SUDO_PLUGIN(8) MAINTENANCE COMMANDS SUDO_PLUGIN(8)NAMEsudo_plugin - Sudo Plugin API
DESCRIPTION
Starting with version 1.8, sudo supports a plugin API for policy and
session logging. By default, the sudoers policy plugin and an
associated I/O logging plugin are used. Via the plugin API, sudo can
be configured to use alternate policy and/or I/O logging plugins
provided by third parties. The plugins to be used are specified via
the /etc/sudo.conf file.
The API is versioned with a major and minor number. The minor version
number is incremented when additions are made. The major number is
incremented when incompatible changes are made. A plugin should be
check the version passed to it and make sure that the major version
matches.
The plugin API is defined by the sudo_plugin.h header file.
The sudo.conf File
The /etc/sudo.conf file contains plugin configuration directives.
Currently, the only supported keyword is the Plugin directive, which
causes a plugin plugin to be loaded.
A Plugin line consists of the Plugin keyword, followed by the
symbol_name and the path to the shared object containing the plugin.
The symbol_name is the name of the struct policy_plugin or struct
io_plugin in the plugin shared object. The path may be fully qualified
or relative. If not fully qualified it is relative to the
/opt/freeware/libexec directory. Any additional parameters after the
path are ignored. Lines that don't begin with Plugin or Path are
silently ignored.
The same shared object may contain multiple plugins, each with a
different symbol name. The shared object file must be owned by uid 0
and only writable by its owner. Because of ambiguities that arise from
composite policies, only a single policy plugin may be specified. This
limitation does not apply to I/O plugins.
#
# Default /etc/sudo.conf file
#
# Format:
# Plugin plugin_name plugin_path
# Path askpass /path/to/askpass
#
# The plugin_path is relative to /opt/freeware/libexec unless
# fully qualified.
# The plugin_name corresponds to a global symbol in the plugin
# that contains the plugin interface structure.
#
Plugin sudoers_policy sudoers.so
Plugin sudoers_io sudoers.so
Policy Plugin API
A policy plugin must declare and populate a policy_plugin struct in the
global scope. This structure contains pointers to the functions that
implement the sudo policy checks. The name of the symbol should be
specified in /etc/sudo.conf along with a path to the plugin so that
sudo can load it.
struct policy_plugin {
#define SUDO_POLICY_PLUGIN 1
unsigned int type; /* always SUDO_POLICY_PLUGIN */
unsigned int version; /* always SUDO_API_VERSION */
int (*open)(unsigned int version, sudo_conv_t conversation,
sudo_printf_t plugin_printf, char * const settings[],
char * const user_info[], char * const user_env[]);
void (*close)(int exit_status, int error);
int (*show_version)(int verbose);
int (*check_policy)(int argc, char * const argv[],
char *env_add[], char **command_info[],
char **argv_out[], char **user_env_out[]);
int (*list)(int argc, char * const argv[], int verbose,
const char *list_user);
int (*validate)(void);
void (*invalidate)(int remove);
int (*init_session)(struct passwd *pwd);
};
The policy_plugin struct has the following fields:
type
The type field should always be set to SUDO_POLICY_PLUGIN.
version
The version field should be set to SUDO_API_VERSION.
This allows sudo to determine the API version the plugin was built
against.
open
int (*open)(unsigned int version, sudo_conv_t conversation,
sudo_printf_t plugin_printf, char * const settings[],
char * const user_info[], char * const user_env[]);
Returns 1 on success, 0 on failure, -1 if a general error occurred,
or -2 if there was a usage error. In the latter case, sudo will
print a usage message before it exits. If an error occurs, the
plugin may optionally call the conversation or plugin_printf
function with SUDO_CONF_ERROR_MSG to present additional error
information to the user.
