Provided by: libmunge-dev_0.5.13-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       munge_ctx_create,  munge_ctx_copy,  munge_ctx_destroy, munge_ctx_strerror, munge_ctx_get, munge_ctx_set -
       MUNGE context functions

SYNOPSIS

       #include <munge.h>

       munge_ctx_t munge_ctx_create (void);

       munge_ctx_t munge_ctx_copy (munge_ctx_t ctx);

       void munge_ctx_destroy (munge_ctx_t ctx);

       const char * munge_ctx_strerror (munge_ctx_t ctx);

       munge_err_t munge_ctx_get (munge_ctx_t ctx, munge_opt_t opt, ...);

       munge_err_t munge_ctx_set (munge_ctx_t ctx, munge_opt_t opt, ...);

       cc `pkg-config --cflags --libs munge` -o foo foo.c

DESCRIPTION

       The munge_ctx_create() function creates and returns a new MUNGE context, or NULL on error.

       The munge_ctx_copy() function copies the context ctx and returns a new MUNGE context, or NULL on error.

       The munge_ctx_destroy() function destroys the context ctx.

       The munge_ctx_strerror() function returns a descriptive text string describing  the  MUNGE  error  number
       according  to  the  context  ctx, or NULL if no error condition exists.  This may provide a more detailed
       error message than that returned by munge_strerror().

       The munge_ctx_get() function gets the value for the option opt associated with  the  MUNGE  context  ctx,
       storing the result in the subsequent pointer argument.  If the result is a string, that string should not
       be freed or modified by the caller.

       The munge_ctx_set() function sets the value for the option opt associated with  the  MUNGE  context  ctx,
       using the value of the subsequent argument.

RETURN VALUE

       The  munge_ctx_create() and munge_ctx_copy() functions return a newly allocated MUNGE context, or NULL on
       error.

       The munge_ctx_strerror() function returns a pointer to a NUL-terminated constant text string, or NULL  if
       no error condition exists.  This string should not be freed or modified by the caller.

       The  munge_ctx_get()  and  munge_ctx_set()  functions  return EMUNGE_SUCCESS on success, or a MUNGE error
       number otherwise.

CONTEXT OPTIONS

       The following context options can be queried via munge_ctx_get() or specified via  munge_ctx_set().   The
       type following each enumeration is the variable type used for the subsequent argument in munge_ctx_set(),
       or the variable type of a pointer used for the subsequent argument in munge_ctx_get().

       MUNGE_OPT_CIPHER_TYPE , int
              Get or set the cipher type (cf., CIPHER TYPES).

       MUNGE_OPT_MAC_TYPE , int
              Get or set the MAC type (cf., MAC TYPES).

       MUNGE_OPT_ZIP_TYPE , int
              Get or set the compression type (cf., COMPRESSION TYPES).

       MUNGE_OPT_REALM , char *
              Get or set the security realm, where the char * type is a NUL-terminated  character  string.   The
              string  returned  by munge_ctx_get() should not be freed or modified by the caller.  NOT CURRENTLY
              SUPPORTED.

       MUNGE_OPT_TTL , int
              Get or set the time-to-live (in seconds) (cf., TTL TYPES).   This  value  controls  how  long  the
              credential is valid once it has been encoded.

       MUNGE_OPT_ADDR4 , struct in_addr
              Get  the  IPv4  address  of  the  host  where  the  credential was encoded.  This option cannot be
              explicitly set.

       MUNGE_OPT_ENCODE_TIME , time_t
              Get the time (in seconds since the epoch) at which the credential was encoded.  This option cannot
              be explicitly set.

       MUNGE_OPT_DECODE_TIME , time_t
              Get the time (in seconds since the epoch) at which the credential was decoded.  This option cannot
              be explicitly set.

       MUNGE_OPT_SOCKET , char *
              Get or set the local domain socket for connecting with munged, where the char *  type  is  a  NUL-
              terminated  character  string.   The  string  returned  by  munge_ctx_get() should not be freed or
              modified by the caller.

       MUNGE_OPT_UID_RESTRICTION , uid_t
              Get or set the UID allowed to decode the credential (cf., UID & GID TYPES).  This  value  will  be
              matched against the effective user ID of the process requesting the credential decode.

