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Kerberos CCACHE into the system.
This again allows the use of the system ccache when no username is
specified, and brings more code in common between gensec_krb5 and
gensec_gssapi.
It also has a side-effect that may (or may not) be expected: If there
is a ccache, even if it is not used (perhaps the remote server didn't
want kerberos), it will change the default username.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 6202267f6ec1446d6bd11d1d37d05a977bc8d315)
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in all the callers. This also allows us to be more flexible in the
type of password we store.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 00b8588c68526e1d86fda0bd81c0b86f690b62c3)
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event_context for the socket_connect() call, so that when things that
use dcerpc are running alongside anything else it doesn't block the
whole process during a connect.
Then of course I needed to change any code that created a dcerpc
connection (such as the auth code) to also take an event context, and
anything that called that and so on .... thus the size of the patch.
There were 3 places where I punted:
- abartlet wanted me to add a gensec_set_event_context() call
instead of adding it to the gensec init calls. Andrew, my
apologies for not doing this. I didn't do it as adding a new
parameter allowed me to catch all the callers with the
compiler. Now that its done, we could go back and use
gensec_set_event_context()
- the ejs code calls auth initialisation, which means it should pass
in the event context from the web server. I punted on that. Needs fixing.
- I used a NULL event context in dcom_get_pipe(). This is equivalent
to what we did already, but should be fixed to use a callers event
context. Jelmer, can you think of a clean way to do that?
I also cleaned up a couple of things:
- libnet_context_destroy() makes no sense. I removed it.
- removed some unused vars in various places
(This used to be commit 3a3025485bdb8f600ab528c0b4b4eef0c65e3fc9)
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We need to pass the 'secure channel type' to the NETLOGON layer, which
must match the account type.
(Yes, jelmer objects to this inclusion of the kitchen sink ;-)
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 8ee208a926d2b15fdc42753b1f9ee586564c6248)
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(This used to be commit 321fbae51267153102e47845736f2c3a5abfe0be)
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DCERPC_SCHANNEL_128 if we fail. Thus, it allows us to work with Windows
NT DCs ...
(This used to be commit 3034b226705c4736d57c9bf4e9470c4d44c72e8e)
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GENSEC, and to pull SCHANNEL into GENSEC, by making it less 'special'.
GENSEC now no longer has it's own handling of 'set username' etc,
instead it uses cli_credentials calls.
In order to link the credentails code right though Samba, a lot of
interfaces have changed to remove 'username, domain, password'
arguments, and these have been replaced with a single 'struct
cli_credentials'.
In the session setup code, a new parameter 'workgroup' contains the
client/server current workgroup, which seems unrelated to the
authentication exchange (it was being filled in from the auth info).
This allows in particular kerberos to only call back for passwords
when it actually needs to perform the kinit.
The kerberos code has been modified not to use the SPNEGO provided
'principal name' (in the mechListMIC), but to instead use the name the
host was connected to as. This better matches Microsoft behaviour,
is more secure and allows better use of standard kerberos functions.
To achieve this, I made changes to our socket code so that the
hostname (before name resolution) is now recorded on the socket.
In schannel, most of the code from librpc/rpc/dcerpc_schannel.c is now
in libcli/auth/schannel.c, and it looks much more like a standard
GENSEC module. The actual sign/seal code moved to
libcli/auth/schannel_sign.c in a previous commit.
The schannel credentails structure is now merged with the rest of the
credentails, as many of the values (username, workstation, domain)
where already present there. This makes handling this in a generic
manner much easier, as there is no longer a custom entry-point.
The auth_domain module continues to be developed, but is now just as
functional as auth_winbind. The changes here are consequential to the
schannel changes.
The only removed function at this point is the RPC-LOGIN test
(simulating the load of a WinXP login), which needs much more work to
clean it up (it contains copies of too much code from all over the
torture suite, and I havn't been able to penetrate its 'structure').
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 2301a4b38a21aa60917973451687063d83d18d66)
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metze needs a working tree...
The main volume of this patch was what I started working on today:
- Cleans up memory handling around DCE/RPC pipes, to have a parent talloc context.
- Uses sepereate inner loops for some of the DCE/RPC tests
The other and more important part of this patch fixes issues
surrounding the new credentials framwork:
This makes the struct cli_credentials always a talloc() structure,
rather than on the stack. Parts of the cli_credentials code already
assumed this.
There were other issues, particularly in the DCERPC over SMB handling,
as well as little things that had to be tidied up before test_w2k3.sh
would start to pass.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 0453f9d05d2e336fba1f85dbf2718d01fa2bf778)
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- gtk+ (returned by GtkHostBindingDialog as well now)
- torture/
- librpc/
- lib/com/dcom/
(This used to be commit ccefd782335e01e8e6ecb2bcd28a4f999c53b1a6)
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I wanted to add a simple 'workstation' argument to the DCERPC
authenticated binding calls, but this patch kind of grew from there.
