Listening by default on all the addresses is so bad I don't know
why I haven't changed this before. Anyway.
Add a `listen on $hostname port $port' syntax to the config file
and deprecate the old "port" and "ipv6" global setting. Still try
to honour them when no "listen on" directive is used for backward
compatibily, but this will go away in the next next version hopefully.
At the moment the `listen on' in server context don't filter the
host, i.e. one can still reach a host from a address not specified
in the corresponding `liste on', this will be added later.
we can use cmp to tell if two files are different, which also has
the benefit of being available everywhere and reporting the byte
offset of the first difference. Reduces the test dependencies on
some systems.
We dup(1) the ca fd and send it to various processes, so they fail
loading it. Instead, use load_file to get a buffer with the file
content and pass that to load_ca which then loads via BIO.
Incorporate the OpenSMTPD' privsep crypto engine. The idea behind
it is to never load the certificate' private keys in a networked
process, instead they are loaded in a separate process (the `crypto'
one) which signs payloads on the behalf of the server processes.
This way, we greatly reduce the risk of leaking the certificate'
private key should the server process be compromised.
This currently compiles only on LibreSSL (portable fix is in the
way).
We don't always do privilege dropping (as we may start as unprivileged
user), so set these two beforehand so when we skip privdrop we don't
miss to set privsep_process and set the process' title.
avoids issues since the same file is sent to multiple processes
after being dup()'ed. Since these files are meant to be regular
files, I don't expect short reads.
Don't have all the processes read gmid.conf. The parent needs to do
that, and the will send the config to the children (already
happening.) The other processes were reading the config anyway to
figure out the user and the chroot (if enabled); make the parent pass
additional flag to propagate that info.
We dissociate a bit from the "usual" proc.c but it's a change worth
having.