On Fri, 2013-08-02 at 17:53 +0100, David Howells wrote:
> Jeff Layton <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> > > + /* -1 indicates the current user */
> > > + if (_uid == (uid_t)-1) {
> > > +         uid = current_uid();
> >
> > Isn't it possible to have a valid uid of (unsigned int)-1? I know that
> > at least some sites use that for "nobody". Why not just require passing
> > in the correct UID?
> 
> See setresuid() and co. - there -1 is "don't change".
> 
> > Looks good overall, but I share Daniel's concerns about making
> > krb5-specific infrastructure like this. Essentially this is just a
> > persistent keyring that's associated with a kuid, right? Perhaps this
> > could be done in such a way that it could be usable for other
> > applications in the future?
> 
> It's not too hard, I suppose:
> 
>       keyctl_get_persistent(uid, prefix, destring)
> 
> eg:
> 
>       keyctl_get_persistent(-1, "_krb.", KEYCTL_SPEC_PROCESS_KEYRING)
> 
> giving:
> 
>       struct user_namespace
>         \___ .krb_cache keyring
>               \___ _krb.0 keyring
>               \___ _krb.5000 keyring
>               \___ _krb.5001 keyring
>               |       \___ tkt785 big_key
>               |       \___ tkt12345 big_key
>               \___ _afs.5000 keyring
>                       \___ afs.redhat.com rxrpc
> 
> The other way to do it is create one keyring per user and let userspace create
> subkeyrings under that:
> 
>       struct user_namespace
>         \___ .krb_cache keyring
>               \___ _uid_p.0 keyring
>               \___ _uid_p.5000 keyring
>               \___ _uid_p.5001 keyring
>                       \___ krb keyring
>                       |       \___ tkt785 big_key
>                       |       \___ tkt12345 big_key
>                       \___ afs keyring
>                               \___ afs.redhat.com rxrpc
> 
> In the above scheme, it might be worth just making these the same as the user
> keyring - which means KEYCTL_SPEC_USER_KEYRING will automatically target it.
> 
> Simo:  I believe the problem you have with the user keyring is that it's not
> persistent beyond the life of the processes of that UID, right?

Correct.

Simo.

-- 
Simo Sorce * Red Hat, Inc * New York

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