1.\" Copyright (c) 1995 David Nugent <davidn@blaze.net.au> 2.\" All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 5.\" modification, is permitted provided that the following conditions 6.\" are met: 7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 8.\" notice immediately at the beginning of the file, without modification, 9.\" this list of conditions, and the following disclaimer. 10.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 11.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 12.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 13.\" 3. This work was done expressly for inclusion into FreeBSD. Other use 14.\" is permitted provided this notation is included. 15.\" 4. Absolutely no warranty of function or purpose is made by the author 16.\" David Nugent. 17.\" 5. Modifications may be freely made to this file providing the above 18.\" conditions are met. 19.\" 20.\" $FreeBSD$ 21.\" 22.Dd December 27, 1996 23.Os 24.Dt LOGIN_CAP 3 25.Sh NAME 26.Nm login_close , 27.Nm login_getcapbool , 28.Nm login_getcaplist , 29.Nm login_getcapnum , 30.Nm login_getcapstr , 31.Nm login_getcapsize , 32.Nm login_getcaptime , 33.Nm login_getclass , 34.Nm login_getclassbyname , 35.Nm login_getpwclass , 36.Nm login_getstyle , 37.Nm login_getuserclass , 38.Nm login_setcryptfmt 39.Nd "functions for accessing the login class capabilities database" 40.Sh LIBRARY 41.Lb libutil 42.Sh SYNOPSIS 43.In sys/types.h 44.In login_cap.h 45.Ft void 46.Fn login_close "login_cap_t *lc" 47.Ft login_cap_t * 48.Fn login_getclassbyname "const char *nam" "const struct passwd *pwd" 49.Ft login_cap_t * 50.Fn login_getclass "const char *nam" 51.Ft login_cap_t * 52.Fn login_getpwclass "const struct passwd *pwd" 53.Ft login_cap_t * 54.Fn login_getuserclass "const struct passwd *pwd" 55.Ft "const char *" 56.Fn login_getcapstr "login_cap_t *lc" "const char *cap" "const char *def" "const char *error" 57.Ft char ** 58.Fn login_getcaplist "login_cap_t *lc" "const char *cap" "const char *chars" 59.Ft "const char *" 60.Fn login_getpath "login_cap_t *lc" "const char *cap" "const char *error" 61.Ft rlim_t 62.Fn login_getcaptime "login_cap_t *lc" "const char *cap" "rlim_t def" "rlim_t error" 63.Ft rlim_t 64.Fn login_getcapnum "login_cap_t *lc" "const char *cap" "rlim_t def" "rlim_t error" 65.Ft rlim_t 66.Fn login_getcapsize "login_cap_t *lc" "const char *cap" "rlim_t def" "rlim_t error" 67.Ft int 68.Fn login_getcapbool "login_cap_t *lc" "const char *cap" "int def" 69.Ft "const char *" 70.Fn login_getstyle "login_cap_t *lc" "const char *style" "const char *auth" 71.Ft const char * 72.Fn login_setcryptfmt "login_cap_t *lc" "const char *def" "const char *error" 73.Sh DESCRIPTION 74These functions represent a programming interface to the login 75classes database provided in 76.Xr login.conf 5 . 77This database contains capabilities, attributes and default environment 78and accounting settings for users and programs running as specific users, 79as determined by the login class field within entries in 80.Pa /etc/master.passwd . 81.Pp 82Entries in 83.Xr login.conf 5 84consist of colon 85.Ql \&: 86separated fields, the first field in each record being one or more 87identifiers for the record (which must be unique for the entire database), 88each separated by a '|', and may optionally include a description as 89the last 'name'. 90Remaining fields in the record consist of keyword/data pairs. 91Long lines may be continued with a backslash within empty entries, 92with the second and subsequent lines optionally indented for readability. 93This is similar to the format used in 94.Xr termcap 5 , 95except that keywords are not limited to two significant characters, 96and are usually longer for improved readability. 97As with termcap entries, multiple records can be linked together 98(one record including another) using a field containing tc=<recordid>. 99The result is that the entire record referenced by <recordid> replaces 100the tc= field at the point at which it occurs. 101See 102.Xr getcap 3 103for further details on the format and use of a capabilities database. 104.Pp 105The 106.Nm login_cap 107interface provides a convenient means of retrieving login class 108records with all tc= references expanded. 109A program will typically call one of 110.Fn login_getclass , 111.Fn login_getpwclass , 112.Fn login_getuserclass 113or 114.Fn login_getclassbyname 115according to its requirements. 116Each of these functions returns a login capabilities structure, 117.Ft login_cap_t , 118which may subsequently be used to interrogate the database for 119specific values using the rest of the API. 120Once the login_cap_t is of no further use, the 121.Fn login_close 122function should be called to free all resources used. 123.Pp 124The structure of login_cap_t is defined in login_cap.h, as: 125.Bd -literal -offset indent 126typedef struct { 127 char *lc_class; 128 char *lc_cap; 129 char *lc_style; 130} login_cap_t; 131.Ed 132.Pp 133The 134.Ar lc_class 135member contains a pointer to the name of the login class 136retrieved. 137This may not necessarily be the same as the one requested, 138either directly via 139.Fn login_getclassbyname , 140indirectly via a user's login record using 141.Fn login_getpwclass , 142by class name using 143.Fn login_getclass , 144or 145.Fn login_getuserclass . 146If the referenced user has no login class specified in 147.Pa /etc/master.passwd , 148the class name is NULL or an empty string. 