Provided by: libauthen-ntlm-perl_1.09-1_all
NAME
Authen::NTLM - An NTLM authentication module
SYNOPSIS
use Mail::IMAPClient; use Authen::NTLM; my $imap = Mail::IMAPClient->new(Server=>'imaphost'); ntlm_user($username); ntlm_password($password); $imap->authenticate("NTLM", Authen::NTLM::ntlm); : $imap->logout; ntlm_reset; : or ntlmv2(1); ntlm_user($username); ntlm_host($host); ntlm_password($password); : or my $ntlm = Authen::NTLM-> new( host => $host, user => $username, domain => $domain, password => $password, version => 1, ); $ntlm-> challenge; : $ntlm-> challenge($challenge);
DESCRIPTION
This module provides methods to use NTLM authentication. It can be used as an authenticate method with the Mail::IMAPClient module to perform the challenge/response mechanism for NTLM connections or it can be used on its own for NTLM authentication with other protocols (eg. HTTP). The implementation is a direct port of the code from F<fetchmail> which, itself, has based its NTLM implementation on F<samba>. As such, this code is not especially efficient, however it will still take a fraction of a second to negotiate a login on a PII which is likely to be good enough for most situations. FUNCTIONS ntlm_domain() Set the domain to use in the NTLM authentication messages. Returns the new domain. Without an argument, this function returns the current domain entry. ntlm_user() Set the username to use in the NTLM authentication messages. Returns the new username. Without an argument, this function returns the current username entry. ntlm_password() Set the password to use in the NTLM authentication messages. Returns the new password. Without an argument, this function returns the current password entry. ntlm_reset() Resets the NTLM challenge/response state machine so that the next call to C<ntlm()> will produce an initial connect message. ntlm() Generate a reply to a challenge. The NTLM protocol involves an initial empty challenge from the server requiring a message response containing the username and domain (which may be empty). The first call to C<ntlm()> generates this first message ignoring any arguments. The second time it is called, it is assumed that the argument is the challenge string sent from the server. This will contain 8 bytes of data which are used in the DES functions to generate the response authentication strings. The result of the call is the final authentication string. If C<ntlm_reset()> is called, then the next call to C<ntlm()> will start the process again allowing multiple authentications within an application. ntlmv2() Use NTLM v2 authentication. OBJECT API new %options Creates an object that accepts the following options: "user", "host", "domain", "password", "version". challenge [$challenge] If $challenge is not supplied, first-stage challenge string is generated. Otherwise, the third-stage challenge is generated, where $challenge is assumed to be extracted from the second stage of NTLM exchange. The result of the call is the final authentication string.
AUTHOR
David (Buzz) Bussenschutt <davidbuzz@gmail.com> - current maintainer Dmitry Karasik <dmitry@karasik.eu.org> - nice ntlmv2 patch, OO extensions. Andrew Hobson <ahobson@infloop.com> - initial ntlmv2 code Mark Bush <Mark.Bush@bushnet.demon.co.uk> - perl port Eric S. Raymond - author of fetchmail Andrew Tridgell and Jeremy Allison for SMB/Netbios code
SEE ALSO
perl, Mail::IMAPClient, LWP::Authen::Ntlm
HISTORY
1.09 - fix CPAN ticket # 70703 1.08 - fix CPAN ticket # 39925 1.07 - not publicly released 1.06 - relicense as GPL+ or Artistic 1.05 - add OO interface by Dmitry Karasik 1.04 - implementation of NTLMv2 by Andrew Hobson/Dmitry Karasik 1.03 - fixes long-standing 1 line bug L<http://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=9521> - released by David Bussenschutt 9th Aug 2007 1.02 - released by Mark Bush 29th Oct 2001