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vlmcsd/config.h

584 lines
16 KiB
C

#ifndef CONFIG_H_
#define CONFIG_H_
/* Don't change anything ABOVE this line */
/*
* As a best practice do not change the original config.h as distributed with vlmcsd.
* Instead make a copy, e.g. myconfig.h, customize it and type 'make CONFIG=myconfig.h'
* to build vlmcsd. This prevents your copy being overwritten when you upgrade to a
* new version.
*/
/*
* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Useful customizations. These options are mandatory. You cannot comment them out.
* Feel free to change them to fit your needs.
* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#ifndef VERSION
/*
* Define your own version identifier here, e.g. '#define VERSION "my vlmcsd based on svn560"'
*/
#define VERSION "private build"
#endif // VERSION
/*
* Define default ePIDs and HWID here. Preferrably grab ePIDs and HWID
* from a real KMS server.
*/
#ifndef EPID_WINDOWS
#define EPID_WINDOWS "06401-00206-271-298329-03-1033-9600.0000-0452015"
#endif
#ifndef EPID_OFFICE2010
#define EPID_OFFICE2010 "06401-00096-199-198322-03-1033-9600.0000-0452015"
#endif
#ifndef EPID_OFFICE2013
#define EPID_OFFICE2013 "06401-00206-234-398213-03-1033-9600.0000-0452015"
#endif
#ifndef HWID // HwId from the Ratiborus VM
#define HWID 0x36, 0x4F, 0x46, 0x3A, 0x88, 0x63, 0xD3, 0x5F
#endif
/*
* Anything below this line is optional. If you want to use any of these options
* uncomment one or more lines starting with "//#define"
*/
/*
* -------------------------------
* Defaults
* -------------------------------
*/
#ifndef INI_FILE
/*
* Uncomment and customize the following line if you want vlmcsd to look for an ini file
* at a default location
*/
//#define INI_FILE "/etc/vlmcsd.ini"
#endif // INI_FILE
/*
* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Troubleshooting options. Please note that disabling features may also help troubleshooting.
* If you have an old OS that does not support features like pthreads, shared memory or
* semaphores, uncomment "#define NO_LIMIT" and "#define NO_SIGHUP" and leave "#define USE_THREADS"
* commented out.
* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#ifndef CHILD_HANDLER
/*
* Uncomment the following #define if you are compiling for a platform that does
* not correctly handle the SA_NOCLDWAIT flag when ignoring SIGCHLD, i.e. forked
* processes remain as "zombies" after dying. This option will add a SIGCHLD handler that
* "waits" for a child that has terminated. This is only required for a few
* unixoid OSses.
*/
//#define CHILD_HANDLER
#endif // CHILD_HANDLER
#ifndef NO_TIMEOUT
/*
* Uncomment the following #define if you are compiling for a platform that does
* not support custom socket send or receive timeouts.
*/
//#define NO_TIMEOUT
#endif // NO_TIMEOUT
#ifndef NO_DNS
/*
* Uncomment the following #define if you have trouble with accessing routines
* from libresolv. If enabled, vlmcs will be compiled without support for
* detecting KMS servers via DNS.
*/
//#define NO_DNS
#endif // NO_DNS
#ifndef TERMINAL_FIXED_WIDTH
/*
* Uncomment the following #define and optionally change its value if you are compiling for
* a platform that cannot properly determine the width of a terminal/command prompt.
* This affects the output of "vlmcsd -x" only. It should be rarely necessary to use this.
*/
//#define TERMINAL_FIXED_WIDTH 80
#endif // TERMINAL_FIXED_WIDTH
#ifndef _PEDANTIC
/*
* Uncomment the following #define if you want to do vlmcs and vlmcsd more checks on the data
* it receives over the network. They are normally not necessary but may provide useful if
* you are testing any KMS server or client emulator that may send malformed KMS packets.
*/
//#define _PEDANTIC
#endif // _PEDANTIC
#ifndef NO_PROCFS
/*
* Cygwin, Linux, Android, NetBSD, DragonflyBSD:
* Do not rely on a properly mounted proc filesystem and use the less reliable
* argv[0] to determine the program's executable name when restarting vlmcsd
* by sending a SIGHUP signal. Use only if absolutely necessary (very old versions
* of these OSses).