149If the class 150specified does not exist in the database, each of these 151functions will search for a record with an id of "default", 152with that name returned in the 153.Ar lc_class 154field. 155In addition, if the referenced user has a UID of 0 (normally, 156"root", although the user name is not considered) then 157.Fn login_getpwclass 158will search for a record with an id of "root" before it searches 159for the record with the id of "default". 160.Pp 161The 162.Ar lc_cap 163field is used internally by the library to contain the 164expanded login capabilities record. 165Programs with unusual requirements may wish to use this 166with the lower-level 167.Fn getcap 168style functions to access the record directly. 169.Pp 170The 171.Ar lc_style 172field is set by the 173.Fn login_getstyle 174function to the authorisation style, according to the requirements 175of the program handling a login itself. 176.Pp 177As noted above, the 178.Fn get*class 179functions return a login_cap_t object which is used to access 180the matching or default record in the capabilities database. 181.Fn getclassbyname 182accepts two arguments: the first one is the record identifier of the 183record to be retrieved, the second is an optional directory name. 184If the first 185.Ar name 186argument is NULL, an empty string, or a class that does not exist 187in the supplemental or system login class database, then the system 188.Em default 189record is returned instead. 190If the second 191.Ar dir 192parameter is NULL, then only the system login class database is 193used, but when not NULL, the named directory is searched for 194a login database file called ".login_conf", and capability records 195contained within it may override the system defaults. 196This scheme allows users to override some login settings from 197those in the system login class database by creating class records 198for their own private class with a record id of `me'. 199In the context of a 200.Em login , 201it should be noted that some options cannot by overridden by 202users for two reasons; many options, such as resource settings 203and default process priorities, require root privileges 204in order to take effect, and other fields in the user's file are 205not be consulted at all during the early phases of login for 206security or administrative reasons. 207See 208.Xr login.conf 5 209for more information on which settings a user is able to override. 210Typically, these are limited purely to the user's default login 211environment which might otherwise have been overridden in shell 212startup scripts in any case. 213The user's 214.Pa .login_conf 215merely provides a convenient way for a user to set up their preferred 216login environment before the shell is invoked on login. 217.Pp 218If the specified record is NULL, empty or does not exist, and the 219system has no "default" record available to fall back to, there is a 220memory allocation error or for some reason 221.Xr cgetent 3 222is unable to access the login capabilities database, this function 223returns NULL. 224.Pp 225The functions 226.Fn login_getpwclass , 227.Fn login_getclass 228and 229.Fn login_getuserclass 230retrieve the applicable login class record for the user's passwd 231entry or class name by calling 232.Fn login_getclassbyname . 233On failure, NULL is returned. 234The difference between these functions is that 235.Fn login_getuserclass 236includes the user's overriding 237.Pa .login_conf 238that exists in the user's home directory, and 239.Fn login_getpwclass 240and 241.Fn login_getclass 242restrict lookup only to the system login class database in 243.Pa /etc/login.conf . 244As explained earlier, 245.Fn login_getpwclass 246only differs from 247.Fn login_getclass 248in that it allows the default class for user 'root' as "root" 249if none has been specified in the password database. 250Otherwise, if the passwd pointer is NULL, or the user record 251has no login class, then the system "default" entry is retrieved. 252.Pp 253Once a program no longer wishes to use a login_cap_t object, 254.Fn login_close 255may be called to free all resources used by the login class. 256.Fn login_close 257may be passed a NULL pointer with no harmful side-effects. 258.Pp 259The remaining functions may be used to retrieve individual 260capability records. 261Each function takes a login_cap_t object as its first parameter, 262a capability tag as the second, and remaining parameters being 263default and error values that are returned if the capability is 264not found. 265The type of the additional parameters passed and returned depend 266on the 267.Em type 268of capability each deals with, be it a simple string, a list, 269a time value, a file or memory size value, a path (consisting of 270a colon-separated list of directories) or a boolean flag. 271The manpage for 272.Xr login.conf 5 273deals in specific tags and their type. 274.Pp 275Note that with all functions in this group, you should not call 276.Xr free 3 277on any pointers returned. 278Memory allocated during retrieval or processing of capability 279tags is automatically reused by subsequent calls to functions 280in this group, or deallocated on calling 281.Fn login_close . 282.Bl -tag -width "login_getcaplist()" 283.It Fn login_getcapstr 284This function returns a simple string capability. 