Provided by: sssd-tools_2.9.1-2ubuntu2.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       sss_cache - perform cache cleanup

SYNOPSIS

       sss_cache [options]

DESCRIPTION

       sss_cache invalidates records in SSSD cache. Invalidated records are forced to be reloaded
       from server as soon as related SSSD backend is online. Options that invalidate a single
       object only accept a single provided argument.

OPTIONS

       -E,--everything
           Invalidate all cached entries.

       -u,--user login
           Invalidate specific user.

       -U,--users
           Invalidate all user records. This option overrides invalidation of specific user if it
           was also set.

       -g,--group group
           Invalidate specific group.

       -G,--groups
           Invalidate all group records. This option overrides invalidation of specific group if
           it was also set.

       -n,--netgroup netgroup
           Invalidate specific netgroup.

       -N,--netgroups
           Invalidate all netgroup records. This option overrides invalidation of specific
           netgroup if it was also set.

       -s,--service service
           Invalidate specific service.

       -S,--services
           Invalidate all service records. This option overrides invalidation of specific service
           if it was also set.

       -a,--autofs-map autofs-map
           Invalidate specific autofs maps.

       -A,--autofs-maps
           Invalidate all autofs maps. This option overrides invalidation of specific map if it
           was also set.

       -h,--ssh-host hostname
           Invalidate SSH public keys of a specific host.

       -H,--ssh-hosts
           Invalidate SSH public keys of all hosts. This option overrides invalidation of SSH
           public keys of specific host if it was also set.

       -r,--sudo-rule rule
           Invalidate particular sudo rule.

       -R,--sudo-rules
           Invalidate all cached sudo rules. This option overrides invalidation of specific sudo
           rule if it was also set.

       -d,--domain domain
           Restrict invalidation process only to a particular domain.

       -?,--help
           Display help message and exit.

EFFECTS ON THE FAST MEMORY CACHE

       sss_cache also invalidates the memory cache. Since the memory cache is a file which is
       mapped into the memory of each process which called SSSD to resolve users or groups the
       file cannot be truncated. A special flag is set in the header of the file to indicate that
       the content is invalid and then the file is unlinked by SSSD's NSS responder and a new
       cache file is created. Whenever a process is now doing a new lookup for a user or a group
       it will see the flag, close the old memory cache file and map the new one into its memory.
       When all processes which had opened the old memory cache file have closed it while looking
       up a user or a group the kernel can release the occupied disk space and the old memory
       cache file is finally removed completely.

       A special case is long running processes which are doing user or group lookups only at
       startup, e.g. to determine the name of the user the process is running as. For those
       lookups the memory cache file is mapped into the memory of the process. But since there
       will be no further lookups this process would never detect if the memory cache file was
       invalidated and hence it will be kept in memory and will occupy disk space until the
       process stops. As a result calling sss_cache might increase the disk usage because old
       memory cache files cannot be removed from the disk because they are still mapped by long
       running processes.

       A possible work-around for long running processes which are looking up users and groups
       only at startup or very rarely is to run them with the environment variable
       SSS_NSS_USE_MEMCACHE set to "NO" so that they won't use the memory cache at all and not
       map the memory cache file into the memory. In general a better solution is to tune the
       cache timeout parameters so that they meet the local expectations and calling sss_cache is
       not needed.

SEE ALSO

       sssd(8), sssd.conf(5), sssd-ldap(5), sssd-ldap-attributes(5), sssd-krb5(5), sssd-
       simple(5), sssd-ipa(5), sssd-ad(5), sssd-files(5), sssd-sudo(5), sssd-session-
       recording(5), sss_cache(8), sss_debuglevel(8), sss_obfuscate(8), sss_seed(8),
       sssd_krb5_locator_plugin(8), sss_ssh_authorizedkeys(8), sss_ssh_knownhostsproxy(8), sssd-
       ifp(5), pam_sss(8).  sss_rpcidmapd(5) sssd-systemtap(5)

AUTHORS

       The SSSD upstream - https://github.com/SSSD/sssd/