ZMQ_GSSAPI(7) | 0MQ Manual | ZMQ_GSSAPI(7) |
zmq_gssapi - secure authentication and confidentiality
The GSSAPI mechanism defines a mechanism for secure authentication and confidentiality for communications between a client and a server using the Generic Security Service Application Program Interface (GSSAPI). The GSSAPI mechanism can be used on both public and private networks. GSSAPI itself is defined in IETF RFC-2743: http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2743. The ZeroMQ GSSAPI mechanism is defined by this document: http://rfc.zeromq.org/spec:38.
A socket using GSSAPI can be either client or server, but not both.
To become a GSSAPI server, the application sets the ZMQ_GSSAPI_SERVER option on the socket.
To become a GSSAPI client, the application sets the ZMQ_GSSAPI_SERVICE_PRINCIPAL option to the name of the principal on the server to which it intends to connect.
On client or server, the application may additionally set the ZMQ_GSSAPI_PRINCIPAL option to provide the socket with the name of the principal for whom GSSAPI credentials should be acquired. If this option is not set, default credentials are used.
By default, the GSSAPI mechanism will encrypt all communications between client and server. If encryption is not desired (e.g. on private networks), the client and server applications can disable it by setting the ZMQ_GSSAPI_PLAINTEXT option. Both the client and server must set this option to the same value.
Principal names specified with the ZMQ_GSSAPI_SERVICE_PRINCIPAL or ZMQ_GSSAPI_PRINCIPAL options are interpreted as "host based" name types by default. The ZMQ_GSSAPI_PRINCIPAL_NAMETYPE and ZMQ_GSSAPI_SERVICE_PRINCIPAL_NAMETYPE options may be used to change the name type to one of:
ZMQ_GSSAPI_NT_HOSTBASED
ZMQ_GSSAPI_NT_USER_NAME
ZMQ_GSSAPI_NT_KRB5_PRINCIPAL
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01/18/2023 | 0MQ 4.3.4 |