Fixed version of "recnews.c"
guy at rlgvax.UUCP
guy at rlgvax.UUCP
Fri May 27 11:54:40 AEST 1983
Relay-Version:version B 2.10 5/3/83; site harpo.UUCP
Posting-Version:version B 2.10 5/3/83; site rlgvax.UUCP
Message-ID:<532 at rlgvax.UUCP>
Date:Thu, 26-May-83 21:54:40 EDT
Organization:RLG Corp., Reston, VA
/*
* recnews [to newsgroup] [from user]
*
* Process a news article which has been mailed to some group like msgs.
* Such articles are in normal mail format and have never seen the insides
* of netnews. If the "to newsgroup" is included, the article is posted
* to this newsgroup instead of trying to intuit it from the headers.
* If the "from user" is included, the return address is forged to look
* like that user instead of what getuid or a from line says.
*
* It is recommended that you always include the to newsgroup, since the
* intution code is flakey and out of date. The from user is probably
* appropriate for arpanet mailing lists being funnelled at ucbvax but
* not otherwise. Sample lines in /usr/lib/aliases (if you run delivermail):
* worldnews: "|/usr/lib/news/recnews net.general"
* Allows you to mail to worldnews rather than using inews.
* Intended for humans to mail to.
* post-unix-wizards: "|/usr/lib/news/recnews fa.unix-wizards unix-wizards"
* Causes mail to post-unix-wizards to be fed into fa.unix-wizards
* and the return address forged as unix-wizards on the local
* machine. post-unix-wizards (on the local machine) should
* be part of the master mailing list somewhere (on a different
* machine.)
*
* Recnews is primarily useful in remote places on the usenet which collect
* mail from mailing lists and funnel them into the network. It is also
* useful if you like to send mail to some user instead of invoking
* inews -t .. -n .. when you want to submit an article. (Many mailers give
* you nice facilities like editing the message.) It is not, however,
* essential to use recnews to be able to join usenet.
*
* WARNING: recnews disables the "recording" check - it has to because
* by the time inews is run, it's in the background and too late to
* ask permission. If you depend heavily on recordings you probably
* should now allow recnews (and thus the mail interface) to be used.
*/
static char *SccsId = "@(#)recnews.c 2.4 3/3/83";
#include "defs.h"
#include <stdio.h>
#include <ctype.h>
/*
* Note: we assume there are 2 kinds of hosts using recnews:
* Those that have delivermail (and hence this program will never
* have to deal with more than one message at a time) and those on the arpanet
* that do not (and hence all messages end with a sentenel). It is
* supposed that regular v7 type systems without delivermail or some
* other automatic forwarding device will just use rnews. We do
* not attempt to tell where a message ends on all systems due to the
* different conventions in effect. (This COULD be fixed, I suppose.)
*/
/*
* Kinds of lines in a message.
*/
#define FROM 001 /* From line */
#define SUBJ 002 /* Subject */
#define TO 003 /* To (newgroup based on this) */
#define BLANK 004 /* blank line */
#define EOM 005 /* End of message (4 ctrl A's) */
#define HEADER 006 /* any unrecognized header */
#define TEXT 007 /* anything unrecognized */
/*
* Possible states program can be in.
*/
#define SKIPPING 0100 /* In header of message */
#define READING 0200 /* In body of message */
#define BFSZ 250
#define EOT '\004'
char from[BFSZ]; /* mailing address for replies */
char sender[BFSZ]; /* mailing address of author, if different */
char to[BFSZ]; /* Destination of mail (msgs, etc) */
char subject[BFSZ]; /* subject of message */
char newsgroup[BFSZ]; /* newsgroups of message */
char cmdbuf[BFSZ]; /* command to popen */
extern char *strcat(), *strcpy();
extern FILE *popen();
char *any();
main(argc, argv)
int argc;
char **argv;
{
char buf[BFSZ];
register char *p;
register FILE *pipe;
register int state, pathcnt;
int t;
if (argc > 1)
strcpy(to, argv[1]);
if (argc > 2)
strcpy(from, argv[2]);
#ifdef debug
printf("argv[0] is <%s>, argv[1] is <%s>, argv[2] is <%s>\n",
argv[0], argv[1], argv[2]);
#endif
state = SKIPPING;
while (fgets(buf, BFSZ, stdin) != NULL) {
t = type(buf) | state;
