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samba-mirror/source3/smbd/uid.c

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/*
Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
uid/user handling
Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 1992-1998
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
*/
#include "includes.h"
/* what user is current? */
extern struct current_user current_user;
/****************************************************************************
Become the guest user without changing the security context stack.
****************************************************************************/
BOOL change_to_guest(void)
{
static struct passwd *pass=NULL;
if (!pass) {
A nice *big* change to the fundemental way we do things. Samba (ab)uses the returns from getpwnam() a lot - in particular it keeps them around for a long time - often past the next call... This adds a getpwnam_alloc and a getpwuid_alloc to the collection. These function as expected, returning a malloced structure that can be free()ed with passwd_free(&passwd). This patch also cuts down on the number of calls to getpwnam - mostly by taking advantage of the fact that the passdb interface is already case-insensiteve. With this patch most of the recursive cases have been removed (that I know of) and the problems are reduced further by not using the sys_ interface in the new code. This means that pointers to the cache won't be affected. (This is a tempoary HACK, I intend to kill the password cache entirly). The only change I'm a little worried about is the change to rpc_server/srv_samr_nt.c for private groups. In this case we are getting groups from the new group mapping DB. Do we still need to check for private groups? I've toned down the check to a case sensitve match with the new code, but we might be able to kill it entirly. I've also added a make_modifyable_passwd() function, that copies a passwd struct into the form that the old sys_getpw* code provided. As far as I can tell this is only actually used in the pass_check.c crazies, where I moved the final 'special case' for shadow passwords (out of _Get_Pwnam()). The matching case for getpwent() is dealt with already, in lib/util_getent.c Also included in here is a small change to register the [homes] share at vuid creation rather than just in one varient of the session setup. (This picks up the SPNEGO cases). The home directory is now stored on the vuid, and I am hoping this might provide a saner way to do %H substitions. TODO: Kill off remaining Get_Pwnam_Modify calls (they are not needed), change the remaining sys_getpwnam() callers to use getpwnam_alloc() and move Get_Pwnam to return an allocated struct. Andrew Bartlett (This used to be commit 1d86c7f94230bc53daebd4d2cd829da6292e05da)
2002-01-17 11:45:58 +03:00
/* Don't need to free() this as its stored in a static */
pass = getpwnam_alloc(lp_guestaccount());
if (!pass)
return(False);
}
#ifdef AIX
/* MWW: From AIX FAQ patch to WU-ftpd: call initgroups before
setting IDs */
A nice *big* change to the fundemental way we do things. Samba (ab)uses the returns from getpwnam() a lot - in particular it keeps them around for a long time - often past the next call... This adds a getpwnam_alloc and a getpwuid_alloc to the collection. These function as expected, returning a malloced structure that can be free()ed with passwd_free(&passwd). This patch also cuts down on the number of calls to getpwnam - mostly by taking advantage of the fact that the passdb interface is already case-insensiteve. With this patch most of the recursive cases have been removed (that I know of) and the problems are reduced further by not using the sys_ interface in the new code. This means that pointers to the cache won't be affected. (This is a tempoary HACK, I intend to kill the password cache entirly). The only change I'm a little worried about is the change to rpc_server/srv_samr_nt.c for private groups. In this case we are getting groups from the new group mapping DB. Do we still need to check for private groups? I've toned down the check to a case sensitve match with the new code, but we might be able to kill it entirly. I've also added a make_modifyable_passwd() function, that copies a passwd struct into the form that the old sys_getpw* code provided. As far as I can tell this is only actually used in the pass_check.c crazies, where I moved the final 'special case' for shadow passwords (out of _Get_Pwnam()). The matching case for getpwent() is dealt with already, in lib/util_getent.c Also included in here is a small change to register the [homes] share at vuid creation rather than just in one varient of the session setup. (This picks up the SPNEGO cases). The home directory is now stored on the vuid, and I am hoping this might provide a saner way to do %H substitions. TODO: Kill off remaining Get_Pwnam_Modify calls (they are not needed), change the remaining sys_getpwnam() callers to use getpwnam_alloc() and move Get_Pwnam to return an allocated struct. Andrew Bartlett (This used to be commit 1d86c7f94230bc53daebd4d2cd829da6292e05da)
