Binary files fail2ban-1.0.2.orig/.setup.py.swp and fail2ban-1.0.2/.setup.py.swp differ diff -Nru fail2ban-1.0.2.orig/debian/control fail2ban-1.0.2/debian/control --- fail2ban-1.0.2.orig/debian/control 2023-09-19 13:55:20.000000000 +0200 +++ fail2ban-1.0.2/debian/control 2024-04-16 20:21:42.756873961 +0200 @@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ Package: fail2ban Architecture: all -Depends: ${python3:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}, python3-systemd +Depends: ${python3:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}, python3-setuptools, python3-systemd Recommends: nftables | iptables, whois, python3-pyinotify Suggests: mailx, system-log-daemon, monit, sqlite3 Description: ban hosts that cause multiple authentication errors diff -Nru fail2ban-1.0.2.orig/fail2ban/compat/asynchat.py fail2ban-1.0.2/fail2ban/compat/asynchat.py --- fail2ban-1.0.2.orig/fail2ban/compat/asynchat.py 1970-01-01 01:00:00.000000000 +0100 +++ fail2ban-1.0.2/fail2ban/compat/asynchat.py 2024-04-16 20:21:19.309141355 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,310 @@ +# -*- Mode: Python; tab-width: 4 -*- +# Id: asynchat.py,v 2.26 2000/09/07 22:29:26 rushing Exp +# Author: Sam Rushing + +# ====================================================================== +# Copyright 1996 by Sam Rushing +# +# All Rights Reserved +# +# Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and +# its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby +# granted, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all +# copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission +# notice appear in supporting documentation, and that the name of Sam +# Rushing not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to +# distribution of the software without specific, written prior +# permission. +# +# SAM RUSHING DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, +# INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN +# NO EVENT SHALL SAM RUSHING BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR +# CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS +# OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, +# NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN +# CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. +# ====================================================================== + +r"""A class supporting chat-style (command/response) protocols. + +This class adds support for 'chat' style protocols - where one side +sends a 'command', and the other sends a response (examples would be +the common internet protocols - smtp, nntp, ftp, etc..). + +The handle_read() method looks at the input stream for the current +'terminator' (usually '\r\n' for single-line responses, '\r\n.\r\n' +for multi-line output), calling self.found_terminator() on its +receipt. + +for example: +Say you build an async nntp client using this class. At the start +of the connection, you'll have self.terminator set to '\r\n', in +order to process the single-line greeting. Just before issuing a +'LIST' command you'll set it to '\r\n.\r\n'. The output of the LIST +command will be accumulated (using your own 'collect_incoming_data' +method) up to the terminator, and then control will be returned to +you - by calling your self.found_terminator() method. +""" +try: + import asyncore +except ImportError: + from . import asyncore +from collections import deque + + +class async_chat(asyncore.dispatcher): + """This is an abstract class. You must derive from this class, and add + the two methods collect_incoming_data() and found_terminator()""" + + # these are overridable defaults + + ac_in_buffer_size = 65536 + ac_out_buffer_size = 65536 + + # we don't want to enable the use of encoding by default, because that is a + # sign of an application bug that we don't want to pass silently + + use_encoding = 0 + encoding = 'latin-1' + + def __init__(self, sock=None, map=None): + # for string terminator matching + self.ac_in_buffer = b'' + + # we use a list here rather than io.BytesIO for a few reasons... + # del lst[:] is faster than bio.truncate(0) + # lst = [] is faster than bio.truncate(0) + self.incoming = [] + + # we toss the use of the "simple producer" and replace it with + # a pure deque, which the original fifo was a wrapping of + self.producer_fifo = deque() + asyncore.dispatcher.