| .\" -*- nroff -*- |
| .\" Copyright (C) 2005 Red Hat, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
| .\" Written by David Howells (dhowells@redhat.com) |
| .\" |
| .\" This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or |
| .\" modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License |
| .\" as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version |
| .\" 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. |
| .\" |
| .TH REQUEST-KEY.CONF 5 "15 November 2011" Linux "Linux Key Management Utilities" |
| .SH NAME |
| request-key.conf - Instantiation handler configuration file |
| .SH DESCRIPTION |
| .P |
| This file and its associated key-type specific variants are used by the |
| /sbin/request-key program to determine which program it should run to |
| instantiate a key. |
| .P |
| request-key looks first in /etc/request-key.d/ for a file of the key type name |
| plus ".conf" that it can use. If that is not found, it will fall back to |
| /etc/request-key.conf. |
| .P |
| request-key scans through the chosen file one line at a time until it |
| finds a match, which it will then use. If it doesn't find a match, it'll return |
| an error and the kernel will automatically negate the key. |
| .P |
| Any blank line or line beginning with a hash mark '#' is considered to be a |
| comment and ignored. |
| .P |
| All other lines are assumed to be command lines with a number of white space |
| separated fields: |
| .P |
| <op> <type> <description> <callout-info> <prog> <arg1> <arg2> ... |
| .P |
| The first four fields are used to match the parameters passed to request-key by |
| the kernel. \fIop\fR is the operation type; currently the only supported |
| operation is "create". |
| .P |
| \fItype\fR, \fIdescription\fR and \fIcallout-info\fR match the three parameters |
| passed to \fBkeyctl request2\fR or the \fBrequest_key()\fR system call. Each of |
| these may contain one or more asterisk '*' characters as wildcards anywhere |
| within the string. |
| .P |
| Should a match be made, the program specified by <prog> will be exec'd. This |
| must have a fully qualified path name. argv[0] will be set from the part of the |
| program name that follows the last slash '/' character. |
| .P |
| If the program name is prefixed with a pipe bar character '|', then the program |
| will be forked and exec'd attached to three pipes. The callout information will |
| be piped to it on it's stdin and the intended payload data will be retrieved |
| from its stdout. Anything sent to stderr will be posted in syslog. If the |
| program exits 0, then /sbin/request-key will attempt to instantiate the key |
| with the data read from stdout. If it fails in any other way, then request-key |
| will attempt to execute the appropriate 'negate' operation command. |
| .P |
| The program arguments can be substituted with various macros. Only complete |
| argument substitution is supported - macro substitutions can't be embedded. All |
| macros begin with a percent character '%'. An argument beginning with two |
| percent characters will have one of them discarded. |
| .P |
| The following macros are supported: |
| .P |
| .RS |
| %o Operation type |
| .br |
| %k Key ID |
| .br |
| %t Key type |
| .br |
| %d Key description |
| .br |
| %c Callout information |
| .br |
| %u Key UID |
| .br |
| %g Key GID |
| .br |
| %T Requestor's thread keyring |
| .br |
| %P Requestor's process keyring |
| .br |
| %S Requestor's session keyring |
| .RE |
| .P |
| There's another macro substitution too that permits the interpolation of the |
| contents of a key: |
| .P |
| .RS |
| %{<type>:<description>} |
| .RE |
| .P |
| This performs a lookup for a key of the given type and description on the |
| requestor's keyrings, and if found, substitutes the contents for the macro. If |
| not found an error will be logged and the key under construction will be |
| negated. |
| .SH EXAMPLE |
| .P |
| A basic file will be installed in the /etc. This will contain two debugging |
| lines that can be used to test the installation: |
| .P |
| .RS |
| create user debug:* negate /bin/keyctl negate %k 30 %S |
| .br |
| create user debug:loop:* * |/bin/cat |
| .br |
| create user debug:* * /usr/share/keyutils/request-key-debug.sh %k %d %c %S |
| .br |
| negate * * * /bin/keyctl negate %k 30 %S |
| .RE |
| .P |
| This is set up so that something like: |
| .P |
| .RS |
| keyctl request2 user debug:xxxx negate |
| .RE |
| .P |
| will create a negative user-defined key, something like: |
| .P |
| .RS |
| keyctl request2 user debug:yyyy spoon |
| .RE |
| .P |
| will create an instantiated user-defined key with "Debug spoon" as the payload, |
| and something like: |
| .P |
| .RS |
| keyctl request2 user debug:loop:zzzz abcdefghijkl |
| .RE |
| .P |
| will create an instantiated user-defined key with the callout information as |
| the payload. |
| .SH FILES |
| .ul |
| /etc/request-key.conf |
| .ul 0 |
| .br |
| .ul |
| /etc/request-key.d/<keytype>.conf |
| .ul 0 |
| .SH SEE ALSO |
| \fBkeyctl\fR(1), \fBrequest-key.conf\fR(5) |