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the schannel code, but I've included that anyway. :-)
This patch revives the client-side NTLMSSP support for RPC named pipes
in Samba, and cleans up the client and server schannel code. The use of the
new code is enabled by the 'sign', 'seal' and 'schannel' commands in
rpcclient.
The aim was to prove that our separate NTLMSSP client library actually
implements NTLMSSP signing and sealing as per Microsoft's NTLMv1 implementation,
in the hope that knowing this will assist us in correctly implementing
NTLMSSP signing for SMB packets. (Still not yet functional)
This patch replaces the NTLMSSP implementation in rpc_client/cli_pipe.c with
calls to libsmb/ntlmssp.c. In the process, we have gained the ability to
use the more secure NT password, and the ability to sign-only, instead of
having to seal the pipe connection. (Previously we were limited to sealing,
and could only use the LM-password derived key).
Our new client-side NTLMSSP code also needed alteration to cope with our
comparatively simple server-side implementation. A future step is to replace
it with calls to the same NTLMSSP library.
Also included in this patch is the schannel 'sign only' patch I submitted to
the team earlier. While not enabled (and not functional, at this stage) the
work in this patch makes the code paths *much* easier to follow. I have also
included similar hooks in rpccleint to allow the use of schannel on *any* pipe.
rpcclient now defaults to not using schannel (or any other extra per-pipe
authenticiation) for any connection. The 'schannel' command enables schannel
for all pipes until disabled.
This code is also much more secure than the previous code, as changes to our
cli_pipe routines ensure that the authentication footer cannot be removed
by an attacker, and more error states are correctly handled.
(The same needs to be done to our server)
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 5472ddc9eaf4e79c5b2e1c8ee8c7f190dc285f19)
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(This used to be commit 0666e34d7c8f0863148763932f60a65ad936f2c9)
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swapped.
(This used to be commit 92be28aa4a6ff42c601e9d2de978265a6c2e8c46)
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A much better SMB signing module, that allows for mulitple signing algorithms
and correctly backs down from signing when the server cannot sign the reply.
This also attempts to enable SMB signing on NTLMSSP connections, but I don't
know what NTLMSSP flags to set yet.
This would allow 'client use signing' to be set by default, for server
compatability. (A seperate option value should be provided for mandetory
signing, which would not back down).
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 1c87be7a3d127201a6ab78d22d17c971af16b86b)
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Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit f4ae028c2ad6ff8c7da3a6ef77a92762861144e1)
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- new kerberos code, allowing the account to change it's own password
without special SD settings required
- NTLMSSP client code, now seperated from cliconnect.c
- NTLMv2 client code
- SMB signing fixes
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 837680ca517982f2e5944730581a83012d4181ae)
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- NTLMSSP over SPENGO (sesssion-setup-and-x) cleanup and code refactor.
- also consequential changes to the NTLMSSP and SPNEGO parsing functions
- and the client code that uses the same functions
- Add ntlm_auth, a NTLMSSP authentication interface for use by applications
like Squid and Apache.
- also consquential changes to use common code for base64 encode/decode.
- Winbind changes to support ntlm_auth (I don't want this program to need
to read smb.conf, instead getting all it's details over the pipe).
- nmbd changes for fstrcat() instead of fstrcpy().
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit fbb46da79cf322570a7e3318100c304bbf33409e)
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(This used to be commit 1df9f3e259b5ba190de7a123a79b3afcd2bfe489)
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eliminate the dependency on the auth subsystem. The next step is to add
the required code to 'ntlm_auth', for export to Squid etc.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 9e48ab86da40e4c1cafa70c04fb9ebdcce23dfab)
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This tries to extract our server-side code out of sessetup.c, and into a more
general lib. I hope this is only a temporay resting place - I indend to
refactor it again into an auth-subsystem independent lib, using callbacks.
Move some of our our NTLMSSP #defines into a new file, and add two that I found
in the COMsource docs - we seem to have a double-up, but I've verified from
traces that the NTLMSSP_TARGET_TYPE_{DOMAIN,SERVER} is real.
This code also copes with ASCII clients - not that we will ever see any here,
but I hope to use this for HTTP, were we can get them. Win2k authenticates
fine under forced ASCII, btw.
Tested with Win2k, NTLMv2 and Samba's smbclient.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit b6641badcbb2fb3bfec9d00a6466318203ea33e1)
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