xref: /freebsd/crypto/heimdal/doc/kerberos4.texi (revision 1669d8afc64812c8d2d1d147ae1fd42ff441e1b1)
1@c $Id: kerberos4.texi,v 1.16 2001/07/19 17:17:46 assar Exp $
2
3@node Kerberos 4 issues, Windows 2000 compatability, Things in search for a better place, Top
4@comment  node-name,  next,  previous,  up
5@chapter Kerberos 4 issues
6
7If compiled with version 4 support, the KDC can serve requests from a
8Kerberos 4 client. There are a few things you must do for this to work.
9
10The KDC will also have kaserver emulation and be able to handle
11AFS-clients that use @code{klog}.
12
13@menu
14* Principal conversion issues::
15* Converting a version 4 database::
16* kaserver::
17@end menu
18
19@node Principal conversion issues, Converting a version 4 database, Kerberos 4 issues, Kerberos 4 issues
20@section Principal conversion issues
21
22First, Kerberos 4 and Kerberos 5 principals are different. A version 4
23principal consists of a name, an instance, and a realm. A version 5
24principal has one or more components, and a realm (the terms ``name''
25and ``instance'' are still used, for the first and second component,
26respectively).    Also, in some cases the name of a version 4 principal
27differs from the first component of the corresponding version 5
28principal. One notable example is the ``host'' type principals, where
29the version 4 name is @samp{rcmd} (for ``remote command''), and the
30version 5 name is @samp{host}. For the class of principals that has a
31hostname as instance, there is an other major difference, Kerberos 4
32uses only the first component of the hostname, whereas Kerberos 5 uses
33the fully qualified hostname.
34
35Because of this it can be hard or impossible to correctly convert a
36version 4 principal to a version 5 principal @footnote{the other way is
37not always trivial either, but usually easier}. The biggest problem is
38to know if the conversion resulted in a valid principal. To give an
39example, suppose you want to convert the principal @samp{rcmd.foo}.
40
41The @samp{rcmd} name suggests that the instance is a hostname (even if
42there are exceptions to this rule). To correctly convert the instance
43@samp{foo} to a hostname, you have to know which host it is referring
44to. You can to this by either guessing (from the realm) which domain
45name to append, or you have to have a list of possible hostnames. In the
46simplest cases you can cover most principals with the first rule. If you
47have several domains sharing a single realm this will not usually
48work. If the exceptions are few you can probably come by with a lookup
49table for the exceptions.
50
51In a complex scenario you will need some kind of host lookup mechanism.
52Using DNS for this is tempting, but DNS is error prone, slow and unsafe
53@footnote{at least until secure DNS is commonly available}.
54
55Fortunately, the KDC has a trump on hand: it can easily tell if a
56principal exists in the database. The KDC will use
57@code{krb5_425_conv_principal_ext} to convert principals when handling
58to version 4 requests.
59
60@node Converting a version 4 database, kaserver , Principal conversion issues, Kerberos 4 issues
61@section Converting a version 4 database
62
63If you want to convert an existing version 4 database, the principal
64conversion issue arises too.
65
66If you decide to convert your database once and for all, you will only
67have to do this conversion once. It is also possible to run a version 5
68KDC as a slave to a version 4 KDC. In this case this conversion will
69happen every time the database is propagated.  When doing this
70conversion, there are a few things to look out for. If you have stale
71entries in the database, these entries will not be converted. This might
72be because these principals are not used anymore, or it might be just
73because the principal couldn't be converted.
74
75You might also see problems with a many-to-one mapping of
76principals. For instance, if you are using DNS lookups and you have two
77principals @samp{rcmd.foo} and @samp{rcmd.bar}, where `foo' is a CNAME
78for `bar', the resulting principals will be the same. Since the
79conversion function can't tell which is correct, these conflicts will
80have to be resolved manually.
81
82@subsection Conversion example
83
84Given the following set of hosts and services:
85
86@example
87foo.se          rcmd
88mail.foo.se     rcmd, pop
89ftp.bar.se      rcmd, ftp
90@end example
91
92you have a database that consists of the following principals:
93
94@samp{rcmd.foo}, @samp{rcmd.mail}, @samp{pop.mail}, @samp{rcmd.ftp}, and
95@samp{ftp.ftp}.
96
97lets say you also got these extra principals: @samp{rcmd.gone},
98@samp{rcmd.old-mail}, where @samp{gone.foo.se} was a machine that has
99now passed away, and @samp{old-mail.foo.se} was an old mail machine that
100is now a CNAME for @samp{mail.foo.se}.
