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1 ============================ 2 KERNEL KEY RETENTION SERVICE 3 ============================ 4 5This service allows cryptographic keys, authentication tokens, cross-domain 6user mappings, and similar to be cached in the kernel for the use of 7filesystems and other kernel services. 8 9Keyrings are permitted; these are a special type of key that can hold links to 10other keys. Processes each have three standard keyring subscriptions that a 11kernel service can search for relevant keys. 12 13The key service can be configured on by enabling: 14 15 "Security options"/"Enable access key retention support" (CONFIG_KEYS) 16 17This document has the following sections: 18 19 - Key overview 20 - Key service overview 21 - Key access permissions 22 - SELinux support 23 - New procfs files 24 - Userspace system call interface 25 - Kernel services 26 - Notes on accessing payload contents 27 - Defining a key type 28 - Request-key callback service 29 - Garbage collection 30 31 32============ 33KEY OVERVIEW 34============ 35 36In this context, keys represent units of cryptographic data, authentication 37tokens, keyrings, etc.. These are represented in the kernel by struct key. 38 39Each key has a number of attributes: 40 41 - A serial number. 42 - A type. 43 - A description (for matching a key in a search). 44 - Access control information. 45 - An expiry time. 46 - A payload. 47 - State. 48 49 50 (*) Each key is issued a serial number of type key_serial_t that is unique for 51 the lifetime of that key. All serial numbers are positive non-zero 32-bit 52 integers. 53 54 Userspace programs can use a key's serial numbers as a way to gain access 55 to it, subject to permission checking. 56 57 (*) Each key is of a defined "type". Types must be registered inside the 58 kernel by a kernel service (such as a filesystem) before keys of that type 59 can be added or used. Userspace programs cannot define new types directly. 60 61 Key types are represented in the kernel by struct key_type. This defines a 62 number of operations that can be performed on a key of that type. 63 64 Should a type be removed from the system, all the keys of that type will 65 be invalidated. 66 67 (*) Each key has a description. This should be a printable string. The key 68 type provides an operation to perform a match between the description on a 69 key and a criterion string. 70 71 (*) Each key has an owner user ID, a group ID and a permissions mask. These 72 are used to control what a process may do to a key from userspace, and 73 whether a kernel service will be able to find the key. 74 75 (*) Each key can be set to expire at a specific time by the key type's 76 instantiation function. Keys can also be immortal. 77 78 (*) Each key can have a payload. This is a quantity of data that represent the 79 actual "key". In the case of a keyring, this is a list of keys to which 80 the keyring links; in the case of a user-defined key, it's an arbitrary 81 blob of data. 82 83 Having a payload is not required; and the payload can, in fact, just be a 84 value stored in the struct key itself. 85 86 When a key is instantiated, the key type's instantiation function is 87 called with a blob of data, and that then creates the key's payload in 88 some way. 89 90 Similarly, when userspace wants to read back the contents of the key, if 91 permitted, another key type operation will be called to convert the key's 92 attached payload back into a blob of data. 93 94 (*) Each key can be in one of a number of basic states: 95 96 (*) Uninstantiated. The key exists, but does not have any data attached. 97 Keys being requested from userspace will be in this state. 98 99 (*) Instantiated. This is the normal state. The key is fully formed, and 100 has data attached. 101 102 (*) Negative. This is a relatively short-lived state. The key acts as a 103 note saying that a previous call out to userspace failed, and acts as 104 a throttle on key lookups. A negative key can be updated to a normal 105 state. 106 107 (*) Expired. Keys can have lifetimes set. If their lifetime is exceeded, 108 they traverse to this state. An expired key can be updated back to a 109 normal state. 110 111 (*) Revoked. A key is put in this state by userspace action. It can't be 112 found or operated upon (apart from by unlinking it). 113 114 (*) Dead. The key's type was unregistered, and so the key is now useless. 115 116Keys in the last three states are subject to garbage collection. See the 117section on "Garbage collection". 118 119 120==================== 121KEY SERVICE OVERVIEW 122==================== 123 124The key service provides a number of features besides keys: 125 126 (*) The key service defines three special key types: 127 128 (+) "keyring" 129 130 Keyrings are special keys that contain a list of other keys. Keyring 131 lists can be modified using various system calls. Keyrings should not 132 be given a payload when created. 133 134 (+) "user" 135 136 A key of this type has a description and a payload that are arbitrary 137 blobs of data. These can be created, updated and read by userspace, 138 and aren't intended for use by kernel services. 139 140 (+) "logon" 141 142 Like a "user" key, a "logon" key has a payload that is an arbitrary 143 blob of data. It is intended as a place to store secrets which are 144 accessible to the kernel but not to userspace programs. 145 146 The description can be arbitrary, but must be prefixed with a non-zero 147 length string that describes the key "subclass". The subclass is 148 separated from the rest of the description by a ':'. "logon" keys can 149 be created and updated from userspace, but the payload is only 150 readable from kernel space. 151 152 (*) Each process subscribes to three keyrings: a thread-specific keyring, a 153 process-specific keyring, and a session-specific keyring. 154 155 The thread-specific keyring is discarded from the child when any sort of 156 clone, fork, vfork or execve occurs. A new keyring is created only when 157 required. 158 159 The process-specific keyring is replaced with an empty one in the child on 160 clone, fork, vfork unless CLONE_THREAD is supplied, in which case it is 161 shared. execve also discards the process's process keyring and creates a 162 new one. 163 164 The session-specific keyring is persistent across clone, fork, vfork and 165 execve, even when the latter executes a set-UID or set-GID binary. A 166 process can, however, replace its current session keyring with a new one 167 by using PR_JOIN_SESSION_KEYRING. It is permitted to request an anonymous 168 new one, or to attempt to create or join one of a specific name. 169 170 The ownership of the thread keyring changes when the real UID and GID of 171 the thread changes. 172 173 (*) Each user ID resident in the system holds two special keyrings: a user 174 specific keyring and a default user session keyring. The default session 175 keyring is initialised with a link to the user-specific keyring. 176 177 When a process changes its real UID, if it used to have no session key, it 178 will be subscribed to the default session key for the new UID. 179 180 If a process attempts to access its session key when it doesn't have one, 181 it will be subscribed to the default for its current UID. 182 183 (*) Each user has two quotas against which the keys they own are tracked. One 184 limits the total number of keys and keyrings, the other limits the total 185 amount of description and payload space that can be consumed. 