With SCHANNEL, the 'workstation' name (the netbios name of the client)
matters, as this is what ties the session between the NETLOGON ops and
the SCHANNEL bind. This changes a lot of files, and these will again
be changed when jelmer does the credentials work.
I also correct some schannel IDL to distinguish between workstation
names and account names. The distinction matters for domain trust
accounts.
Issues in handling this (issues with lifetime of talloc pointers)
caused me to change the 'creds_CredentialsState' and 'struct
dcerpc_binding' pointers to always be talloc()ed pointers.
In the schannel DB, we now store both the domain and computername, and
query on both. This should ensure we fault correctly when the domain
is specified incorrectly in the SCHANNEL bind.
In the RPC-SCHANNEL test, I finally fixed a bug that vl pointed out,
where the comment claimed we re-used a connection, but in fact we made
a new connection.
This was achived by breaking apart some of the
dcerpc_secondary_connection() logic.
The addition of workstation handling was also propogated to NTLMSSP
and GENSEC, for completeness.
The RPC-SAMSYNC test has been cleaned up a little, using a loop over
usernames/passwords rather than manually expanded tests. This will be
expanded further (the code in #if 0 in this patch) to use a newly
created user account for testing.
In making this test pass test_rpc.sh, I found a bug in the RPC-ECHO
server, caused by the removal of [ref] and the assoicated pointer from
the IDL. This has been re-added, until the underlying pidl issues are
solved.
(This used to be commit 824289dcc20908ddec957a4a892a103eec2da9b9)
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which will move in with the rest of GENSEC shortly).
Add the RID as another element in the schannel state.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 69114b4a8e1c937ab5ff12ca91dd22bd83fd9a3b)
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metze
(This used to be commit add1c579375d08040f722946da31ee3862f9e7ac)
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large commit. I thought this was worthwhile to get done for
consistency.
(This used to be commit ec32b22ed5ec224f6324f5e069d15e92e38e15c0)
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- added support for "spnego" in binding strings. This enables SPNEGO
auth in the dcerpc client code, using as many allter_context calls as
are needed
To try SPNEGO do this:
smbtorture ncacn_ip_tcp:SERVER[spnego,seal] -Uadministrator%password RPC-SAMR
(This used to be commit 9c0a3423f03111c110d21c0d3910e16aa1a8bf87)
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doesn't need to
use function pointers anymore
- make the module init much easier
- a lot of cleanups
don't try to read the diff in auth/ better read the new files
it passes test_echo.sh and test_rpc.sh
abartlet: please fix spelling fixes
metze
(This used to be commit 3c0d16b8236451f2cfd38fc3db8ae2906106d847)
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dcerpc_alter_context and multiple context_ids in the dcerpc client
library.
This stage does the following:
- split "struct dcerpc_pipe" into two parts, the main part being "struct dcerpc_connection", which
contains all the parts not dependent on the context, and "struct dcerpc_pipe" which has
the context dependent part. This is similar to the layering in libcli_*() for SMB
- disable the current dcerpc_alter code. I've used a #warning until i
get the 2nd phase finished. I don't know how portable #warning is, but
it won't be long before I add full alter context support anyway, so it won't last long
- cleanup the allocation of dcerpc_pipe structures. The previous code
was quite awkward.
(This used to be commit 4004c69937be7e5dae56f9567ca607f982d395d3)
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.enabled = True
on modules we know are good (and we want on be default) seems neater.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 18850c66b7c8ac5e8caf08151dbb9b72cf93230f)
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In developing a GSSAPI plugin for GENSEC, it became clear that the API
needed to change:
- GSSAPI exposes only a wrap() and unwrap() interface, and determines
the location of the signature itself.
- The 'have feature' API did not correctly function in the recursive
SPNEGO environment.
As such, NTLMSSP has been updated to support these methods.
The LDAP client and server have been updated to use the new wrap() and
unwrap() methods, and now pass the LDAP-* tests in our smbtorture.
(Unfortunely I still get valgrind warnings, in the code that was
previously unreachable).
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 9923c3bc1b5a6e93a5996aadb039bd229e888ac6)
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favor of talloc_free().
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 1933cd12fbaed56e13f2386b19de6ade99bf9478)
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- Update Samba4's kerberos code to match the 'salting' changes in
Samba3 (and many other cleanups by jra).
- Move GENSEC into the modern era of talloc destructors. This avoids
many of the memory leaks in this code, as we now can't somehow
'forget' to call the end routine.