       MUNGE_OPT_GID_RESTRICTION , gid_t
              Get  or  set  the GID allowed to decode the credential (cf., UID & GID TYPES).  This value will be
              matched against the effective group ID of the process requesting the credential decode, as well as
              each supplementary group of which the effective user ID of that process is a member.

CIPHER TYPES

       Credentials  can  be encrypted using the secret key shared by all munged daemons within a security realm.
       Anyone having access to this key can use it to decrypt a credential, thereby bypassing  any  restrictions
       being imposed by munged.

       MUNGE_CIPHER_NONE
              Specify that encryption is to be disabled.

       MUNGE_CIPHER_DEFAULT
              Specify the default according to the munged configuration.

       MUNGE_CIPHER_BLOWFISH
              Specify the Blowfish cipher designed by Bruce Schneier.  This cipher has a 64-bit block-size and a
              variable key length.  MUNGE uses it with a 128-bit key in CBC mode.  It is a fast block cipher but
              suffers  from  a  slow  key  setup  time.   Consequently,  it  underperforms when generating small
              credentials.

       MUNGE_CIPHER_CAST5
              Specify the CAST5 cipher designed by Carlisle Adams and  Stafford  Tavares.   This  cipher  has  a
              64-bit block-size and a variable key length.  MUNGE uses it with a 128-bit key in CBC mode.

       MUNGE_CIPHER_AES128
              Specify the AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) cipher, also known as Rijndael.  It was designed by
              Joan Daemen and Vincent Rijmen.  This cipher has a 128-bit block-size and a  key  length  of  128,
              192, or 256 bits.  MUNGE uses it here with a 128-bit key in CBC mode.

       MUNGE_CIPHER_AES256
              Specify the AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) cipher, also known as Rijndael.  It was designed by
              Joan Daemen and Vincent Rijmen.  This cipher has a 128-bit block-size and a  key  length  of  128,
              192,   or   256  bits.   MUNGE  uses  it  here  with  a  256-bit  key  in  CBC  mode.   Currently,
              MUNGE_CIPHER_AES256 requires the use of MUNGE_MAC_SHA256.

MAC TYPES

       The message authentication code (MAC) is a required component of the credential; consequently, it  cannot
       be disabled.

       MUNGE_MAC_DEFAULT
              Specify the default according to the munged configuration.

       MUNGE_MAC_MD5
              Specify  the  MD5  algorithm  designed  by Ron Rivest and published in 1991.  This algorithm has a
              128-bit message digest.  In 2004, a successful collision attack against MD5 was demonstrated.   In
              2009,  a  theoretical pre-image attack against MD5 was published.  Consequently, use of MD5 is not
              recommended due to its lower security margin.

       MUNGE_MAC_SHA1
              Specify the SHA-1 algorithm designed by the National Security Agency and published in  1995;  this
              is the successor to the original Secure Hash Algorithm (now called SHA-0) published in 1993.  This
              algorithm has a 160-bit message digest.  In 2005, successful collision attacks  were  demonstrated
              against SHA-1.  In 2017, a successful identical-prefix collision attack (SHAttered) was announced.
              Since a pre-image attack has not yet been demonstrated, SHA-1 should still be safe to  use  within
              MUNGE; however, use of a SHA-2 hash function (such as SHA-256 or SHA-512) should be preferred.

       MUNGE_MAC_RIPEMD160
              Specify the RIPEMD-160 (RACE Integrity Primitives Evaluation Message Digest) algorithm designed in
              Europe by Hans Dobbertin, Antoon Bosselaers, and  Bart  Preneel,  and  published  in  1996.   This
              algorithm   has   a  160-bit  message  digest.   It  is  somewhat  less  popular  than  SHA-1  and
              correspondingly less well studied.  While slower than SHA-1, it is believed  to  have  a  slightly
              better security margin.

       MUNGE_MAC_SHA256
              Specify the SHA-256 algorithm designed by the National Security Agency and published in 2002; this
              is one of the SHA-2 variants in the Secure Hash Algorithm family.  This algorithm  has  a  256-bit
              message digest.  In 2006, NIST began encouraging the use of the SHA-2 family of hash functions for
              all new applications and protocols.