The function arguments are as follows:
version
The version passed in by sudo allows the plugin to determine
the major and minor version number of the plugin API supported
by sudo.
conversation
A pointer to the conversation function that can be used by the
plugin to interact with the user (see below). Returns 0 on
success and -1 on failure.
plugin_printf
A pointer to a printf-style function that may be used to
display informational or error messages (see below). Returns
the number of characters printed on success and -1 on failure.
settings
A vector of user-supplied sudo settings in the form of
"name=value" strings. The vector is terminated by a NULL
pointer. These settings correspond to flags the user specified
when running sudo. As such, they will only be present when the
corresponding flag has been specified on the command line.
When parsing settings, the plugin should split on the first
equal sign ('=') since the name field will never include one
itself but the value might.
debug_flags=string
A comma-separated list of debug flags that correspond to
sudo's Debug entry in /etc/sudo.conf, if there is one. The
flags are passed to the plugin as they appear in
/etc/sudo.conf. The syntax used by sudo and the sudoers
plugin is subsystem@priority but the plugin is free to use
a different format so long as it does not include a command
,.
For reference, the priorities supported by the sudo front
end and sudoers are: crit, err, warn, notice, diag, info,
trace and debug.
The following subsystems are defined: main, memory, args,
exec, pty, utmp, conv, pcomm, util, list, netif, audit,
edit, selinux, ldap, match, parser, alias, defaults, auth,
env, logging, nss, rbtree, perms, plugin. The subsystem
all includes every subsystem.
There is not currently a way to specify a set of debug
flags specific to the plugin--the flags are shared by sudo
and the plugin.
debug_level=number
This setting has been deprecated in favor of debug_flags.
runas_user=string
The user name or uid to to run the command as, if specified
via the -u flag.
runas_group=string
The group name or gid to to run the command as, if
specified via the -g flag.
prompt=string
The prompt to use when requesting a password, if specified
via the -p flag.
set_home=bool
Set to true if the user specified the -H flag. If true,
set the HOME environment variable to the target user's home
directory.
preserve_environment=bool
Set to true if the user specified the -E flag, indicating
that the user wishes to preserve the environment.
run_shell=bool
Set to true if the user specified the -s flag, indicating
that the user wishes to run a shell.
login_shell=bool
Set to true if the user specified the -i flag, indicating
that the user wishes to run a login shell.
implied_shell=bool
If the user does not specify a program on the command line,
sudo will pass the plugin the path to the user's shell and
set implied_shell to true. This allows sudo with no
arguments to be used similarly to su(1). If the plugin
does not to support this usage, it may return a value of -2
from the check_policy function, which will cause sudo to
print a usage message and exit.
preserve_groups=bool
Set to true if the user specified the -P flag, indicating
that the user wishes to preserve the group vector instead
of setting it based on the runas user.
ignore_ticket=bool
Set to true if the user specified the -k flag along with a
command, indicating that the user wishes to ignore any
cached authentication credentials.
noninteractive=bool
Set to true if the user specified the -n flag, indicating
that sudo should operate in non-interactive mode. The
plugin may reject a command run in non-interactive mode if
user interaction is required.
login_class=string
BSD login class to use when setting resource limits and
nice value, if specified by the -c flag.
selinux_role=string
SELinux role to use when executing the command, if
specified by the -r flag.
selinux_type=string
SELinux type to use when executing the command, if
specified by the -t flag.
bsdauth_type=string
Authentication type, if specified by the -a flag, to use on
systems where BSD authentication is supported.
network_addrs=list
A space-separated list of IP network addresses and netmasks
in the form "addr/netmask", e.g.
"192.168.1.2/255.255.255.0". The address and netmask pairs
may be either IPv4 or IPv6, depending on what the operating
system supports. If the address contains a colon (':'), it
is an IPv6 address, else it is IPv4.
progname=string
The command name that sudo was run as, typically "sudo" or
"sudoedit".
sudoedit=bool
Set to true when the -e flag is is specified or if invoked
as sudoedit. The plugin shall substitute an editor into
argv in the check_policy function or return -2 with a usage
error if the plugin does not support sudoedit. For more
information, see the check_policy section.
closefrom=number
If specified, the user has requested via the -C flag that
sudo close all files descriptors with a value of number or
higher. The plugin may optionally pass this, or another
value, back in the command_info list.