2002-01-17 11:45:58 +03:00
initgroups(pass->pw_name, pass->pw_gid);
#endif
A nice *big* change to the fundemental way we do things. Samba (ab)uses the returns from getpwnam() a lot - in particular it keeps them around for a long time - often past the next call... This adds a getpwnam_alloc and a getpwuid_alloc to the collection. These function as expected, returning a malloced structure that can be free()ed with passwd_free(&passwd). This patch also cuts down on the number of calls to getpwnam - mostly by taking advantage of the fact that the passdb interface is already case-insensiteve. With this patch most of the recursive cases have been removed (that I know of) and the problems are reduced further by not using the sys_ interface in the new code. This means that pointers to the cache won't be affected. (This is a tempoary HACK, I intend to kill the password cache entirly). The only change I'm a little worried about is the change to rpc_server/srv_samr_nt.c for private groups. In this case we are getting groups from the new group mapping DB. Do we still need to check for private groups? I've toned down the check to a case sensitve match with the new code, but we might be able to kill it entirly. I've also added a make_modifyable_passwd() function, that copies a passwd struct into the form that the old sys_getpw* code provided. As far as I can tell this is only actually used in the pass_check.c crazies, where I moved the final 'special case' for shadow passwords (out of _Get_Pwnam()). The matching case for getpwent() is dealt with already, in lib/util_getent.c Also included in here is a small change to register the [homes] share at vuid creation rather than just in one varient of the session setup. (This picks up the SPNEGO cases). The home directory is now stored on the vuid, and I am hoping this might provide a saner way to do %H substitions. TODO: Kill off remaining Get_Pwnam_Modify calls (they are not needed), change the remaining sys_getpwnam() callers to use getpwnam_alloc() and move Get_Pwnam to return an allocated struct. Andrew Bartlett (This used to be commit 1d86c7f94230bc53daebd4d2cd829da6292e05da)
2002-01-17 11:45:58 +03:00
set_sec_ctx(pass->pw_uid, pass->pw_gid, 0, NULL, NULL);
current_user.conn = NULL;
current_user.vuid = UID_FIELD_INVALID;
passwd_free(&pass);
return True;
}
/****************************************************************************
Readonly share for this user ?
****************************************************************************/
static BOOL is_share_read_only_for_user(connection_struct *conn, user_struct *vuser)
{
char **list;
const char *service = lp_servicename(conn->service);
BOOL read_only_ret = lp_readonly(conn->service);
if (!service)
return read_only_ret;
str_list_copy(&list, lp_readlist(conn->service));
if (list) {
if (!str_list_sub_basic(list, vuser->user.smb_name) ) {
DEBUG(0, ("is_share_read_only_for_user: ERROR: read list substitution failed\n"));
}
if (!str_list_substitute(list, "%S", service)) {
DEBUG(0, ("is_share_read_only_for_user: ERROR: read list service substitution failed\n"));
}
if (user_in_list(vuser->user.unix_name, (const char **)list, vuser->groups, vuser->n_groups)) {
read_only_ret = True;
}
str_list_free(&list);
}
str_list_copy(&list, lp_writelist(conn->service));
if (list) {
if (!str_list_sub_basic(list, vuser->user.smb_name) ) {
DEBUG(0, ("is_share_read_only_for_user: ERROR: write list substitution failed\n"));
}
if (!str_list_substitute(list, "%S", service)) {
DEBUG(0, ("is_share_read_only_for_user: ERROR: write list service substitution failed\n"));
}
if (user_in_list(vuser->user.unix_name, (const char **)list, vuser->groups, vuser->n_groups)) {
read_only_ret = False;
}
str_list_free(&list);
}
DEBUG(10,("is_share_read_only_for_user: share %s is %s for unix user %s\n",
service, read_only_ret ? "read-only" : "read-write", vuser->user.unix_name ));
return read_only_ret;
}
/*******************************************************************
Check if a username is OK.
