On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 10:14 AM, Mike Diehn<m...@diehn.net> wrote: > > > Hello, all. > > I'm authenticating users with mod_auth_krb and setting KrbSaveCredentials > to on. I've found that the credentials are stored in a file in /tmp. The > name of the file is passed to CGI programs as the contents of an ENV var > named KRB5CCNAME. > > I'm handling the authorization phase with a mod_perl2 PerlAuthzHandler > script. I want to use the credentials that mod_auth_kerb just verified. > By this phase, the name of the credential cache file has been stored > somewhere by mod_auth_kerb. > > The question is this: > > How can I get that filename? > How can I read the ENV that will ultimately go to CGI scripts? > > PerlPassEnv seems not to do it.
On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 10:14 AM, Mike Diehn<m...@diehn.net> wrote: > > Hello, all. > > I'm authenticating users with mod_auth_krb and setting KrbSaveCredentials > to on. I've found that the credentials are stored in a file in /tmp. The > name of the file is passed to CGI programs as the contents of an ENV var > named KRB5CCNAME. > > I'm handling the authorization phase with a mod_perl2 PerlAuthzHandler > script. I want to use the credentials that mod_auth_kerb just verified. > By this phase, the name of the credential cache file has been stored > somewhere by mod_auth_kerb. > > The question is this: > > How can I get that filename? > How can I read the ENV that will ultimately go to CGI scripts? > > PerlPassEnv seems not to do it. You need both PassEnv and PerlPassEnv. Alternatively you may be able to access the variable using subprocess_env. http://perl.apache.org/docs/2.0/api/Apache2/RequestRec.html#C_subprocess_env_ -wjt