186 187 The user can view information on this and other statistics through procfs 188 files. The root user may also alter the quota limits through sysctl files 189 (see the section "New procfs files"). 190 191 Process-specific and thread-specific keyrings are not counted towards a 192 user's quota. 193 194 If a system call that modifies a key or keyring in some way would put the 195 user over quota, the operation is refused and error EDQUOT is returned. 196 197 (*) There's a system call interface by which userspace programs can create and 198 manipulate keys and keyrings. 199 200 (*) There's a kernel interface by which services can register types and search 201 for keys. 202 203 (*) There's a way for the a search done from the kernel to call back to 204 userspace to request a key that can't be found in a process's keyrings. 205 206 (*) An optional filesystem is available through which the key database can be 207 viewed and manipulated. 208 209 210====================== 211KEY ACCESS PERMISSIONS 212====================== 213 214Keys have an owner user ID, a group access ID, and a permissions mask. The mask 215has up to eight bits each for possessor, user, group and other access. Only 216six of each set of eight bits are defined. These permissions granted are: 217 218 (*) View 219 220 This permits a key or keyring's attributes to be viewed - including key 221 type and description. 222 223 (*) Read 224 225 This permits a key's payload to be viewed or a keyring's list of linked 226 keys. 227 228 (*) Write 229 230 This permits a key's payload to be instantiated or updated, or it allows a 231 link to be added to or removed from a keyring. 232 233 (*) Search 234 235 This permits keyrings to be searched and keys to be found. Searches can 236 only recurse into nested keyrings that have search permission set. 237 238 (*) Link 239 240 This permits a key or keyring to be linked to. To create a link from a 241 keyring to a key, a process must have Write permission on the keyring and 242 Link permission on the key. 243 244 (*) Set Attribute 245 246 This permits a key's UID, GID and permissions mask to be changed. 247 248For changing the ownership, group ID or permissions mask, being the owner of 249the key or having the sysadmin capability is sufficient. 250 251 252=============== 253SELINUX SUPPORT 254=============== 255 256The security class "key" has been added to SELinux so that mandatory access 257controls can be applied to keys created within various contexts. This support 258is preliminary, and is likely to change quite significantly in the near future. 259Currently, all of the basic permissions explained above are provided in SELinux 260as well; SELinux is simply invoked after all basic permission checks have been 261performed. 262 263The value of the file /proc/self/attr/keycreate influences the labeling of 264newly-created keys. If the contents of that file correspond to an SELinux 265security context, then the key will be assigned that context. Otherwise, the 266key will be assigned the current context of the task that invoked the key 267creation request. Tasks must be granted explicit permission to assign a 268particular context to newly-created keys, using the "create" permission in the 269key security class. 270 271The default keyrings associated with users will be labeled with the default 272context of the user if and only if the login programs have been instrumented to 273properly initialize keycreate during the login process. Otherwise, they will 274be labeled with the context of the login program itself. 275 276Note, however, that the default keyrings associated with the root user are 277labeled with the default kernel context, since they are created early in the 278boot process, before root has a chance to log in. 279 280The keyrings associated with new threads are each labeled with the context of 281their associated thread, and both session and process keyrings are handled 282similarly. 283 284 285================ 286NEW PROCFS FILES 287================ 288 289Two files have been added to procfs by which an administrator can find out 290about the status of the key service: 291 292 (*) /proc/keys 293 294 This lists the keys that are currently viewable by the task reading the 295 file, giving information about their type, description and permissions. 296 It is not possible to view the payload of the key this way, though some 297 information about it may be given. 298 299 The only keys included in the list are those that grant View permission to 300 the reading process whether or not it possesses them. Note that LSM 301 security checks are still performed, and may further filter out keys that 302 the current process is not authorised to view. 303 304 The contents of the file look like this: 305 306 SERIAL FLAGS USAGE EXPY PERM UID GID TYPE DESCRIPTION: SUMMARY 307 00000001 I----- 39 perm 1f3f0000 0 0 keyring _uid_ses.0: 1/4 308 00000002 I----- 2 perm 1f3f0000 0 0 keyring _uid.0: empty 309 00000007 I----- 1 perm 1f3f0000 0 0 keyring _pid.1: empty 310 0000018d I----- 1 perm 1f3f0000 0 0 keyring _pid.412: empty 311 000004d2 I--Q-- 1 perm 1f3f0000 32 -1 keyring _uid.32: 1/4 312 000004d3 I--Q-- 3 perm 1f3f0000 32 -1 keyring _uid_ses.32: empty 313 00000892 I--QU- 1 perm 1f000000 0 0 user metal:copper: 0 314 00000893 I--Q-N 1 35s 1f3f0000 0 0 user metal:silver: 0 315 00000894 I--Q-- 1 10h 003f0000 0 0 user metal:gold: 0 316 317 The flags are: 318 319 I Instantiated 320 R Revoked 321 D Dead 322 Q Contributes to user's quota 323 U Under construction by callback to userspace 324 N Negative key 325 326 327 (*) /proc/key-users 328 329 This file lists the tracking data for each user that has at least one key 330 on the system. Such data includes quota information and statistics: 331 332 [root@andromeda root]# cat /proc/key-users 333 0: 46 45/45 1/100 13/10000 334 29: 2 2/2 2/100 40/10000 335 32: 2 2/2 2/100 40/10000 336 38: 2 2/2 2/100 40/10000 337 338 The format of each line is 339 <UID>: User ID to which this applies 340 <usage> Structure refcount 341 <inst>/<keys> Total number of keys and number instantiated 342 <keys>/<max> Key count quota 343 <bytes>/<max> Key size quota 344 345 346Four new sysctl files have been added also for the purpose of controlling the 347quota limits on keys: 348 349 (*) /proc/sys/kernel/keys/root_maxkeys 350 /proc/sys/kernel/keys/root_maxbytes 351 352 These files hold the maximum number of keys that root may have and the 353 maximum total number of bytes of data that root may have stored in those 354 keys. 355 356 (*) /proc/sys/kernel/keys/maxkeys 357 /proc/sys/kernel/keys/maxbytes 358 359 These files hold the maximum number of keys that each non-root user may 360 have and the maximum total number of bytes of data that each of those 361 users may have stored in their keys. 362 363Root may alter these by writing each new limit as a decimal number string to 364the appropriate file. 365 366 367=============================== 368USERSPACE SYSTEM CALL INTERFACE 369=============================== 370 371Userspace can manipulate keys directly through three new syscalls: add_key, 372request_key and keyctl. The latter provides a number of functions for 373manipulating keys. 374 375When referring to a key directly, userspace programs should use the key's 376serial number (a positive 32-bit integer). However, there are some special 377values available for referring to special keys and keyrings that relate to the 378process making the call: 379 380 CONSTANT VALUE KEY REFERENCED 381 ============================== ====== =========================== 382 KEY_SPEC_THREAD_KEYRING -1 thread-specific keyring 383 KEY_SPEC_PROCESS_KEYRING -2 process-specific keyring 384 KEY_SPEC_SESSION_KEYRING -3 session-specific keyring 385 KEY_SPEC_USER_KEYRING -4 UID-specific keyring 386 KEY_SPEC_USER_SESSION_KEYRING -5 UID-session keyring 387 KEY_SPEC_GROUP_KEYRING -6 GID-specific keyring 388 KEY_SPEC_REQKEY_AUTH_KEY -7 assumed request_key() 389 authorisation key 390 391 392The main syscalls are: 393 394 (*) Create a new key of given type, description and payload and add it to the 395 nominated keyring: 396 397 key_serial_t add_key(const char *type, const char *desc, 398 const void *payload, size_t plen, 399 key_serial_t keyring); 400 401 If a key of the same type and description as that proposed already exists 402 in the keyring, this will try to update it with the given payload, or it 403 will return error EEXIST if that function is not supported by the key 404 type. The process must also have permission to write to the key to be able 405 to update it. The new key will have all user permissions granted and no 406 group or third party permissions. 