- This required fixing some of the talloc hierarchies.
- The new krb5 seems more sensitive to getting the service name
right, so start actually setting the service name on the krb5 context.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 278bf1a61a6da6ef955a12c13d7b1a0357cebf1f)
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schannel code.
I would also like to give a gentle reminder to everyone to please run
the appropriate test scripts when you change a subsystem. It's a shame
to have this test code and not use it, and it takes much longer for
another developer to track down a bug in your new code than it would
take for you fix to it at the time you first add it.
- for rpc changes run test_rpc.sh
- for CIFS changes run test_posix.sh
- for ldb changes run test-tdb in lib/ldb/
(This used to be commit 0c58b254cabd236911021aff87c73183356fa8e3)
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metze
(This used to be commit 57bd26f9c528687ca2ca9bbaa56f7f36efd2231f)
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- Re-disable tdbtool (it was building fine on my Debian box but other
machines were having problems)
(This used to be commit 0d7bb2c40b7a9ed59df3f8944133ea562697e814)
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Break out the samsync tests from RPC-NETLOGON into a new RPC-SAMSYNC,
that will cross-verify all the values.
Add support for the way netlogon credentials are shared between the
pipe that sets up schannel and the pipe that is encrypted with it.
Test this support, by calling both NETLOGON and SAMR operations in the
RPC-SCHANNEL test.
Move some of the Netlogon NEG flags into the .idl, now we have an idea
what a few of them really are.
Rename the sam_pwd_hash into a name that has meaning (all other crypto
functions were renamed in Samba4 ages ago).
Break out NTLMv2 functionality for operation on the NT hash - I intend
to do NTLMv2 logins in the samsync test in future, and naturally I
only have the hash.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 6e6cc6fb9842113a1b0c7f6904dac709b320a6e5)
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tuning
Samba3/OpenLDAP for. For a concrete situation you have to adapt the domain,
pdcname and usernames/passwords. Sorry, not parametrized yet, but this should
be doable if necessary.
Volker
(This used to be commit 02f52058722fc1aea02d4fe237c97404d8e4f491)
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- tidied up some of the system includes
- moved a few more structures back from misc.idl to netlogon.idl and samr.idl now that pidl
knows about inter-IDL dependencies
(This used to be commit 7b7477ac42d96faac1b0ff361525d2c63cedfc64)
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The thing that finally convinced me that minimal includes was worth
pursuing for rpc was a compiler (tcc) that failed to build Samba due
to reaching internal limits of the size of include files. Also the
fact that includes.h.gch was 16MB, which really seems excessive. This
patch brings it back to 12M, which is still too large, but
better. Note that this patch speeds up compile times for both the pch
and non-pch case.
This change also includes the addition iof a "depends()" option in our
IDL files, allowing you to specify that one IDL file depends on
another. This capability was needed for the auto-includes generation.
(This used to be commit b8f5fa8ac8e8725f3d321004f0aedf4246fc6b49)
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(This used to be commit 0b93be9f5f89ef17f94e8e98c3a405495e04e235)
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(This used to be commit eb3366d3667ddddf7ab5eae5d1fbc5de86c41072)
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Samba4.
(This used to be commit 01f5c1c72d9fc8f21029adc586154b0c54f76c9e)
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again. The problem was that the sig_size method didn't get added in
the gensec conversion.
(This used to be commit a49b61173dbadbf4efb0fbcfaba67da393913639)
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ensure we don't segfault on the cleanup from an incomplete schannel
bind.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 173f29a1d8db111d5adb258eead5379d681d3bb2)
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also fixes a memory leak found with --leak-check.
(This used to be commit f19201ea274f0a542314c61c4af676197bf154ad)
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by making our gensec structures a talloc child of the open connection
we can be sure that it will be destroyed when the connection is
dropped.
(This used to be commit f12ee2f241aab1549bc1d9ca4c35a35a1ca0d09d)
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This means that 'require NTLMv2 session security' now works for RPC
pipe signing. We don't yet have sealing, but it can't be much further.
This is almost all tridge's code, munged into a form that can work
with the GENSEC API.
This commit also includes more lsakey fixes - that key is used for all
DCE-RPC level authenticated connections, even over CIFS/ncacn_np.
No doubt I missed something, but I'm going to get some sleep :-)
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit a1fe175eec884280fb7e9ca8f528134cf4600beb)
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generate a separate *_send() async function for every RPC call, and
there is a single dcerpc_ndr_request_recv() call that processes the
receive side of any rpc call. The caller can use
dcerpc_event_context() to get a pointer to the event context for the
pipe so that events can be waited for asynchronously.
The only part that remains synchronous is the initial bind
calls. These could also be made async if necessary, although I suspect
most applications won't need them to be.
