connection_tether-ppp.sh 9.4 KB

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  1. #!/bin/bash
  2. #
  3. # Copyright (c) 2019 Clementine Computing LLC.
  4. #
  5. # This file is part of PopuFare.
  6. #
  7. # PopuFare is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
  8. # it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by
  9. # the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
  10. # (at your option) any later version.
  11. #
  12. # PopuFare is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
  13. # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  14. # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
  15. # GNU Affero General Public License for more details.
  16. #
  17. # You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License
  18. # along with PopuFare. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
  19. #
  20. export BASEDIR='/home/bus/'
  21. echo "## connection_tether-ppp $BASEDIR"
  22. . $BASEDIR/bin/common_values.sh
  23. # Do this once at boot time, but do it again after a tunnel abort request...
  24. #
  25. generate_ssh_targets
  26. ssh_fail_counter=0
  27. debug_print()
  28. {
  29. echo $@
  30. }
  31. # Every once in a while pppd will report connection, and still have a ppp session open to the modem, but
  32. # the router on the other end will have croaked, or the underlying GPRS connection will be too unreliable, or
  33. # sometimes even a pppd will hang such that it needs a SIGKILL to get rid of it... This function does that
  34. # and then cleans up after the dead pppd by removing its dropfiles and locks.
  35. #
  36. force_kill_pppd()
  37. {
  38. /usr/bin/killall pppd
  39. rm -rf /var/lock/*ttyGPRS
  40. rm -rf $GPRS_DROPFILE
  41. }
  42. # This function goes and looks at the version dropfiles for packages, gathering their package names
  43. # and versions to report when we check in with the server to log that we connected, and at what firmware and
  44. # config revision.
  45. #
  46. output_versions()
  47. {
  48. for file in `ls $CHECKSUM_AND_VERSION_PATH/*.version`; do
  49. echo -n " `echo $file | sed -r 's/^.*\/(.*)\.version$/\1/'`=`cat $file`";
  50. done
  51. }
  52. # This function extracts a field from the network ID dropfile by name (also used by the checkin process)
  53. #
  54. output_net_ids_field()
  55. {
  56. field="$1"
  57. cat $NETWORK_ID_DROPFILE | grep "$field" | cut -d'=' -f2 | xargs -n1 echo -n
  58. }
  59. # This function attempts to check in with the version server and report hardware and network serial numbers
  60. # so that us sysadmin types can see each time a unit attached to the network, which unit it was, and what software
  61. # it was running at the time.
  62. #
  63. perform_post_connect_checkin()
  64. {
  65. if [ -f $SERIAL_NUM_FILE ]; then
  66. busunitnum="`cat $SERIAL_NUM_FILE 2> /dev/null`"
  67. fi
  68. equipnum="`cat $EQUIP_NUM_FILE 2> /dev/null || echo 0`"
  69. version="`output_versions`"
  70. imei="`output_net_ids_field IMEI`"
  71. imsi="`output_net_ids_field IMSI`"
  72. mac="`output_net_ids_field ETH0`"
  73. # Send these gathered data to the update daemon. The leading '#' tells the server that this is a
  74. #checkin, not an update request.
  75. echo -e "#$busunitnum\t$equipnum\t$mac\t$imei\t$imsi\t$version" | nc -q1 localhost $UPDATE_DAEMON_PORT
  76. }
  77. # This function generates the server->client port forwards to allow a sysadmin to log into any unit that is on
  78. # the network by equipment number, serial number, or bus number. The three parameters are:
  79. #
  80. # 1: The path to the file containing the identifying number
  81. # 2: The base port number on the remote server to add the identifying number to to get the server-side port that will
  82. # forward to port 22 (sshd) on the client side.
  83. # 3: An optional parameter which if present is taken as a set of command line flags to cut to apply to the contents
  84. # of the file specified by $1 to extract the numeric component (for instance, serial numbers may be in the form XYZ-1234
  85. # in which case it's really the 1234 part we're after...
  86. #
  87. generate_reverse_phonehome_component()
  88. {
  89. file="$1"
  90. base="$2"
  91. cut_cmdline="$3"
  92. #Make sure the candidate dropfile exists
  93. if [ -f "$file" ]; then
  94. if [ -n "$cut_cmdline" ]; then
  95. #Grab the desired substring
  96. num="`cat $file | cut $cut_cmdline`"
  97. else
  98. #Grab its contents
  99. num="`cat $file`";
  100. fi
  101. #Make sure those contents are indeed numeric...
  102. if (echo "$num" | egrep -q '^[0-9]+$'); then
  103. #Make sure that number is within an acceptable range so as not to overflow
  104. if [ "$num" -gt "0" -a "$num" -le "$REVERSE_PHONE_HOME_MAX_TOKEN" ]; then
  105. echo -n " -R$((base + num)):localhost:22";
  106. fi
  107. fi
  108. fi
  109. }
  110. # This function calls the above component function for each identifying number we want to do a port forward based on...
  111. #
  112. generate_reverse_phonehome_string()
  113. {
  114. #If the reverse phone home feature is disabled, return without printing any commandline args
  115. if [ "$REVERSE_PHONE_HOME" -eq "0" ]; then return; fi
  116. generate_reverse_phonehome_component $EQUIP_NUM_FILE $REVERSE_PHONE_HOME_EQNUM_BASE
  117. generate_reverse_phonehome_component $SERIAL_NUM_FILE $REVERSE_PHONE_HOME_SERIALNUM_BASE "-d- -f3"
  118. }
  119. # This function performs teardown on a dead ssh connection, and increments the ssh connect failure counter. If
  120. # that counter has reached its maximum value, we force pppd down and try a clean redial. Otherwise, we just sleep and
  121. # try again.