407 408 Otherwise, this will attempt to create a new key of the specified type and 409 description, and to instantiate it with the supplied payload and attach it 410 to the keyring. In this case, an error will be generated if the process 411 does not have permission to write to the keyring. 412 413 If the key type supports it, if the description is NULL or an empty 414 string, the key type will try and generate a description from the content 415 of the payload. 416 417 The payload is optional, and the pointer can be NULL if not required by 418 the type. The payload is plen in size, and plen can be zero for an empty 419 payload. 420 421 A new keyring can be generated by setting type "keyring", the keyring name 422 as the description (or NULL) and setting the payload to NULL. 423 424 User defined keys can be created by specifying type "user". It is 425 recommended that a user defined key's description by prefixed with a type 426 ID and a colon, such as "krb5tgt:" for a Kerberos 5 ticket granting 427 ticket. 428 429 Any other type must have been registered with the kernel in advance by a 430 kernel service such as a filesystem. 431 432 The ID of the new or updated key is returned if successful. 433 434 435 (*) Search the process's keyrings for a key, potentially calling out to 436 userspace to create it. 437 438 key_serial_t request_key(const char *type, const char *description, 439 const char *callout_info, 440 key_serial_t dest_keyring); 441 442 This function searches all the process's keyrings in the order thread, 443 process, session for a matching key. This works very much like 444 KEYCTL_SEARCH, including the optional attachment of the discovered key to 445 a keyring. 446 447 If a key cannot be found, and if callout_info is not NULL, then 448 /sbin/request-key will be invoked in an attempt to obtain a key. The 449 callout_info string will be passed as an argument to the program. 450 451 See also Documentation/security/keys-request-key.txt. 452 453 454The keyctl syscall functions are: 455 456 (*) Map a special key ID to a real key ID for this process: 457 458 key_serial_t keyctl(KEYCTL_GET_KEYRING_ID, key_serial_t id, 459 int create); 460 461 The special key specified by "id" is looked up (with the key being created 462 if necessary) and the ID of the key or keyring thus found is returned if 463 it exists. 464 465 If the key does not yet exist, the key will be created if "create" is 466 non-zero; and the error ENOKEY will be returned if "create" is zero. 467 468 469 (*) Replace the session keyring this process subscribes to with a new one: 470 471 key_serial_t keyctl(KEYCTL_JOIN_SESSION_KEYRING, const char *name); 472 473 If name is NULL, an anonymous keyring is created attached to the process 474 as its session keyring, displacing the old session keyring. 475 476 If name is not NULL, if a keyring of that name exists, the process 477 attempts to attach it as the session keyring, returning an error if that 478 is not permitted; otherwise a new keyring of that name is created and 479 attached as the session keyring. 480 481 To attach to a named keyring, the keyring must have search permission for 482 the process's ownership. 483 484 The ID of the new session keyring is returned if successful. 485 486 487 (*) Update the specified key: 488 489 long keyctl(KEYCTL_UPDATE, key_serial_t key, const void *payload, 490 size_t plen); 491 492 This will try to update the specified key with the given payload, or it 493 will return error EOPNOTSUPP if that function is not supported by the key 494 type. The process must also have permission to write to the key to be able 495 to update it. 496 497 The payload is of length plen, and may be absent or empty as for 498 add_key(). 499 500 501 (*) Revoke a key: 502 503 long keyctl(KEYCTL_REVOKE, key_serial_t key); 504 505 This makes a key unavailable for further operations. Further attempts to 506 use the key will be met with error EKEYREVOKED, and the key will no longer 507 be findable. 508 509 510 (*) Change the ownership of a key: 511 512 long keyctl(KEYCTL_CHOWN, key_serial_t key, uid_t uid, gid_t gid); 513 514 This function permits a key's owner and group ID to be changed. Either one 515 of uid or gid can be set to -1 to suppress that change. 516 517 Only the superuser can change a key's owner to something other than the 518 key's current owner. Similarly, only the superuser can change a key's 519 group ID to something other than the calling process's group ID or one of 520 its group list members. 521 522 523 (*) Change the permissions mask on a key: 524 525 long keyctl(KEYCTL_SETPERM, key_serial_t key, key_perm_t perm); 526 527 This function permits the owner of a key or the superuser to change the 528 permissions mask on a key. 529 530 Only bits the available bits are permitted; if any other bits are set, 531 error EINVAL will be returned. 532 533 534 (*) Describe a key: 535 536 long keyctl(KEYCTL_DESCRIBE, key_serial_t key, char *buffer, 537 size_t buflen); 538 539 This function returns a summary of the key's attributes (but not its 540 payload data) as a string in the buffer provided. 541 542 Unless there's an error, it always returns the amount of data it could 543 produce, even if that's too big for the buffer, but it won't copy more 544 than requested to userspace. If the buffer pointer is NULL then no copy 545 will take place. 546 547 A process must have view permission on the key for this function to be 548 successful. 549 550 If successful, a string is placed in the buffer in the following format: 551 552 <type>;<uid>;<gid>;<perm>;<description> 553 554 Where type and description are strings, uid and gid are decimal, and perm 555 is hexadecimal. A NUL character is included at the end of the string if 556 the buffer is sufficiently big. 557 558 This can be parsed with 559 560 sscanf(buffer, "%[^;];%d;%d;%o;%s", type, &uid, &gid, &mode, desc); 561 562 563 (*) Clear out a keyring: 564 565 long keyctl(KEYCTL_CLEAR, key_serial_t keyring); 566 567 This function clears the list of keys attached to a keyring. The calling 568 process must have write permission on the keyring, and it must be a 569 keyring (or else error ENOTDIR will result). 