формат штампа времени Sudoers (Sudoers Time Stamp Format)
Имя (Name)
sudoers_timestamp
— Sudoers Time Stamp Format
Описание (Description)
The sudoers
plugin uses per-user time stamp files for credential
caching. Once a user has been authenticated, they may use sudo
without a password for a short period of time (5 minutes unless
overridden by the timestamp_timeout option). By default, sudoers
uses a separate record for each terminal, which means that a user's
login sessions are authenticated separately. The timestamp_type
option can be used to select the type of time stamp record sudoers
will use.
A multi-record time stamp file format was introduced in sudo
1.8.10
that uses a single file per user. Previously, a separate file was
used for each user and terminal combination unless tty-based time
stamps were disabled. The new format is extensible and records of
multiple types and versions may coexist within the same file.
All records, regardless of type or version, begin with a 16-bit
version number and a 16-bit record size.
Time stamp records have the following structure:
/* Time stamp entry types */
#define TS_GLOBAL 0x01 /* not restricted by tty or ppid */
#define TS_TTY 0x02 /* restricted by tty */
#define TS_PPID 0x03 /* restricted by ppid */
#define TS_LOCKEXCL 0x04 /* special lock record */
/* Time stamp flags */
#define TS_DISABLED 0x01 /* entry disabled */
#define TS_ANYUID 0x02 /* ignore uid, only valid in key */
struct timestamp_entry {
unsigned short version; /* version number */
unsigned short size; /* entry size */
unsigned short type; /* TS_GLOBAL, TS_TTY, TS_PPID */
unsigned short flags; /* TS_DISABLED, TS_ANYUID */
uid_t auth_uid; /* uid to authenticate as */
pid_t sid; /* session ID associated with tty/ppid */
struct timespec start_time; /* session/ppid start time */
struct timespec ts; /* time stamp (CLOCK_MONOTONIC) */
union {
dev_t ttydev; /* tty device number */
pid_t ppid; /* parent pid */
} u;
};
The timestamp_entry struct fields are as follows:
version
The version number of the timestamp_entry struct. New
entries are created with a version number of 2. Records with
different version numbers may coexist in the same file but
are not inter-operable.
size The size of the record in bytes.
type The record type, currently TS_GLOBAL, TS_TTY, or TS_PPID.
flags
Zero or more record flags which can be bit-wise ORed
together. Supported flags are TS_DISABLED, for records
disabled via sudo -k
and TS_ANYUID, which is used only when
matching records.
auth_uid
The user-ID that was used for authentication. Depending on
the value of the rootpw, runaspw and targetpw options, the
user-ID may be that of the invoking user, the root user, the
default runas user or the target user.
sid The ID of the user's terminal session, if present. The
session ID is only used when matching records of type TS_TTY.
start_time
The start time of the session leader for records of type
TS_TTY or of the parent process for records of type TS_PPID.
The start_time is used to help prevent re-use of a time stamp
record after a user has logged out. Not all systems support
a method to easily retrieve a process's start time. The
start_time field was added in sudoers
version 1.8.22 for the
second revision of the timestamp_entry struct.
ts The actual time stamp. A monotonic time source (which does
not move backward) is used if the system supports it. Where
possible, sudoers
uses a monotonic timer that increments even
while the system is suspended. The value of ts is updated
each time a command is run via sudo
. If the difference
between ts and the current time is less than the value of the
timestamp_timeout option, no password is required.
u.ttydev
The device number of the terminal associated with the session
for records of type TS_TTY.
u.ppid
The ID of the parent process for records of type TS_PPID.
LOCKING
In sudoers
versions 1.8.10 through 1.8.14, the entire time stamp
file was locked for exclusive access when reading or writing to the
file. Starting in sudoers
1.8.15, individual records are locked in
the time stamp file instead of the entire file and the lock is held
for a longer period of time. This scheme is described below.
The first record in the time stamp file is of type TS_LOCKEXCL and
is used as a lock record to prevent more than one sudo
process from
adding a new record at the same time. Once the desired time stamp
record has been located or created (and locked), the TS_LOCKEXCL
record is unlocked. The lock on the individual time stamp record,
however, is held until authentication is complete. This allows
sudoers
to avoid prompting for a password multiple times when it is
used more than once in a pipeline.
Records of type TS_GLOBAL cannot be locked for a long period of
time since doing so would interfere with other sudo
processes.
Instead, a separate lock record is used to prevent multiple sudo
processes using the same terminal (or parent process ID) from
prompting for a password as the same time.
Смотри также (See also)
sudoers(5), sudo(8)
История (History)
Originally, sudo
used a single zero-length file per user and the
file's modification time was used as the time stamp. Later
versions of sudo
added restrictions on the ownership of the time
stamp files and directory as well as checks on the validity of the
time stamp itself. Notable changes were introduced in the
following sudo
versions:
1.4.0
Support for tty-based time stamp file was added by appending
the terminal name to the time stamp file name.
1.6.2
The time stamp file was replaced by a per-user directory
which contained any tty-based time stamp files.
1.6.3p2
The target user name was added to the time stamp file name
when the targetpw option was set.
1.7.3
Information about the terminal device was stored in tty-based
time stamp files for validity checks. This included the
terminal device numbers, inode number and, on systems where
it was not updated when the device was written to, the inode
change time. This helped prevent re-use of the time stamp
file after logout.
1.8.6p7
The terminal session ID was added to tty-based time stamp
files to prevent re-use of the time stamp by the same user in
a different terminal session. It also helped prevent re-use
of the time stamp file on systems where the terminal device's
inode change time was updated by writing.
1.8.10
A new, multi-record time stamp file format was introduced
that uses a single file per user. The terminal device's
change time was not included since most systems now update
the change time after a write is performed as required by
POSIX.
1.8.15
Individual records are locked in the time stamp file instead
of the entire file and the lock is held until authentication
is complete.
1.8.22
The start time of the terminal session leader or parent
process is now stored in non-global time stamp records. This
prevents re-use of the time stamp file after logout in most
cases.
Support was added for the kernel-based tty time stamps
available in OpenBSD which do not use an on-disk time stamp
file.