********************************************************************/
static BOOL check_user_ok(connection_struct *conn, user_struct *vuser,int snum)
{
unsigned int i;
struct vuid_cache_entry *ent = NULL;
BOOL readonly_share;
for (i=0;i<conn->vuid_cache.entries && i< VUID_CACHE_SIZE;i++) {
if (conn->vuid_cache.array[i].vuid == vuser->vuid) {
ent = &conn->vuid_cache.array[i];
conn->read_only = ent->read_only;
conn->admin_user = ent->admin_user;
return(True);
}
}
if (!user_ok(vuser->user.unix_name,snum, vuser->groups, vuser->n_groups))
return(False);
readonly_share = is_share_read_only_for_user(conn, vuser);
if (!readonly_share &&
!share_access_check(conn, snum, vuser, FILE_WRITE_DATA)) {
/* smb.conf allows r/w, but the security descriptor denies
* write. Fall back to looking at readonly. */
readonly_share = True;
DEBUG(5,("falling back to read-only access-evaluation due to security descriptor\n"));
}
if (!share_access_check(conn, snum, vuser, readonly_share ? FILE_READ_DATA : FILE_WRITE_DATA)) {
return False;
}
i = conn->vuid_cache.entries % VUID_CACHE_SIZE;
if (conn->vuid_cache.entries < VUID_CACHE_SIZE)
conn->vuid_cache.entries++;
ent = &conn->vuid_cache.array[i];
ent->vuid = vuser->vuid;
ent->read_only = readonly_share;
if (user_in_list(vuser->user.unix_name ,lp_admin_users(conn->service), vuser->groups, vuser->n_groups)) {
ent->admin_user = True;
} else {
ent->admin_user = False;
}
conn->read_only = ent->read_only;
conn->admin_user = ent->admin_user;
return(True);
}
delineation between smb and msrpc more marked. smbd now constructs pdus, and then feeds them over either a "local" function call or a "remote" function call to an msrpc service. the "remote" msrpc daemon, on the other side of a unix socket, then calls the same "local" function that smbd would, if the msrpc service were being run from inside smbd. this allows a transition from local msrpc services (inside the same smbd process) to remote (over a unix socket). removed reference to pipes_struct in msrpc services. all msrpc processing functions take rpcsrv_struct which is a structure containing state info for the msrpc functions to decode and create pdus. created become_vuser() which does everything not related to connection_struct that become_user() does. removed, as best i could, connection_struct dependencies from the nt spoolss printing code. todo: remove dcinfo from rpcsrv_struct because this stores NETLOGON-specific info on a per-connection basis, and if the connection dies then so does the info, and that's a fairly serious problem. had to put pretty much everything that is in user_struct into parse_creds.c to feed unix user info over to the msrpc daemons. why? because it's expensive to do unix password/group database lookups, and it's definitely expensive to do nt user profile lookups, not to mention pretty difficult and if you did either of these it would introduce a complication / unnecessary interdependency. so, send uid/gid/num_groups/gid_t* + SID+num_rids+domain_group_rids* + unix username + nt username + nt domain + user session key etc. this is the MINIMUM info identified so far that's actually implemented. missing bits include the called and calling netbios names etc. (basically, anything that can be loaded into standard_sub() and standard_sub_basic()...) (This used to be commit aa3c659a8dba0437c17c60055a6ed30fdfecdb6d)
1999-12-12 04:25:49 +03:00
/****************************************************************************
Become the user of a connection number without changing the security context
stack, but modify the currnet_user entries.
delineation between smb and msrpc more marked. smbd now constructs pdus, and then feeds them over either a "local" function call or a "remote" function call to an msrpc service. the "remote" msrpc daemon, on the other side of a unix socket, then calls the same "local" function that smbd would, if the msrpc service were being run from inside smbd. this allows a transition from local msrpc services (inside the same smbd process) to remote (over a unix socket). removed reference to pipes_struct in msrpc services. all msrpc processing functions take rpcsrv_struct which is a structure containing state info for the msrpc functions to decode and create pdus. created become_vuser() which does everything not related to connection_struct that become_user() does. removed, as best i could, connection_struct dependencies from the nt spoolss printing code. todo: remove dcinfo from rpcsrv_struct because this stores NETLOGON-specific info on a per-connection basis, and if the connection dies then so does the info, and that's a fairly serious problem. had to put pretty much everything that is in user_struct into parse_creds.c to feed unix user info over to the msrpc daemons. why? because it's expensive to do unix password/group database lookups, and it's definitely expensive to do nt user profile lookups, not to mention pretty difficult and if you did either of these it would introduce a complication / unnecessary interdependency. so, send uid/gid/num_groups/gid_t* + SID+num_rids+domain_group_rids* + unix username + nt username + nt domain + user session key etc. this is the MINIMUM info identified so far that's actually implemented. missing bits include the called and calling netbios names etc. (basically, anything that can be loaded into standard_sub() and standard_sub_basic()...) (This used to be commit aa3c659a8dba0437c17c60055a6ed30fdfecdb6d)
1999-12-12 04:25:49 +03:00
****************************************************************************/
BOOL change_to_user(connection_struct *conn, uint16 vuid)
{
user_struct *vuser = get_valid_user_struct(vuid);
int snum;
gid_t gid;
uid_t uid;
char group_c;
BOOL must_free_token = False;
NT_USER_TOKEN *token = NULL;
if (!conn) {
DEBUG(2,("change_to_user: Connection not open\n"));
return(False);
}
/*
* We need a separate check in security=share mode due to vuid
* always being UID_FIELD_INVALID. If we don't do this then
* in share mode security we are *always* changing uid's between
* SMB's - this hurts performance - Badly.
