ref: 5edeca01b0622463a65c126ebcc29314013fd928
dir: /man/2/keyring-auth/
.TH KEYRING-AUTH 2 .SH NAME keyring: auth, readauthinfo, writeauthinfo \- authenticate a connection .SH SYNOPSIS .EX include "keyring.m"; keyring := load Keyring Keyring->PATH; auth: fn(fd: ref Sys->FD, info: ref Authinfo, setid: int) : (string, array of byte); readauthinfo: fn(filename: string): ref Authinfo; writeauthinfo: fn(filename: string, info: ref Authinfo): int; .EE .SH DESCRIPTION .B Auth performs mutual authentication over a network connection, usually between a client and a server. The function is symmetric: each party runs it on their end of the connection. .I Info holds the public key of a certifying authority .RB ( PKca ), the private key of the user .RB ( SKu ), the public key .RB ( PKu ) of the user signed by the certifying authority .RB ( CERTu ), and Diffie-Hellman parameters .RB ( alpha , .BR p ). .PP .B Auth returns a string and a byte array. If the byte array is nil then the authentication has failed and the string is an error message. If the byte array is non-nil, it represents a secret shared by the two communicating parties, and the string names the party at the other end of the connection. .PP If the authentication is successful and .I setid is non-zero then .B auth attempts to write the name of the party at the other end of the connection into .B /dev/user (see .IR cons (3)); no error is generated if that does not succeed. If the authentication is not successful and .I setid is non-zero, .B auth writes the name .B nobody into .BR /dev/user . .PP The authentication protocol is based on the Station-to-Station protocol. In the following, the parties are labelled 0 and 1. .BI Sig0( x ) is .I x signed with 0's private key. .IP .EX 0 → 1 alpha**r0 mod p, CERTu0, PKu0 1 → 0 alpha**r1 mod p, CERTu1, PKu1 0 → 1 sig0(alpha**r0 mod p, alpha**r1 mod p) 1 → 0 sig1(alpha**r0 mod p, alpha**r1 mod p) .EE .PP At this point both 0 and 1 share the secret .B "alpha**(r0*r1)" which is returned in the byte array. Amongst other things, it can be the secret to digest or encrypt a conversation (see .IR security-ssl (2)). .PP .B Readauthinfo reads a representation of an .B Authinfo from a file. It returns nil if there is a read error or a conversion error; it returns a reference to the .B Authinfo otherwise. .PP .B Writeauthinfo writes a representation of .I info to a file. It returns -1 if the write operation fails, 0 otherwise. .SH FILES .TF /usr/user/keyring/defaultxxx .TP .BI /usr/ user /keyring The conventional directory for storing .B Authinfo files .TP .BI /usr/ user /keyring/default The key file normally used by server programs .TP .BI /usr/ user /keyring/ net ! server The key file normally used by clients for a given .I server .SH SOURCE .B /libinterp/keyring.c