#ifdef debug
printf("%o\t%s", t, buf);
#endif
switch (t) {
case FROM | SKIPPING:
frombreak(buf, from);
break;
case FROM | READING:
fputs(buf, pipe);
break;
case SUBJ | SKIPPING:
p = any(buf, " \t");
if (p == NULL)
p = buf+8;
strcpy(subject, p+1);
subject[strlen(subject)-1] = 0; /* trim trailing \n */
break;
case SUBJ | READING:
fputs(buf, pipe);
break;
case TO | SKIPPING:
if (to[0])
break; /* already have one */
p = any(buf, " \t");
if (p == NULL)
p = buf;
strcpy(to, p+1); /* strip leading blank */
to[strlen(to)-1] = 0; /* strip trailing \n */
break;
case TO | READING:
fputs(buf, pipe);
break;
/*
* Kludge to compensate for messages without real headers
*/
case HEADER | SKIPPING:
break;
case HEADER | READING:
fputs(buf, pipe);
break;
case BLANK | SKIPPING:
state = READING;
findgroup(to, newsgroup);
sprintf(cmdbuf, "%s -D -t \"%s\" -n %s -f %s", INEWS, subject, newsgroup, from);
#ifdef debug
pipe = stdout;
printf("BLANK: %s\n", cmdbuf);
#else
pipe = popen(cmdbuf, "w");
if (pipe == NULL) {
perror("recnews: popen failed");
exit(1);
}
#endif
if (sender[0])
fputs(sender, pipe);
break;
case BLANK | READING:
fputs(buf, pipe);
break;
case TEXT | SKIPPING:
findgroup(to, newsgroup);
state = READING;
if (subject[0] == 0) {
strcpy(subject, buf);
if (subject[strlen(subject)-1] == '\n')
subject[strlen(subject)-1] = '\0';
}
sprintf(cmdbuf, "%s -D -t \"%s\" -n %s -f %s", INEWS, subject, newsgroup, from);
#ifdef debug
pipe = stdout;
printf("TEXT: %s\n", cmdbuf);
#else
pipe = popen(cmdbuf, "w");
if (pipe == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "pipe failed\n");
exit(1);
}
#endif
if (sender[0])
fputs(sender, pipe);
break;
case TEXT | READING:
fputs(buf, pipe);
break;
}
}
exit(0);
}
#define itsa(kind) {lastcomma=thiscomma; lasthdr=(kind!=TEXT); return kind;}
type(p)
register char *p;
{
char *firstbl;
static char lasthdr=0; /* prev line was a header */
static char lastcomma=0; /* prev line ended in a comma */
int thiscomma;
thiscomma = (p[strlen(p)-2] == ',');
if (*p == ' ' && lasthdr && lastcomma)
itsa(HEADER); /* continuation line */
firstbl = any(p, " \t");
while (*p == ' ' || *p == '?' || *p == '\t')
++p;
if (*p == '\n' || *p == 0)
itsa(BLANK);
if (strncmp(p, ">From", 5) == 0 ||
strncmp(p, "From", 4) == 0)
itsa (FROM);
if (strncmp(p, "Subj", 4)==0 ||
strncmp(p, "Re:", 3)==0 ||
strncmp(p, "re:", 3)==0)
itsa (SUBJ);
if (strncmp(p, "To", 2)==0)
itsa(TO);
if (strncmp(p, "\1\1\1\1", 4)==0)
itsa(EOM);
if (firstbl && firstbl[-1] == ':' && isalpha(*p))
itsa(HEADER);
itsa(TEXT);
}
/*
* Figure out who a message is from.
*/
frombreak(buf, fbuf)
register char *buf, *fbuf;
{
register char *p;
char wordfrom[BFSZ], uname[BFSZ], at[BFSZ], site[BFSZ];
if (fbuf[0]) { /* we already know who it's from */
if (sender[0] == 0) {
#ifdef debug
printf("sender set to: %s", buf);
#endif
strcpy(sender, buf);
}
return;
}
/* break the line into tokens. */
sscanf(buf, "%s %s %s %s", wordfrom, uname, at, site);
if (isat(at))
/*
* Some arpanet mail comes from "joe at mit-dms"
* instead of "joe at mit-dms", so handle it here.
*/
sprintf(fbuf, "%s@%s", uname, site);
else
strcpy(fbuf, uname);
}
isat(str)
char *str;
{
if (strcmp(str, "@")==0) return TRUE;
if (strcmp(str, "at")==0) return TRUE;
if (strcmp(str, "AT")==0) return TRUE;
return FALSE;
}
findgroup(to, group)
char *to;
char *group;
{
#ifdef debug
printf("findgroup(%s)\n", to);
#endif
#ifdef fussy
/*
* Default unknown "to" fields to "general". This gives you
* tight control over which newsgroups exist.
*/
if (strcmp(to, "msgs")==0)
strcpy(group, "msgs");
else if (strcmp(to, "allmsgs")==0)
strcpy(group, "NET.allmsgs");
else if (strcmp(to, "csmsgs")==0)
strcpy(group, "NET.csmsgs");
else
strcpy(group, "general");
#else
/*
* Allow any newsgroup. This way you don't have to recompile
* recnews everytime you add a newsgroup.
*/
strcpy(group, to);
#endif
}
/*
* Return the ptr in sp at which a character in sq appears;
* NULL if not found
*
*/
char *
any(sp, sq)
char *sp, *sq;
{
register c1, c2;
register char *q;
while (c1 = *sp++) {
q = sq;
while (c2 = *q++)
if (c1 == c2)
return(--sp);
}
return(NULL);
}
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