Additional settings may be added in the future so the plugin
should silently ignore settings that it does not recognize.
user_info
A vector of information about the user running the command in
the form of "name=value" strings. The vector is terminated by
a NULL pointer.
When parsing user_info, the plugin should split on the first
equal sign ('=') since the name field will never include one
itself but the value might.
user=string
The name of the user invoking sudo.
uid=uid_t
The real user ID of the user invoking sudo.
gid=gid_t
The real group ID of the user invoking sudo.
groups=list
The user's supplementary group list formatted as a string
of comma-separated group IDs.
cwd=string
The user's current working directory.
tty=string
The path to the user's terminal device. If the user has no
terminal device associated with the session, the value will
be empty, as in tty=.
host=string
The local machine's hostname as returned by the
gethostname() system call.
lines=int
The number of lines the user's terminal supports. If there
is no terminal device available, a default value of 24 is
used.
cols=int
The number of columns the user's terminal supports. If
there is no terminal device available, a default value of
80 is used.
user_env
The user's environment in the form of a NULL-terminated vector
of "name=value" strings.
When parsing user_env, the plugin should split on the first
equal sign ('=') since the name field will never include one
itself but the value might.
close
void (*close)(int exit_status, int error);
The close function is called when the command being run by sudo
finishes.
The function arguments are as follows:
exit_status
The command's exit status, as returned by the wait(2) system
call. The value of exit_status is undefined if error is non-
zero.
error
If the command could not be executed, this is set to the value
of errno set by the execve(2) system call. The plugin is
responsible for displaying error information via the
conversation or plugin_printf function. If the command was
successfully executed, the value of error is 0.
show_version
int (*show_version)(int verbose);
The show_version function is called by sudo when the user specifies
the -V option. The plugin may display its version information to
the user via the conversation or plugin_printf function using
SUDO_CONV_INFO_MSG. If the user requests detailed version
information, the verbose flag will be set.
check_policy
int (*check_policy)(int argc, char * const argv[]
char *env_add[], char **command_info[],
char **argv_out[], char **user_env_out[]);
The check_policy function is called by sudo to determine whether
the user is allowed to run the specified commands.
If the sudoedit option was enabled in the settings array passed to
the open function, the user has requested sudoedit mode. sudoedit
is a mechanism for editing one or more files where an editor is run
with the user's credentials instead of with elevated privileges.
sudo achieves this by creating user-writable temporary copies of
the files to be edited and then overwriting the originals with the
temporary copies after editing is complete. If the plugin supports
sudoedit, it should choose the editor to be used, potentially from
a variable in the user's environment, such as EDITOR, and include
it in argv_out (note that environment variables may include command
line flags). The files to be edited should be copied from argv
into argv_out, separated from the editor and its arguments by a
"--" element. The "--" will be removed by sudo before the editor
is executed. The plugin should also set sudoedit=true in the
command_info list.
The check_policy function returns 1 if the command is allowed, 0 if
not allowed, -1 for a general error, or -2 for a usage error or if
sudoedit was specified but is unsupported by the plugin. In the
latter case, sudo will print a usage message before it exits. If
an error occurs, the plugin may optionally call the conversation or
plugin_printf function with SUDO_CONF_ERROR_MSG to present
additional error information to the user.
The function arguments are as follows:
argc
The number of elements in argv, not counting the final NULL
pointer.
argv
The argument vector describing the command the user wishes to
run, in the same form as what would be passed to the execve()
system call. The vector is terminated by a NULL pointer.
env_add
Additional environment variables specified by the user on the
command line in the form of a NULL-terminated vector of
"name=value" strings. The plugin may reject the command if one
or more variables are not allowed to be set, or it may silently
ignore such variables.