__init__(self, sock, map) + + def collect_incoming_data(self, data): + raise NotImplementedError("must be implemented in subclass") + + def _collect_incoming_data(self, data): + self.incoming.append(data) + + def _get_data(self): + d = b''.join(self.incoming) + del self.incoming[:] + return d + + def found_terminator(self): + raise NotImplementedError("must be implemented in subclass") + + def set_terminator(self, term): + """Set the input delimiter. + + Can be a fixed string of any length, an integer, or None. + """ + if isinstance(term, str) and self.use_encoding: + term = bytes(term, self.encoding) + elif isinstance(term, int) and term < 0: + raise ValueError('the number of received bytes must be positive') + self.terminator = term + + def get_terminator(self): + return self.terminator + + # grab some more data from the socket, + # throw it to the collector method, + # check for the terminator, + # if found, transition to the next state. + + def handle_read(self): + + try: + data = self.recv(self.ac_in_buffer_size) + except BlockingIOError: + return + except OSError: + self.handle_error() + return + + if isinstance(data, str) and self.use_encoding: + data = bytes(str, self.encoding) + self.ac_in_buffer = self.ac_in_buffer + data + + # Continue to search for self.terminator in self.ac_in_buffer, + # while calling self.collect_incoming_data. The while loop + # is necessary because we might read several data+terminator + # combos with a single recv(4096). + + while self.ac_in_buffer: + lb = len(self.ac_in_buffer) + terminator = self.get_terminator() + if not terminator: + # no terminator, collect it all + self.collect_incoming_data(self.ac_in_buffer) + self.ac_in_buffer = b'' + elif isinstance(terminator, int): + # numeric terminator + n = terminator + if lb < n: + self.collect_incoming_data(self.ac_in_buffer) + self.ac_in_buffer = b'' + self.terminator = self.terminator - lb + else: + self.collect_incoming_data(self.ac_in_buffer[:n]) + self.ac_in_buffer = self.ac_in_buffer[n:] + self.terminator = 0 + self.found_terminator() + else: + # 3 cases: + # 1) end of buffer matches terminator exactly: + # collect data, transition + # 2) end of buffer matches some prefix: + # collect data to the prefix + # 3) end of buffer does not match any prefix: + # collect data + terminator_len = len(terminator) + index = self.ac_in_buffer.find(terminator) + if index != -1: + # we found the terminator + if index > 0: + # don't bother reporting the empty string + # (source of subtle bugs) + self.collect_incoming_data(self.ac_in_buffer[:index]) + self.ac_in_buffer = self.ac_in_buffer[index+terminator_len:] + # This does the Right Thing if the terminator + # is changed here. + self.found_terminator() + else: + # check for a prefix of the terminator + index = find_prefix_at_end(self.ac_in_buffer, terminator) + if index: + if index != lb: + # we found a prefix, collect up to the prefix + self.collect_incoming_data(self.ac_in_buffer[:-index]) + self.ac_in_buffer = self.ac_in_buffer[-index:] + break + else: + # no prefix, collect it all + self.collect_incoming_data(self.ac_in_buffer) + self.ac_in_buffer = b'' + + def handle_write(self): + self.initiate_send() + + def handle_close(self): + self.close() + + def push(self, data): + if not isinstance(data, (bytes, bytearray, memoryview)): + raise TypeError('data argument must be byte-ish (%r)', + type(data)) + sabs = self.ac_out_buffer_size + if len(data) > sabs: + for i in range(0, len(data), sabs): + self.producer_fifo.append(data[i:i+sabs]) + else: + self.producer_fifo.append(data) + self.initiate_send() + + def push_with_producer(self, producer): + self.producer_fifo.append(producer) + self.initiate_send() + + def readable(self): + "predicate for inclusion in the readable for select()" + # cannot use the old predicate, it violates the claim of the + # set_terminator method. + + # return (len(self.ac_in_buffer) <= self.ac_in_buffer_size) + return 1 + + def writable(self): + "predicate for inclusion in the writable for select()" + return self.producer_fifo or (not self.connected) + + def close_when_done(self): + "automatically close this channel once the outgoing queue is empty" + self.producer_fifo.append(None) + + def initiate_send(self): + while self.producer_fifo and self.connected: + first = self.producer_fifo[0] + # handle empty string/buffer or None entry + if not first: + del self.producer_fifo[0] + if first is None: + self.handle_close() + return + + # handle classic producer behavior + obs = self.ac_out_buffer_size + try: + data = first[:obs] + except TypeError: + data = first.more() + if data: + self.producer_fifo.appendleft(data) + else: + del self.producer_fifo[0] + continue + + if isinstance(data, str) and self.use_encoding: + data = bytes(data, self.encoding) + + # send the data + try: + num_sent = self.send(data) + except OSError: + self.handle_error() + return + + if num_sent: + if num_sent < len(data) or obs < len(first): + self.producer_fifo[0] = first[num_sent:] + else: + del self.producer_fifo[0] + # we tried to send some actual data + return + + def discard_buffers(self): + # Emergencies