bugzilla-daemon at netfilter.org
2023-Dec-05 10:09 UTC
[Bug 1726] New: invalid json generated by ipset list -output json
https://bugzilla.netfilter.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1726 Bug ID: 1726 Summary: invalid json generated by ipset list -output json Product: ipset Version: unspecified Hardware: x86_64 OS: Debian GNU/Linux Status: NEW Severity: trivial Priority: P5 Component: default Assignee: netfilter-buglog at lists.netfilter.org Reporter: mark at glines.org I tried to use the -output json parameter with ipset list, and found that it does not emit valid json. This is true in both the Debian Trixie package, version 7.19-1, as well as a fresh ipset build from today's git. I can see two problems with the output: 1. the "initval" field is emitted as hex, which is not a part of the json syntax [1]. 2. in combination with '-name', it seems to be printing key:value pairs in an array, not a map. I set up a test ipset as follows: --- root at gir:~# ipset list root at gir:~# ipset new test hash:ip root at gir:~# ipset add test 1.2.3.4 root at gir:~# ipset list --output json [ { "name" : "test", "type" : "hash:ip", "revision" : 6, "header" : { "family" : "inet", "hashsize" : 1024, "maxelem" : 65536, "bucketsize" : 12, "initval" : 0xdcadf93b, --- This is the point where parsing fails. The "0x" prefix is not part of the JSON grammar [1]. Popular JSON parsers fail on this: --- root at gir:~# ipset list -output json | jq . jq: parse error: Invalid numeric literal at line 11, column 29 --- It is strange that the JSON spec allows hex literals for unicode characters within strings, but not 0x-prefixes in numbers. But it is what it is. I think that this could be resolved by emitting the value as a decimal (%d), or as a quoted string. When combined with the -name parameter, I see: --- root at gir:~# ipset list -output json -name [ "name" : "test" ] --- The problem with this is that key:value pairs are valid in a map/object (curly braces), but not an array (square braces). Popular JSON parsers fail on this: --- root at gir:~# ipset list -output json -name | jq . jq: parse error: ':' not as part of an object at line 2, column 8 --- This output looks even more odd when multiple ipsets are present. --- root at gir:~# ipset new test2 hash:ip root at gir:~# ipset list -output json -name [ "name" : "test" "name" : "test2" ] --- If the outer braces were curly, then this would have multiple instances of the same key at the same level. It's also missing a comma separator. I think the best way to solve this would be to put curly braces around each name, like this: --- [ { "name" : "test" }, { "name" : "test2" } ] --- [1]: https://ecma-international.org/wp-content/uploads/ECMA-404_2nd_edition_december_2017.pdf Figure 4 and surrounding text -- You are receiving this mail because: You are watching all bug changes. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.netfilter.org/pipermail/netfilter-buglog/attachments/20231205/969443c6/attachment.html>
bugzilla-daemon at netfilter.org
2023-Dec-05 10:36 UTC
[Bug 1726] invalid json generated by ipset list -output json
https://bugzilla.netfilter.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1726 --- Comment #1 from mark at glines.org --- Created attachment 732 --> https://bugzilla.netfilter.org/attachment.cgi?id=732&action=edit Fix ipset list -output json -name This fixes -output json -name. Adds curly braces. Adds a static flag to keep track of whether a comma is necessary. This is very similar to how list_create() handles it, in the non-"-name" case. Output before: --- % sudo src/ipset list -output json -name [ "name" : "blocklist.de.ipv4" "name" : "blocklist.de.ipv6" ] --- Output after: --- sudo src/ipset list -output json -name [ { "name" : "blocklist.de.ipv4" }, { "name" : "blocklist.de.ipv6" } ] --- While testing this, I added an "else" to solve a logic problem. It wants to do one thing for xml, another thing for json, and a third thing for plain text. But because of the missing "else", xml output contains both xml and plaintext. Like this: --- % sudo src/ipset list -output xml -name <ipsets> <ipset name="blocklist.de.ipv4"/> blocklist.de.ipv4 <ipset name="blocklist.de.ipv6"/> blocklist.de.ipv6 </ipsets> --- The added "else" resolves that. --- % sudo src/ipset list -output xml -name <ipsets> <ipset name="blocklist.de.ipv4"/> <ipset name="blocklist.de.ipv6"/> </ipsets> --- -- You are receiving this mail because: You are watching all bug changes. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.netfilter.org/pipermail/netfilter-buglog/attachments/20231205/bb2d32d6/attachment.html>
bugzilla-daemon at netfilter.org
2023-Dec-05 10:41 UTC
[Bug 1726] invalid json generated by ipset list -output json
https://bugzilla.netfilter.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1726 --- Comment #2 from mark at glines.org --- I don't have a patch for the first problem (initval printed as hex). It seems to be caused by the way ipset_args[] works, calling ipset_print_hexnumber() unconditionally. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are watching all bug changes. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.netfilter.org/pipermail/netfilter-buglog/attachments/20231205/35584828/attachment.html>
bugzilla-daemon at netfilter.org
2023-Dec-12 08:36 UTC
[Bug 1726] invalid json generated by ipset list -output json
https://bugzilla.netfilter.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1726 Jozsef Kadlecsik <kadlec at netfilter.org> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Status|NEW |RESOLVED CC| |kadlec at netfilter.org Resolution|--- |FIXED --- Comment #3 from Jozsef Kadlecsik <kadlec at netfilter.org> --- I applied your patch to fix the json listing of the -name output. Also, fixed the printing of hex numbers as quoted strings. Both patches are available from the ipset git tree at https://git.netfilter.org/ipset/ and there'll be a new ipset release in a few days. Thanks for the reporting and the patch, Jozsef -- You are receiving this mail because: You are watching all bug changes. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.netfilter.org/pipermail/netfilter-buglog/attachments/20231212/7870c20c/attachment.html>
Seemingly Similar Threads
- [Bug 773] New: iptables performance limits on # of rules using ipset
- [Bug 719] New: ipset restore fails randomly
- [Bug 880] New: ipset doesn't refresh the timeout for an existing entry when the table is FULL.
- [Bug 1719] New: ipset wrongly blocking undefined ranges and not blocking ranges that are defined
- [Bug 838] New: ipset add foo syslog fails for bitmap:port