net-ldap 0.0.5
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- data/COPYING +272 -0
- data/History.txt +96 -0
- data/LICENSE +55 -0
- data/Manifest.txt +30 -0
- data/README.txt +62 -0
- data/Rakefile +18 -0
- data/Release-Announcement +95 -0
- data/lib/net/ber.rb +557 -0
- data/lib/net/ldap.rb +1613 -0
- data/lib/net/ldap/dataset.rb +108 -0
- data/lib/net/ldap/entry.rb +269 -0
- data/lib/net/ldap/filter.rb +499 -0
- data/lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb +258 -0
- data/lib/net/ldap/psw.rb +64 -0
- data/lib/net/ldif.rb +39 -0
- data/lib/net/snmp.rb +297 -0
- data/pre-setup.rb +45 -0
- data/setup.rb +1366 -0
- data/test/common.rb +7 -0
- data/test/test_ber.rb +100 -0
- data/test/test_entry.rb +7 -0
- data/test/test_filter.rb +83 -0
- data/test/test_ldif.rb +59 -0
- data/test/test_password.rb +17 -0
- data/test/test_snmp.rb +130 -0
- data/test/testdata.ldif +101 -0
- data/tests/NOTICE.txt +6 -0
- data/tests/testldap.rb +190 -0
- data/testserver/ldapserver.rb +229 -0
- data/testserver/testdata.ldif +101 -0
- metadata +105 -0
data/README.txt
ADDED
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= Net::LDAP for Ruby
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* http://rubyforge.org/projects/net-ldap
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== DESCRIPTION:
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Pure Ruby LDAP library.
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== FEATURES/PROBLEMS:
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The Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) is an Internet protocol
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for accessing distributed directory services.
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Net::LDAP is an LDAP support library written in pure Ruby. It supports
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most LDAP client features and a subset of server features as well.
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* Standards-based (going for RFC 4511)
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* Portable: 100% Ruby
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== SYNOPSIS:
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See Net::LDAP for documentation and usage samples.
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== REQUIREMENTS:
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Net::LDAP requires Ruby 1.8.2 or better.
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== INSTALL:
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Net::LDAP is a pure Ruby library. It does not require any external
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libraries.
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You can install the RubyGems version of Net::LDAP available from the
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usual sources.
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* gem install net-ldap
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If using the packaged (.tgz) version; it can be installed with:
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* ruby setup.rb
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== CREDITS:
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Net::LDAP was originally developed by:
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* Francis Cianfrocca <garbagecat10@gmail.com>
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Contributions since:
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* Austin Ziegler <halostatue@gmail.com>
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* Emiel van de Laar <gemiel@gmail.com>
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== LICENSE:
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Copyright (C) 2006 by Francis Cianfrocca
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Please read the file LICENSE for licensing restrictions on this library. In
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the simplest terms, this library is available under the same terms as Ruby
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itself.
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Available under the same terms as Ruby. See LICENSE in the main
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distribution for full licensing information.
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data/Rakefile
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# -*- ruby -*-
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require 'rubygems'
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require 'hoe'
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# Add 'lib' to load path.
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$LOAD_PATH.unshift( "#{File.dirname(__FILE__)}/lib" )
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# Pull in local 'net/ldap' as opposed to an installed version.
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require 'net/ldap'
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Hoe.new('net-ldap', Net::LDAP::VERSION) do |p|
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p.rubyforge_name = 'net-ldap'
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p.developer('Francis Cianfrocca', 'garbagecat10@gmail.com')
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p.developer('Emiel van de Laar', 'gemiel@gmail.com')
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end
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# vim: syntax=Ruby
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We're pleased to announce version 0.0.4 of Net::LDAP, the pure-Ruby LDAP library.
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This version adds an implementation of Net::LDAP#bind_as, which allows
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you to authenticate users who log into your applications using simple
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identifiers like email addresses and simple usernames. Thanks to Simon Claret
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for suggesting the original implementation in his page on the Rails-Wiki,
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and for valuable comments and help with testing.
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We have un-deprecated Net::LDAP#modify, which can be useful with
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LDAP servers that observe non-standard transactional and concurrency
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semantics in LDAP Modify operations. Note: this is a documentation change,
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not a code change. Thanks to Justin Forder for providing the rationale
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for this change.