570 571 This function can also be used to clear special kernel keyrings if they 572 are appropriately marked if the user has CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability. The 573 DNS resolver cache keyring is an example of this. 574 575 576 (*) Link a key into a keyring: 577 578 long keyctl(KEYCTL_LINK, key_serial_t keyring, key_serial_t key); 579 580 This function creates a link from the keyring to the key. The process must 581 have write permission on the keyring and must have link permission on the 582 key. 583 584 Should the keyring not be a keyring, error ENOTDIR will result; and if the 585 keyring is full, error ENFILE will result. 586 587 The link procedure checks the nesting of the keyrings, returning ELOOP if 588 it appears too deep or EDEADLK if the link would introduce a cycle. 589 590 Any links within the keyring to keys that match the new key in terms of 591 type and description will be discarded from the keyring as the new one is 592 added. 593 594 595 (*) Unlink a key or keyring from another keyring: 596 597 long keyctl(KEYCTL_UNLINK, key_serial_t keyring, key_serial_t key); 598 599 This function looks through the keyring for the first link to the 600 specified key, and removes it if found. Subsequent links to that key are 601 ignored. The process must have write permission on the keyring. 602 603 If the keyring is not a keyring, error ENOTDIR will result; and if the key 604 is not present, error ENOENT will be the result. 605 606 607 (*) Search a keyring tree for a key: 608 609 key_serial_t keyctl(KEYCTL_SEARCH, key_serial_t keyring, 610 const char *type, const char *description, 611 key_serial_t dest_keyring); 612 613 This searches the keyring tree headed by the specified keyring until a key 614 is found that matches the type and description criteria. Each keyring is 615 checked for keys before recursion into its children occurs. 616 617 The process must have search permission on the top level keyring, or else 618 error EACCES will result. Only keyrings that the process has search 619 permission on will be recursed into, and only keys and keyrings for which 620 a process has search permission can be matched. If the specified keyring 621 is not a keyring, ENOTDIR will result. 622 623 If the search succeeds, the function will attempt to link the found key 624 into the destination keyring if one is supplied (non-zero ID). All the 625 constraints applicable to KEYCTL_LINK apply in this case too. 626 627 Error ENOKEY, EKEYREVOKED or EKEYEXPIRED will be returned if the search 628 fails. On success, the resulting key ID will be returned. 629 630 631 (*) Read the payload data from a key: 632 633 long keyctl(KEYCTL_READ, key_serial_t keyring, char *buffer, 634 size_t buflen); 635 636 This function attempts to read the payload data from the specified key 637 into the buffer. The process must have read permission on the key to 638 succeed. 639 640 The returned data will be processed for presentation by the key type. For 641 instance, a keyring will return an array of key_serial_t entries 642 representing the IDs of all the keys to which it is subscribed. The user 643 defined key type will return its data as is. If a key type does not 644 implement this function, error EOPNOTSUPP will result. 645 646 As much of the data as can be fitted into the buffer will be copied to 647 userspace if the buffer pointer is not NULL. 648 649 On a successful return, the function will always return the amount of data 650 available rather than the amount copied. 651 652 653 (*) Instantiate a partially constructed key. 654 655 long keyctl(KEYCTL_INSTANTIATE, key_serial_t key, 656 const void *payload, size_t plen, 657 key_serial_t keyring); 658 long keyctl(KEYCTL_INSTANTIATE_IOV, key_serial_t key, 659 const struct iovec *payload_iov, unsigned ioc, 660 key_serial_t keyring); 661 662 If the kernel calls back to userspace to complete the instantiation of a 663 key, userspace should use this call to supply data for the key before the 664 invoked process returns, or else the key will be marked negative 665 automatically. 666 667 The process must have write access on the key to be able to instantiate 668 it, and the key must be uninstantiated. 669 670 If a keyring is specified (non-zero), the key will also be linked into 671 that keyring, however all the constraints applying in KEYCTL_LINK apply in 672 this case too. 673 674 The payload and plen arguments describe the payload data as for add_key(). 675 676 The payload_iov and ioc arguments describe the payload data in an iovec 677 array instead of a single buffer. 678 679 680 (*) Negatively instantiate a partially constructed key. 681 682 long keyctl(KEYCTL_NEGATE, key_serial_t key, 683 unsigned timeout, key_serial_t keyring); 684 long keyctl(KEYCTL_REJECT, key_serial_t key, 685 unsigned timeout, unsigned error, key_serial_t keyring); 686 687 If the kernel calls back to userspace to complete the instantiation of a 688 key, userspace should use this call mark the key as negative before the 689 invoked process returns if it is unable to fulfill the request. 690 691 The process must have write access on the key to be able to instantiate 692 it, and the key must be uninstantiated. 693 694 If a keyring is specified (non-zero), the key will also be linked into 695 that keyring, however all the constraints applying in KEYCTL_LINK apply in 696 this case too. 697 698 If the key is rejected, future searches for it will return the specified 699 error code until the rejected key expires. Negating the key is the same 700 as rejecting the key with ENOKEY as the error code. 701 702 703 (*) Set the default request-key destination keyring. 704 705 long keyctl(KEYCTL_SET_REQKEY_KEYRING, int reqkey_defl); 706 707 This sets the default keyring to which implicitly requested keys will be 708 attached for this thread. reqkey_defl should be one of these constants: 709 710 CONSTANT VALUE NEW DEFAULT KEYRING 711 ====================================== ====== ======================= 712 KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_NO_CHANGE -1 No change 713 KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_DEFAULT 0 Default[1] 714 KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_THREAD_KEYRING 1 Thread keyring 715 KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_PROCESS_KEYRING 2 Process keyring 716 KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_SESSION_KEYRING 3 Session keyring 717 KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_USER_KEYRING 4 User keyring 718 KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_USER_SESSION_KEYRING 5 User session keyring 719 KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_GROUP_KEYRING 6 Group keyring 720 721 The old default will be returned if successful and error EINVAL will be 722 returned if reqkey_defl is not one of the above values. 723 724 The default keyring can be overridden by the keyring indicated to the 725 request_key() system call. 726 727 Note that this setting is inherited across fork/exec. 728 729 [1] The default is: the thread keyring if there is one, otherwise 730 the process keyring if there is one, otherwise the session keyring if 731 there is one, otherwise the user default session keyring. 732 733 734 (*) Set the timeout on a key. 735 736 long keyctl(KEYCTL_SET_TIMEOUT, key_serial_t key, unsigned timeout); 737 738 This sets or clears the timeout on a key. The timeout can be 0 to clear 739 the timeout or a number of seconds to set the expiry time that far into 740 the future. 741 742 The process must have attribute modification access on a key to set its 743 timeout. Timeouts may not be set with this function on negative, revoked 744 or expired keys. 745 746 747 (*) Assume the authority granted to instantiate a key 748 749 long keyctl(KEYCTL_ASSUME_AUTHORITY, key_serial_t key); 750 751 This assumes or divests the authority required to instantiate the 752 specified key. Authority can only be assumed if the thread has the 753 authorisation key associated with the specified key in its keyrings 754 somewhere. 