Only two exceptional conditions can happen when using named pipes: a writer can have its reader disappear, or vice versa. If a process is reading from a named pipe and the writer closes its end, the reading process will get an end-of-file (<> returns undef). If the reader closes the connection, though, the writer will get a SIGPIPE when it next tries to write there. If you disregard broken pipe signals with $SIG{PIPE} = 'IGNORE', your print will return a false value and $! will be set to EPIPE:

use POSIX qw(:errno_h); $SIG{PIPE} = 'IGNORE'; # ... $status = print $fifo "Are you there?\n"; if (!$status && $! =  = EPIPE) {     warn "My reader has forsaken me!\n";     next; }

You may be asking "If I have 100 processes all trying simultaneously to write to this server, how can I be sure that I'll get 100 separate entries and not a jumbled mishmash with characters or lines from different processes?" That's a good question. The POSIX standard says that writes of less than PIPE_BUF bytes in size will be delivered atomically, i.e., not jumbled. You can get the PIPE_BUF constant from POSIX:

use POSIX; print PIPE_BUF, "\n";

Fortunately, the POSIX standard also requires PIPE_BUF to be at least 512 bytes. This means that all we have to do is ensure that our clients don't try to log more than 512 bytes at a time.

What if you want to log more than 512 bytes at a time? Then you split each large message into several smaller (fewer than 512 bytes) messages, preface each with the unique client identifier (process ID, say), and have the server reassemble them. This is similar to the processing involved in TCP/IP message fragmentation and reassembly.

Because a single named pipe doesn't allow bidirectional access between writer and reader, authentication and similar ways of preventing forged messages are hard to do (if not impossible). Rather than struggle to force such things on top of a model that doesn't accommodate them, you are better off using the filesystem's access control to restrict access to the file through the owner and group permissions on the named pipe.

16.11.4 See Also

mkfifo(8) or mknod(8) (if you have them); Recipe 17.6



Perl Cookbook
Perl Cookbook, Second Edition
ISBN: 0596003137
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 501

flylib.com © 2008-2017.
If you may any questions please contact us: flylib@qtcs.net