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We added a larger set of special characters which may appear in RFC-2254
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standard search filters. Thanks to Andre Nathan for this patch.
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We fixed a bug that was preventing Net::LDAP#open from being called more
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than once on the same object.
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Net::LDAP is a feature-complete LDAP client which can access as much as
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possible of the functionality of the most-used LDAP server implementations.
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This library does not wrap any existing native-code LDAP libraries, creates no
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Ruby extensions, and has no dependencies external to Ruby.
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If anyone wants to contribute suggestions, insights or (especially)
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code, please email me at garbagecat10 .. .. gmail.com.
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= What is Net::LDAP for Ruby?
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This library provides a pure-Ruby implementation of an LDAP client.
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It can be used to access any server which implements the LDAP protocol.
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Net::LDAP is intended to provide full LDAP functionality while hiding
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the more arcane aspects of the LDAP protocol itself, so as to make the
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programming interface as Ruby-like as possible.
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In particular, this means that there is no direct dependence on the
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structure of the various "traditional" LDAP clients. This is a ground-up
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rethinking of the LDAP API.
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Net::LDAP is based on RFC-2251, which specifies the Lightweight Directory
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Access Protocol, as amended and extended by subsequent RFCs and by the more
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widely-used directory implementations.
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Homepage:: http://rubyforge.org/projects/net-ldap/
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Download:: http://rubyforge.org/frs/?group_id=143
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Copyright:: 2006 by Francis Cianfrocca
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== LICENCE NOTES
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Please read the file LICENCE for licensing restrictions on this library. In
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the simplest terms, this library is available under the same terms as Ruby
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itself.
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== Requirements and Installation
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Net::LDAP requires Ruby 1.8.2 or better.
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Net::LDAP can be installed with:
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% ruby setup.rb
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Alternatively, you can use the RubyGems version of Net::LDAP available
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as ruby-net-ldap-0.0.2.gem from the usual sources.
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== Whet your appetite:
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require 'net/ldap'
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ldap = Net::LDAP.new :host => server_ip_address,
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:port => 389,
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:auth => {
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:method => :simple,
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:username => "cn=manager,dc=example,dc=com",
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:password => "opensesame"
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}
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filter = Net::LDAP::Filter.eq( "cn", "George*" )
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treebase = "dc=example,dc=com"
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ldap.search( :base => treebase, :filter => filter ) do |entry|
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puts "DN: #{entry.dn}"
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entry.each do |attribute, values|
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puts " #{attribute}:"
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values.each do |value|
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puts " --->#{value}"
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end
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end
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end
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p ldap.get_operation_result
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== Net::LDAP 0.0.2: May 3, 2006
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* Fixed malformation in distro tarball and gem.
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* Improved documentation.
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* Supported "paged search control."
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data/lib/net/ber.rb
ADDED
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# $Id$
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#
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# NET::BER
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# Mixes ASN.1/BER convenience methods into several standard classes.
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# Also provides BER parsing functionality.
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#
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#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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#
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# Copyright (C) 2006 by Francis Cianfrocca. All Rights Reserved.
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#
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# Gmail: garbagecat10
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#
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# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
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# (at your option) any later version.
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#
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# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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# GNU General Public License for more details.
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#
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# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
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# Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
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#
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#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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#
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#
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module Net
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module BER
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class BerError < StandardError; end
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class BerIdentifiedString < String
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attr_accessor :ber_identifier
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def initialize args
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super args
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end
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end
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class BerIdentifiedArray < Array
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attr_accessor :ber_identifier
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def initialize
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super
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end
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end
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class BerIdentifiedNull
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attr_accessor :ber_identifier
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def to_ber
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"\005\000"
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end
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end
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class BerIdentifiedOid
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attr_accessor :ber_identifier
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def initialize oid
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if oid.is_a?(String)
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oid = oid.split(/\./).map {|s| s.to_i }
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end
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@value = oid
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end
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def to_ber
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# Provisional implementation.
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# We ASSUME that our incoming value is an array, and we
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# use the Array#to_ber_oid method defined below.
