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>
compile
1) remove rubbish no longer needed
2) correct existing Makefiles
3) add new makefiles where needed
4) correct code, header files and man pages where necessary
PLEASE NOTE - after this you will need to make install in eBones/include,
and mamake obj depend all install in eBones/lib before doing a
make obj depend all install in eBones/. (I am going 6to fix src/Makefile
next)
PS - I hate slow international links - apologies for all the typos
- Get all functions prototyped or at least defined before use.
- Make code compile (Mostly) clean with -Wall set
- Start to reduce the degree to which DES aka libdes is built in.
- get all functions to the same uniform standard of definition:
int
foo(a, b)
int a;
int *b;
{
:
}
- fix numerous bugs exposed by above processes.
Note - this replaces the previous work which used an unpopular function
definition style.
These are the start of a lot of work to clean up the FreeBSD eBones code.
these changes include, but are not limited to:
- Create prototypes for all the library routines
- Make all the libraries compile clean with -Wall set
- Fix numerous small bugs shown up in the above process
- Prepare the code for libdes's removal to secure/
- add register, registerd and make_keypair to the make
Lots more will follow in days to come.
OK'ed by: rgrimes
kerberos databases to slave servers.
NOTE: This method was abandoned by MIT long ago, this code is close to
garbage, but it is slightly more secure than using rdist.
There is no documentation available on how to use it, and
it should -not- be built by default.
Obtained from: MIT Project Athena