DOKK / manpages / debian 12 / libgssapi-perl / GSSAPI::OID.3pm.en
GSSAPI::OID(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation GSSAPI::OID(3pm)

GSSAPI::OID - methods for handling GSSAPI OIDs and some constant OIDs

  use GSSAPI;
  #$oid = GSSAPI::OID->new;             # rarely needed or wanted
  $status = GSSAPI::OID->from_str($oid, "{ 1 2 840 113554 1 2 1 1 }");
  #
  # only supported on MIT Kerberos
  #
  $status = $oid->to_str($str);
  #
  # only supported on MIT Kerberos
  #
  $status = $oid->inquire_names($oidset);
  # Constant OIDs provided:
  $oid = gss_nt_user_name;
  $oid = gss_nt_machine_uid_name;
  $oid = gss_nt_string_uid_name;
  $oid = gss_nt_service_name;
  $oid = gss_nt_exported_name;
  $oid = gss_nt_service_name_v2;
  $oid = gss_nt_krb5_name;
  $oid = gss_nt_krb5_principal;
  $oid = gss_mech_krb5;
  $oid = gss_mech_krb5_old;
  $oid = gss_mech_krb5_v2;
  $oid = gss_mech_spnego;
  # if your GSSAPI implementation supports
  # SPNEGO (Heimdal 0.7 for example
  # you can  use mechtype OID::gss_mech_spnego.
  #
  # use GSSAPI::indicate_mechs( $oidset );
  # to get the of mechtypes your implementation supports
  $oid = gss_nt_hostbased_service; # GSS_C_NT_HOSTBASED_SERVICE

"GSSAPI::OID" objects are used as unique indentifiers/constants for 'mechanisisms' -- the particular protocol and version being used -- and for the encodings used to represent names. In many cases you can request the default mechanism or encoding for the implementation by using GSS_C_NO_OID. Check the description of the routine in rfc2743 if you're not sure.

maintained by Achim Grolms <perl@grolmsnet.de>

originally written by Philip Guenther <pguen@cpan.org>

perl(1) GSSAPI(3p) GSSAPI::OID::Set(3p) RFC2743

2022-10-19 perl v5.36.0