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# We probably should obsolete that method, actually, in
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# and move the code here.
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# WE ARE NOT CURRENTLY ENCODING THE BER-IDENTIFIER.
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# This implementation currently hardcodes 6, the universal OID tag.
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ary = @value.dup
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first = ary.shift
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raise Net::BER::BerError.new(" invalid OID" ) unless [0,1,2].include?(first)
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first = first * 40 + ary.shift
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ary.unshift first
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oid = ary.pack("w*")
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[6, oid.length].pack("CC") + oid
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end
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end
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#--
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# This condenses our nicely self-documenting ASN hashes down
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# to an array for fast lookups.
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# Scoped to be called as a module method, but not intended for
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# user code to call.
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#
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def self.compile_syntax syn
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out = [nil] * 256
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syn.each {|tclass,tclasses|
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tagclass = {:universal=>0, :application=>64, :context_specific=>128, :private=>192} [tclass]
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tclasses.each {|codingtype,codings|
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encoding = {:primitive=>0, :constructed=>32} [codingtype]
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codings.each {|tag,objtype|
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out[tagclass + encoding + tag] = objtype
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}
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}
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}
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out
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end
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# This module is for mixing into IO and IO-like objects.
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module BERParser
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# The order of these follows the class-codes in BER.
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# Maybe this should have been a hash.
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TagClasses = [:universal, :application, :context_specific, :private]
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BuiltinSyntax = BER.compile_syntax( {
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:universal => {
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:primitive => {
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1 => :boolean,
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2 => :integer,
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4 => :string,
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5 => :null,
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6 => :oid,
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10 => :integer,
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13 => :string # (relative OID)
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},
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:constructed => {
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16 => :array,
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17 => :array
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}
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},
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:context_specific => {
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:primitive => {
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10 => :integer
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}
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}
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})
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#
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# read_ber
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# TODO: clean this up so it works properly with partial
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# packets coming from streams that don't block when
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# we ask for more data (like StringIOs). At it is,
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# this can throw TypeErrors and other nasties.
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#--
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# BEWARE, this violates DRY and is largely equal in functionality to
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# read_ber_from_string. Eventually that method may subsume the functionality
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# of this one.
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#
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def read_ber syntax=nil
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# don't bother with this line, since IO#getbyte by definition returns nil on eof.
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#return nil if eof?
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id = getbyte or return nil # don't trash this value, we'll use it later
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#tag = id & 31
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#tag < 31 or raise BerError.new( "unsupported tag encoding: #{id}" )
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#tagclass = TagClasses[ id >> 6 ]
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#encoding = (id & 0x20 != 0) ? :constructed : :primitive
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n = getbyte
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lengthlength,contentlength = if n <= 127
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[1,n]
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else
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# Replaced the inject because it profiles hot.
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#j = (0...(n & 127)).inject(0) {|mem,x| mem = (mem << 8) + getbyte}
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j = 0
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read( n & 127 ).each_byte {|n1| j = (j << 8) + n1}
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[1 + (n & 127), j]
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end
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newobj = read contentlength
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# This exceptionally clever and clear bit of code is verrrry slow.
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objtype = (syntax && syntax[id]) || BuiltinSyntax[id]
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# == is expensive so sort this if/else so the common cases are at the top.
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obj = if objtype == :string
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#(newobj || "").dup
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s = BerIdentifiedString.new( newobj || "" )
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s.ber_identifier = id
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s
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elsif objtype == :integer
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j = 0
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newobj.each_byte {|b| j = (j << 8) + b}
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j
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elsif objtype == :oid
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# cf X.690 pgh 8.19 for an explanation of this algorithm.