*
* FreeBSD:
* Do not use sysctl and but the less reliable
* argv[0] to determine the program's executable name when restarting vlmcsd
* by sending a SIGHUP signal. Use only if absolutely necessary (very old FreeBSD).
*
* OpenBSD:
* This option has no effect since OpenBSD always must use the less reliable argv[0].
*
* Mac OS X, Solaris:
* This option is not neccessary (and has no effect) since these OSses provide
* a reliable way to determine the executable name.
*
* Windows:
* This option is not used because Windows doesn't support signals.
*/
//#define NO_PROCFS
#endif // NO_PROCFS
#ifndef USE_AUXV
/*
* Linux only:
* Use the process' ELF aux vector to determine the executable name when restarting
* vlmcsd by sending a SIGHUP signal. This is actually the best method but is supported
* only with
* * the musl library
* * the glbic library 2.16 or newer
*
* It does NOT work with uclibc (most routers and other small devices) and glibc < 2.16.
* Use it only if your system supports it and you do not plan to use the binary on older systems.
* It won't work on debian 7 or Red Hat 6.x.
*
* It it safe to try this by yourself. vlmcsd won't compile if your system doesn't support it.
*/
//#define USE_AUXV
#endif // USE_AUXV
#ifndef _OPENSSL_NO_HMAC
/*
* If you configured vlmcsd to use OpenSSL (which you shouldn't) you may use this option
* to calculate the KMSv6 HMAC with internal code instead of using OpenSSL.
*
* This may be necessary for some embedded devices that have OpenSSL without HMAC support.
*/
//#define _OPENSSL_NO_HMAC
#endif // _OPENSSL_NO_HMAC
/*
* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Modes of operation
* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#ifndef USE_THREADS
/*
* Do not use fork() but threads to serve your clients.
*
* Unix-like operarting systems:
* You may use this or not. Entirely your choice. Threads do not require explicitly allocating
* a shared memory segment which might be a problem on some systems. Using fork() is more robust
* although the threaded version of vlmcsd is rock solid too.
*
* Some older unixoid OSses may not have pthreads. Do NOT use USE_THREADS and define NO_SIGHUP
* and NO_LIMIT instead to disable use of the pthreads, shared memory and semaphores.
*
* Cygwin:
* It is recommended to use threads since fork() is extremely slow (no copy on write) and somewhat
* unstable.
*
* Windows:
* This option has no effect since fork() is not supported.
*/
//#define USE_THREADS
#endif // USE_THREADS
#ifndef _CRYPTO_POLARSSL
/*
* Not available on native Windows. Can be used with Cygwin.
*
* Use PolarSSL for crypto routines if possible and if it is safe. There is not much benefit by using this
* options since it can be used for SHA256 and HMAC_SHA256 only. It cannot be used for AES calculations because
* KMSv6 uses a modified algorithm that PolarSSL does not support. KMSv4 CMAC is also unsupported since it uses
* a Rijndael keysize (160 bits) that is not part of the AES standard.
*
* It is strongly recommended not to use an external crypto library.
*
* Do not define both _CRYPTO_OPENSSL and _CRYPTO_POLARSSL
*/
//#define _CRYPTO_POLARSSL
#endif // _CRYPTO_POLARSSL
#ifndef _CRYPTO_OPENSSL
/*
* Not available on native Windows. Can be used with Cygwin.
*
* Use OpenSSL for crypto routines if possible and if it is safe. There is not much benefit by using this
* options since it can be used for SHA256 and HMAC_SHA256 only. It cannot be used for AES calculations because
* KMSv6 uses a modified algorithm that OpenSSL does not support. KMSv4 CMAC is also unsupported since it uses
* a Rijndael keysize (160 bits) that is not part of the AES standard.
*
* It is strongly recommended not to use an external crypto library.
