Provided by: krb5-strength_3.1-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       heimdal-strength - Heimdal password quality check embedding CrackLib

SYNOPSIS

       heimdal-strength [principal]

DESCRIPTION

       heimdal-strength is an external password quality check program for Heimdal that verifies the strength of
       a password.  Passwords can be tested with CrackLib, checked against a CDB database of known weak
       passwords, checked for length, checked for non-printable or non-ASCII characters that may be difficult to
       enter reproducibly, required to contain particular character classes, or any combination of these tests.
       It is normally run via kpasswdd(8) using the Heimdal password quality check interface rather than
       directly.

       To use this program, it must be configured in krb5.conf via settings in "[appdefaults]" for the
       application name "krb5-strength".  A typical setting would be:

           krb5-strength = {
               password_dictionary = /usr/local/lib/kadmind/dictionary
           }

       which says to check passwords with CrackLib using the given path as the base path of the CrackLib
       dictionary.  See "CONFIGURATION" below for details on the supported configuration options.

       heimdal-strength then expects the Heimdal password quality check information on standard input,
       specifically:

           principal: <principal>
           new-password: <password>
           end

       where <principal> is the principal whose password would be changed and <password> is the new password.
       If the password appears to be strong, it prints "APPROVED" on standard output and exits with a status of
       0.  If the password is rejected as being too weak, it will print the reason for rejecting the password on
       standard error and exit with a status of 0.  If some fatal error occurs, it will print that error to
       standard error and exit with a non-zero status.

CONFIGURATION

       The following krb5.conf configuration options are supported:

       cracklib_maxlen
           Normally, all passwords are checked with CrackLib if a CrackLib dictionary is defined.  However,
           CrackLib's rules were designed for a world in which most passwords were four to eight characters
           long, and tends to spuriously reject a lot of passphrases.  If this option is set to something other
           than its default of 0, passwords longer than that length bypass CrackLib checks.  (Using a SQLite
           dictionary for longer passwords is strongly recommended.)

       minimum_different
           If set to a numeric value, passwords with fewer than this number of unique characters will be
           rejected.  This can be used to reject, for example, passwords that are long strings of the same
           character or repetitions of small numbers of characters, which may be too easy to guess.

       minimum_length
           If set to a numeric value, passwords with fewer than that number of characters will be rejected,
           independent of any length restrictions in CrackLib.  Note that this setting does not bypass the
           minimum length requirements in CrackLib itself.

       password_dictionary
           Specifies the base path to a CrackLib dictionary and enables password strength testing using
           CrackLib.  The provided path should be the full path to the dictionary files, omitting the trailing
           *.hwm, *.pwd, and *.pwi extensions for the CrackLib dictionary.

       password_dictionary_cdb
           Specifies the base path to a CDB dictionary and enables CDB password dictionary lookups.  The path
           must point to a CDB-format database whose keys are the known passwords or dictionary words.  The
           values are ignored.  You can use the krb5-strength-wordlist utility to generate the CDB database from
           a word list.

           The CDB dictionary lookups do not do the complex password mangling that CrackLib does.  Instead, the
           password itself will be checked against the dictionary, and then variations of the password formed by
           removing the first character, the last character, the first and last characters, the first two
           characters, and the last two characters.  If any of these strings are found in the CDB database, the
           password will be rejected; otherwise, it will be accepted, at least by this check.

           A CrackLib dictionary, a CDB dictionary, and a SQLite dictionary may all be configured at the same
           time or in any combination, in which case CrackLib will be run first, followed by CDB and then SQLite
           as appropriate.

       password_dictionary_sqlite
           Specifies the base path to a SQLite dictionary and enables SQLite password dictionary lookups.  The
           path must point to a SQLite 3 database with a table named "passwords".  This table should have two
           columns, "password" and "drowssap", which, for each dictionary word, holds the word and the reversed
           form of the word.  You can use the krb5-strength-wordlist utility to generate the SQLite database
           from a word list.

           The SQLite dictionary lookups do not do the complex password mangling that CrackLib does, but they
           will detect and reject any password that is within edit distance one of a word in the dictionary,
           meaning that the dictionary word can be formed from the password by adding, deleting, or modifying a
           single character.

           A CrackLib dictionary, a CDB dictionary, and a SQLite dictionary may all be configured at the same
           time or in any combination, in which case CrackLib will be run first, followed by CDB and then SQLite
           as appropriate.

       require_ascii_printable
           If set to a true boolean value, rejects any password that contains non-ASCII characters or ASCII
           control characters.  Spaces are allowed; tabs are not (at least assuming the POSIX C locale).  No
           canonicalization or character set is defined for Kerberos passwords in general, so you may want to
           reject non-ASCII characters to avoid interoperability problems with computers with different default
           character sets or Unicode normalization forms.

       require_classes
           This option allows specification of more complex character class requirements.  The value of this
           parameter should be one or more whitespace-separated rule.  Each rule has the syntax:

               [<min>-<max>:]<class>[,<class>...]

           where <class> is one of "upper", "lower", "digit", or "symbol".  The symbol class includes all
           characters other than alphanumeric characters, including space.  The listed classes must appear in
           the password.  Separate multiple required classes with a comma (and no space).

           The character class checks will be done in whatever locale the plugin or password check program is
           run in, which will normally be the POSIX C locale but may be different depending on local
           configuration.

           A simple example:

               require_classes = upper,lower,digit

           This requires all passwords contain at least one uppercase letter, at least one lowercase letter, and
           at least one digit.

           If present, <min> and <max> specify the minimum password length and maximum password length to which
           this rule applies.  This allows one to specify character class requirements that change with password
           length.  So, for example:

               require_classes = 8-19:upper,lower 8-15:digit 8-11:symbol

           requires all passwords from 8 to 11 characters long contain all four character classes, passwords
           from 12 to 15 characters long contain upper and lower case and a digit, and passwords from 16 to 19
           characters long contain both upper and lower case.  Passwords longer than 20 characters have no
           character class restrictions.  (This example is probably used in conjunction with minimum_length =
           8.)

       require_non_letter
           If set to a true boolean value, the password must contain at least one character that is not a letter
           (uppercase or lowercase) or a space.  This may be helpful in combination with passphrases; users may
           choose a stock English phrase, and this will force at least some additional complexity.

SEE ALSO

       krb5-strength-wordlist(1), kadm5-strength(3), kpasswdd(8), krb5.conf(5)

       The "Password changing" section of the Heimdal info documentation describes the interface that this
       program implements and how to configure Heimdal to use it.

       The current version of this program is available from its web page at
       <https://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/software/krb5-strength/> as part of the krb5-strength package.

AUTHOR

       Russ Allbery <eagle@eyrie.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright 2016 Russ Allbery <eagle@eyrie.org>

       Copyright 2010, 2013, 2014 The Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University

       Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are permitted in any medium without
       royalty provided the copyright notice and this notice are preserved.  This file is offered as-is, without
       any warranty.