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# Potentially not good enough. We may need a BerIdentifiedOid
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|
+
# as a subclass of BerIdentifiedArray, to get the ber identifier
|
188
|
+
# and also a to_s method that produces the familiar dotted notation.
|
189
|
+
oid = newobj.unpack("w*")
|
190
|
+
f = oid.shift
|
191
|
+
g = if f < 40
|
192
|
+
[0, f]
|
193
|
+
elsif f < 80
|
194
|
+
[1, f-40]
|
195
|
+
else
|
196
|
+
[2, f-80] # f-80 can easily be > 80. What a weird optimization.
|
197
|
+
end
|
198
|
+
oid.unshift g.last
|
199
|
+
oid.unshift g.first
|
200
|
+
oid
|
201
|
+
elsif objtype == :array
|
202
|
+
#seq = []
|
203
|
+
seq = BerIdentifiedArray.new
|
204
|
+
seq.ber_identifier = id
|
205
|
+
sio = StringIO.new( newobj || "" )
|
206
|
+
# Interpret the subobject, but note how the loop
|
207
|
+
# is built: nil ends the loop, but false (a valid
|
208
|
+
# BER value) does not!
|
209
|
+
while (e = sio.read_ber(syntax)) != nil
|
210
|
+
seq << e
|
211
|
+
end
|
212
|
+
seq
|
213
|
+
elsif objtype == :boolean
|
214
|
+
newobj != "\000"
|
215
|
+
elsif objtype == :null
|
216
|
+
n = BerIdentifiedNull.new
|
217
|
+
n.ber_identifier = id
|
218
|
+
n
|
219
|
+
else
|
220
|
+
#raise BerError.new( "unsupported object type: class=#{tagclass}, encoding=#{encoding}, tag=#{tag}" )
|
221
|
+
raise BerError.new( "unsupported object type: id=#{id}" )
|
222
|
+
end
|
223
|
+
|
224
|
+
# Add the identifier bits into the object if it's a String or an Array.
|
225
|
+
# We can't add extra stuff to Fixnums and booleans, not that it makes much sense anyway.
|
226
|
+
# Replaced this mechanism with subclasses because the instance_eval profiled too hot.
|
227
|
+
#obj and ([String,Array].include? obj.class) and obj.instance_eval "def ber_identifier; #{id}; end"
|
228
|
+
#obj.ber_identifier = id if obj.respond_to?(:ber_identifier)
|
229
|
+
obj
|
230
|
+
|
231
|
+
end
|
232
|
+
|
233
|
+
#--
|
234
|
+
# Violates DRY! This replicates the functionality of #read_ber.
|
235
|
+
# Eventually this method may replace that one.
|
236
|
+
# This version of #read_ber behaves properly in the face of incomplete
|
237
|
+
# data packets. If a full BER object is detected, we return an array containing
|
238
|
+
# the detected object and the number of bytes consumed from the string.
|
239
|
+
# If we don't detect a complete packet, return nil.
|
240
|
+
#
|
241
|
+
# Observe that weirdly we recursively call the original #read_ber in here.
|
242
|
+
# That needs to be fixed if we ever obsolete the original method in favor of this one.
|
243
|
+
def read_ber_from_string str, syntax=nil
|
244
|
+
id = str[0] or return nil
|
245
|
+
n = str[1] or return nil
|
246
|
+
n_consumed = 2
|
247
|
+
lengthlength,contentlength = if n <= 127
|
248
|
+
[1,n]
|
249
|
+
else
|
250
|
+
n1 = n & 127
|
251
|
+
return nil unless str.length >= (n_consumed + n1)
|
252
|
+
j = 0
|
253
|
+
n1.times {
|
254
|
+
j = (j << 8) + str[n_consumed]
|
255
|
+
n_consumed += 1
|
256
|
+
}
|
257
|
+
[1 + (n1), j]
|
258
|
+
end
|
259
|
+
|
260
|
+
return nil unless str.length >= (n_consumed + contentlength)
|
261
|
+
newobj = str[n_consumed...(n_consumed + contentlength)]
|
262
|
+
n_consumed += contentlength
|
263
|
+
|
264
|
+
objtype = (syntax && syntax[id]) || BuiltinSyntax[id]
|
265
|
+
|
266
|
+
# == is expensive so sort this if/else so the common cases are at the top.
|
267
|
+
obj = if objtype == :array
|
268
|
+
seq = BerIdentifiedArray.new
|
269
|
+
seq.ber_identifier = id
|
270
|
+
sio = StringIO.new( newobj || "" )