*
* Do not define both _CRYPTO_OPENSSL and _CRYPTO_POLARSSL
*/
//#define _CRYPTO_OPENSSL
#endif // _CRYPTO_OPENSSL
#ifndef _USE_AES_FROM_OPENSSL
/*
* DANGEROUS: Tweak OpenSSL to perform KMSv4 CMAC and KMSv6 modified AES. This option creates the expanded
* AES key by itself and then applies modifications to it. OpenSSL will then perfom modified AES operations.
*
* This options tampers with internal structures of OpenSSL that are subject to change or may have a platform
* specific implementation. In this case your resulting binary can only perform KMSv5 operations.
*
* This option has no effect if _CRYPTO_OPENSSL is not defined.
*
* Don't use this except for your own research on the internals of OpenSSL.
*/
//#define _USE_AES_FROM_OPENSSL
#endif // _USE_AES_FROM_OPENSSL
#ifndef _OPENSSL_SOFTWARE
/*
* Use this only if you have defined _CRYPTO_OPENSSL and _USE_AES_FROM_OPENSSL. It has no effect otherwise.
*
* This options assumes a different internal AES expanded key in OpenSSL which is used mostly if OpenSSL is
* compiled without support for hardware accelerated AES. It's worth a try if _USE_AES_FROM_OPENSSL doesn't work.
*/
//#define _OPENSSL_SOFTWARE
#endif // _OPENSSL_SOFTWARE
/*
* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Extra features not compiled by default because they are rarely needed
* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#ifndef INCLUDE_BETAS
/*
* Uncomment the following #define if you want obsolete beta/preview SKUs
* to be included in the extended product list.
*/
//#define INCLUDE_BETAS
#endif
/*
* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Removal of features. Allows you to remove features of vlmcsd you do not need or want.
* Use it to get smaller binaries. This is especially useful on very small embedded devices.
* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#ifndef NO_EXTENDED_PRODUCT_LIST
/*
* Do not compile the extended product list. Removes the list of Activation GUIDs (aka
* Client SKU Id, License Id) and their respective product names (e.g. Windows 8.1 Enterprise).
*
* This affects logging only and does not have an effect on activation itself. As long as you
* do not also define NO_BASIC_PRODUCT_LIST more generic names like Windows 8.1 or Office 2013
* will still be logged. Saves a lot of space without loosing much functionality.
*
*/
//#define NO_EXTENDED_PRODUCT_LIST
#endif // NO_EXTENDED_PRODUCT_LIST
#ifndef NO_BASIC_PRODUCT_LIST
/*
* Do not compile the basic product list. Removes the list KMS GUIDs (aka Server SKU Id) and their
* respective product names. Only affects logging not activation. This has a negative impact only
* if you activate a product that is not (yet) in the extended product list. On the other hand you
* do not save much space by not compiling this list.
*/
//#define NO_BASIC_PRODUCT_LIST
#endif // NO_BASIC_PRODUCT_LIST
#ifndef NO_VERBOSE_LOG
/*
* Removes the ability to do verbose logging and disables -v and -q in vlmcsd. It does not remove the -v
* option in the vlmcs client. Disables ini file directive LogVerbose.
*/
//#define NO_VERBOSE_LOG
#endif // NO_VERBOSE_LOG
#ifndef NO_LOG
/*
* Disables logging completely. You can neither log to a file nor to the console. -D and -f will
* start vlmcsd in foreground. -e will not be available. Disables ini file directive LogFile.
* Implies NO_VERBOSE_LOG, NO_EXTENDED_PRODUCT_LIST and NO_BASIC_PRODUCT_LIST.
*/
//#define NO_LOG
#endif // NO_LOG
#ifndef NO_RANDOM_EPID
/*
* Disables the ability to generate random ePIDs. Useful if you managed to grab ePID/HWID from a
* real KMS server and want to use these. Removes -r from the vlmcsd command line and the ini
* file directive RandomizationLevel (The randomization level will be harcoded to 0).
*/
//#define NO_RANDOM_EPID
#endif // NO_RANDOM_EPID
#ifndef NO_INI_FILE
/*
* Disables the ability to use a configuration file (aka ini file). Removes -i from the command line.