101
102When you convert this database you want the following conversions to be
103done:
104@example
105rcmd.foo         host/foo.se
106rcmd.mail        host/mail.foo.se
107pop.mail         pop/mail.foo.se
108rcmd.ftp         host/ftp.bar.se
109ftp.ftp          ftp/ftp.bar.se
110rcmd.gone        @i{removed}
111rcmd.old-mail    @i{removed}
112@end example
113
114A @file{krb5.conf} that does this looks like:
115
116@example
117[realms]
118        FOO.SE = @{
119                v4_name_convert = @{
120                        host = @{
121                                ftp = ftp
122                                pop = pop
123                                rcmd = host
124                        @}
125                @}
126                v4_instance_convert = @{
127                        foo = foo.se
128                        ftp = ftp.bar.se
129                @}
130                default_domain = foo.se
131        @}
132@end example
133
134The @samp{v4_name_convert} section says which names should be considered
135having an instance consisting of a hostname, and it also says how the
136names should be converted (for instance @samp{rcmd} should be converted
137to @samp{host}). The @samp{v4_instance_convert} section says how a
138hostname should be qualified (this is just a hosts-file in
139disguise). Host-instances that aren't covered by
140@samp{v4_instance_convert} are qualified by appending the contents of
141the @samp{default_domain}.
142
143Actually, this example doesn't work. Or rather, it works to well. Since
144it has no way of knowing which hostnames are valid and which are not, it
145will happily convert @samp{rcmd.gone} to @samp{host/gone.foo.se}. This
146isn't a big problem, but if you have run your kerberos realm for a few
147years, chances are big that you have quite a few `junk' principals.
148
149If you don't want this you can remove the @samp{default_domain}
150statement, but then you will have to add entries for @emph{all} your hosts
151in the @samp{v4_instance_convert} section.
152
153Instead of doing this you can use DNS to convert instances. This is not
154a solution without problems, but it is probably easier than adding lots
155of static host entries.
156
157To enable DNS lookup you should turn on @samp{v4_instance_resolve} in
158the @samp{[libdefaults]} section.
159
160@subsection Converting a database
161
162The database conversion is done with @samp{hprop}. You can run this
163command to propagate the database to the machine called
164@samp{slave-server} (which should be running a @samp{hpropd}).
165
166@example
167hprop --source=krb4-db --master-key=/.m slave-server
168@end example
169
170This command can also be to use for converting the v4 database on the
171server:
172
173@example
174hprop -n --source=krb4-db -d /var/kerberos/principal --master-key=/.m | hpropd -n
175@end example
176
177@section Version 4 Kadmin
178
179@samp{kadmind} can act as a version 4 kadmind, and you can do most
180operations, but with some restrictions (since the version 4 kadmin
181protocol is, lets say, very ad hoc.) One example is that it only passes
182des keys when creating principals and changing passwords (modern kpasswd
183clients do send the password, so it's possible to to password quality
184checks). Because of this you can only create principals with des keys,
185and you can't set any flags or do any other fancy stuff.
186
187To get this to work, you have to add another entry to inetd (since
188version 4 uses port 751, not 749).
189
190@emph{And then there are a many more things you can do; more on this in
191a later version of this manual. Until then, UTSL.}
192
193@node kaserver, , Converting a version 4 database, Kerberos 4 issues
194@section kaserver
195
196@subsection kaserver emulation
197
198The Heimdal kdc can emulate a kaserver. The kaserver is a Kerberos 4
199server with pre-authentication using Rx as the on-wire protocol. The kdc
200contains a minimalistic Rx implementation.
201
202There are three parts of the kaserver; KAA (Authentication), KAT (Ticket
203Granting), and KAM (Maintenance). The KAA interface and KAT interface
204both passes over DES encrypted data-blobs (just like the
205Kerberos-protocol) and thus do not need any other protection.  The KAM
206interface uses @code{rxkad} (Kerberos authentication layer for Rx) for
207security and data protection, and is used for example for changing
208passwords.  This part is not implemented in the kdc.
209
210Another difference between the ka-protocol and the Kerberos 4 protocol
211is that the pass-phrase is salted with the cellname in the @code{string to
212key} function in the ka-protocol, while in the Kerberos 4 protocol there
213is no salting of the password at all. To make sure AFS-compatible keys
214are added to each principals when they are created or their password are
215changed, @samp{afs3-salt} should be added to
216@samp{[kadmin]default_keys}.
217
218@subsection Transarc AFS Windows client
219
220The Transarc Windows client uses Kerberos 4 to obtain tokens, and thus
221does not need a kaserver. The Windows client assumes that the Kerberos
222server is on the same machine as the AFS-database server. If you do not
223like to do that you can add a small program that runs on the database
224servers that forward all kerberos requests to the real kerberos
225server. A program that does this is @code{krb-forward}
226(@url{ftp://ftp.stacken.kth.se/pub/projekts/krb-forward}).
227