|
271
|
+
# Interpret the subobject, but note how the loop
|
272
|
+
# is built: nil ends the loop, but false (a valid
|
273
|
+
# BER value) does not!
|
274
|
+
# Also, we can use the standard read_ber method because
|
275
|
+
# we know for sure we have enough data. (Although this
|
276
|
+
# might be faster than the standard method.)
|
277
|
+
while (e = sio.read_ber(syntax)) != nil
|
278
|
+
seq << e
|
279
|
+
end
|
280
|
+
seq
|
281
|
+
elsif objtype == :string
|
282
|
+
s = BerIdentifiedString.new( newobj || "" )
|
283
|
+
s.ber_identifier = id
|
284
|
+
s
|
285
|
+
elsif objtype == :integer
|
286
|
+
j = 0
|
287
|
+
newobj.each_byte {|b| j = (j << 8) + b}
|
288
|
+
j
|
289
|
+
elsif objtype == :oid
|
290
|
+
# cf X.690 pgh 8.19 for an explanation of this algorithm.
|
291
|
+
# Potentially not good enough. We may need a BerIdentifiedOid
|
292
|
+
# as a subclass of BerIdentifiedArray, to get the ber identifier
|
293
|
+
# and also a to_s method that produces the familiar dotted notation.
|
294
|
+
oid = newobj.unpack("w*")
|
295
|
+
f = oid.shift
|
296
|
+
g = if f < 40
|
297
|
+
[0,f]
|
298
|
+
elsif f < 80
|
299
|
+
[1, f-40]
|
300
|
+
else
|
301
|
+
[2, f-80] # f-80 can easily be > 80. What a weird optimization.
|
302
|
+
end
|
303
|
+
oid.unshift g.last
|
304
|
+
oid.unshift g.first
|
305
|
+
oid
|
306
|
+
elsif objtype == :boolean
|
307
|
+
newobj != "\000"
|
308
|
+
elsif objtype == :null
|
309
|
+
n = BerIdentifiedNull.new
|
310
|
+
n.ber_identifier = id
|
311
|
+
n
|
312
|
+
else
|
313
|
+
raise BerError.new( "unsupported object type: id=#{id}" )
|
314
|
+
end
|
315
|
+
|
316
|
+
[obj, n_consumed]
|
317
|
+
end
|
318
|
+
|
319
|
+
end # module BERParser
|
320
|
+
end # module BER
|
321
|
+
|
322
|
+
end # module Net
|
323
|
+
|
324
|
+
|
325
|
+
class IO
|
326
|
+
include Net::BER::BERParser
|
327
|
+
end
|
328
|
+
|
329
|
+
require "stringio"
|
330
|
+
class StringIO
|
331
|
+
include Net::BER::BERParser
|
332
|
+
end
|
333
|
+
|
334
|
+
begin
|
335
|
+
require 'openssl'