When parsing env_add, the plugin should split on the first
equal sign ('=') since the name field will never include one
itself but the value might.
command_info
Information about the command being run in the form of
"name=value" strings. These values are used by sudo to set the
execution environment when running a command. The plugin is
responsible for creating and populating the vector, which must
be terminated with a NULL pointer. The following values are
recognized by sudo:
command=string
Fully qualified path to the command to be executed.
runas_uid=uid
User ID to run the command as.
runas_euid=uid
Effective user ID to run the command as. If not specified,
the value of runas_uid is used.
runas_gid=gid
Group ID to run the command as.
runas_egid=gid
Effective group ID to run the command as. If not
specified, the value of runas_gid is used.
runas_groups=list
The supplementary group vector to use for the command in
the form of a comma-separated list of group IDs. If
preserve_groups is set, this option is ignored.
login_class=string
BSD login class to use when setting resource limits and
nice value (optional). This option is only set on systems
that support login classes.
preserve_groups=bool
If set, sudo will preserve the user's group vector instead
of initializing the group vector based on runas_user.
cwd=string
The current working directory to change to when executing
the command.
noexec=bool
If set, prevent the command from executing other programs.
chroot=string
The root directory to use when running the command.
nice=int
Nice value (priority) to use when executing the command.
The nice value, if specified, overrides the priority
associated with the login_class on BSD systems.
umask=octal
The file creation mask to use when executing the command.
selinux_role=string
SELinux role to use when executing the command.
selinux_type=string
SELinux type to use when executing the command.
timeout=int
Command timeout. If non-zero then when the timeout expires
the command will be killed.
sudoedit=bool
Set to true when in sudoedit mode. The plugin may enable
sudoedit mode even if sudo was not invoked as sudoedit.
This allows the plugin to perform command substitution and
transparently enable sudoedit when the user attempts to run
an editor.
closefrom=number
If specified, sudo will close all files descriptors with a
value of number or higher.
iolog_compress=bool
Set to true if the I/O logging plugins, if any, should
compress the log data. This is a hint to the I/O logging
plugin which may choose to ignore it.
iolog_path=string
Fully qualified path to the file or directory in which I/O
log is to be stored. This is a hint to the I/O logging
plugin which may choose to ignore it. If no I/O logging
plugin is loaded, this setting has no effect.
iolog_stdin=bool
Set to true if the I/O logging plugins, if any, should log
the standard input if it is not connected to a terminal
device. This is a hint to the I/O logging plugin which may
choose to ignore it.
iolog_stdout=bool
Set to true if the I/O logging plugins, if any, should log
the standard output if it is not connected to a terminal
device. This is a hint to the I/O logging plugin which may
choose to ignore it.
iolog_stderr=bool
Set to true if the I/O logging plugins, if any, should log
the standard error if it is not connected to a terminal
device. This is a hint to the I/O logging plugin which may
choose to ignore it.
iolog_ttyin=bool
Set to true if the I/O logging plugins, if any, should log
all terminal input. This only includes input typed by the
user and not from a pipe or redirected from a file. This
is a hint to the I/O logging plugin which may choose to
ignore it.
iolog_ttyout=bool
Set to true if the I/O logging plugins, if any, should log
all terminal output. This only includes output to the
screen, not output to a pipe or file. This is a hint to
the I/O logging plugin which may choose to ignore it.
use_pty=bool
Allocate a pseudo-tty to run the command in, regardless of
whether or not I/O logging is in use. By default, sudo
will only run the command in a pty when an I/O log plugin
is loaded.
set_utmp=bool
Create a utmp (or utmpx) entry when a pseudo-tty is
allocated. By default, the new entry will be a copy of the
user's existing utmp entry (if any), with the tty, time,
type and pid fields updated.
utmp_user=string
User name to use when constructing a new utmp (or utmpx)
entry when set_utmp is enabled. This option can be used to
set the user field in the utmp entry to the user the
command runs as rather than the invoking user. If not set,
sudo will base the new entry on the invoking user's
existing entry.
Unsupported values will be ignored.
argv_out
The NULL-terminated argument vector to pass to the execve()
system call when executing the command. The plugin is
responsible for allocating and populating the vector.
user_env_out
The NULL-terminated environment vector to use when executing
the command. The plugin is responsible for allocating and
populating the vector.
list
int (*list)(int verbose, const char *list_user,
int argc, char * const argv[]);
List available privileges for the invoking user. Returns 1 on
success, 0 on failure and -1 on error. On error, the plugin may
optionally call the conversation or plugin_printf function with
SUDO_CONF_ERROR_MSG to present additional error information to the
user.