       MUNGE_MAC_SHA512
              Specify the SHA-512 algorithm designed by the National Security Agency and published in 2002; this
              is  one  of  the SHA-2 variants in the Secure Hash Algorithm family.  This algorithm has a 512-bit
              message digest.  In 2006, NIST began encouraging the use of the SHA-2 family of hash functions for
              all new applications and protocols.

COMPRESSION TYPES

       If  a  compression  type  is  specified,  a  payload-bearing  credential  will be compressed accordingly.
       However, if the resulting compressed data is larger than the original uncompressed data, the uncompressed
       data will be restored and compression will be disabled for that credential.

       MUNGE_ZIP_NONE
              Specify  that  compression  is  to be disabled.  This is the recommended setting unless there is a
              payload of sufficient size to compress.

       MUNGE_ZIP_DEFAULT
              Specify the default according to the munged configuration.

       MUNGE_ZIP_BZLIB
              Specify the bzip2 library developed by Julian Seward.  This is slower and uses  more  memory,  but
              generally gets better compression on larger payloads.

       MUNGE_ZIP_ZLIB
              Specify  the  zlib  library developed by Jean-loup Gailly and Mark Adler.  This is faster and uses
              less memory, but gets pretty good compression nonetheless.

TTL TYPES

       The time-to-live value specifies the number of seconds after  the  encode-time  that  the  credential  is
       considered valid.  In addition to specifying an integer value, the following types are available.

       MUNGE_TTL_MAXIMUM
              Specify the maximum allowed by the munged configuration.

       MUNGE_TTL_DEFAULT
              Specify the default according to the munged configuration.

UID & GID TYPES

       The  UID  and  GID  restrictions  can  be  used  to  restrict the decoding of the credential based on the
       effective user and group ID of the requesting process.  In addition to specifying an integer  value,  the
       following types are available.

       MUNGE_UID_ANY
              Specify that no UID restriction is to take effect; this is the default behavior.

       MUNGE_GID_ANY
              Specify that no GID restriction is to take effect; this is the default behavior.

ERRORS

       Refer to munge(3) for a complete list of errors.

EXAMPLE

       The  following  example  program  illustrates  the  use of the MUNGE context to query the location of the
       munged domain socket.

       #include <stdio.h>                      /* for printf() */
       #include <stdlib.h>                     /* for exit() */
       #include <munge.h>

       int
       main (int argc, char *argv[])
       {
           munge_ctx_t  ctx;
           munge_err_t  err;
           char        *str;

           if (!(ctx = munge_ctx_create ())) {
               fprintf (stderr, "ERROR: Unable to create MUNGE context\n");
               exit (1);
           }
           err = munge_ctx_get (ctx, MUNGE_OPT_SOCKET, &str);

           if (err != EMUNGE_SUCCESS) {
               fprintf (stderr, "ERROR: %s\n", munge_ctx_strerror (ctx));
               exit (1);
           }
           printf ("socket=%s\n", str);
           /*
            *  Note that 'str' is not to be free()d since
            *    it points to a string within the 'ctx'.
            */
           munge_ctx_destroy (ctx);
           exit (0);
       }

NOTES

       Abandoning a new or copied MUNGE context without destroying it will result in a memory leak.

       The context passed to munge_encode() is treated read-only except for the error message that is  set  when
       an  error  is  returned.   The  context  passed to munge_decode() is set according to the context used to
       encode the credential; however, on error, its settings may be in a state which is invalid  for  encoding.
       Consequently, separate contexts should be used for encoding and decoding.

       A  context  should  not  be  shared  between threads unless it is protected by a mutex; however, a better
       alternative is to use a separate context (or two) for each thread, either  by  creating  a  new  one  via
       munge_ctx_create() or copying an existing one via munge_ctx_copy().

AUTHOR

       Chris Dunlap <cdunlap@llnl.gov>

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2007-2017 Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC.
       Copyright (C) 2002-2007 The Regents of the University of California.

       MUNGE  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 3 of the License, or (at your
       option) any later version.

       Additionally  for  the MUNGE library (libmunge), you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms
       of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either  version  3
       of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

SEE ALSO

       munge(1), remunge(1), unmunge(1), munge(3), munge_enum(3), munge(7), munged(8).

       https://dun.github.io/munge/