|
336
|
+
class OpenSSL::SSL::SSLSocket
|
337
|
+
include Net::BER::BERParser
|
338
|
+
end
|
339
|
+
rescue LoadError
|
340
|
+
# Ignore LoadError.
|
341
|
+
# DON'T ignore NameError, which means the SSLSocket class
|
342
|
+
# is somehow unavailable on this implementation of Ruby's openssl.
|
343
|
+
# This may be WRONG, however, because we don't yet know how Ruby's
|
344
|
+
# openssl behaves on machines with no OpenSSL library. I suppose
|
345
|
+
# it's possible they do not fail to require 'openssl' but do not
|
346
|
+
# create the classes. So this code is provisional.
|
347
|
+
# Also, you might think that OpenSSL::SSL::SSLSocket inherits from
|
348
|
+
# IO so we'd pick it up above. But you'd be wrong.
|
349
|
+
end
|
350
|
+
|
351
|
+
|
352
|
+
|
353
|
+
class String
|
354
|
+
include Net::BER::BERParser
|
355
|
+
def read_ber syntax=nil
|
356
|
+
StringIO.new(self).read_ber(syntax)
|
357
|
+
end
|
358
|
+
def read_ber! syntax=nil
|
359
|
+
obj,n_consumed = read_ber_from_string(self, syntax)
|
360
|
+
if n_consumed
|
361
|
+
self.slice!(0...n_consumed)
|
362
|
+
obj
|
363
|
+
else
|
364
|
+
nil
|
365
|
+
end
|
366
|
+
end
|
367
|
+
end
|
368
|
+
|
369
|
+
#----------------------------------------------
|
370
|
+
|
371
|
+
|
372
|
+
class FalseClass
|
373
|
+
#
|
374
|
+
# to_ber
|
375
|
+
#
|
376
|
+
def to_ber
|
377
|
+
"\001\001\000"
|
378
|
+
end
|
379
|
+
end
|
380
|
+
|
381
|
+
|
382
|
+
class TrueClass
|
383
|
+
#
|
384
|
+
# to_ber
|
385
|
+
#
|
386
|
+
def to_ber
|
387
|
+
"\001\001\001"
|
388
|
+
end
|
389
|
+
end
|
390
|
+
|
391
|
+
|
392
|
+
|
393
|
+
class Fixnum
|
394
|
+
#
|
395
|
+
# to_ber
|
396
|
+
#
|
397
|
+
def to_ber
|
398
|
+
"\002" + to_ber_internal
|
399
|
+
end
|
400
|
+
|
401
|
+
#
|
402
|
+
# to_ber_enumerated
|
403
|
+
#
|
404
|
+
def to_ber_enumerated
|
405
|
+
"\012" + to_ber_internal
|
406
|
+
end
|
407
|
+
|
408
|
+
#
|
409
|
+
# to_ber_length_encoding
|
410
|
+
#
|
411
|
+
def to_ber_length_encoding
|
412
|
+
if self <= 127
|
413
|
+
[self].pack('C')
|
414
|
+
else
|
415
|
+
i = [self].pack('N').sub(/^[\0]+/,"")
|
416
|
+
[0x80 + i.length].pack('C') + i
|
417
|
+
end
|
418
|
+
end
|
419
|
+
|
420
|
+
# Generate a BER-encoding for an application-defined INTEGER.
|
421
|
+
# Example: SNMP's Counter, Gauge, and TimeTick types.
|
422
|
+
#
|
423
|
+
def to_ber_application tag
|
424
|
+
[0x40 + tag].pack("C") + to_ber_internal
|
425
|
+
end
|
426
|
+
|
427
|
+
#--
|
428
|
+
# Called internally to BER-encode the length and content bytes of a Fixnum.
|
429
|
+
# The caller will prepend the tag byte.
|
430
|
+
def to_ber_internal
|
431
|
+
# PLEASE optimize this code path. It's awfully ugly and probably slow.
|
432
|
+
# It also doesn't understand negative numbers yet.
|
433
|
+
raise Net::BER::BerError.new( "range error in fixnum" ) unless self >= 0
|
434
|
+
z = [self].pack("N")
|
435
|
+
zlen = if self < 0x80
|
436
|
+
1
|
437
|
+
elsif self < 0x8000
|
438
|
+
2
|
439
|
+
elsif self < 0x800000
|
440
|
+
3
|
441
|
+
else
|
442
|
+
4
|
443
|
+
end
|
444
|
+
[zlen].pack("C") + z[0-zlen,zlen]
|
445
|
+
end
|
446
|
+
private :to_ber_internal
|
447
|
+
|
448
|
+
end # class Fixnum
|
449
|
+
|
450
|
+
|
451
|
+
class Bignum
|
452
|
+
|
453
|
+
def to_ber
|
454
|
+
#i = [self].pack('w')
|
455
|
+
#i.length > 126 and raise Net::BER::BerError.new( "range error in bignum" )
