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auth_generic_meta, auth_generic — Generic authentication request
#include <courierauth.h>
int
rc=auth_generic_meta( |
struct auth_meta *meta, |
const char *service, | |
const char *authtype, | |
const char *authdata, | |
int (*callback_func) ( struct
authinfo *, void *) , |
|
void *callback_arg) ; |
int
rc=auth_generic( |
const char *service, |
const char *authtype, | |
const char *authdata, | |
int (*callback_func) ( struct
authinfo *, void *) , |
|
void *callback_arg) ; |
auth_generic_meta
processes
a generic authentication request. You do not want to use this
function by itself. You really want to use auth_login_meta(3).
service
specifies
which so-called "service" is being authenticated; like
“imap”
or “pop3”. service
may or may not be used
by the Courier authentication library's configured back-end
module.
authtype
specifies the
format of the authentication request. Three authentication
formats are defined in courierauth.h
:
AUTHTYPE_LOGIN
authdata
contains the following string: “userid
\npassword
\n”.
That is, the userid being authenticated, an
ASCII newline
character, the password, and a second newline
character.
AUTHTYPE_CRAMMD5
or AUTHTYPE_CRAMSHA1
This format is used with CRAM-MD5 or CRAM-SHA1. authdata
contains the
following string: “challenge
\nresponse
\n”.
challenge
is
the base64-encoded challenge, which is followed by an
ASCII newline
character. response
is a
base64-encoded string that's followed by a second
newline character. The base64-encoded string consists
of the responding userid, a space character, then the
response to the challenge expressed as hexadecimal
digits.
A NULL meta
is
equivalent to using the default auth_meta returned by auth_meta_init_default(3).
auth_generic_meta
() should
not be used by itself, but only together with auth_sasl_ex(3).
auth_generic
() is deprecated
and should not be used in new code.
callback_func
will be
invoked if auth_generic_meta
succeeds, and callback_func
's
return value becomes the return value from auth_generic_meta
(which should be 0, by
convention). callback_func
will
not be invoked if an error occurs, which is reported by a
non-zero return value from auth_generic_meta
. By convention, a
positive return value indicates an internal, temporary
failure, such as the authentication daemon process not
running; a negative return value indicates that this request
was processed, but it failed.
The second argument to callback_func
will be callback_arg
, which is not interpreted by
this function in any way. The first argument will be a
pointer to the following structure:
struct authinfo { const char *sysusername; const uid_t *sysuserid; gid_t sysgroupid; const char *homedir; const char *address; const char *fullname; const char *maildir; const char *quota; const char *passwd; const char *clearpasswd; const char *options; } ;
Description of the above fields:
The authenticated login ID.
The authenticated account's userid and groupid can
be looked up in the password file using address
. If this field is NULL
, obtain the userid and the
groupid from sysuserid
and
sysgroupid
.
sysuserid
may be
NULL
if sysusername
is initialized, otherwise
it's a pointer to the account's numeric userid.
Account's numeric groupid. sysgroupid
is only used when
sysusername
is
NULL
.
This is the account's full name. This field is
optional, it may be NULL
.
The account's home directory. This field cannot be
NULL
.
The pathname to the account's mailbox. This field is
optional, it can be NULL
in which case the default location is assumed.
Optional maildir quota on the account's mailbox (and
NULL
if no quota is
set).
The account's encrypted password, if available. If
the account has a cleartext password defined, this
field can be set to NULL
.
The encrypted password can take several formats:
A traditional triple-DES crypted password, or a MD5+salt-hashed password, as used in Linux.
“{MD5}” followed by a base64-encoded MD5 hash of the password.
“{SHA}” followed by a base64-encoded SHA1 hash of the password.
The account's cleartext password, if available. If
the account has an encrypted password defined, this
field can be set to NULL
.
A comma-separated list of miscellaneous account options. See below for more information.
Depending on the configuration of the Courier
authentication library, accounts may have individual
options associated with them. If the authentication library
configuration does not implement account options, the
option string will be a NULL
value. Otherwise it will be a comma-separated list of
“option
=value
”
settings.
The application is responsible for actually
implementing the options. For example, sn authentication
request for service “imap”, for example, will succeed
provided that the userid and the password are valid, even
if “disableimap=1” is set. The
application's callback_func
should check for this condition, and return a negative
return code.
The following list of account options is a combined list of implemented options supported by Courier, Courier-IMAP, and SqWebMail packages. Some of the following information is obviously not applicable for a particular package. The inapplicable bits should be obvious.
The following options are recognized by the various Courier packages:
disableimap=
n
If "n" is 1, IMAP access to this account should be disabled.
disablepop3=
n
If "n" is 1, POP3 access to this account should be disabled.
disableinsecureimap=
n
If "n" is 1, unencrypted IMAP access to this account should be disabled.
disableinsecurepop3=
n
If "n" is 1, unencrypted POP3 access to this account should be disabled.
disablewebmail=
n
If "n" is 1, webmail access to this account should be disabled.
disableshared=
n
If "n" is 1, this account should not have access to shared folders or be able to share its own folders with other people.
group=
name
This option is used by Courier-IMAP in calculating
access control lists. This option places the account
as a member of access group name
. Instead of
granting access rights on individual mail folders to
individual accounts, the access rights can be granted
to an access group “name”, and all members of this
group get the specified access rights.
The access group name “administrators” is a reserved
group. All accounts in the administrators
group automatically
receive all rights to all accessible folders.
This option may be specified multiple times to specify that the account belongs to multiple account groups.
sharedgroup=
name
Another option used by Courier-IMAP. Append "name" to the name of the top level virtual shared folder index file. This setting restricts which virtual shared folders this account could possibly access (and that's on top of whatever else the access control lists say). See the virtual shared folder documentation for more information.
For technical reasons, group names may not include comma, tab, "/" or "|" characters.