only! + self.ac_in_buffer = b'' + del self.incoming[:] + self.producer_fifo.clear() + + +class simple_producer: + + def __init__(self, data, buffer_size=512): + self.data = data + self.buffer_size = buffer_size + + def more(self): + if len(self.data) > self.buffer_size: + result = self.data[:self.buffer_size] + self.data = self.data[self.buffer_size:] + return result + else: + result = self.data + self.data = b'' + return result + + +# Given 'haystack', see if any prefix of 'needle' is at its end. This +# assumes an exact match has already been checked. Return the number of +# characters matched. +# for example: +# f_p_a_e("qwerty\r", "\r\n") => 1 +# f_p_a_e("qwertydkjf", "\r\n") => 0 +# f_p_a_e("qwerty\r\n", "\r\n") => + +# this could maybe be made faster with a computed regex? +# [answer: no; circa Python-2.0, Jan 2001] +# new python: 28961/s +# old python: 18307/s +# re: 12820/s +# regex: 14035/s + +def find_prefix_at_end(haystack, needle): + l = len(needle) - 1 + while l and not haystack.endswith(needle[:l]): + l -= 1 + return l diff -Nru fail2ban-1.0.2.orig/fail2ban/compat/asyncore.py fail2ban-1.0.2/fail2ban/compat/asyncore.py --- fail2ban-1.0.2.orig/fail2ban/compat/asyncore.py 1970-01-01 01:00:00.000000000 +0100 +++ fail2ban-1.0.2/fail2ban/compat/asyncore.py 2024-04-16 20:21:19.309141355 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,642 @@ +# -*- Mode: Python -*- +# Id: asyncore.py,v 2.51 2000/09/07 22:29:26 rushing Exp +# Author: Sam Rushing + +# ====================================================================== +# Copyright 1996 by Sam Rushing +# +# All Rights Reserved +# +# Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and +# its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby +# granted, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all +# copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission +# notice appear in supporting documentation, and that the name of Sam +# Rushing not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to +# distribution of the software without specific, written prior +# permission. +# +# SAM RUSHING DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, +# INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN +# NO EVENT SHALL SAM RUSHING BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR +# CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS +# OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, +# NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN +# CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. +# ====================================================================== + +"""Basic infrastructure for asynchronous socket service clients and servers. + +There are only two ways to have a program on a single processor do "more +than one thing at a time". Multi-threaded programming is the simplest and +most popular way to do it, but there is another very different technique, +that lets you have nearly all the advantages of multi-threading, without +actually using multiple threads. it's really only practical if your program +is largely I/O bound. If your program is CPU bound, then pre-emptive +scheduled threads are probably what you really need. Network servers are +rarely CPU-bound, however. + +If your operating system supports the select() system call in its I/O +library (and nearly all do), then you can use it to juggle multiple +communication channels at once; doing other work while your I/O is taking +place in the "background." Although this strategy can seem strange and +complex, especially at first, it is in many ways easier to understand and +control than multi-threaded programming. The module documented here solves +many of the difficult problems for you, making the task of building +sophisticated high-performance network servers and clients a snap. +""" + +import select +import socket +import sys +import time +import warnings + +import os +from errno import EALREADY, EINPROGRESS, EWOULDBLOCK, ECONNRESET, EINVAL, \ + ENOTCONN, ESHUTDOWN, EISCONN, EBADF, ECONNABORTED, EPIPE, EAGAIN, \ + errorcode + +_DISCONNECTED = frozenset({ECONNRESET, ENOTCONN, ESHUTDOWN, ECONNABORTED, EPIPE, + EBADF}) + +try: + socket_map +except NameError: + socket_map = {} + +def _strerror(err): + try: + return os.strerror(err) + except (ValueError, OverflowError, NameError): + if err in errorcode: + return errorcode[err] + return "Unknown error %s" %err + +class ExitNow(Exception): + pass + +_reraised_exceptions = (ExitNow, KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit) + +def read(obj): + try: + obj.handle_read_event() + except _reraised_exceptions: + raise + except: + obj.handle_error() + +def write(obj): + try: + obj.handle_write_event() + except _reraised_exceptions: + raise + except: + obj.handle_error() + +def _exception(obj): + try: + obj.handle_expt_event() + except _reraised_exceptions: + raise + except: + obj.handle_error() + +def readwrite(obj, flags): + try: + if flags & select.POLLIN: + obj.handle_read_event() + if flags & select.POLLOUT: + obj.handle_write_event() + if flags & select.POLLPRI: + obj.handle_expt_event() + if flags & (select.POLLHUP | select.POLLERR | select.POLLNVAL): + obj.handle_close() + except OSError as e: + if e.errno not in _DISCONNECTED: + obj.handle_error() + else: + obj.handle_close() + except _reraised_exceptions: + raise + except: + obj.handle_error() + +def poll(timeout=0.0, map=None): + if map is None: + map = socket_map + if map: + r = []; w = []; e = [] + for fd, obj in list(map.items()): + is_r = obj.readable() + is_w = obj.writable() + if is_r: + r.append(fd) + # accepting sockets should not be writable + if is_w and not obj.accepting: + w.append(fd) + if is_r or is_w: + e.append(fd) + if [] == r == w == e: + time.sleep(timeout) + return + + r, w, e = select.select(r, w, e, timeout) + + for fd in r: + obj = map.get(fd) + if obj is None: + continue + read(obj) + + for fd in w: + obj = map.get(fd) + if obj is None: + continue + write(obj) + + for fd in e: + obj = map.get(fd) + if obj is None: + continue + _exception(obj) + +def poll2(timeout=0.0, map=None): + # Use the poll() support added to the select module in Python 2.0 + if map is None: + map = socket_map + if timeout is not None: + # timeout is in milliseconds + timeout = int(timeout*1000) + pollster = select.poll() + if map: + for fd, obj in list(map.items()): + flags = 0 + if obj.readable(): + flags |= select.POLLIN | select.POLLPRI + # accepting sockets should not be writable + if obj.writable() and not obj.accepting: + flags |= select.POLLOUT + if flags: + pollster.register(fd, flags) + + r = pollster.poll(timeout) + for fd, flags in r: + obj = map.get(fd) + if obj is None: + continue + readwrite(obj, flags) + +poll3 = poll2 # Alias for backward compatibility + +def loop(timeout=30.0, use_poll=False, map=None, count=None): + if map is None: + map = socket_map + + if use_poll and hasattr(select, 'poll'): + poll_fun = poll2 + else: + poll_fun = poll + + if count is None: + while map: + poll_fun(timeout, map) + + else: + while map and count > 0: + poll_fun(timeout, map) + count = count - 1 + +class dispatcher: + + debug = False + connected = False + accepting = False + connecting = False + closing = False + addr = None + ignore_log_types = frozenset({'warning'}) + + def __init__(self, sock=None, map=None): + if map is None: + self._map = socket_map + else: + self._map = map + + self._fileno = None + + if sock: + # Set to nonblocking just to make sure for cases where we + # get a socket from a blocking source. + sock.setblocking(False) + self.set_socket(sock, map) + self.connected = True + # The constructor no longer requires that the socket + # passed be connected. + try: + self.addr = sock.getpeername() + except OSError as err: + if err.errno in (ENOTCONN, EINVAL): + # To handle the case where we got an unconnected + # socket. + self.connected = False + else: + # The socket is broken in some unknown way, alert + # the user and remove it from the map (to prevent + # polling of broken sockets). + self.del_channel(map) + raise + else: + self.socket = None + + def __repr__(self): + status = [self.__class__.__module__+"."+self.__class__.__qualname__] + if self.accepting and self.addr: + status.append('listening') + elif self.connected: + status.append('connected') + if self.addr is not None: + try: + status.append('%s:%d' % self.addr) + except TypeError: + status.append(repr(self.addr)) + return '<%s at %#x>' % (' '.join(status), id(self)) + + def add_channel(self, map=None): + #self.log_info('adding channel %s' % self) + if map is None: + map = self._map + map[self._fileno] = self + + def del_channel(self, map=None): + fd = self._fileno + if map is None: + map = self._map + if fd in map: + #self.log_info('closing channel %d:%s' % (fd, self)) + del map[fd] + self._fileno = None + + def create_socket(self, family=socket.AF_INET, type=socket.SOCK_STREAM): + self.family_and_type = family, type + sock = socket.socket(family, type) + sock.setblocking(False) + self.set_socket(sock) + + def set_socket(self, sock, map=None): + self.socket = sock + self._fileno = sock.fileno() + self.add_channel(map) + + def set_reuse_addr(self): + # try to re-use a server port if possible + try: + self.socket.setsockopt( + socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEADDR, + self.socket.getsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, + socket.SO_REUSEADDR) | 1 + ) + except OSError: + pass + + # ================================================== + # predicates for select() + # these are used as filters for the lists of sockets + # to pass to select(). + # ================================================== + + def readable(self): + return True + + def writable(self): + return True + + # ================================================== + # socket object methods. + # ================================================== + + def listen(self, num): + self.accepting = True + if os.name == 'nt' and num > 5: + num = 5 + return self.socket.listen(num) + + def bind(self, addr): + self.addr = addr + return self.socket.bind(addr) + + def connect(self, address): + self.connected = False + self.connecting = True + err = self.socket.connect_ex(address) + if err in (EINPROGRESS, EALREADY, EWOULDBLOCK) \ + or err == EINVAL and os.name == 'nt': + self.addr = address + return + if err in (0, EISCONN): + self.addr = address + self.handle_connect_event() + else: + raise OSError(err, errorcode[err]) + + def accept(self): + # XXX can return either an address pair or None + try: + conn, addr = self.socket.accept() + except TypeError: + return None + except OSError as why: + if why.errno in (EWOULDBLOCK, ECONNABORTED, EAGAIN): + return None + else: + raise + else: + return conn, addr + + def send(self, data): + try: + result = self.socket.send(data) + return result + except OSError as why: + if why.errno == EWOULDBLOCK: + return 0 + elif why.errno in _DISCONNECTED: + self.handle_close() + return 0 + else: + raise + + def recv(self, buffer_size): + try: + data = self.socket.recv(buffer_size) + if not data: + # a closed connection is indicated by signaling + # a read condition, and having recv() return 0. + self.handle_close() + return b'' + else: + return data + except OSError as why: + # winsock sometimes raises ENOTCONN + if why.errno in _DISCONNECTED: + self.handle_close() + return b'' + else: + raise + + def close(self): + self.connected = False + self.accepting = False + self.connecting = False + self.del_channel() + if self.socket is not None: + try: + self.socket.close() + except OSError as why: + if why.errno not in (ENOTCONN, EBADF): + raise + + # log and log_info may be overridden to provide more sophisticated + # logging and warning methods. In general, log is for 'hit' logging + # and 'log_info' is for informational, warning and error logging. + + def log(self, message): + sys.stderr.write('log: %s\n' % str(message)) + + def log_info(self, message, type='info'): + if type not in self.ignore_log_types: + print('%s: %s' % (type, message)) + + def handle_read_event(self): + if self.accepting: + # accepting sockets are never connected, they "spawn" new + # sockets that are connected + self.handle_accept() + elif not self.connected: + if self.connecting: + self.handle_connect_event() + self.handle_read() + else: + self.handle_read() + + def handle_connect_event(self): + err = self.socket.getsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_ERROR) + if err != 0: + raise OSError(err, _strerror(err)) + self.handle_connect() + self.connected = True + self.connecting = False + + def handle_write_event(self): + if self.accepting: + # Accepting sockets shouldn't get a write event. + # We will pretend it didn't happen. + return + + if not self.connected: + if self.connecting: + self.handle_connect_event() + self.handle_write() + + def handle_expt_event(self): + # handle_expt_event() is called if there might be an error on the + # socket, or if there is OOB data + # check for the error condition first + err = self.socket.getsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_ERROR) + if err != 0: + # we can get here when select.select() says that there is an + # exceptional condition on the socket + # since there is an error, we'll go ahead and close the socket + # like we would in a subclassed handle_read() that received no + # data + self.handle_close() + else: + self.handle_expt() + + def handle_error(self): + nil, t, v, tbinfo = compact_traceback() + + # sometimes a user repr method will crash. + try: + self_repr = repr(self) + except: + self_repr = '<__repr__(self) failed for object at %0x>' % id(self) + + self.log_info( + 'uncaptured python exception, closing channel %s (%s:%s %s)' % ( + self_repr, + t, + v, + tbinfo + ), + 'error' + ) + self.handle_close() + + def handle_expt(self): + self.log_info('unhandled incoming priority event', 'warning') + + def handle_read(self): + self.log_info('unhandled read event', 'warning') + + def handle_write(self): + self.log_info('unhandled write event', 'warning') + + def handle_connect(self): + self.log_info('unhandled connect event', 'warning') + + def handle_accept(self): + pair = self.accept() + if pair is not None: + self.handle_accepted(*pair) + + def handle_accepted(self, sock, addr): + sock.close() + self.log_info('unhandled accepted event', 'warning') + + def handle_close(self): + self.log_info('unhandled close event', 'warning') + self.close() + +# --------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# adds simple buffered output capability, useful for simple clients. +# [for more sophisticated usage use asynchat.async_chat] +# --------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +class dispatcher_with_send(dispatcher): + + def __init__(self, sock=None, map=None): + dispatcher.