KEYRING-AUTH(2) KEYRING-AUTH(2) NAME keyring: auth, readauthinfo, writeauthinfo - authenticate a connection SYNOPSIS include "keyring.m"; keyring := load Keyring Keyring->PATH; auth: fn(fd: ref Sys->FD, info: ref Authinfo, setid: int) : (string, array of byte); readauthinfo: fn(filename: string): ref Authinfo; writeauthinfo: fn(filename: string, info: ref Authinfo): int; DESCRIPTION Auth performs mutual authentication over a network connec- tion, usually between a client and a server. The function is symmetric: each party runs it on their end of the connec- tion. Info holds the public key of a certifying authority (PKca), the private key of the user (SKu), the public key (PKu) of the user signed by the certifying authority (CERTu), and Diffie-Hellman parameters (alpha, p). Auth returns a string and a byte array. If the byte array is nil then the authentication has failed and the string is an error message. If the byte array is non-nil, it repre- sents a secret shared by the two communicating parties, and the string names the party at the other end of the connec- tion. If the authentication is successful and setid is non-zero then auth attempts to write the name of the party at the other end of the connection into /dev/user (see cons(3)); no error is generated if that does not succeed. If the authen- tication is not successful and setid is non-zero, auth writes the name nobody into /dev/user. The authentication protocol is based on the Station-to- Station protocol. In the following, the parties are labelled 0 and 1. Sig0(x) is x signed with 0's private key. 0 → 1 alpha**r0 mod p, CERTu0, PKu0 1 → 0 alpha**r1 mod p, CERTu1, PKu1 0 → 1 sig0(alpha**r0 mod p, alpha**r1 mod p) 1 → 0 sig1(alpha**r0 mod p, alpha**r1 mod p) At this point both 0 and 1 share the secret alpha**(r0*r1) which is returned in the byte array. Amongst other things, it can be the secret to digest or encrypt a conversation (see security-ssl(2)). Readauthinfo reads a representation of an Authinfo from a Page 1 Plan 9 (printed 11/17/24) KEYRING-AUTH(2) KEYRING-AUTH(2) file. It returns nil if there is a read error or a conver- sion error; it returns a reference to the Authinfo other- wise. Writeauthinfo writes a representation of info to a file. It returns -1 if the write operation fails, 0 otherwise. FILES /usr/user/keyring The conventional directory for storing Authinfo files /usr/user/keyring/default The key file normally used by server programs /usr/user/keyring/net!server The key file normally used by clients for a given server SOURCE /libinterp/keyring.c Page 2 Plan 9 (printed 11/17/24)