*/
if((lp_security() == SEC_SHARE) && (current_user.conn == conn) &&
(current_user.uid == conn->uid)) {
DEBUG(4,("change_to_user: Skipping user change - already user\n"));
return(True);
} else if ((current_user.conn == conn) &&
(vuser != 0) && (current_user.vuid == vuid) &&
(current_user.uid == vuser->uid)) {
DEBUG(4,("change_to_user: Skipping user change - already user\n"));
return(True);
}
snum = SNUM(conn);
if ((vuser) && !check_user_ok(conn, vuser, snum)) {
DEBUG(2,("change_to_user: SMB user %s (unix user %s, vuid %d) not permitted access to share %s.\n",
vuser->user.smb_name, vuser->user.unix_name, vuid, lp_servicename(snum)));
return False;
}
if (conn->force_user) /* security = share sets this too */ {
uid = conn->uid;
gid = conn->gid;
current_user.groups = conn->groups;
current_user.ngroups = conn->ngroups;
token = conn->nt_user_token;
} else if (vuser) {
uid = conn->admin_user ? 0 : vuser->uid;
gid = vuser->gid;
current_user.ngroups = vuser->n_groups;
current_user.groups = vuser->groups;
token = vuser->nt_user_token;
} else {
DEBUG(2,("change_to_user: Invalid vuid used %d in accessing share %s.\n",vuid, lp_servicename(snum) ));
return False;
}
/*
* See if we should force group for this service.
* If so this overrides any group set in the force
* user code.
*/
if((group_c = *lp_force_group(snum))) {
BOOL is_guest = False;
if(group_c == '+') {
/*
* Only force group if the user is a member of
* the service group. Check the group memberships for
* this user (we already have this) to
* see if we should force the group.
*/
int i;
for (i = 0; i < current_user.ngroups; i++) {
if (current_user.groups[i] == conn->gid) {
gid = conn->gid;
break;
}
}
} else {
gid = conn->gid;
}
/*
* We've changed the group list in the token - we must
* re-create it.
*/
if (vuser && vuser->guest)
is_guest = True;
token = create_nt_token(uid, gid, current_user.ngroups, current_user.groups, is_guest);
if (!token) {
DEBUG(1, ("change_to_user: create_nt_token failed!\n"));
return False;
}
must_free_token = True;
}
set_sec_ctx(uid, gid, current_user.ngroups, current_user.groups, token);
/*
* Free the new token (as set_sec_ctx copies it).
*/
if (must_free_token)
delete_nt_token(&token);
current_user.conn = conn;
current_user.vuid = vuid;
DEBUG(5,("change_to_user uid=(%d,%d) gid=(%d,%d)\n",
configure: Changes for extra headers. configure.in: Source for header changes. client/clitar.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. include/config.h.in: Added MEMSET, BZERO, MEMORY, RPCSVC_YPCLNT, STRINGS headers. include/includes.h: Headers for the above. include/smb.h: Made SIGNAL_CAST POSIX by default void (*)(int). lib/access.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. lib/charset.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. lib/debug.c: Fixed signal functs. lib/kanji.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. lib/smbrun.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. lib/util.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. libsmb/namequery.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. locking/shmem.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. locking/shmem_sysv.c: Fixed error messages in sysV stuff. nmbd/asyncdns.c: Fixed signal functs. nmbd/nmbd.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. passdb/passdb.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. passdb/smbpassfile.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. smbd/chgpasswd.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. smbd/ipc.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. smbd/nttrans.c: Fixed fsp code path. smbd/password.c: fixed HAVE_YP_GET_DEFAULT_DOMAIN problem. smbd/printing.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. smbd/reply.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. smbd/server.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. smbd/trans2.c: Fixed core dump bug. smbd/uid.c: Fixed isXXX macros & debugs for gcc pedantic compile. Jeremy. (This used to be commit 1b9cbcd02e575dc0a95fa589f720df30a4acc46b)
1998-08-15 05:19:26 +04:00
(int)getuid(),(int)geteuid(),(int)getgid(),(int)getegid()));
return(True);
}
/****************************************************************************
Go back to being root without changing the security context stack,
but modify the current_user entries.