755 756 Once authority is assumed, searches for keys will also search the 757 requester's keyrings using the requester's security label, UID, GID and 758 groups. 759 760 If the requested authority is unavailable, error EPERM will be returned, 761 likewise if the authority has been revoked because the target key is 762 already instantiated. 763 764 If the specified key is 0, then any assumed authority will be divested. 765 766 The assumed authoritative key is inherited across fork and exec. 767 768 769 (*) Get the LSM security context attached to a key. 770 771 long keyctl(KEYCTL_GET_SECURITY, key_serial_t key, char *buffer, 772 size_t buflen) 773 774 This function returns a string that represents the LSM security context 775 attached to a key in the buffer provided. 776 777 Unless there's an error, it always returns the amount of data it could 778 produce, even if that's too big for the buffer, but it won't copy more 779 than requested to userspace. If the buffer pointer is NULL then no copy 780 will take place. 781 782 A NUL character is included at the end of the string if the buffer is 783 sufficiently big. This is included in the returned count. If no LSM is 784 in force then an empty string will be returned. 785 786 A process must have view permission on the key for this function to be 787 successful. 788 789 790 (*) Install the calling process's session keyring on its parent. 791 792 long keyctl(KEYCTL_SESSION_TO_PARENT); 793 794 This functions attempts to install the calling process's session keyring 795 on to the calling process's parent, replacing the parent's current session 796 keyring. 797 798 The calling process must have the same ownership as its parent, the 799 keyring must have the same ownership as the calling process, the calling 800 process must have LINK permission on the keyring and the active LSM module 801 mustn't deny permission, otherwise error EPERM will be returned. 802 803 Error ENOMEM will be returned if there was insufficient memory to complete 804 the operation, otherwise 0 will be returned to indicate success. 805 806 The keyring will be replaced next time the parent process leaves the 807 kernel and resumes executing userspace. 808 809 810 (*) Invalidate a key. 811 812 long keyctl(KEYCTL_INVALIDATE, key_serial_t key); 813 814 This function marks a key as being invalidated and then wakes up the 815 garbage collector. The garbage collector immediately removes invalidated 816 keys from all keyrings and deletes the key when its reference count 817 reaches zero. 818 819 Keys that are marked invalidated become invisible to normal key operations 820 immediately, though they are still visible in /proc/keys until deleted 821 (they're marked with an 'i' flag). 822 823 A process must have search permission on the key for this function to be 824 successful. 825 826 (*) Compute a Diffie-Hellman shared secret or public key 827 828 long keyctl(KEYCTL_DH_COMPUTE, struct keyctl_dh_params *params, 829 char *buffer, size_t buflen); 830 831 The params struct contains serial numbers for three keys: 832 833 - The prime, p, known to both parties 834 - The local private key 835 - The base integer, which is either a shared generator or the 836 remote public key 837 838 The value computed is: 839 840 result = base ^ private (mod prime) 841 842 If the base is the shared generator, the result is the local 843 public key. If the base is the remote public key, the result is 844 the shared secret. 845 846 The buffer length must be at least the length of the prime, or zero. 847 848 If the buffer length is nonzero, the length of the result is 849 returned when it is successfully calculated and copied in to the 850 buffer. When the buffer length is zero, the minimum required 851 buffer length is returned. 852 853 This function will return error EOPNOTSUPP if the key type is not 854 supported, error ENOKEY if the key could not be found, or error 855 EACCES if the key is not readable by the caller. 856 857=============== 858KERNEL SERVICES 859=============== 860 861The kernel services for key management are fairly simple to deal with. They can 862be broken down into two areas: keys and key types. 863 864Dealing with keys is fairly straightforward. Firstly, the kernel service 865registers its type, then it searches for a key of that type. It should retain 866the key as long as it has need of it, and then it should release it. For a 867filesystem or device file, a search would probably be performed during the open 868call, and the key released upon close. How to deal with conflicting keys due to 869two different users opening the same file is left to the filesystem author to 870solve. 871 872To access the key manager, the following header must be #included: 873 874 <linux/key.h> 875 876Specific key types should have a header file under include/keys/ that should be 877used to access that type. For keys of type "user", for example, that would be: 878 879 <keys/user-type.h> 880 881Note that there are two different types of pointers to keys that may be 882encountered: 883 884 (*) struct key * 885 886 This simply points to the key structure itself. Key structures will be at 887 least four-byte aligned. 888 889 (*) key_ref_t 890 891 This is equivalent to a struct key *, but the least significant bit is set 892 if the caller "possesses" the key. By "possession" it is meant that the 893 calling processes has a searchable link to the key from one of its 894 keyrings. There are three functions for dealing with these: 895 896 key_ref_t make_key_ref(const struct key *key, bool possession); 897 898 struct key *key_ref_to_ptr(const key_ref_t key_ref); 899 900 bool is_key_possessed(const key_ref_t key_ref); 901 902 The first function constructs a key reference from a key pointer and 903 possession information (which must be true or false). 904 905 The second function retrieves the key pointer from a reference and the 906 third retrieves the possession flag. 907 908When accessing a key's payload contents, certain precautions must be taken to 909prevent access vs modification races. See the section "Notes on accessing 910payload contents" for more information. 911 912(*) To search for a key, call: 913 914 struct key *request_key(const struct key_type *type, 915 const char *description, 916 const char *callout_info); 917 918 This is used to request a key or keyring with a description that matches 919 the description specified according to the key type's match_preparse() 920 method. This permits approximate matching to occur. If callout_string is 921 not NULL, then /sbin/request-key will be invoked in an attempt to obtain 922 the key from userspace. In that case, callout_string will be passed as an 923 argument to the program. 924 925 Should the function fail error ENOKEY, EKEYEXPIRED or EKEYREVOKED will be 926 returned. 927 928 If successful, the key will have been attached to the default keyring for 929 implicitly obtained request-key keys, as set by KEYCTL_SET_REQKEY_KEYRING. 930 931 See also Documentation/security/keys-request-key.txt. 932 933 934(*) To search for a key, passing auxiliary data to the upcaller, call: 935 936 struct key *request_key_with_auxdata(const struct key_type *type, 937 const char *description, 938 const void *callout_info, 939 size_t callout_len, 940 void *aux); 941 942 This is identical to request_key(), except that the auxiliary data is 943 passed to the key_type->request_key() op if it exists, and the callout_info 944 is a blob of length callout_len, if given (the length may be 0). 