Privileges should be output via the conversation or plugin_printf
function using SUDO_CONV_INFO_MSG.
verbose
Flag indicating whether to list in verbose mode or not.
list_user
The name of a different user to list privileges for if the
policy allows it. If NULL, the plugin should list the
privileges of the invoking user.
argc
The number of elements in argv, not counting the final NULL
pointer.
argv
If non-NULL, an argument vector describing a command the user
wishes to check against the policy in the same form as what
would be passed to the execve() system call. If the command is
permitted by the policy, the fully-qualified path to the
command should be displayed along with any command line
arguments.
validate
int (*validate)(void);
The validate function is called when sudo is run with the -v flag.
For policy plugins such as sudoers that cache authentication
credentials, this function will validate and cache the credentials.
The validate function should be NULL if the plugin does not support
credential caching.
Returns 1 on success, 0 on failure and -1 on error. On error, the
plugin may optionally call the conversation or plugin_printf
function with SUDO_CONF_ERROR_MSG to present additional error
information to the user.
invalidate
void (*invalidate)(int remove);
The invalidate function is called when sudo is called with the -k
or -K flag. For policy plugins such as sudoers that cache
authentication credentials, this function will invalidate the
credentials. If the remove flag is set, the plugin may remove the
credentials instead of simply invalidating them.
The invalidate function should be NULL if the plugin does not
support credential caching.
init_session
int (*init_session)(struct passwd *pwd);
The init_session function is called when sudo sets up the execution
environment for the command, immediately before the contents of the
command_info list are applied (before the uid changes). This can
be used to do session setup that is not supported by command_info,
such as opening the PAM session.
The pwd argument points to a passwd struct for the user the command
will be run as if the uid the command will run as was found in the
password database, otherwise it will be NULL.
Returns 1 on success, 0 on failure and -1 on error. On error, the
plugin may optionally call the conversation or plugin_printf
function with SUDO_CONF_ERROR_MSG to present additional error
information to the user.
Version macros
#define SUDO_API_VERSION_GET_MAJOR(v) ((v) >> 16)
#define SUDO_API_VERSION_GET_MINOR(v) ((v) & 0xffff)
#define SUDO_API_VERSION_SET_MAJOR(vp, n) do { \
*(vp) = (*(vp) & 0x0000ffff) | ((n) << 16); \
} while(0)
#define SUDO_VERSION_SET_MINOR(vp, n) do { \
*(vp) = (*(vp) & 0xffff0000) | (n); \
} while(0)
#define SUDO_API_VERSION_MAJOR 1
#define SUDO_API_VERSION_MINOR 0
#define SUDO_API_VERSION ((SUDO_API_VERSION_MAJOR << 16) | \
SUDO_API_VERSION_MINOR)
I/O Plugin API
struct io_plugin {
#define SUDO_IO_PLUGIN 2
unsigned int type; /* always SUDO_IO_PLUGIN */
unsigned int version; /* always SUDO_API_VERSION */
int (*open)(unsigned int version, sudo_conv_t conversation
sudo_printf_t plugin_printf, char * const settings[],
char * const user_info[], int argc, char * const argv[],
char * const user_env[]);
void (*close)(int exit_status, int error); /* wait status or error */
int (*show_version)(int verbose);
int (*log_ttyin)(const char *buf, unsigned int len);
int (*log_ttyout)(const char *buf, unsigned int len);
int (*log_stdin)(const char *buf, unsigned int len);
int (*log_stdout)(const char *buf, unsigned int len);
int (*log_stderr)(const char *buf, unsigned int len);
};
When an I/O plugin is loaded, sudo runs the command in a pseudo-tty.
This makes it possible to log the input and output from the user's
session. If any of the standard input, standard output or standard
error do not correspond to a tty, sudo will open a pipe to capture the
I/O for logging before passing it on.