|
456
|
+
#[2, i.length].pack("CC") + i
|
457
|
+
|
458
|
+
# Ruby represents Bignums as two's-complement numbers so we may actually be
|
459
|
+
# good as far as representing negatives goes.
|
460
|
+
# I'm sure this implementation can be improved performance-wise if necessary.
|
461
|
+
# Ruby's Bignum#size returns the number of bytes in the internal representation
|
462
|
+
# of the number, but it can and will include leading zero bytes on at least
|
463
|
+
# some implementations. Evidently Ruby stores these as sets of quadbytes.
|
464
|
+
# It's not illegal in BER to encode all of the leading zeroes but let's strip
|
465
|
+
# them out anyway.
|
466
|
+
#
|
467
|
+
sz = self.size
|
468
|
+
out = "\000" * sz
|
469
|
+
(sz*8).times {|bit|
|
470
|
+
if self[bit] == 1
|
471
|
+
out[bit/8] += (1 << (bit % 8))
|
472
|
+
end
|
473
|
+
}
|
474
|
+
|
475
|
+
while out.length > 1 and out[-1] == 0
|
476
|
+
out.slice!(-1,1)
|
477
|
+
end
|
478
|
+
|
479
|
+
[2, out.length].pack("CC") + out.reverse
|
480
|
+
end
|
481
|
+
|
482
|
+
end
|
483
|
+
|
484
|
+
|
485
|
+
|
486
|
+
class String
|
487
|
+
#
|
488
|
+
# to_ber
|
489
|
+
# A universal octet-string is tag number 4,
|
490
|
+
# but others are possible depending on the context, so we
|
491
|
+
# let the caller give us one.
|
492
|
+
# The preferred way to do this in user code is via to_ber_application_sring
|
493
|
+
# and to_ber_contextspecific.
|
494
|
+
#
|
495
|
+
def to_ber code = 4
|
496
|
+
[code].pack('C') + length.to_ber_length_encoding + self
|
497
|
+
end
|
498
|
+
|
499
|
+
#
|
500
|
+
# to_ber_application_string
|
501
|
+
#
|
502
|
+
def to_ber_application_string code
|
503
|
+
to_ber( 0x40 + code )
|
504
|
+
end
|
505
|
+
|
506
|
+
#
|
507
|
+
# to_ber_contextspecific
|
508
|
+
#
|
509
|
+
def to_ber_contextspecific code
|
510
|
+
to_ber( 0x80 + code )
|
511
|
+
end
|
512
|
+
|
513
|
+
end # class String
|
514
|
+
|
515
|
+
|
516
|
+
|
517
|
+
class Array
|
518
|
+
#
|
519
|
+
# to_ber_appsequence
|
520
|
+
# An application-specific sequence usually gets assigned
|
521
|
+
# a tag that is meaningful to the particular protocol being used.
|
522
|
+
# This is different from the universal sequence, which usually
|
523
|
+
# gets a tag value of 16.
|
524
|
+
# Now here's an interesting thing: We're adding the X.690
|
525
|
+
# "application constructed" code at the top of the tag byte (0x60),
|
526
|
+
# but some clients, notably ldapsearch, send "context-specific
|
527
|
+
# constructed" (0xA0). The latter would appear to violate RFC-1777,
|
528
|
+
# but what do I know? We may need to change this.
|
529
|
+
#
|
530
|
+
|
531
|
+
def to_ber id = 0; to_ber_seq_internal( 0x30 + id ); end
|
532
|
+
def to_ber_set id = 0; to_ber_seq_internal( 0x31 + id ); end
|
533
|
+
def to_ber_sequence id = 0; to_ber_seq_internal( 0x30 + id ); end
|
534
|
+
def to_ber_appsequence id = 0; to_ber_seq_internal( 0x60 + id ); end
|
535
|
+
def to_ber_contextspecific id = 0; to_ber_seq_internal( 0xA0 + id ); end
|
536
|
+
|
537
|
+
def to_ber_oid
|
538
|
+
ary = self.dup
|
539
|
+
first = ary.shift
|
540
|
+
raise Net::BER::BerError.new( "invalid OID" ) unless [0,1,2].include?(first)
|
541
|
+
first = first * 40 + ary.shift
|
542
|
+
ary.unshift first
|
543
|
+
oid = ary.pack("w*")
|
544
|
+
[6, oid.length].pack("CC") + oid
|
545
|
+
end
|
546
|
+
|
547
|
+
private
|
548
|
+
def to_ber_seq_internal code
|
549
|
+
s = ''
|
550
|
+
self.each{|x| s = s + x}
|
551
|
+
[code].pack('C') + s.length.to_ber_length_encoding + s
|
552
|
+
end
|
553
|
+
|
554
|
+
|
555
|
+
end # class Array
|
556
|
+
|
557
|
+
|