945 946 947(*) A key can be requested asynchronously by calling one of: 948 949 struct key *request_key_async(const struct key_type *type, 950 const char *description, 951 const void *callout_info, 952 size_t callout_len); 953 954 or: 955 956 struct key *request_key_async_with_auxdata(const struct key_type *type, 957 const char *description, 958 const char *callout_info, 959 size_t callout_len, 960 void *aux); 961 962 which are asynchronous equivalents of request_key() and 963 request_key_with_auxdata() respectively. 964 965 These two functions return with the key potentially still under 966 construction. To wait for construction completion, the following should be 967 called: 968 969 int wait_for_key_construction(struct key *key, bool intr); 970 971 The function will wait for the key to finish being constructed and then 972 invokes key_validate() to return an appropriate value to indicate the state 973 of the key (0 indicates the key is usable). 974 975 If intr is true, then the wait can be interrupted by a signal, in which 976 case error ERESTARTSYS will be returned. 977 978 979(*) When it is no longer required, the key should be released using: 980 981 void key_put(struct key *key); 982 983 Or: 984 985 void key_ref_put(key_ref_t key_ref); 986 987 These can be called from interrupt context. If CONFIG_KEYS is not set then 988 the argument will not be parsed. 989 990 991(*) Extra references can be made to a key by calling one of the following 992 functions: 993 994 struct key *__key_get(struct key *key); 995 struct key *key_get(struct key *key); 996 997 Keys so references will need to be disposed of by calling key_put() when 998 they've been finished with. The key pointer passed in will be returned. 999 1000 In the case of key_get(), if the pointer is NULL or CONFIG_KEYS is not set 1001 then the key will not be dereferenced and no increment will take place. 1002 1003 1004(*) A key's serial number can be obtained by calling: 1005 1006 key_serial_t key_serial(struct key *key); 1007 1008 If key is NULL or if CONFIG_KEYS is not set then 0 will be returned (in the 1009 latter case without parsing the argument). 1010 1011 1012(*) If a keyring was found in the search, this can be further searched by: 1013 1014 key_ref_t keyring_search(key_ref_t keyring_ref, 1015 const struct key_type *type, 1016 const char *description) 1017 1018 This searches the keyring tree specified for a matching key. Error ENOKEY 1019 is returned upon failure (use IS_ERR/PTR_ERR to determine). If successful, 1020 the returned key will need to be released. 1021 1022 The possession attribute from the keyring reference is used to control 1023 access through the permissions mask and is propagated to the returned key 1024 reference pointer if successful. 1025 1026 1027(*) A keyring can be created by: 1028 1029 struct key *keyring_alloc(const char *description, uid_t uid, gid_t gid, 1030 const struct cred *cred, 1031 key_perm_t perm, 1032 int (*restrict_link)(struct key *, 1033 const struct key_type *, 1034 unsigned long, 1035 const union key_payload *), 1036 unsigned long flags, 1037 struct key *dest); 1038 1039 This creates a keyring with the given attributes and returns it. If dest 1040 is not NULL, the new keyring will be linked into the keyring to which it 1041 points. No permission checks are made upon the destination keyring. 1042 1043 Error EDQUOT can be returned if the keyring would overload the quota (pass 1044 KEY_ALLOC_NOT_IN_QUOTA in flags if the keyring shouldn't be accounted 1045 towards the user's quota). Error ENOMEM can also be returned. 1046 1047 If restrict_link not NULL, it should point to a function that will be 1048 called each time an attempt is made to link a key into the new keyring. 1049 This function is called to check whether a key may be added into the keying 1050 or not. Callers of key_create_or_update() within the kernel can pass 1051 KEY_ALLOC_BYPASS_RESTRICTION to suppress the check. An example of using 1052 this is to manage rings of cryptographic keys that are set up when the 1053 kernel boots where userspace is also permitted to add keys - provided they 1054 can be verified by a key the kernel already has. 1055 1056 When called, the restriction function will be passed the keyring being 1057 added to, the key flags value and the type and payload of the key being 1058 added. Note that when a new key is being created, this is called between 1059 payload preparsing and actual key creation. The function should return 0 1060 to allow the link or an error to reject it. 1061 1062 A convenience function, restrict_link_reject, exists to always return 1063 -EPERM to in this case. 1064 1065 1066(*) To check the validity of a key, this function can be called: 1067 1068 int validate_key(struct key *key); 1069 1070 This checks that the key in question hasn't expired or and hasn't been 1071 revoked. Should the key be invalid, error EKEYEXPIRED or EKEYREVOKED will 1072 be returned. If the key is NULL or if CONFIG_KEYS is not set then 0 will be 1073 returned (in the latter case without parsing the argument). 1074 1075 1076(*) To register a key type, the following function should be called: 1077 1078 int register_key_type(struct key_type *type); 1079 1080 This will return error EEXIST if a type of the same name is already 1081 present. 1082 1083 1084(*) To unregister a key type, call: 1085 1086 void unregister_key_type(struct key_type *type); 1087 1088 1089Under some circumstances, it may be desirable to deal with a bundle of keys. 1090The facility provides access to the keyring type for managing such a bundle: 1091 1092 struct key_type key_type_keyring; 1093 1094This can be used with a function such as request_key() to find a specific 1095keyring in a process's keyrings. A keyring thus found can then be searched 1096with keyring_search(). Note that it is not possible to use request_key() to 1097search a specific keyring, so using keyrings in this way is of limited utility. 1098 1099 1100=================================== 1101NOTES ON ACCESSING PAYLOAD CONTENTS 1102=================================== 1103 1104The simplest payload is just data stored in key->payload directly. In this 1105case, there's no need to indulge in RCU or locking when accessing the payload. 1106 1107More complex payload contents must be allocated and pointers to them set in the 1108key->payload.data[] array. One of the following ways must be selected to 1109access the data: 1110 1111 (1) Unmodifiable key type. 1112 1113 If the key type does not have a modify method, then the key's payload can 1114 be accessed without any form of locking, provided that it's known to be 1115 instantiated (uninstantiated keys cannot be "found"). 1116 1117 (2) The key's semaphore. 1118 1119 The semaphore could be used to govern access to the payload and to control 1120 the payload pointer. It must be write-locked for modifications and would 1121 have to be read-locked for general access. The disadvantage of doing this 1122 is that the accessor may be required to sleep. 1123 1124 (3) RCU. 1125 1126 RCU must be used when the semaphore isn't already held; if the semaphore 1127 is held then the contents can't change under you unexpectedly as the 1128 semaphore must still be used to serialise modifications to the key. The 1129 key management code takes care of this for the key type. 1130 1131 However, this means using: 1132 1133 rcu_read_lock() ... rcu_dereference() ... rcu_read_unlock() 1134 1135 to read the pointer, and: 1136 1137 rcu_dereference() ... rcu_assign_pointer() ... call_rcu() 1138 1139 to set the pointer and dispose of the old contents after a grace period. 