1 %/*- 2 % * Copyright (c) 2010, Oracle America, Inc. 3 % * 4 % * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 5 % * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are 6 % * met: 7 % * 8 % * * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 9 % * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 10 % * * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above 11 % * copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following 12 % * disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials 13 % * provided with the distribution. 14 % * * Neither the name of the "Oracle America, Inc." nor the names of its 15 % * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived 16 % * from this software without specific prior written permission. 17 % * 18 % * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS 19 % * "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT 20 % * LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS 21 % * FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE 22 % * COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, 23 % * INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 24 % * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE 25 % * GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS 26 % * INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, 27 % * WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING 28 % * NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE 29 % * OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 30 % */ 31 32 /* 33 * nis_object.x 34 * 35 * Copyright (c) 1988-1992 Sun Microsystems Inc 36 * All Rights Reserved. 37 */ 38 39 #if RPC_HDR 40 % 41 %#ifndef __nis_object_h 42 %#define __nis_object_h 43 % 44 #endif 45 /* 46 * This file defines the format for a NIS object in RPC language. 47 * It is included by the main .x file and the database access protocol 48 * file. It is common because both of them need to deal with the same 49 * type of object. Generating the actual code though is a bit messy because 50 * the nis.x file and the nis_dba.x file will generate xdr routines to 51 * encode/decode objects when only one set is needed. Such is life when 52 * one is using rpcgen. 53 * 54 * Note, the protocol doesn't specify any limits on such things as 55 * maximum name length, number of attributes, etc. These are enforced 56 * by the database backend. When you hit them you will no. Also see 57 * the db_getlimits() function for fetching the limit values. 58 * 59 */ 60 61 /* Some manifest constants, chosen to maximize flexibility without 62 * plugging the wire full of data. 63 */ 64 const NIS_MAXSTRINGLEN = 255; 65 const NIS_MAXNAMELEN = 1024; 66 const NIS_MAXATTRNAME = 32; 67 const NIS_MAXATTRVAL = 2048; 68 const NIS_MAXCOLUMNS = 64; 69 const NIS_MAXATTR = 16; 70 const NIS_MAXPATH = 1024; 71 const NIS_MAXREPLICAS = 128; 72 const NIS_MAXLINKS = 16; 73 74 const NIS_PK_NONE = 0; /* no public key (unix/sys auth) */ 75 const NIS_PK_DH = 1; /* Public key is Diffie-Hellman type */ 76 const NIS_PK_RSA = 2; /* Public key if RSA type */ 77 const NIS_PK_KERB = 3; /* Use kerberos style authentication */ 78 79 /* 80 * The fundamental name type of NIS. The name may consist of two parts, 81 * the first being the fully qualified name, and the second being an 82 * optional set of attribute/value pairs. 83 */ 84 struct nis_attr { 85 string zattr_ndx<>; /* name of the index */ 86 opaque zattr_val<>; /* Value for the attribute. */ 87 }; 88 89 typedef string nis_name<>; /* The NIS name itself. */ 90 91 /* NIS object types are defined by the following enumeration. The numbers 92 * they use are based on the following scheme : 93 * 0 - 1023 are reserved for Sun, 94 * 1024 - 2047 are defined to be private to a particular tree. 95 * 2048 - 4095 are defined to be user defined. 96 * 4096 - ... are reserved for future use. 97 */ 98 99 enum zotypes { 100 BOGUS_OBJ = 0, /* Uninitialized object structure */ 101 NO_OBJ = 1, /* NULL object (no data) */ 102 DIRECTORY_OBJ = 2, /* Directory object describing domain */ 103 GROUP_OBJ = 3, /* Group object (a list of names) */ 104 TABLE_OBJ = 4, /* Table object (a database schema) */ 105 ENTRY_OBJ = 5, /* Entry object (a database record) */ 106 LINK_OBJ = 6, /* A name link. */ 107 PRIVATE_OBJ = 7 /* Private object (all opaque data) */ 108 }; 109 110 /* 111 * The types of Name services NIS knows about. They are enumerated 112 * here. The Binder code will use this type to determine if it has 113 * a set of library routines that will access the indicated name service. 