The log_ttyin function receives the raw user input from the terminal
device (note that this will include input even when echo is disabled,
such as when a password is read). The log_ttyout function receives
output from the pseudo-tty that is suitable for replaying the user's
session at a later time. The log_stdin, log_stdout and log_stderr
functions are only called if the standard input, standard output or
standard error respectively correspond to something other than a tty.
Any of the logging functions may be set to the NULL pointer if no
logging is to be performed. If the open function returns 0, no I/O
will be sent to the plugin.
The io_plugin struct has the following fields:
type
The type field should always be set to SUDO_IO_PLUGIN
version
The version field should be set to SUDO_API_VERSION.
This allows sudo to determine the API version the plugin was built
against.
open
int (*open)(unsigned int version, sudo_conv_t conversation
sudo_printf_t plugin_printf, char * const settings[],
char * const user_info[], int argc, char * const argv[],
char * const user_env[]);
The open function is run before the log_input, log_output or
show_version functions are called. It is only called if the
version is being requested or the check_policy function has
returned successfully. It returns 1 on success, 0 on failure, -1
if a general error occurred, or -2 if there was a usage error. In
the latter case, sudo will print a usage message before it exits.
If an error occurs, the plugin may optionally call the conversation
or plugin_printf function with SUDO_CONF_ERROR_MSG to present
additional error information to the user.
The function arguments are as follows:
version
The version passed in by sudo allows the plugin to determine
the major and minor version number of the plugin API supported
by sudo.
conversation
A pointer to the conversation function that may be used by the
show_version function to display version information (see
show_version below). The conversation function may also be
used to display additional error message to the user. The
conversation function returns 0 on success and -1 on failure.
plugin_printf
A pointer to a printf-style function that may be used by the
show_version function to display version information (see
show_version below). The plugin_printf function may also be
used to display additional error message to the user. The
plugin_printf function returns number of characters printed on
success and -1 on failure.
settings
A vector of user-supplied sudo settings in the form of
"name=value" strings. The vector is terminated by a NULL
pointer. These settings correspond to flags the user specified
when running sudo. As such, they will only be present when the
corresponding flag has been specified on the command line.
When parsing settings, the plugin should split on the first
equal sign ('=') since the name field will never include one
itself but the value might.
See the "Policy Plugin API" section for a list of all possible
settings.
user_info
A vector of information about the user running the command in
the form of "name=value" strings. The vector is terminated by
a NULL pointer.
When parsing user_info, the plugin should split on the first
equal sign ('=') since the name field will never include one
itself but the value might.
See the "Policy Plugin API" section for a list of all possible
strings.
argc
The number of elements in argv, not counting the final NULL
pointer.
argv
If non-NULL, an argument vector describing a command the user
wishes to run in the same form as what would be passed to the
execve() system call.
user_env
The user's environment in the form of a NULL-terminated vector
of "name=value" strings.
When parsing user_env, the plugin should split on the first
equal sign ('=') since the name field will never include one
itself but the value might.
close
void (*close)(int exit_status, int error);
The close function is called when the command being run by sudo
finishes.
The function arguments are as follows:
exit_status
The command's exit status, as returned by the wait(2) system
call. The value of exit_status is undefined if error is non-
zero.
error
If the command could not be executed, this is set to the value
of errno set by the execve(2) system call. If the command was
successfully executed, the value of error is 0.
show_version
int (*show_version)(int verbose);
The show_version function is called by sudo when the user specifies
the -V option. The plugin may display its version information to
the user via the conversation or plugin_printf function using
SUDO_CONV_INFO_MSG. If the user requests detailed version
information, the verbose flag will be set.
log_ttyin
int (*log_ttyin)(const char *buf, unsigned int len);
The log_ttyin function is called whenever data can be read from the
user but before it is passed to the running command. This allows
the plugin to reject data if it chooses to (for instance if the
input contains banned content). Returns 1 if the data should be
passed to the command, 0 if the data is rejected (which will
terminate the command) or -1 if an error occurred.
