request_key — request a key from the kernel's key management facility
#include <keyutils.h>
key_serial_t
request_key( |
const char *type, |
const char *description, | |
const char *callout_info, | |
key_serial_t dest_keyring) ; |
Note | |
---|---|
There is no glibc wrapper for this system call; see NOTES. |
request_key
() attempts to
find a key of the given type
with a description (name)
that matches the specified description
. If such a key
could not be found, then the key is optionally created. If
the key is found or created, request_key
() attaches it to the keyring
whose ID is specified in dest_keyring
and returns the
key's serial number.
request_key
() first
recursively searches for a matching key in all of the
keyrings attached to the calling process. The keyrings are
searched in the order: thread-specific keyring,
process-specific keyring, and then session keyring.
If request_key
() is called
from a program invoked by request_key
() on behalf of some other
process to generate a key, then the keyrings of that other
process will be searched next, using that other process's
user ID, group ID, supplementary group IDs, and security
context to determine access.
The search of the keyring tree is breadth-first: the keys
in each keyring searched are checked for a match before any
child keyrings are recursed into. Only keys for which the
caller has search
permission be found, and only keyrings for which the caller
has search
permission may be searched.
If the key is not found and callout
is NULL, then the
call fails with the error ENOKEY.
If the key is not found and callout
is not NULL, then the
kernel attempts to invoke a user-space program to instantiate
the key. The details are given below.
The dest_keyring
serial number may be that of a valid keyring for which the
caller has write
permission, or it may be one of the following special keyring
IDs:
KEY_SPEC_THREAD_KEYRING
This specifies the caller's thread-specific keyring (see thread-keyring(7)).
KEY_SPEC_PROCESS_KEYRING
This specifies the caller's process-specific keyring (see process-keyring(7)).
KEY_SPEC_SESSION_KEYRING
This specifies the caller's session-specific keyring (see session-keyring(7)).
KEY_SPEC_USER_KEYRING
This specifies the caller's UID-specific keyring (see user-keyring(7)).
KEY_SPEC_USER_SESSION_KEYRING
This specifies the caller's UID-session keyring (see user-session-keyring(7)).
When the dest_keyring
is specified as 0
and no key construction has been performed, then no
additional linking is done.
Otherwise, if dest_keyring
is 0 and a new key
is constructed, the new key will be linked to the "default"
keyring. More precisely, when the kernel tries to determine
to which keyring the newly constructed key should be linked,
it tries the following keyrings, beginning with the keyring
set via the keyctl(2) KEYCTL_SET_REQKEY_KEYRING
operation and
continuing in the order shown below until it finds the first
keyring that exists:
The requestor keyring (KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_REQUESTOR_KEYRING
,
since Linux 2.6.29).
The thread-specific keyring (KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_THREAD_KEYRING
; see
thread-keyring(7)).
The process-specific keyring (KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_PROCESS_KEYRING
; see
process-keyring(7)).
The session-specific keyring (KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_SESSION_KEYRING
; see
session-keyring(7)).
The session keyring for the process's user ID
(KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_USER_SESSION_KEYRING
;
see user-session-keyring(7)).
This keyring is expected to always exist.
The UID-specific keyring (KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_USER_KEYRING
; see
user-keyring(7)).
This keyring is also expected to always exist.
If the keyctl(2) KEYCTL_SET_REQKEY_KEYRING
operation
specifies KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_DEFAULT
(or no KEYCTL_SET_REQKEY_KEYRING
operation is
performed), then the kernel looks for a keyring starting from
the beginning of the list.
If the kernel cannot find a key matching type
and description
, and callout
is not NULL, then
the kernel attempts to invoke a user-space program to
instantiate a key with the given type
and description
. In this case,
the following steps are performed:
The kernel creates an uninstantiated key, U, with
the requested type
and description
.
The kernel creates an authorization key, V, that
refers to the key U and records the facts that the
caller of request_key
()
is:
(1)
the context in which the key U should be instantiated and secured, and
(2)
the context from which associated key requests may be satisfied.
The authorization key is constructed as follows:
The key type is
".request_key_auth"
.The key's UID and GID are the same as the corresponding filesystem IDs of the requesting process.
The key grants
view
,read
, andsearch
permissions to the key possessor as well asview
permission for the key user.The description (name) of the key is the hexadecimal string representing the ID of the key that is to be instantiated in the requesting program.
The payload of the key is taken from the data specified in
callout_info
.Internally, the kernel also records the PID of the process that called
request_key
().
The kernel creates a process that executes a user-space service such as request-key(8) with a new session keyring that contains a link to the authorization key, V.
This program is supplied with the following command-line arguments:
[0]
The string
"/sbin/request−key"
.[1]
The string
"create"
(indicating that a key is to be created).[2]
The ID of the key that is to be instantiated.
[3]
The filesystem UID of the caller of
request_key
().[4]
The filesystem GID of the caller of
request_key
().[5]
The ID of the thread keyring of the caller of
request_key
(). This may be zero if that keyring hasn't been created.[6]
The ID of the process keyring of the caller of
request_key
(). This may be zero if that keyring hasn't been created.[7]
The ID of the session keyring of the caller of
request_key
().
