KEYRINGS
Section: Kernel key management (7)Updated: 21 Feb 2014
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NAME
keyutils - In-kernel key management utilitiesDESCRIPTION
The keyutils package is a library and a set of utilities for accessing the kernel keyrings facility.A header file is supplied to provide the definitions and declarations required to access the library:
- #include <keyutils.h>
To link with the library, the following:
- -lkeyutils
should be specified to the linker.
Three system calls are provided:
- add_key()
- Supply a new key to the kernel.
- request_key()
- Find an existing key for use, or, optionally, create one if one does not exist.
- keyctl()
- Control a key in various ways. The library provides a variety of wrappers around this system call and those should be used rather than calling it directly.
See the add_key(2), request_key(2), and keyctl(2) manual pages for more information.
The keyctl() wrappers are listed on the keyctl(3) manual page.
UTILITIES
A program is provided to interact with the kernel facility by a number of subcommands, e.g.:
- keyctl add user foo bar @s
See the keyctl(1) manual page for information on that.
The kernel has the ability to upcall to userspace to fabricate new keys. This can be triggered by request_key(), but userspace is better off using add_key() instead if it possibly can.
The upcalling mechanism is usually routed via the:
- request-key
program. What this does with any particular key is configurable in:
-
/etc/request-key.conf
/etc/request-key.d/
See the request-key.conf(5) and the request-key(8) manual pages for more information.
SEE ALSO
keyrings(7),pam_keyinit(8),
process-keyring(7),
session-keyring(7),
thread-keyring(7),
user-keyring(7),
user-session-keyring(7),
persistent-keyring(7)
Index
This document was created by man2html, using the manual pages.
Time: 04:45:58 GMT, September 16, 2022
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