freebsd-skq/lib/libc/rpc/rpc_secure.3
bde 5fe4e36282 Fixed wrong prototypes. Most of the prototypes had missing return types,
or missing const's or `short *' instead of `[ug]id_t *' in argument types.
1998-01-16 13:33:09 +00:00

239 lines
5.8 KiB
Groff

.\" @(#)rpc_secure.3n 2.1 88/08/08 4.0 RPCSRC; from 1.19 88/06/24 SMI
.\" $Id: rpc_secure.3,v 1.2 1998/01/05 07:12:16 charnier Exp $
.Dd February 16, 1988
.Dt RPC 3
.Sh NAME
.Nm rpc_secure
.Nd library routines for secure remote procedure calls
.Sh SYNOPSIS
.Fd #include <rpc/rpc.h>
.Ft AUTH *
.Fo authdes_create
.Fa "char *name"
.Fa "unsigned window"
.Fa "struct sockaddr *addr"
.Fa "des_block *ckey"
.Fc
.Ft int
.Fn authdes_getucred "struct authdes_cred *adc" "uid_t *uid" "gid_t *gid" "int *grouplen" "gid_t *groups"
.Ft int
.Fn getnetname "char *name"
.Ft int
.Fn host2netname "char *name" "char *host" "char *domain"
.Ft int
.Fn key_decryptsession "const char *remotename" "des_block *deskey"
.Ft int
.Fn key_encryptsession "const char *remotename" "des_block *deskey"
.Ft int
.Fn key_gendes "des_block *deskey"
.Ft int
.Fn key_setsecret "const char *key"
.Ft int
.Fn netname2host "char *name" "char *host" "int hostlen"
.Ft int
.Fn netname2user "char *name" "uid_t *uidp" "gid_t *gidp" "int *gidlenp" "gid_t *gidlist"
.Ft int
.Fn user2netname "char *name" "uid_t uid" "char *domain"
.Sh DESCRIPTION
These routines are part of the
.Tn RPC
library. They implement
.Tn DES
Authentication. See
.Xr rpc 3
for further details about
.Tn RPC .
.Pp
The
.Fn authdes_create
is the first of two routines which interface to the
.Tn RPC
secure authentication system, known as
.Tn DES
authentication.
The second is
.Fn authdes_getucred ,
below.
.Pp
Note: the keyserver daemon
.Xr keyserv 8
must be running for the
.Tn DES
authentication system to work.
.Pp
.Fn Authdes_create ,
used on the client side, returns an authentication handle that
will enable the use of the secure authentication system.
The first parameter
.Fa name
is the network name, or
.Fa netname ,
of the owner of the server process. This field usually
represents a
.Fa hostname
derived from the utility routine
.Fn host2netname ,
but could also represent a user name using
.Fn user2netname .
The second field is window on the validity of
the client credential, given in seconds. A small
window is more secure than a large one, but choosing
too small of a window will increase the frequency of
resynchronizations because of clock drift. The third
parameter
.Fa addr
is optional. If it is
.Dv NULL ,
then the authentication system will assume
that the local clock is always in sync with the server's
clock, and will not attempt resynchronizations. If an address
is supplied, however, then the system will use the address
for consulting the remote time service whenever
resynchronization
is required. This parameter is usually the
address of the
.Tn RPC
server itself. The final parameter
.Fa ckey
is also optional. If it is
.Dv NULL ,
then the authentication system will
generate a random
.Tn DES
key to be used for the encryption of credentials.
If it is supplied, however, then it will be used instead.
.Pp
.Fn Authdes_getucred ,
the second of the two
.Tn DES
authentication routines,
is used on the server side for converting a
.Tn DES
credential, which is
operating system independent, into a
.Ux
credential. This routine differs from utility routine
.Fn netname2user
in that
.Fn authdes_getucred
pulls its information from a cache, and does not have to do a
Yellow Pages lookup every time it is called to get its information.
.Pp
.Fn Getnetname
installs the unique, operating-system independent netname of
the
caller in the fixed-length array
.Fa name .
Returns
.Dv TRUE
if it succeeds and
.Dv FALSE
if it fails.
.Pp
.Fn Host2netname
converts from a domain-specific hostname to an
operating-system independent netname. Returns
.Dv TRUE
if it succeeds and
.Dv FALSE
if it fails. Inverse of
.Fn netname2host .
.Pp
.Fn Key_decryptsession
is an interface to the keyserver daemon, which is associated
with
.Tn RPC Ns 's
secure authentication system (
.Tn DES
authentication).
User programs rarely need to call it, or its associated routines
.Fn key_encryptsession ,
.Fn key_gendes
and
.Fn key_setsecret .
System commands such as
.Xr login 1
and the
.Tn RPC
library are the main clients of these four routines.
.Pp
.Fn Key_decryptsession
takes a server netname and a
.Tn DES
key, and decrypts the key by
using the the public key of the the server and the secret key
associated with the effective uid of the calling process. It
is the inverse of
.Fn key_encryptsession .
.Pp
.Fn Key_encryptsession
is a keyserver interface routine. It
takes a server netname and a des key, and encrypts
it using the public key of the the server and the secret key
associated with the effective uid of the calling process. It
is the inverse of
.Fn key_decryptsession .
.Pp
.Fn Key_gendes
is a keyserver interface routine. It
is used to ask the keyserver for a secure conversation key.
Choosing one
.Qq random
is usually not good enough,
because
the common ways of choosing random numbers, such as using the
current time, are very easy to guess.
.Pp
.Fn Key_setsecret
is a keyserver interface routine. It is used to set the key for
the effective
.Fa uid
of the calling process.
.Pp
.Fn Netname2host
converts from an operating-system independent netname to a
domain-specific hostname. Returns
.Dv TRUE
if it succeeds and
.Dv FALSE
if it fails. Inverse of
.Fn host2netname .
.Pp
.Fn Netname2user
converts from an operating-system independent netname to a
domain-specific user ID.
Returns
.Dv TRUE
if it succeeds and
.Dv FALSE
if it fails. Inverse of
.Fn user2netname .
.Pp
.Fn User2netname
converts from a domain-specific username to an operating-system
independent netname. Returns
.Dv TRUE
if it succeeds and
.Dv FALSE
if it fails. Inverse of
.Fn netname2user .
.Sh SEE ALSO
.Xr rpc 3 ,
.Xr xdr 3 ,
.Xr keyserv 8
.Pp
The following manuals:
.Rs
.%B Remote Procedure Calls: Protocol Specification
.Re
.Rs
.%B Remote Procedure Call Programming Guide
.Re
.Rs
.%B Rpcgen Programming Guide
.Re
.Rs
.%B RPC: Remote Procedure Call Protocol Specification
.%O RFC1050, Sun Microsystems Inc., USC-ISI
.Re