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authorDavid Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>2013-09-24 10:35:19 +0100
committerDavid Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>2013-09-24 10:35:19 +0100
commitf36f8c75ae2e7d4da34f4c908cebdb4aa42c977e (patch)
tree09d5dd4ffe2e8cc499f97b0fc3895b7e3f35ccbf /security/keys/sysctl.c
parentab3c3587f8cda9083209a61dbe3a4407d3cada10 (diff)
KEYS: Add per-user_namespace registers for persistent per-UID kerberos caches
Add support for per-user_namespace registers of persistent per-UID kerberos caches held within the kernel. This allows the kerberos cache to be retained beyond the life of all a user's processes so that the user's cron jobs can work. The kerberos cache is envisioned as a keyring/key tree looking something like: struct user_namespace \___ .krb_cache keyring - The register \___ _krb.0 keyring - Root's Kerberos cache \___ _krb.5000 keyring - User 5000's Kerberos cache \___ _krb.5001 keyring - User 5001's Kerberos cache \___ tkt785 big_key - A ccache blob \___ tkt12345 big_key - Another ccache blob Or possibly: struct user_namespace \___ .krb_cache keyring - The register \___ _krb.0 keyring - Root's Kerberos cache \___ _krb.5000 keyring - User 5000's Kerberos cache \___ _krb.5001 keyring - User 5001's Kerberos cache \___ tkt785 keyring - A ccache \___ krbtgt/REDHAT.COM@REDHAT.COM big_key \___ http/REDHAT.COM@REDHAT.COM user \___ afs/REDHAT.COM@REDHAT.COM user \___ nfs/REDHAT.COM@REDHAT.COM user \___ krbtgt/KERNEL.ORG@KERNEL.ORG big_key \___ http/KERNEL.ORG@KERNEL.ORG big_key What goes into a particular Kerberos cache is entirely up to userspace. Kernel support is limited to giving you the Kerberos cache keyring that you want. The user asks for their Kerberos cache by: krb_cache = keyctl_get_krbcache(uid, dest_keyring); The uid is -1 or the user's own UID for the user's own cache or the uid of some other user's cache (requires CAP_SETUID). This permits rpc.gssd or whatever to mess with the cache. The cache returned is a keyring named "_krb.<uid>" that the possessor can read, search, clear, invalidate, unlink from and add links to. Active LSMs get a chance to rule on whether the caller is permitted to make a link. Each uid's cache keyring is created when it first accessed and is given a timeout that is extended each time this function is called so that the keyring goes away after a while. The timeout is configurable by sysctl but defaults to three days. Each user_namespace struct gets a lazily-created keyring that serves as the register. The cache keyrings are added to it. This means that standard key search and garbage collection facilities are available. The user_namespace struct's register goes away when it does and anything left in it is then automatically gc'd. Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> Tested-by: Simo Sorce <simo@redhat.com> cc: Serge E. Hallyn <serge.hallyn@ubuntu.com> cc: Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'security/keys/sysctl.c')
-rw-r--r--security/keys/sysctl.c11
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/security/keys/sysctl.c b/security/keys/sysctl.c
index ee32d181764a..8c0af08760c8 100644
--- a/security/keys/sysctl.c
+++ b/security/keys/sysctl.c
@@ -61,5 +61,16 @@ ctl_table key_sysctls[] = {
.extra1 = (void *) &zero,
.extra2 = (void *) &max,
},
+#ifdef CONFIG_PERSISTENT_KEYRINGS
+ {
+ .procname = "persistent_keyring_expiry",
+ .data = &persistent_keyring_expiry,
+ .maxlen = sizeof(unsigned),
+ .mode = 0644,
+ .proc_handler = proc_dointvec_minmax,
+ .extra1 = (void *) &zero,
+ .extra2 = (void *) &max,
+ },
+#endif
{ }
};