# Shell function library to initialize Kerberos credentials # # Written by Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu> # Copyright 2009, 2010 Board of Trustees, Leland Stanford Jr. University # # See LICENSE for licensing terms. # Set up Kerberos, including the ticket cache environment variable. Bail out # if not successful, return 0 if successful, and return 1 if Kerberos is not # configured. Sets the global principal variable to the principal to use. kerberos_setup () { local keytab keytab=`test_file_path data/test.keytab` principal=`test_file_path data/test.principal` principal=`cat "$principal" 2>/dev/null` if [ -z "$keytab" ] || [ -z "$principal" ] ; then return 1 fi KRB5CCNAME="$BUILD/data/test.cache"; export KRB5CCNAME kinit -k -t "$keytab" "$principal" >/dev/null </dev/null status=$? if [ $status != 0 ] ; then kinit -t "$keytab" "$principal" >/dev/null </dev/null status=$? fi if [ $status != 0 ] ; then kinit -k -K "$keytab" "$principal" >/dev/null </dev/null status=$? fi if [ $status != 0 ] ; then bail "Can't get Kerberos tickets" fi return 0 } # Clean up at the end of a test. Currently only removes the ticket cache. kerberos_cleanup () { rm -f "$BUILD/data/test.cache" } # List the contents of a keytab with enctypes and keys. This adjusts for the # difference between MIT Kerberos (which uses klist) and Heimdal (which uses # ktutil). Be careful to try klist first, since the ktutil on MIT Kerberos # may just hang. Takes the keytab to list and the file into which to save the # output, and strips off the header containing the file name. ktutil_list () { if klist -keK "$1" > ktutil-tmp 2>/dev/null ; then : else ktutil -k "$1" list --keys > ktutil-tmp < /dev/null 2>/dev/null fi sed -e '/Keytab name:/d' -e "/^[^ ]*:/d" ktutil-tmp > "$2" rm -f ktutil-tmp }