****************************************************************************/
BOOL change_to_root_user(void)
{
set_root_sec_ctx();
DEBUG(5,("change_to_root_user: now uid=(%d,%d) gid=(%d,%d)\n",
(int)getuid(),(int)geteuid(),(int)getgid(),(int)getegid()));
current_user.conn = NULL;
current_user.vuid = UID_FIELD_INVALID;
return(True);
}
/****************************************************************************
Become the user of an authenticated connected named pipe.
When this is called we are currently running as the connection
user. Doesn't modify current_user.
****************************************************************************/
BOOL become_authenticated_pipe_user(pipes_struct *p)
{
if (!push_sec_ctx())
return False;
set_sec_ctx(p->pipe_user.uid, p->pipe_user.gid,
p->pipe_user.ngroups, p->pipe_user.groups, p->pipe_user.nt_user_token);
return True;
}
/****************************************************************************
Unbecome the user of an authenticated connected named pipe.
When this is called we are running as the authenticated pipe
user and need to go back to being the connection user. Doesn't modify
current_user.
****************************************************************************/
BOOL unbecome_authenticated_pipe_user(void)
{
return pop_sec_ctx();
}
/****************************************************************************
Utility functions used by become_xxx/unbecome_xxx.
****************************************************************************/
struct conn_ctx {
connection_struct *conn;
uint16 vuid;
};
/* A stack of current_user connection contexts. */
static struct conn_ctx conn_ctx_stack[MAX_SEC_CTX_DEPTH];
static int conn_ctx_stack_ndx;
static void push_conn_ctx(void)
{
struct conn_ctx *ctx_p;
/* Check we don't overflow our stack */
if (conn_ctx_stack_ndx == MAX_SEC_CTX_DEPTH) {
DEBUG(0, ("Connection context stack overflow!\n"));
smb_panic("Connection context stack overflow!\n");
}
/* Store previous user context */
ctx_p = &conn_ctx_stack[conn_ctx_stack_ndx];
ctx_p->conn = current_user.conn;
ctx_p->vuid = current_user.vuid;
DEBUG(3, ("push_conn_ctx(%u) : conn_ctx_stack_ndx = %d\n",
(unsigned int)ctx_p->vuid, conn_ctx_stack_ndx ));
conn_ctx_stack_ndx++;
}
static void pop_conn_ctx(void)
{
struct conn_ctx *ctx_p;
/* Check for stack underflow. */
if (conn_ctx_stack_ndx == 0) {
DEBUG(0, ("Connection context stack underflow!\n"));
smb_panic("Connection context stack underflow!\n");
}
conn_ctx_stack_ndx--;
ctx_p = &conn_ctx_stack[conn_ctx_stack_ndx];
current_user.conn = ctx_p->conn;
current_user.vuid = ctx_p->vuid;
ctx_p->conn = NULL;
ctx_p->vuid = UID_FIELD_INVALID;
}
/****************************************************************************
Temporarily become a root user. Must match with unbecome_root(). Saves and
restores the connection context.
****************************************************************************/
void become_root(void)
{
push_sec_ctx();
push_conn_ctx();
set_root_sec_ctx();
}
/* Unbecome the root user */
void unbecome_root(void)
{
pop_sec_ctx();
pop_conn_ctx();
}
/****************************************************************************
Push the current security context then force a change via change_to_user().
Saves and restores the connection context.
****************************************************************************/
BOOL become_user(connection_struct *conn, uint16 vuid)
{
if (!push_sec_ctx())
return False;
push_conn_ctx();
if (!change_to_user(conn, vuid)) {
pop_sec_ctx();
pop_conn_ctx();
return False;
}
return True;
}
BOOL unbecome_user(void)
{
pop_sec_ctx();
pop_conn_ctx();
return True;
}