285If the string is not found, then the value in 286.Ar def 287is returned as the default value, or if an error 288occurs, the value in the 289.Ar error 290parameter is returned. 291.It Fn login_getcaplist 292This function returns the value corresponding to the named 293capability tag as a list of values in a NULL terminated 294array. 295Within the login class database, some tags are of type 296.Em list , 297which consist of one or more comma- or space separated 298values. 299Usually, this function is not called directly from an 300application, but is used indirectly via 301.Fn login_getstyle . 302.It Fn login_getpath 303This function returns a list of directories separated by colons 304.Ql &: . 305Capability tags for which this function is called consist of a list of 306directories separated by spaces. 307.It Fn login_getcaptime 308This function returns a 309.Em time value 310associated with a particular capability tag with the value expressed 311in seconds (the default), minutes, hours, days, weeks or (365 day) 312years or any combination of these. 313A suffix determines the units used: S for seconds, M for minutes, 314H for hours, D for days, W for weeks and Y for 365 day years. 315Case of the units suffix is ignored. 316.Pp 317Time values are normally used for setting resource, accounting and 318session limits. 319If supported by the operating system and compiler (which is true of 320.Fx ) , 321the value returned is a quad (long long), of type 322.Em rlim_t . 323A value "inf" or "infinity" may be used to express an infinite 324value, in which case RLIM_INFINITY is returned. 325.It Fn login_getcapnum 326This function returns a numeric value for a tag, expressed either as 327tag=<value> or the standard 328.Fn cgetnum 329format tag#<value>. 330The first format should be used in preference to the second, the 331second format is provided for compatibility and consistency with the 332.Xr getcap 3 333database format where numeric types use the 334.Ql \&# 335as the delimiter for numeric values. 336If in the first format, then the value given may be "inf" or 337"infinity" which results in a return value of RLIM_INFINITY. 338If the given capability tag cannot be found, the 339.Ar def 340parameter is returned, and if an error occurs, the 341.Ar error 342parameter is returned. 343.It Fn login_getcapsize 344.Fn login_getcapsize 345returns a value representing a size (typically, file or memory) 346which may be expressed as bytes (the default), 512 byte blocks, 347kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes, and on systems that support the 348.Ar long long 349type, terabytes. 350The suffix used determines the units, and multiple values and 351units may be used in combination (e.g. 1m500k = 1.5 megabytes). 352A value with no suffix is interpreted as bytes, B as 512-byte 353blocks, K as kilobytes, M as megabytes, G as gigabytes and T as 354terrabytes. 355Case is ignored. 356The error value is returned if there is a login capabilities database 357error, if an invalid suffix is used, or if a numeric value cannot be 358interpreted. 359.It Fn login_getcapbool 360This function returns a boolean value tied to a particular flag. 361It returns 0 if the given capability tag is not present or is 362negated by the presence of a "tag@" (See 363.Xr getcap 3 364for more information on boolean flags), and returns 1 if the tag 365is found. 366.It Fn login_getstyle 367This function is used by the login authorisation system to determine 368the style of login available in a particular case. 369The function accepts three parameters, the login_cap entry itself and 370two optional parameters, and authorisation type 'auth' and 'style', and 371applies these to determine the authorisation style that best suites 372these rules. 373.Bl -bullet 374.It 375If 'auth' is neither NULL nor an empty string, look for a tag of type 376"auth-<auth>" in the capability record. 377If not present, then look for the default tag "auth=". 378.It 379If no valid authorisation list was found from the previous step, then 380default to "passwd" as the authorisation list. 381.It 382If 'style' is not NULL or empty, look for it in the list of authorisation 383methods found from the pprevious step. 384If 'style' is NULL or an empty string, then default to "passwd" 385authorisation. 386.It 387If 'style' is found in the chosen list of authorisation methods, then 388return that, otherwise return NULL. 389.El 390.Pp 391This scheme allows the administrator to determine the types of 392authorisation methods accepted by the system, depending on the 393means by which the access occurs. 394For example, the administrator may require skey or kerberos as 395the authentication method used for access to the system via the 396network, and standard methods via direct dialup or console 397logins, significantly reducing the risk of password discovery 398by "snooping" network packets. 399.It Fn login_setcryptfmt 400The 401.Fn login_setcryptfmt 402function is used to set the 403.Xr crypt 3 404format using the 405.Ql passwd_format 406configuration entry. 407If no entry is found, 408.Fa def 409is taken to be used as the fallback. 410If calling 411.Xr crypt_set_format 3 412on the specifier fails, 413.Fa error 414is returned to indicate this. 415.El 416.Sh SEE ALSO 417.Xr crypt 3 , 418.Xr getcap 3 , 419.Xr login_class 3 , 420.Xr login.conf 5 , 421.Xr termcap 5 422