1140 Note that only the key type should ever modify a key's payload. 1141 1142 Furthermore, an RCU controlled payload must hold a struct rcu_head for the 1143 use of call_rcu() and, if the payload is of variable size, the length of 1144 the payload. key->datalen cannot be relied upon to be consistent with the 1145 payload just dereferenced if the key's semaphore is not held. 1146 1147 Note that key->payload.data[0] has a shadow that is marked for __rcu 1148 usage. This is called key->payload.rcu_data0. The following accessors 1149 wrap the RCU calls to this element: 1150 1151 rcu_assign_keypointer(struct key *key, void *data); 1152 void *rcu_dereference_key(struct key *key); 1153 1154 1155=================== 1156DEFINING A KEY TYPE 1157=================== 1158 1159A kernel service may want to define its own key type. For instance, an AFS 1160filesystem might want to define a Kerberos 5 ticket key type. To do this, it 1161author fills in a key_type struct and registers it with the system. 1162 1163Source files that implement key types should include the following header file: 1164 1165 <linux/key-type.h> 1166 1167The structure has a number of fields, some of which are mandatory: 1168 1169 (*) const char *name 1170 1171 The name of the key type. This is used to translate a key type name 1172 supplied by userspace into a pointer to the structure. 1173 1174 1175 (*) size_t def_datalen 1176 1177 This is optional - it supplies the default payload data length as 1178 contributed to the quota. If the key type's payload is always or almost 1179 always the same size, then this is a more efficient way to do things. 1180 1181 The data length (and quota) on a particular key can always be changed 1182 during instantiation or update by calling: 1183 1184 int key_payload_reserve(struct key *key, size_t datalen); 1185 1186 With the revised data length. Error EDQUOT will be returned if this is not 1187 viable. 1188 1189 1190 (*) int (*vet_description)(const char *description); 1191 1192 This optional method is called to vet a key description. If the key type 1193 doesn't approve of the key description, it may return an error, otherwise 1194 it should return 0. 1195 1196 1197 (*) int (*preparse)(struct key_preparsed_payload *prep); 1198 1199 This optional method permits the key type to attempt to parse payload 1200 before a key is created (add key) or the key semaphore is taken (update or 1201 instantiate key). The structure pointed to by prep looks like: 1202 1203 struct key_preparsed_payload { 1204 char *description; 1205 union key_payload payload; 1206 const void *data; 1207 size_t datalen; 1208 size_t quotalen; 1209 time_t expiry; 1210 }; 1211 1212 Before calling the method, the caller will fill in data and datalen with 1213 the payload blob parameters; quotalen will be filled in with the default 1214 quota size from the key type; expiry will be set to TIME_T_MAX and the 1215 rest will be cleared. 1216 1217 If a description can be proposed from the payload contents, that should be 1218 attached as a string to the description field. This will be used for the 1219 key description if the caller of add_key() passes NULL or "". 1220 1221 The method can attach anything it likes to payload. This is merely passed 1222 along to the instantiate() or update() operations. If set, the expiry 1223 time will be applied to the key if it is instantiated from this data. 1224 1225 The method should return 0 if successful or a negative error code 1226 otherwise. 1227 1228 1229 (*) void (*free_preparse)(struct key_preparsed_payload *prep); 1230 1231 This method is only required if the preparse() method is provided, 1232 otherwise it is unused. It cleans up anything attached to the description 1233 and payload fields of the key_preparsed_payload struct as filled in by the 1234 preparse() method. It will always be called after preparse() returns 1235 successfully, even if instantiate() or update() succeed. 1236 1237 1238 (*) int (*instantiate)(struct key *key, struct key_preparsed_payload *prep); 1239 1240 This method is called to attach a payload to a key during construction. 1241 The payload attached need not bear any relation to the data passed to this 1242 function. 1243 1244 The prep->data and prep->datalen fields will define the original payload 1245 blob. If preparse() was supplied then other fields may be filled in also. 1246 1247 If the amount of data attached to the key differs from the size in 1248 keytype->def_datalen, then key_payload_reserve() should be called. 1249 1250 This method does not have to lock the key in order to attach a payload. 1251 The fact that KEY_FLAG_INSTANTIATED is not set in key->flags prevents 1252 anything else from gaining access to the key. 1253 1254 It is safe to sleep in this method. 1255 1256 generic_key_instantiate() is provided to simply copy the data from 1257 prep->payload.data[] to key->payload.data[], with RCU-safe assignment on 1258 the first element. It will then clear prep->payload.data[] so that the 1259 free_preparse method doesn't release the data. 1260 1261 1262 (*) int (*update)(struct key *key, const void *data, size_t datalen); 1263 1264 If this type of key can be updated, then this method should be provided. 1265 It is called to update a key's payload from the blob of data provided. 1266 1267 The prep->data and prep->datalen fields will define the original payload 1268 blob. If preparse() was supplied then other fields may be filled in also. 1269 1270 key_payload_reserve() should be called if the data length might change 1271 before any changes are actually made. Note that if this succeeds, the type 1272 is committed to changing the key because it's already been altered, so all 1273 memory allocation must be done first. 1274 1275 The key will have its semaphore write-locked before this method is called, 1276 but this only deters other writers; any changes to the key's payload must 1277 be made under RCU conditions, and call_rcu() must be used to dispose of 1278 the old payload. 1279 1280 key_payload_reserve() should be called before the changes are made, but 1281 after all allocations and other potentially failing function calls are 1282 made. 1283 1284 It is safe to sleep in this method. 1285 1286 1287 (*) int (*match_preparse)(struct key_match_data *match_data); 1288 1289 This method is optional. It is called when a key search is about to be 1290 performed. It is given the following structure: 1291 1292 struct key_match_data { 1293 bool (*cmp)(const struct key *key, 1294 const struct key_match_data *match_data); 1295 const void *raw_data; 1296 void *preparsed; 1297 unsigned lookup_type; 1298 }; 1299 1300 On entry, raw_data will be pointing to the criteria to be used in matching 1301 a key by the caller and should not be modified. (*cmp)() will be pointing 1302 to the default matcher function (which does an exact description match 1303 against raw_data) and lookup_type will be set to indicate a direct lookup. 1304 1305 The following lookup_type values are available: 1306 1307 [*] KEYRING_SEARCH_LOOKUP_DIRECT - A direct lookup hashes the type and 1308 description to narrow down the search to a small number of keys. 1309 1310 [*] KEYRING_SEARCH_LOOKUP_ITERATE - An iterative lookup walks all the 1311 keys in the keyring until one is matched. This must be used for any 1312 search that's not doing a simple direct match on the key description. 