(This used to be commit f5d004d8eb8c76c03342cace1976b27266cfa1f0)
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The bug (found by tridge) is that Win2k3 is being tighter about the
NTLMSSP flags. If we don't negotiate sealing, we can't use it.
We now have a way to indicate to the GENSEC implementation mechanisms
what things we want for a connection.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 86f61568ea44c5719f9b583beeeefb12e0c26f4c)
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for me).
Fix indent, and add a few more useful debug messages.
Send a fault, if the bind is not accepted - don't just leave the client hanging.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 486215edc1148ad754632be37760dc0d38b0340d)
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Rework our random number generation system.
On systems with /dev/urandom, this avoids a change to secrets.tdb for every fork().
For other systems, we now only re-seed after a fork, and on startup.
No need to do it per-operation. This removes the 'need_reseed'
parameter from generate_random_buffer().
This also requires that we start the secrets subsystem, as that is
where the reseed value is stored, for systems without /dev/urandom.
In order to aviod identical streams in forked children, the random
state is re-initialised after the fork(), at the same point were we do
that to the tdbs.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit b97d3cb2efd68310b1aea8a3ac40a64979c8cdae)
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instead of auth3
metze
(This used to be commit 19b0567ee533744a0f2778bf8549636a25d96526)
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This implements gensec for Samba's server side, and brings gensec up
to the standards of a full subsystem.
This means that use of the subsystem is by gensec_* functions, not
function pointers in structures (this is internal). This causes
changes in all the existing gensec users.
Our RPC server no longer contains it's own generalised security
scheme, and now calls gensec directly.
Gensec has also taken over the role of auth/auth_ntlmssp.c
An important part of gensec, is the output of the 'session_info'
struct. This is now reference counted, so that we can correctly free
it when a pipe is closed, no matter if it was inherited, or created by
per-pipe authentication.
The schannel code is reworked, to be in the same file for client and
server.
ntlm_auth is reworked to use gensec.
The major problem with this code is the way it relies on subsystem
auto-initialisation. The primary reason for this commit now.is to
allow these problems to be looked at, and fixed.
There are problems with the new code:
- I've tested it with smbtorture, but currently don't have VMware and
valgrind working (this I'll fix soon).
- The SPNEGO code is client-only at this point.
- We still do not do kerberos.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 07fd885fd488fd1051eacc905a2d4962f8a018ec)
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This layer is used for DCERPC security, as well as ntlm_auth at this
time. It expect things like SASL and the CIFS layer to use it as
well.
The particular purpose of this layer is to introduce SPENGO, which
needs generic access to the actual implementation mechanisms.
Schannel, due to it's 'interesting' setup properties is in GENSEC, but
is only in the RPC code.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 902af49006fb8cfecaadd3cc0c10e2e542083fb1)
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metze
(This used to be commit 1706ff88a72c6578a109c2cf24f2f009812c3892)
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- added server side support for schannel type 23. This allows WinXP to establish a schannel connection
to Samba4 as an ADS DC
- added client side support for schannel type 23, but disabled it as currently the client
code has now way of getting the fully qualified domain name (which is needed)
- report dcerpc faults in the server code in the log
(This used to be commit 55e0b014fe14ca8811b55887208a1c3147ddb0d2)
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(This used to be commit 96fc2b6f1e7372cc3646bd52172187b8a689c15a)
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separate utility function, to allow
multiple torture tests to temporarily join a domain
- fixed a session key size problem
- added a schannel test suite
- allow schannel to work with ncacn_ip_tcp
(This used to be commit 36f05e4d575099fcb957b8a55781c38dcd2e1177)
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Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 88222b5da9a005e48477d2bfd98a488e4442b5f6)
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(This used to be commit 2ac79dfba0e64056a680f21d7dd0c007f79d4a70)
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pwd -> password
passwd -> password
username -> account_name
Also work on consistant structure feild names between these two pipes,
and fix up some callers to use samr_Password for the netlogon
credential code.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 4e35418c2776f7b79be5b358ffd077754685d1ac)
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names rather than our crazy naming scheme. So DES is now called
des_crypt() rather than smbhash()
- added the code from the solution of the ADS crypto challenge that
allows Samba to correctly handle a 128 bit session key in all of the
netr_ServerAuthenticateX() varients. A huge thanks to Luke Howard
from PADL for solving this one!
- restructured the server side rpc authentication to allow for other
than NTLMSSP sign and seal. This commit just adds the structure, the
next commit will add schannel server side support.
- added 128 bit session key support to our client side code, and
testing against w2k3 with smbtorture. Works well.
(This used to be commit 729b2f41c924a0b435d44a14209e6dacc2304cee)
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