__init__(self, sock, map) + self.out_buffer = b'' + + def initiate_send(self): + num_sent = 0 + num_sent = dispatcher.send(self, self.out_buffer[:65536]) + self.out_buffer = self.out_buffer[num_sent:] + + def handle_write(self): + self.initiate_send() + + def writable(self): + return (not self.connected) or len(self.out_buffer) + + def send(self, data): + if self.debug: + self.log_info('sending %s' % repr(data)) + self.out_buffer = self.out_buffer + data + self.initiate_send() + +# --------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# used for debugging. +# --------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +def compact_traceback(): + t, v, tb = sys.exc_info() + tbinfo = [] + if not tb: # Must have a traceback + raise AssertionError("traceback does not exist") + while tb: + tbinfo.append(( + tb.tb_frame.f_code.co_filename, + tb.tb_frame.f_code.co_name, + str(tb.tb_lineno) + )) + tb = tb.tb_next + + # just to be safe + del tb + + file, function, line = tbinfo[-1] + info = ' '.join(['[%s|%s|%s]' % x for x in tbinfo]) + return (file, function, line), t, v, info + +def close_all(map=None, ignore_all=False): + if map is None: + map = socket_map + for x in list(map.values()): + try: + x.close() + except OSError as x: + if x.errno == EBADF: + pass + elif not ignore_all: + raise + except _reraised_exceptions: + raise + except: + if not ignore_all: + raise + map.clear() + +# Asynchronous File I/O: +# +# After a little research (reading man pages on various unixen, and +# digging through the linux kernel), I've determined that select() +# isn't meant for doing asynchronous file i/o. +# Heartening, though - reading linux/mm/filemap.c shows that linux +# supports asynchronous read-ahead. So _MOST_ of the time, the data +# will be sitting in memory for us already when we go to read it. +# +# What other OS's (besides NT) support async file i/o? [VMS?] +# +# Regardless, this is useful for pipes, and stdin/stdout... + +if os.name == 'posix': + class file_wrapper: + # Here we override just enough to make a file + # look like a socket for the purposes of asyncore. + # The passed fd is automatically os.dup()'d + + def __init__(self, fd): + self.fd = os.dup(fd) + + def __del__(self): + if self.fd >= 0: + warnings.warn("unclosed file %r" % self, ResourceWarning, + source=self) + self.close() + + def recv(self, *args): + return os.read(self.fd, *args) + + def send(self, *args): + return os.write(self.fd, *args) + + def getsockopt(self, level, optname, buflen=None): + if (level == socket.SOL_SOCKET and + optname == socket.SO_ERROR and + not buflen): + return 0 + raise NotImplementedError("Only asyncore specific behaviour " + "implemented.") + + read = recv + write = send + + def close(self): + if self.fd < 0: + return + fd = self.fd + self.fd = -1 + os.close(fd) + + def fileno(self): + return self.fd + + class file_dispatcher(dispatcher): + + def __init__(self, fd, map=None): + dispatcher.__init__(self, None, map) + self.connected = True + try: + fd = fd.fileno() + except AttributeError: + pass + self.set_file(fd) + # set it to non-blocking mode + os.set_blocking(fd, False) + + def set_file(self, fd): + self.socket = file_wrapper(fd) + self._fileno = self.socket.fileno() + self.add_channel() diff -Nru fail2ban-1.0.2.orig/fail2ban/server/asyncserver.py fail2ban-1.0.2/fail2ban/server/asyncserver.py --- fail2ban-1.0.2.orig/fail2ban/server/asyncserver.py 2022-11-09 16:46:15.000000000 +0100 +++ fail2ban-1.0.2/fail2ban/server/asyncserver.py 2024-04-16 20:21:29.417027263 +0200 @@ -25,8 +25,14 @@ __license__ = "GPL" from pickle import dumps, loads, HIGHEST_PROTOCOL -import asynchat -import asyncore +try: + import asynchat +except ImportError: + from ..compat import asynchat +try: + import asyncore +except ImportError: + from ..compat import asyncore import errno import fcntl import os diff -Nru fail2ban-1.0.2.orig/setup.py fail2ban-1.0.2/setup.py --- fail2ban-1.0.2.orig/setup.py 2022-11-09 16:46:15.000000000 +0100 +++ fail2ban-1.0.2/setup.py 2024-04-16 20:22:29.072318624 +0200 @@ -220,6 +220,7 @@ packages = [ 'fail2ban', 'fail2ban.client', + 'fail2ban.compat', 'fail2ban.server', ] + [ 'fail2ban.tests',