114 */ 115 enum nstype { 116 UNKNOWN = 0, 117 NIS = 1, /* Nis Plus Service */ 118 SUNYP = 2, /* Old NIS Service */ 119 IVY = 3, /* Nis Plus Plus Service */ 120 DNS = 4, /* Domain Name Service */ 121 X500 = 5, /* ISO/CCCIT X.500 Service */ 122 DNANS = 6, /* Digital DECNet Name Service */ 123 XCHS = 7, /* Xerox ClearingHouse Service */ 124 CDS= 8 125 }; 126 127 /* 128 * DIRECTORY - The name service object. These objects identify other name 129 * servers that are serving some portion of the name space. Each has a 130 * type associated with it. The resolver library will note whether or not 131 * is has the needed routines to access that type of service. 132 * The oarmask structure defines an access rights mask on a per object 133 * type basis for the name spaces. The only bits currently used are 134 * create and destroy. By enabling or disabling these access rights for 135 * a specific object type for a one of the accessor entities (owner, 136 * group, world) the administrator can control what types of objects 137 * may be freely added to the name space and which require the 138 * administrator's approval. 139 */ 140 struct oar_mask { 141 u_long oa_rights; /* Access rights mask */ 142 zotypes oa_otype; /* Object type */ 143 }; 144 145 struct endpoint { 146 string uaddr<>; 147 string family<>; /* Transport family (INET, OSI, etc) */ 148 string proto<>; /* Protocol (TCP, UDP, CLNP, etc) */ 149 }; 150 151 /* 152 * Note: pkey is a netobj which is limited to 1024 bytes which limits the 153 * keysize to 8192 bits. This is consider to be a reasonable limit for 154 * the expected lifetime of this service. 155 */ 156 struct nis_server { 157 nis_name name; /* Principal name of the server */ 158 endpoint ep<>; /* Universal addr(s) for server */ 159 u_long key_type; /* Public key type */ 160 netobj pkey; /* server's public key */ 161 }; 162 163 struct directory_obj { 164 nis_name do_name; /* Name of the directory being served */ 165 nstype do_type; /* one of NIS, DNS, IVY, YP, or X.500 */ 166 nis_server do_servers<>; /* <0> == Primary name server */ 167 u_long do_ttl; /* Time To Live (for caches) */ 168 oar_mask do_armask<>; /* Create/Destroy rights by object type */ 169 }; 170 171 /* 172 * ENTRY - This is one row of data from an information base. 173 * The type value is used by the client library to convert the entry to 174 * it's internal structure representation. The Table name is a back pointer 175 * to the table where the entry is stored. This allows the client library 176 * to determine where to send a request if the client wishes to change this 177 * entry but got to it through a LINK rather than directly. 178 * If the entry is a "standalone" entry then this field is void. 179 */ 180 const EN_BINARY = 1; /* Indicates value is binary data */ 181 const EN_CRYPT = 2; /* Indicates the value is encrypted */ 182 const EN_XDR = 4; /* Indicates the value is XDR encoded */ 183 const EN_MODIFIED = 8; /* Indicates entry is modified. */ 184 const EN_ASN1 = 64; /* Means contents use ASN.1 encoding */ 185 186 struct entry_col { 187 u_long ec_flags; /* Flags for this value */ 188 opaque ec_value<>; /* It's textual value */ 189 }; 190 191 struct entry_obj { 192 string en_type<>; /* Type of entry such as "passwd" */ 193 entry_col en_cols<>; /* Value for the entry */ 194 }; 195 196 /* 197 * GROUP - The group object contains a list of NIS principal names. Groups 198 * are used to authorize principals. Each object has a set of access rights 199 * for members of its group. Principal names in groups are in the form 200 * name.directory and recursive groups are expressed as @groupname.directory 201 */ 202 struct group_obj { 203 u_long gr_flags; /* Flags controlling group */ 204 nis_name gr_members<>; /* List of names in group */ 205 }; 206 207 /* 208 * LINK - This is the LINK object. It is quite similar to a symbolic link 209 * in the UNIX filesystem. The attributes in the main object structure are 210 * relative to the LINK data and not what it points to (like the file system) 211 * "modify" privleges here indicate the right to