The function arguments are as follows:
buf The buffer containing user input.
len The length of buf in bytes.
log_ttyout
int (*log_ttyout)(const char *buf, unsigned int len);
The log_ttyout function is called whenever data can be read from
the command but before it is written to the user's terminal. This
allows the plugin to reject data if it chooses to (for instance if
the output contains banned content). Returns 1 if the data should
be passed to the user, 0 if the data is rejected (which will
terminate the command) or -1 if an error occurred.
The function arguments are as follows:
buf The buffer containing command output.
len The length of buf in bytes.
log_stdin
int (*log_stdin)(const char *buf, unsigned int len);
The log_stdin function is only used if the standard input does not
correspond to a tty device. It is called whenever data can be read
from the standard input but before it is passed to the running
command. This allows the plugin to reject data if it chooses to
(for instance if the input contains banned content). Returns 1 if
the data should be passed to the command, 0 if the data is rejected
(which will terminate the command) or -1 if an error occurred.
The function arguments are as follows:
buf The buffer containing user input.
len The length of buf in bytes.
log_stdout
int (*log_stdout)(const char *buf, unsigned int len);
The log_stdout function is only used if the standard output does
not correspond to a tty device. It is called whenever data can be
read from the command but before it is written to the standard
output. This allows the plugin to reject data if it chooses to
(for instance if the output contains banned content). Returns 1 if
the data should be passed to the user, 0 if the data is rejected
(which will terminate the command) or -1 if an error occurred.
The function arguments are as follows:
buf The buffer containing command output.
len The length of buf in bytes.
log_stderr
int (*log_stderr)(const char *buf, unsigned int len);
The log_stderr function is only used if the standard error does not
correspond to a tty device. It is called whenever data can be read
from the command but before it is written to the standard error.
This allows the plugin to reject data if it chooses to (for
instance if the output contains banned content). Returns 1 if the
data should be passed to the user, 0 if the data is rejected (which
will terminate the command) or -1 if an error occurred.
The function arguments are as follows:
buf The buffer containing command output.
len The length of buf in bytes.
Version macros
Same as for the "Policy Plugin API".
Conversation API
If the plugin needs to interact with the user, it may do so via the
conversation function. A plugin should not attempt to read directly
from the standard input or the user's tty (neither of which are
guaranteed to exist). The caller must include a trailing newline in
msg if one is to be printed.
A printf-style function is also available that can be used to display
informational or error messages to the user, which is usually more
convenient for simple messages where no use input is required.
struct sudo_conv_message {
#define SUDO_CONV_PROMPT_ECHO_OFF 0x0001 /* do not echo user input */
#define SUDO_CONV_PROMPT_ECHO_ON 0x0002 /* echo user input */
#define SUDO_CONV_ERROR_MSG 0x0003 /* error message */
#define SUDO_CONV_INFO_MSG 0x0004 /* informational message */
#define SUDO_CONV_PROMPT_MASK 0x0005 /* mask user input */
#define SUDO_CONV_DEBUG_MSG 0x0006 /* debugging message */
#define SUDO_CONV_PROMPT_ECHO_OK 0x1000 /* flag: allow echo if no tty */
int msg_type;
int timeout;
const char *msg;
};
struct sudo_conv_reply {
char *reply;
};
typedef int (*sudo_conv_t)(int num_msgs,
const struct sudo_conv_message msgs[],
struct sudo_conv_reply replies[]);
typedef int (*sudo_printf_t)(int msg_type, const char *fmt, ...);
Pointers to the conversation and printf-style functions are passed in
to the plugin's open function when the plugin is initialized.
To use the conversation function, the plugin must pass an array of
sudo_conv_message and sudo_conv_reply structures. There must be a
struct sudo_conv_message and struct sudo_conv_reply for each message in
the conversation. The plugin is responsible for freeing the reply
buffer filled in to the struct sudo_conv_reply, if any.
The printf-style function uses the same underlying mechanism as the
conversation function but only supports SUDO_CONV_INFO_MSG,
SUDO_CONV_ERROR_MSG and SUDO_CONV_DEBUG_MSG for the msg_type parameter.
It can be more convenient than using the conversation function if no
user reply is needed and supports standard printf() escape sequences.