*/
//#define NO_INI_FILE
#endif // NO_INI_FILE
#ifndef NO_PID_FILE
/*
* Disables the abilty to write a pid file containing the process id of vlmcsd. If your init system
* does not need this feature, you can safely disables this but it won't save much space. Disables
* the use of -p from the command line and PidFile from the ini file.
*/
//#define NO_PID_FILE
#endif // NO_PID_FILE
#ifndef NO_USER_SWITCH
/*
* Disables switching to another uid and/or gid after starting the program and setting up the sockets.
* You cannot use -u anf -g on the command line as well as User and Group in the ini file. If your init system
* supports starting daemons as another uid/gid (user/group) you can disable this feature in vlmcsd as long as you
* do not need to run vlmcsd on a privileged port ( < 1024 on most systems).
*
* This setting has no effect on native Windows since -u and -g is not available anyway. It may be used with
* Cygwin.
*/
//#define NO_USER_SWITCH
#endif // NO_USER_SWITCH
#ifndef NO_HELP
/*
* Disables display of help in both vlmcsd and vlmcs. Saves some bytes but only makes sense if you have
* access to the man files vlmcsd.8 and vlmcs.1
*/
//#define NO_HELP
#endif // NO_HELP
#ifndef NO_CUSTOM_INTERVALS
/*
* Disables the ability to specify custom interval for renewing and retrying activation. Newer versions of the Microsoft's
* KMS activation client (as in Win 8.1) do not honor these parameters anyway. Disable them to save some bytes. Removes
* -A and -R from the command line as well as ActivationInterval and RenewalInterval in the ini file.
*/
//#define NO_CUSTOM_INTERVALS
#endif // NO_CUSTOM_INTERVALS
#ifndef NO_SOCKETS
/*
* Disables standalone startup of vlmcsd. If you use this config directive, you must start vlmcsd from an internet
* superserver like inetd, xinetd, systemd or launchd. Disables -m, -t, -4, -6, -e, -f, -P and -L in the vlmcsd
* command line. Socket setup is the job of your superserver.
*/
//#define NO_SOCKETS
#endif // NO_SOCKETS
#ifndef NO_CL_PIDS
/*
* Disables the ability to specify ePIDs and HWID at the command line. You still may use them in the ini file.
* Removes -0, -3, -w and -H from the vlmcsd command line.
*/
//#define NO_CL_PIDS
#endif // NO_CL_PIDS
#ifndef NO_LIMIT
/*
* Disables the ability to limit the number of worker threads or processes that vlmcsd uses. While you should set a
* limit whenever possible, you may save some bytes by enabling that setting. If you do not use a limit, use vlmcsd
* in a "friendly" environment only, i.e. do not run it without a reasonable limit on the internet.
*
* Removes the ability to use -m in the vlmcsd command line and MaxWorkers in the ini file.
*
* Some older unixoid OSses may not have pthreads. Do NOT use USE_THREADS and define NO_SIGHUP
* and NO_LIMIT instead to disable use of the pthreads, shared memory and semaphores.
*/
//#define NO_LIMIT
#endif // NO_LIMIT
#ifndef NO_SIGHUP
/*
* Disables the ability to signal hangup (SIGHUP) to vlmcsd to restart it (rereading the ini file). The SIGHUP
* handler makes heavy use of OS specific code. It should not cause any trouble on Solaris, Mac OS X and iOS. On Linux
* use "#define USE_AUXV" (see troubleshooting options) if this is supported by your C runtime library.
*
* You may save some bytes by enabling this option. Use it also if the SIGHUP handler causes any trouble on your
* platform. Please note that with no SIGHUP handler at all. vlmcsd will simply terminate (uncleanly) if it receives
* the SIGHUP signal. This is the same behavior as with most other signals.
*
* This option has no effect on native Windows since Posix signaling is not supported. It can be used with Cygwin.
*/
//#define NO_SIGHUP
#endif // NO_SIGHUP
/* Don't change anything BELOW this line */
#endif /* CONFIG_H_ */