modify what the link points 212 * at and not to modify that actual object pointed to by the link. 213 */ 214 struct link_obj { 215 zotypes li_rtype; /* Real type of the object */ 216 nis_attr li_attrs<>; /* Attribute/Values for tables */ 217 nis_name li_name; /* The object's real NIS name */ 218 }; 219 220 /* 221 * TABLE - This is the table object. It implements a simple 222 * data base that applications and use for configuration or 223 * administration purposes. The role of the table is to group together 224 * a set of related entries. Tables are the simple database component 225 * of NIS. Like many databases, tables are logically divided into columns 226 * and rows. The columns are labeled with indexes and each ENTRY makes 227 * up a row. Rows may be addressed within the table by selecting one 228 * or more indexes, and values for those indexes. Each row which has 229 * a value for the given index that matches the desired value is returned. 230 * Within the definition of each column there is a flags variable, this 231 * variable contains flags which determine whether or not the column is 232 * searchable, contains binary data, and access rights for the entry objects 233 * column value. 234 */ 235 236 const TA_BINARY = 1; /* Means table data is binary */ 237 const TA_CRYPT = 2; /* Means value should be encrypted */ 238 const TA_XDR = 4; /* Means value is XDR encoded */ 239 const TA_SEARCHABLE = 8; /* Means this column is searchable */ 240 const TA_CASE = 16; /* Means this column is Case Sensitive */ 241 const TA_MODIFIED = 32; /* Means this columns attrs are modified*/ 242 const TA_ASN1 = 64; /* Means contents use ASN.1 encoding */ 243 244 struct table_col { 245 string tc_name<64>; /* Column Name */ 246 u_long tc_flags; /* control flags */ 247 u_long tc_rights; /* Access rights mask */ 248 }; 249 250 struct table_obj { 251 string ta_type<64>; /* Table type such as "passwd" */ 252 int ta_maxcol; /* Total number of columns */ 253 u_char ta_sep; /* Separator character */ 254 table_col ta_cols<>; /* The number of table indexes */ 255 string ta_path<>; /* A search path for this table */ 256 }; 257 258 /* 259 * This union joins together all of the currently known objects. 260 */ 261 union objdata switch (zotypes zo_type) { 262 case DIRECTORY_OBJ : 263 struct directory_obj di_data; 264 case GROUP_OBJ : 265 struct group_obj gr_data; 266 case TABLE_OBJ : 267 struct table_obj ta_data; 268 case ENTRY_OBJ: 269 struct entry_obj en_data; 270 case LINK_OBJ : 271 struct link_obj li_data; 272 case PRIVATE_OBJ : 273 opaque po_data<>; 274 case NO_OBJ : 275 void; 276 case BOGUS_OBJ : 277 void; 278 default : 279 void; 280 }; 281 282 /* 283 * This is the basic NIS object data type. It consists of a generic part 284 * which all objects contain, and a specialized part which varies depending 285 * on the type of the object. All of the specialized sections have been 286 * described above. You might have wondered why they all start with an 287 * integer size, followed by the useful data. The answer is, when the 288 * server doesn't recognize the type returned it treats it as opaque data. 289 * And the definition for opaque data is {int size; char *data;}. In this 290 * way, servers and utility routines that do not understand a given type 291 * may still pass it around. One has to be careful in setting 292 * this variable accurately, it must take into account such things as 293 * XDR padding of structures etc. The best way to set it is to note one's 294 * position in the XDR encoding stream, encode the structure, look at the 295 * new position and calculate the size. 296 */ 297 struct nis_oid { 298 u_long ctime; /* Time of objects creation */ 299 u_long mtime; /* Time of objects modification */ 300 }; 301 302 struct nis_object { 303 nis_oid zo_oid; /* object identity verifier. */ 304 nis_name zo_name; /* The NIS name for this object */ 305 nis_name zo_owner; /* NIS name of object owner. */ 306 nis_name zo_group; /* NIS name of access group. */ 307 nis_name zo_domain; /* The administrator for the object */ 308 u_long zo_access; /* Access rights (owner, group, world) */ 309 u_long zo_ttl; /* Object's time to live in seconds. */ 310 objdata zo_data; /* Data structure for this type */ 311 }; 312 #if RPC_HDR 313 % 314 %#endif /* if __nis_object_h */ 315 % 316 #endif 317