Unlike, SUDO_CONV_INFO_MSG and SUDO_CONV_ERROR_MSG, messages sent with
the <SUDO_CONV_DEBUG_MSG> msg_type are not directly user-visible.
Instead, they are logged to the file specified in the Debug statement
(if any) in the /etc/sudo.conf file. This allows a plugin to log
debugging information and is intended to be used in conjunction with
the debug_flags setting.
See the sample plugin for an example of the conversation function
usage.
Sudoers Group Plugin API
The sudoers module supports a plugin interface to allow non-Unix group
lookups. This can be used to query a group source other than the
standard Unix group database. A sample group plugin is bundled with
sudo that implements file-based lookups. Third party group plugins
include a QAS AD plugin available from Quest Software.
A group plugin must declare and populate a sudoers_group_plugin struct
in the global scope. This structure contains pointers to the functions
that implement plugin initialization, cleanup and group lookup.
struct sudoers_group_plugin {
unsigned int version;
int (*init)(int version, sudo_printf_t sudo_printf,
char *const argv[]);
void (*cleanup)(void);
int (*query)(const char *user, const char *group,
const struct passwd *pwd);
};
The sudoers_group_plugin struct has the following fields:
version
The version field should be set to GROUP_API_VERSION.
This allows sudoers to determine the API version the group plugin
was built against.
init
int (*init)(int version, sudo_printf_t plugin_printf,
char *const argv[]);
The init function is called after sudoers has been parsed but
before any policy checks. It returns 1 on success, 0 on failure
(or if the plugin is not configured), and -1 if a error occurred.
If an error occurs, the plugin may call the plugin_printf function
with SUDO_CONF_ERROR_MSG to present additional error information to
the user.
The function arguments are as follows:
version
The version passed in by sudoers allows the plugin to determine
the major and minor version number of the group plugin API
supported by sudoers.
plugin_printf
A pointer to a printf-style function that may be used to
display informational or error message to the user. Returns
the number of characters printed on success and -1 on failure.
argv
A NULL-terminated array of arguments generated from the
group_plugin option in sudoers. If no arguments were given,
argv will be NULL.
cleanup
void (*cleanup)();
The cleanup function is called when sudoers has finished its group
checks. The plugin should free any memory it has allocated and
close open file handles.
query
int (*query)(const char *user, const char *group,
const struct passwd *pwd);
The query function is used to ask the group plugin whether user is
a member of group.
The function arguments are as follows:
user
The name of the user being looked up in the external group
database.
group
The name of the group being queried.
pwd The password database entry for user, if any. If user is not
present in the password database, pwd will be NULL.
Version Macros
/* Sudoers group plugin version major/minor */
#define GROUP_API_VERSION_MAJOR 1
#define GROUP_API_VERSION_MINOR 0
#define GROUP_API_VERSION ((GROUP_API_VERSION_MAJOR << 16) | \
GROUP_API_VERSION_MINOR)
/* Getters and setters for group version */
#define GROUP_API_VERSION_GET_MAJOR(v) ((v) >> 16)
#define GROUP_API_VERSION_GET_MINOR(v) ((v) & 0xffff)
#define GROUP_API_VERSION_SET_MAJOR(vp, n) do { \
*(vp) = (*(vp) & 0x0000ffff) | ((n) << 16); \
} while(0)
#define GROUP_API_VERSION_SET_MINOR(vp, n) do { \
*(vp) = (*(vp) & 0xffff0000) | (n); \
} while(0)SEE ALSOsudoers(5), sudo(8)BUGS
If you feel you have found a bug in sudo, please submit a bug report at
http://www.sudo.ws/sudo/bugs/
SUPPORT
Limited free support is available via the sudo-workers mailing list,
see http://www.sudo.ws/mailman/listinfo/sudo-workers to subscribe or
search the archives.
DISCLAIMER
sudo is provided ``AS IS'' and any express or implied warranties,
including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of
merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose are disclaimed.
See the LICENSE file distributed with sudo or
http://www.sudo.ws/sudo/license.html for complete details.
1.8.4 January 6, 2012 SUDO_PLUGIN(8)