rpc.gssd(8) | System Manager's Manual | rpc.gssd(8) |
rpc.gssd - RPCSEC_GSS daemon
rpc.gssd [-DfMnlvr] [-k keytab] [-p pipefsdir] [-d ccachedir] [-t timeout] [-R realm]
The RPCSEC_GSS protocol, defined in RFC 5403, is used to provide strong security for RPC-based protocols such as NFS.
Before exchanging RPC requests using RPCSEC_GSS, an RPC client must establish a GSS security context. A security context is shared state on each end of a network transport that enables GSS-API security services.
Security contexts are established using security credentials. A credential grants temporary access to a secure network service, much as a railway ticket grants temporary access to use a rail service.
A user typically obtains a credential by providing a password to the kinit(1) command, or via a PAM library at login time. A credential acquired with a user principal is known as a user credential (see kerberos(1) for more on principals).
For certain operations, a credential is required which represents no user, is otherwise unprivileged, and is always available. This is referred to as a machine credential.
Machine credentials are typically established using a service principal, whose encrypted password, called its key, is stored in a file, called a keytab, to avoid requiring a user prompt. A machine credential effectively does not expire because the system can renew it as needed without user intervention.
Once obtained, credentials are typically stored in local temporary files with well-known pathnames.
To establish GSS security contexts using these credential files, the Linux kernel RPC client depends on a userspace daemon called rpc.gssd. The rpc.gssd daemon uses the rpc_pipefs filesystem to communicate with the kernel.
When a user authenticates using a command such as kinit(1), the resulting credential is stored in a file with a well-known name constructed using the user's UID.
To interact with an NFS server on behalf of a particular Kerberos-authenticated user, the Linux kernel RPC client requests that rpc.gssd initialize a security context with the credential in that user's credential file.
Typically, credential files are placed in /tmp. However, rpc.gssd can search for credential files in more than one directory. See the description of the -d option for details.
A user credential is established by a user and is then shared with the kernel and rpc.gssd. A machine credential is established by rpc.gssd for the kernel when there is no user. Therefore rpc.gssd must already have the materials on hand to establish this credential without requiring user intervention.
rpc.gssd searches the local system's keytab for a principal and key to use to establish the machine credential. By default, rpc.gssd assumes the file /etc/krb5.keytab contains principals and keys that can be used to obtain machine credentials.
rpc.gssd searches in the following order for a principal to use. The first matching credential is used. For the search, <hostname> and <REALM> are replaced with the local system's hostname and Kerberos realm.
<HOSTNAME>$@<REALM>
root/<hostname>@<REALM>
nfs/<hostname>@<REALM>
host/<hostname>@<REALM>
root/<anyname>@<REALM>
nfs/<anyname>@<REALM>
host/<anyname>@<REALM>
The <anyname> entries match on the service name and realm, but ignore the hostname. These can be used if a principal matching the local host's name is not found.
Note that the first principal in the search order is a user principal that enables Kerberized NFS when the local system is joined to an Active Directory domain using Samba. A password for this principal must be provided in the local system's keytab.
You can specify another keytab by using the -k option if /etc/krb5.keytab does not exist or does not provide one of these principals.
UID 0 is a special case. By default rpc.gssd uses the system's machine credentials for UID 0 accesses that require GSS authentication. This limits the privileges of the root user when accessing network resources that require authentication.
Specify the -n option when starting rpc.gssd if you'd like to force the root user to obtain a user credential rather than use the local system's machine credential.
When -n is specified, the kernel continues to request a GSS context established with a machine credential for NFSv4 operations, such as SETCLIENTID or RENEW, that manage state. If rpc.gssd cannot obtain a machine credential (say, the local system has no keytab), NFSv4 operations that require machine credentials will fail.
A realm administrator can choose to add keys encoded in a number of different encryption types to the local system's keytab. For instance, a host/ principal might have keys for the aes256-cts-hmac-sha1-96, aes128-cts-hmac-sha1-96, des3-cbc-sha1, and arcfour-hmac encryption types. This permits rpc.gssd to choose an appropriate encryption type that the target NFS server supports.
These encryption types are stronger than legacy single-DES encryption types. To interoperate in environments where servers support only weak encryption types, you can restrict your client to use only single-DES encryption types by specifying the -l option when starting rpc.gssd.
If -D is present, a reverse DNS lookup will always be used, even if the server name looks like a canonical name. So it is needed if partially qualified, or non canonical names are regularly used.
Using -D can introduce a security vulnerability, so it is recommended that -D not be used, and that canonical names always be used when requesting services.
Dug Song <dugsong@umich.edu>
Andy Adamson <andros@umich.edu>
Marius Aamodt Eriksen <marius@umich.edu>
J. Bruce Fields <bfields@umich.edu>
20 Feb 2013 |