1313 1314 The method may set cmp to point to a function of its choice that does some 1315 other form of match, may set lookup_type to KEYRING_SEARCH_LOOKUP_ITERATE 1316 and may attach something to the preparsed pointer for use by (*cmp)(). 1317 (*cmp)() should return true if a key matches and false otherwise. 1318 1319 If preparsed is set, it may be necessary to use the match_free() method to 1320 clean it up. 1321 1322 The method should return 0 if successful or a negative error code 1323 otherwise. 1324 1325 It is permitted to sleep in this method, but (*cmp)() may not sleep as 1326 locks will be held over it. 1327 1328 If match_preparse() is not provided, keys of this type will be matched 1329 exactly by their description. 1330 1331 1332 (*) void (*match_free)(struct key_match_data *match_data); 1333 1334 This method is optional. If given, it called to clean up 1335 match_data->preparsed after a successful call to match_preparse(). 1336 1337 1338 (*) void (*revoke)(struct key *key); 1339 1340 This method is optional. It is called to discard part of the payload 1341 data upon a key being revoked. The caller will have the key semaphore 1342 write-locked. 1343 1344 It is safe to sleep in this method, though care should be taken to avoid 1345 a deadlock against the key semaphore. 1346 1347 1348 (*) void (*destroy)(struct key *key); 1349 1350 This method is optional. It is called to discard the payload data on a key 1351 when it is being destroyed. 1352 1353 This method does not need to lock the key to access the payload; it can 1354 consider the key as being inaccessible at this time. Note that the key's 1355 type may have been changed before this function is called. 1356 1357 It is not safe to sleep in this method; the caller may hold spinlocks. 1358 1359 1360 (*) void (*describe)(const struct key *key, struct seq_file *p); 1361 1362 This method is optional. It is called during /proc/keys reading to 1363 summarise a key's description and payload in text form. 1364 1365 This method will be called with the RCU read lock held. rcu_dereference() 1366 should be used to read the payload pointer if the payload is to be 1367 accessed. key->datalen cannot be trusted to stay consistent with the 1368 contents of the payload. 1369 1370 The description will not change, though the key's state may. 1371 1372 It is not safe to sleep in this method; the RCU read lock is held by the 1373 caller. 1374 1375 1376 (*) long (*read)(const struct key *key, char __user *buffer, size_t buflen); 1377 1378 This method is optional. It is called by KEYCTL_READ to translate the 1379 key's payload into something a blob of data for userspace to deal with. 1380 Ideally, the blob should be in the same format as that passed in to the 1381 instantiate and update methods. 1382 1383 If successful, the blob size that could be produced should be returned 1384 rather than the size copied. 1385 1386 This method will be called with the key's semaphore read-locked. This will 1387 prevent the key's payload changing. It is not necessary to use RCU locking 1388 when accessing the key's payload. It is safe to sleep in this method, such 1389 as might happen when the userspace buffer is accessed. 1390 1391 1392 (*) int (*request_key)(struct key_construction *cons, const char *op, 1393 void *aux); 1394 1395 This method is optional. If provided, request_key() and friends will 1396 invoke this function rather than upcalling to /sbin/request-key to operate 1397 upon a key of this type. 1398 1399 The aux parameter is as passed to request_key_async_with_auxdata() and 1400 similar or is NULL otherwise. Also passed are the construction record for 1401 the key to be operated upon and the operation type (currently only 1402 "create"). 1403 1404 This method is permitted to return before the upcall is complete, but the 1405 following function must be called under all circumstances to complete the 1406 instantiation process, whether or not it succeeds, whether or not there's 1407 an error: 1408 1409 void complete_request_key(struct key_construction *cons, int error); 1410 1411 The error parameter should be 0 on success, -ve on error. The 1412 construction record is destroyed by this action and the authorisation key 1413 will be revoked. If an error is indicated, the key under construction 1414 will be negatively instantiated if it wasn't already instantiated. 1415 1416 If this method returns an error, that error will be returned to the 1417 caller of request_key*(). complete_request_key() must be called prior to 1418 returning. 1419 1420 The key under construction and the authorisation key can be found in the 1421 key_construction struct pointed to by cons: 1422 1423 (*) struct key *key; 1424 1425 The key under construction. 1426 1427 (*) struct key *authkey; 1428 1429 The authorisation key. 1430 1431 1432============================ 1433REQUEST-KEY CALLBACK SERVICE 1434============================ 1435 1436To create a new key, the kernel will attempt to execute the following command 1437line: 1438 1439 /sbin/request-key create <key> <uid> <gid> \ 1440 <threadring> <processring> <sessionring> <callout_info> 1441 1442<key> is the key being constructed, and the three keyrings are the process 1443keyrings from the process that caused the search to be issued. These are 1444included for two reasons: 1445 1446 (1) There may be an authentication token in one of the keyrings that is 1447 required to obtain the key, eg: a Kerberos Ticket-Granting Ticket. 1448 1449 (2) The new key should probably be cached in one of these rings. 1450 1451This program should set it UID and GID to those specified before attempting to 1452access any more keys. It may then look around for a user specific process to 1453hand the request off to (perhaps a path held in placed in another key by, for 1454example, the KDE desktop manager). 1455 1456The program (or whatever it calls) should finish construction of the key by 1457calling KEYCTL_INSTANTIATE or KEYCTL_INSTANTIATE_IOV, which also permits it to 1458cache the key in one of the keyrings (probably the session ring) before 1459returning. Alternatively, the key can be marked as negative with KEYCTL_NEGATE 1460or KEYCTL_REJECT; this also permits the key to be cached in one of the 1461keyrings. 1462 1463If it returns with the key remaining in the unconstructed state, the key will 1464be marked as being negative, it will be added to the session keyring, and an 1465error will be returned to the key requestor. 1466 1467Supplementary information may be provided from whoever or whatever invoked this 1468service. This will be passed as the <callout_info> parameter. If no such 1469information was made available, then "-" will be passed as this parameter 1470instead. 1471 1472 1473Similarly, the kernel may attempt to update an expired or a soon to expire key 1474by executing: 1475 1476 /sbin/request-key update <key> <uid> <gid> \ 1477 <threadring> <processring> <sessionring> 1478 1479In this case, the program isn't required to actually attach the key to a ring; 1480the rings are provided for reference. 1481 1482 1483================== 1484GARBAGE COLLECTION 1485================== 1486 1487Dead keys (for which the type has been removed) will be automatically unlinked 1488from those keyrings that point to them and deleted as soon as possible by a 1489background garbage collector. 1490 1491Similarly, revoked and expired keys will be garbage collected, but only after a 1492certain amount of time has passed. This time is set as a number of seconds in: 1493 1494 /proc/sys/kernel/keys/gc_delay