Note | |
---|---|
each of the command-line arguments that is
a key ID is encoded in |
The program spawned in the previous step:
Assumes the authority to instantiate the key U using the keyctl(2)
KEYCTL_ASSUME_AUTHORITY
operation (typically via the keyctl_assume_authority(3) function).Obtains the callout data from the payload of the authorization key V (using the keyctl(2)
KEYCTL_READ
operation (or, more commonly, the keyctl_read(3) function) with a key ID value ofKEY_SPEC_REQKEY_AUTH_KEY
).Instantiates the key (or execs another program that performs that task), specifying the payload and destination keyring. (The destination keyring that the requestor specified when calling
request_key
() can be accessed using the special key IDKEY_SPEC_REQUESTOR_KEYRING
.) Instantiation is performed using the keyctl(2)KEYCTL_INSTANTIATE
operation (or, more commonly, the keyctl_instantiate(3) function). At this point, therequest_key
() call completes, and the requesting program can continue execution.
If these steps are unsuccessful, then an ENOKEY error will be returned to the
caller of request_key
() and a
temporary, negatively instantiated key will be installed in
the keyring specified by dest_keyring
. This will
expire after a few seconds, but will cause subsequent calls
to request_key
() to fail
until it does. The purpose of this negatively instantiated
key is to prevent (possibly different) processes making
repeated requests (that require expensive request-key(8) upcalls) for a
key that can't (at the moment) be positively
instantiated.
Once the key has been instantiated, the authorization
key (KEY_SPEC_REQKEY_AUTH_KEY
) is revoked, and
the destination keyring (KEY_SPEC_REQUESTOR_KEYRING
) is no longer
accessible from the request-key(8) program.
If a key is created, then—regardless of whether it
is a valid key or a negatively instantiated key—it
will displace any other key with the same type and
description from the keyring specified in dest_keyring
.
On success, request_key
()
returns the serial number of the key it found or caused to be
created. On error, −1 is returned and errno
is set to indicate the error.
The keyring wasn't available for modification by the user.
The key quota for this user would be exceeded by creating this key or linking it to the keyring.
One of type
,
description
, or
callout_info
points outside the process's accessible address
space.
The request was interrupted by a signal; see signal(7).
The size of the string (including the terminating
null byte) specified in type
or description
exceeded the
limit (32 bytes and 4096 bytes respectively).
The size of the string (including the terminating
null byte) specified in callout_info
exceeded the
system page size.
An expired key was found, but no replacement could be obtained.
The attempt to generate a new key was rejected.
A revoked key was found, but no replacement could be obtained.
No matching key was found.
Insufficient memory to create a key.
The type
argument started with a period ('.').
This system call first appeared in Linux 2.6.10. The ability to instantiate keys upon request was added in Linux 2.6.13.
Glibc does not provide a wrapper for this system call. A
wrapper is provided in the libkeyutils
package. When
employing the wrapper in that library, link with −lkeyutils
.
The program below demonstrates the use of request_key
(). The type
, description
, and callout_info
arguments for the
system call are taken from the values supplied in the
command-line arguments. The call specifies the session
keyring as the target keyring.
In order to demonstrate this program, we first create a
suitable entry in the file /etc/request−key.conf
.
$ sudo sh # echo 'create user mtk:* * /bin/keyctl instantiate %k %c %S' \ > /etc/request−key.conf #exit
This entry specifies that when a new "user" key with the
prefix "mtk:" must be instantiated, that task should be
performed via the keyctl(1) command's instantiate
operation. The
arguments supplied to the instantiate
operation are:
the ID of the uninstantiated key (%k
); the callout data
supplied to the request_key
()
call (%c
); and the
session keyring (%S
) of the requestor (i.e.,
the caller of request_key
()).
See request-key.conf(5) for details
of these %
specifiers.
Then we run the program and check the contents of
/proc/keys
to verify that the
requested key has been instantiated:
$ ./t_request_key user mtk:key1 "Payload data" $ grep '2dddaf50' /proc/keys 2dddaf50 I−−Q−−− 1 perm 3f010000 1000 1000 user mtk:key1: 12
For another example of the use of this program, see keyctl(2).
/* t_request_key.c */ #include <sys/types.h> #include <keyutils.h> #include <stdint.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { key_serial_t key; if (argc != 4) { fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s type description callout−data\n", argv[0]); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } key = request_key(argv[1], argv[2], argv[3], KEY_SPEC_SESSION_KEYRING); if (key == −1) { perror("request_key"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } printf("Key ID is %jx\n", (uintmax_t) key); exit(EXIT_SUCCESS); }
keyctl(1), add_key(2), keyctl(2), keyctl(3), capabilities(7), keyrings(7), keyutils(7), persistent-keyring(7), process-keyring(7), session-keyring(7), thread-keyring(7), user-keyring(7), user-session-keyring(7), request-key(8)
The kernel source files Documentation/security/keys/core.rst
and
Documentation/keys/request−key.rst
(or, before Linux 4.13, in the files Documentation/security/keys.txt
and
Documentation/security/keys−request−key.txt
).
This page is part of release 5.11 of the Linux man-pages
project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs,
and the latest version of this page, can be found at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/man−pages/.
Copyright (C) 2006 Red Hat, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Written by David Howells (dhowellsredhat.com) and Copyright (C) 2016 Michael Kerrisk <mtk.man-pagesgmail.com> %%%LICENSE_START(GPLv2+_SW_ONEPARA) This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. %%%LICENSE_END |