BOS_LISTKEYS(8) | AFS Command Reference | BOS_LISTKEYS(8) |
bos_listkeys - Displays the server encryption keys from the KeyFile file
bos listkeys
-server <machine name> [-showkey]
[-cell <cell name>] [-noauth]
[-localauth] [-help]
bos listk
-se <machine name> [-sh]
[-c <cell name>]
[-n] [-l] [-h]
The bos listkeys command formats and displays the list of server encryption keys from the /etc/openafs/server/KeyFile file on the server machine named by the -server argument. It is equivalent to asetkey list, but can be run remotely.
To edit the list of keys, use the asetkey command; see asetkey(8) for more information. You can also remove keys remotely using the bos removekey command. If you are using the Authentication Server (kaserver) rather than a Kerberos v5 KDC, use the bos addkey command instead of asetkey to add a new key.
Displaying actual keys on the standard output stream (by including the -showkey flag) is a security exposure. Displaying a checksum is sufficient for most purposes.
This command will only list keys in the KeyFile; it cannot display keys from a KeyFileExt. A server running a modern, secure installation using only keys for the rxkad-k5 extension will yield no keys in the output of this command.
For consistent performance in the cell, the output must be the same on every server machine. asetkey(8) explains how to keep the machines synchronized.
The output includes one line for each server encryption key listed in the KeyFile file, identified by its key version number.
If the -showkey flag is included, the output displays the actual string of eight octal numbers that constitute the key. Each octal number is a backslash and three decimal digits.
If the -showkey flag is not included, the output represents each key as a checksum, which is a decimal number derived by encrypting a constant with the key.
Following the list of keys or checksums, the string "Keys last changed" indicates when a key was last added to the KeyFile file. The words "All done" indicate the end of the output.
For mutual authentication to work properly, the output from the command "kas examine afs" must match the key or checksum with the same key version number in the output from this command.
The following example shows the checksums for the keys stored in the KeyFile file on the machine "fs3.example.com".
% bos listkeys fs3.example.com key 1 has cksum 972037177 key 3 has cksum 2825175022 key 4 has cksum 260617746 key 6 has cksum 4178774593 Keys last changed on Mon Apr 12 11:24:46 1999. All done.
The following example shows the actual keys from the KeyFile file on the machine "fs6.example.com".
% bos listkeys fs6.example.com -showkey key 0 is '\040\205\211\241\345\002\023\211' key 1 is '\343\315\307\227\255\320\135\244' key 2 is '\310\310\255\253\326\236\261\211' Keys last changed on Wed Mar 31 11:24:46 1999. All done.
The issuer must be listed in the /etc/openafs/server/UserList file on the machine named by the -server argument, or must be logged onto a server machine as the local superuser "root" if the -localauth flag is included.
KeyFile(5), KeyFileExt(5), UserList(5), asetkey(8), bos_addkey(8), bos_removekey(8), bos_setauth(8), kas_examine(8)
IBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved.
This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas Williams and Russ Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.
2022-12-22 | OpenAFS |