Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Justin T. Gibbs
f4390542d7 Kerberos can now deal with multi-homed clients.
Kerberos obtains a network address for the local host from the routing
tables and uses it consistently for all Kerberos transactions.  This ensures
that packets only leave the *authenticated* interface.  Clients who open
and use their own sockets for encrypted or authenticated correspondance
to kerberos services should bind their sockets to the same address as that
used by kerberos.  krb_get_local_addr() and krb_bind_local_addr() allow
clients to obtain the local address or bind a socket to the local address
used by Kerberos respectively.

Reviewed by: Mark Murray <markm>, Garrett Wollman <wollman>
Obtained from: concept by Dieter Dworkin Muller <dworkin@village.org>
1995-10-05 21:30:21 +00:00
Rodney W. Grimes
7799f52a32 Remove trailing whitespace. 1995-05-30 06:41:30 +00:00
Garrett Wollman
cde665121e Fix Sharnoff complain bin/136 (-e flag doesn't work). 1995-01-14 20:36:22 +00:00
Garrett Wollman
a38c3127e1 Add distribution=krb for P-HK 1994-11-20 23:23:28 +00:00
Geoff Rehmet
c368d11dd2 First level of changes for bringing in eBones (kerberos).
- Get rid of inverse logic (NOKERBEROS and NOEBONES) in src/makefile,
and replace with MAKE_KERBEROS and MAKE_EBONES.  (Far fewer contortions,
and both default to off.)  IF YOU WANT KERBEROS, YOU HAVE TO EXPLICITLY
DEFINE ONE OF THESE.
- Make Makefiles kerberos-aware.
1994-09-29 13:06:54 +00:00
Doug Rabson
ab1698b3e9 Move the call to des_set_key to after the kerberos initialisation, removing
assumption about the implementation of des_read/des_write.
1994-09-26 09:22:08 +00:00
Garrett Wollman
348be7d6d5 Don't use kerberos yet, we aren't ready for it. 1994-08-05 20:40:56 +00:00
Rodney W. Grimes
9b50d90275 BSD 4.4 Lite Usr.bin Sources 1994-05-27 12:33:43 +00:00