  122. #
  123. clean_up_after_tunnel_teardown()
  124. {
  125. #If the tunnel was intentionally aborted for the purpose of switching servers
  126. if [ -f $TUNNEL_ABORT_DROPFILE ]; then
  127. debug_print "SSH tunnel aborted, removing dropfiles..."
  128. #Remove the dropfiles...
  129. /bin/rm -f $TUNNEL_DROPFILE $SSH_TUNNEL_PIDFILE
  130. #Generate new ssh target from server config dropfiles
  131. generate_ssh_targets
  132. /bin/rm -f $TUNNEL_ABORT_DROPFILE
  133. #Reset the failure counter
  134. ssh_fail_counter=0
  135. #Sleep until it is time to try again
  136. /bin/sleep $SLEEP_AFTER_TUNNEL_ABORT
  137. else
  138. #OTHERWISE, we assume that the modem lost signal, or the router or remote server went wonky...
  139. debug_print "SSH client dead, removing dropfiles..."
  140. #Remove the dropfiles...
  141. /bin/rm -f $TUNNEL_DROPFILE $SSH_TUNNEL_PIDFILE
  142. ssh_fail_counter=$((ssh_fail_counter + 1))
  143. if [ "$ssh_fail_counter" -ge "$MAX_FAIL_HANGUP" ]; then
  144. debug_print "pppd claims to be up; tunnel failed $ssh_fail_counter times, killing pppd to force redial."
  145. force_kill_pppd
  146. fi
  147. debug_print "Sleeping before any retry attempts..."
  148. #Sleep before trying this again...
  149. /bin/sleep $SLEEP_AFTER_TUNNEL_FAILURE
  150. fi
  151. }
  152. while true; do
  153. # If our GRPS connection has died...
  154. #
  155. if [ ! -f $GPRS_DROPFILE ]; then
  156. ssh_fail_counter=0
  157. debug_print "Attempting to dial..."
  158. # Try to re-"dial" our ISP
  159. #
  160. /usr/bin/pon gprs
  161. # Give the modem a minute to do its thing...
  162. #
  163. /bin/sleep $SLEEP_AFTER_DIAL
  164. fi
  165. # If we've just been asked to abort the SSH tunnel
  166. #
  167. if [ -f $TUNNEL_ABORT_DROPFILE ]; then
  168. # Generate new ssh target from server config dropfiles
  169. #
  170. generate_ssh_targets
  171. /bin/rm -f $TUNNEL_ABORT_DROPFILE
  172. # Reset the failure counter
  173. #
  174. ssh_fail_counter=0
  175. fi
  176. # If we now have an active GPRS network connection, try and bring a tunnel up...
  177. #
  178. if [ -f $GPRS_DROPFILE ]; then
  179. # If we have no active tunnel already...
  180. #
  181. if [ ! -f $TUNNEL_DROPFILE ]; then
  182. debug_print "Attempting to establish SSH tunnel... (Attempt number $((ssh_fail_counter + 1)))"
  183. # Attempt to create our tunnel... (incliding (if REVERSE_PHONE_HOME != 0) reverse phone home support
  184. #
  185. ssh $SSH_OPTIONS -i $SSH_IDENTITY $SSH_FORWARDS `generate_reverse_phonehome_string` -p $SSH_PORT $SSH_TARGET &
  186. # Remember its PID
  187. #
  188. echo "$!" > $SSH_TUNNEL_PIDFILE
  189. # Wait a few seconds to allow SSH negotiations
  190. #
  191. /bin/sleep $SLEEP_BEFORE_TUNNEL_TEST
  192. debug_print -n "Testing our new tunnel..."
  193. # Test to see if our tunnel is really up...
  194. #
  195. if [ "`nc localhost $HELLO_DAEMON_PORT < /dev/null`" = $HELLO_DAEMON_MESSAGE ]; then
  196. debug_print " It works."
  197. ssh_fail_counter=0
  198. debug_print "Checking in with server to report net IDs and package versions... "
  199. perform_post_connect_checkin
  200. debug_print "Touching dropfile and waiting for SSH to terminate..."
  201. # Touch our dropfile indicating the tunnel is up...
  202. #
  203. /bin/touch $TUNNEL_DROPFILE
  204. # and wait for the the SSH client process to end
  205. #
  206. wait `cat $SSH_TUNNEL_PIDFILE`
  207. # Clean Up...
  208. #
  209. clean_up_after_tunnel_teardown
  210. else
  211. debug_print " No luck..."
  212. debug_print "Issuing kill to SSH client...."
  213. # Kill the defunct and/or too slow to use SSH client
  214. #
  215. /bin/kill `cat $SSH_TUNNEL_PIDFILE`
  216. # Wait for the process to terminate
  217. #
  218. wait `cat $SSH_TUNNEL_PIDFILE`
  219. # Clean Up...
  220. #
  221. clean_up_after_tunnel_teardown
  222. fi
  223. else
  224. # This means we _think_ we have an SSH tunnel, but it's not one we set up...
  225. #
  226. debug_print -n "We seem to already have a pre-existing tunnel... Monitoring it."
  227. # Loop and periodically test this tunnel... When this condition fails, we're done...
  228. #
  229. while [ "`nc localhost $HELLO_DAEMON_PORT < /dev/null`" = $HELLO_DAEMON_MESSAGE ]; do
  230. # Sleep for a while before testing this tunnel again...
  231. #
  232. /bin/sleep $SLEEP_MONITORING_TUNNEL
  233. done
  234. # Clean Up...
  235. #
  236. clean_up_after_tunnel_teardown
  237. fi
  238. else
  239. # If we don't have an active GPRS session, that means we just failed at dialing
  240. #
  241. debug_print "Dialing failed... Sleeping"
  242. /bin/sleep $SLEEP_BETWEEN_REDIALS
  243. fi
  244. done