Mercurial > pidgin
view src/protocols/yahoo/crypt.c @ 4151:1a5dcfa1823e
[gaim-migrate @ 4377]
Why do I make these things so long? I'm defective, that's why.
Mr. Walp pointed out a problem with "allow only peeps in my buddy list"
for ICQ, so I fixed that. One important problem: If you set your
permdeny to "allow only peeps in my buddy list," and then add or remove
someone from your buddy list, it will not update the allow/deny list on
the server. And that's a bad thing.
I changed an error message string or 4 in oscar.c for various reasons.
1) I feel that "he/she" is much better than "it." If you disagree,
please let me know, because I'm not sure of the correct phrasing.
2) There is only 1 unknown reason, it just applies to multiple messages.
I shuffled some of the clientauto functions around in oscar.c to make
it more uniform. I intend to look into why status messages aren't
working well soon.
I added some semblance of more advanced ICQ info support to libfaim.
There's also a bit of support in oscar.c for it, but making it display
itself nicely will take a little work, so I'll do it later.
A patch from the good Mr. Blanton taking out a non-ascii character
from oscar.c (my bad).
A patch from the good Mr. Blanton adding support for i18n to away
messages and aim profile info. Questions for the good Mr. Blanton:
1) Line 59 of info.c, in the first half of that if statement, should
profile_len also be &&'ed in with the other 2?
2) I changed a gaim_parse_user_info so that it works for non-unicode
away messages and profiles. Or so I think.
3) I changed little bits of your patch to appease my annoyingness,
so it might not cvs update cleanly for you. Sorry.
I organized the ChangeLog entries for 0.60. I tried to put stuff
that I thought was more important near the top of each category.
Please change stuff around, because I'm pretty sure it could be
better.
Breathe in, breathe out, breathe in, breathe out...
Tied to a wheel...
committer: Tailor Script <tailor@pidgin.im>
author | Mark Doliner <mark@kingant.net> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 29 Dec 2002 17:12:05 +0000 |
parents | 536bb833fdeb |
children | e46efd264489 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* One way encryption based on MD5 sum. Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of the GNU C Library. Contributed by Ulrich Drepper <drepper@cygnus.com>, 1996. The GNU C 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. The GNU C 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 the GNU C Library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA. */ /* warmenhoven took this file and made it work with the md5.[ch] we * already had. isn't that lovely. people should just use linux or * freebsd, crypt works properly on those systems. i hate solaris */ #include <string.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <glib.h> #include "md5.h" /* Define our magic string to mark salt for MD5 "encryption" replacement. This is meant to be the same as for other MD5 based encryption implementations. */ static const char md5_salt_prefix[] = "$1$"; /* Table with characters for base64 transformation. */ static const char b64t[64] = "./0123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"; char *yahoo_crypt(char *key, char *salt) { static char *buffer = NULL; static int buflen = 0; int needed = 3 + strlen (salt) + 1 + 26 + 1; md5_byte_t alt_result[16]; md5_state_t ctx; md5_state_t alt_ctx; size_t salt_len; size_t key_len; size_t cnt; char *cp; if (buflen < needed) { buflen = needed; if ((buffer = g_realloc(buffer, buflen)) == NULL) return NULL; } /* Find beginning of salt string. The prefix should normally always be present. Just in case it is not. */ if (strncmp (md5_salt_prefix, salt, sizeof (md5_salt_prefix) - 1) == 0) /* Skip salt prefix. */ salt += sizeof (md5_salt_prefix) - 1; salt_len = MIN (strcspn (salt, "$"), 8); key_len = strlen (key); /* Prepare for the real work. */ md5_init(&ctx); /* Add the key string. */ md5_append(&ctx, key, key_len); /* Because the SALT argument need not always have the salt prefix we add it separately. */ md5_append(&ctx, md5_salt_prefix, sizeof (md5_salt_prefix) - 1); /* The last part is the salt string. This must be at most 8 characters and it ends at the first `$' character (for compatibility which existing solutions). */ md5_append(&ctx, salt, salt_len); /* Compute alternate MD5 sum with input KEY, SALT, and KEY. The final result will be added to the first context. */ md5_init(&alt_ctx); /* Add key. */ md5_append(&alt_ctx, key, key_len); /* Add salt. */ md5_append(&alt_ctx, salt, salt_len); /* Add key again. */ md5_append(&alt_ctx, key, key_len); /* Now get result of this (16 bytes) and add it to the other context. */ md5_finish(&alt_ctx, alt_result); /* Add for any character in the key one byte of the alternate sum. */ for (cnt = key_len; cnt > 16; cnt -= 16) md5_append(&ctx, alt_result, 16); md5_append(&ctx, alt_result, cnt); /* For the following code we need a NUL byte. */ alt_result[0] = '\0'; /* The original implementation now does something weird: for every 1 bit in the key the first 0 is added to the buffer, for every 0 bit the first character of the key. This does not seem to be what was intended but we have to follow this to be compatible. */ for (cnt = key_len; cnt > 0; cnt >>= 1) md5_append(&ctx, (cnt & 1) != 0 ? alt_result : (md5_byte_t *)key, 1); /* Create intermediate result. */ md5_finish(&ctx, alt_result); /* Now comes another weirdness. In fear of password crackers here comes a quite long loop which just processes the output of the previous round again. We cannot ignore this here. */ for (cnt = 0; cnt < 1000; ++cnt) { /* New context. */ md5_init(&ctx); /* Add key or last result. */ if ((cnt & 1) != 0) md5_append(&ctx, key, key_len); else md5_append(&ctx, alt_result, 16); /* Add salt for numbers not divisible by 3. */ if (cnt % 3 != 0) md5_append(&ctx, salt, salt_len); /* Add key for numbers not divisible by 7. */ if (cnt % 7 != 0) md5_append(&ctx, key, key_len); /* Add key or last result. */ if ((cnt & 1) != 0) md5_append(&ctx, alt_result, 16); else md5_append(&ctx, key, key_len); /* Create intermediate result. */ md5_finish(&ctx, alt_result); } /* Now we can construct the result string. It consists of three parts. */ strncpy(buffer, md5_salt_prefix, MAX (0, buflen)); cp = buffer + strlen(buffer); buflen -= sizeof (md5_salt_prefix); strncpy(cp, salt, MIN ((size_t) buflen, salt_len)); cp = cp + strlen(cp); buflen -= MIN ((size_t) buflen, salt_len); if (buflen > 0) { *cp++ = '$'; --buflen; } #define b64_from_24bit(B2, B1, B0, N) \ do { \ unsigned int w = ((B2) << 16) | ((B1) << 8) | (B0); \ int n = (N); \ while (n-- > 0 && buflen > 0) { \ *cp++ = b64t[w & 0x3f]; \ --buflen; \ w >>= 6; \ }\ } while (0) b64_from_24bit (alt_result[0], alt_result[6], alt_result[12], 4); b64_from_24bit (alt_result[1], alt_result[7], alt_result[13], 4); b64_from_24bit (alt_result[2], alt_result[8], alt_result[14], 4); b64_from_24bit (alt_result[3], alt_result[9], alt_result[15], 4); b64_from_24bit (alt_result[4], alt_result[10], alt_result[5], 4); b64_from_24bit (0, 0, alt_result[11], 2); if (buflen <= 0) { g_free(buffer); buffer = NULL; } else *cp = '\0'; /* Terminate the string. */ /* Clear the buffer for the intermediate result so that people attaching to processes or reading core dumps cannot get any information. We do it in this way to clear correct_words[] inside the MD5 implementation as well. */ md5_init(&ctx); md5_finish(&ctx, alt_result); memset (&ctx, '\0', sizeof (ctx)); memset (&alt_ctx, '\0', sizeof (alt_ctx)); return buffer; }