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KEYRINGS(7)                Linux Programmer's Manual               KEYRINGS(7)
NAME
       keyrings - in-kernel key management and retention facility
DESCRIPTION
       The Linux key-management facility is primarily a way for various kernel
       components to retain  or  cache  security  data,  authentication  keys,
       encryption keys, and other data in the kernel.
       System  call  interfaces  are  provided so that user-space programs can
       manage those objects and also use the facility for their own  purposes;
       see add_key(2), request_key(2), and keyctl(2).
       A library and some user-space utilities are provided to allow access to
       the facility.  See  keyctl(1),  keyctl(3),  and  keyutils(7)  for  more
       information.
   Keys
       A key has the following attributes:
       Serial number (ID)
              This is a unique integer handle by which a key is referred to in
              system calls.   The  serial  number  is  sometimes  synonymously
              referred  as  the  key ID.  Programmatically, key serial numbers
              are represented using the type key_serial_t.
       Type   A key's type defines what sort of data can be held in  the  key,
              how  the proposed content of the key will be parsed, and how the
              payload will be used.
              There are a number of general-purpose types available, plus some
              specialist types defined by specific kernel components.
       Description (name)
              The  key  description  is a printable string that is used as the
              search term for the key (in conjunction with the  key  type)  as
              well as a display name.  During searches, the description may be
              partially matched or exactly matched.
       Payload (data)
              The payload is the actual content of a key.  This is usually set
              when  a  key  is  created,  but it is possible for the kernel to
              upcall to user space to finish the instantiation  of  a  key  if
              that  key  wasn't  already  known  to  the  kernel  when  it was
              requested.  For further details, see request_key(2).
              A key's payload can be read and updated if the key type supports
              it and if suitable permission is granted to the caller.
       Access rights
              Much  as  files  do,  each  key has an owning user ID, an owning
              group ID, and a security label.  Each key also has a set of per-
              missions, though there are more than for a normal UNIX file, and
              there is an  additional  category--possessor--beyond  the  usual
              user, group, and other (see Possession, below).
              Note  that keys are quota controlled, since they require unswap-
              pable kernel memory.  The owning user ID specifies  whose  quota
              is to be debited.
       Expiration time
              Each  key  can  have  an expiration time set.  When that time is
              reached, the key is marked as being expired and accesses  to  it
              fail  with  the  error EKEYEXPIRED.  If not deleted, updated, or
              replaced, then, after a set amount of time, an  expired  key  is
              automatically  removed  (garbage collected) along with all links
              to it, and attempts to  access  the  key  fail  with  the  error
              ENOKEY.
       Reference count
              Each  key  has  a  reference  count.   Keys  are  referenced  by
              keyrings, by currently active users, and by a process's  creden-
              tials.  When the reference count reaches zero, the key is sched-
              uled for garbage collection.
   Key types
       The kernel provides several basic types of key:
       "keyring"
              Keyrings are special keys which store a set of  links  to  other
              keys  (including other keyrings), analogous to a directory hold-
              ing links to files.  The main purpose of a keyring is to prevent
              other  keys  from being garbage collected because nothing refers
              to them.
              Keyrings with descriptions (names)  that  begin  with  a  period
              ('.') are reserved to the implementation.
       "user" This  is  a  general-purpose key type.  The key is kept entirely
              within kernel memory.  The payload may be read  and  updated  by
              user-space applications.
              The payload for keys of this type is a blob of arbitrary data of
              up to 32,767 bytes.
              The description may be any valid string, though it is  preferred
              that  it  start  with  a colon-delimited prefix representing the
              service  to  which  the  key  is  of  interest   (for   instance
              "afs:mykey").
       "logon" (since Linux 3.3)
              This key type is essentially the same as "user", but it does not
              provide reading (i.e.,  the  keyctl(2)  KEYCTL_READ  operation),
              meaning  that  the key payload is never visible from user space.
              This is suitable for storing username-password pairs that should
              not be readable from user space.
              The  description  of  a  "logon"  key muststart with a non-empty
              colon-delimited prefix whose purpose is to identify the  service
              to  which the key belongs.  (Note that this differs from keys of
              the "user" type, where the inclusion of a prefix is  recommended
              but is not enforced.)
       "big_key" (since Linux 3.13)
              This key type is similar to the "user" key type, but it may hold
              a payload of up to 1 MiB in size.  This key type is  useful  for
              purposes such as holding Kerberos ticket caches.
              The  payload  data  may  be stored in a tmpfs filesystem, rather
              than in kernel memory, if the data size exceeds the overhead  of
              storing  the  data  in  the  filesystem.  (Storing the data in a
              filesystem requires filesystem structures to be allocated in the
              kernel.   The  size  of  these  structures  determines  the size
              threshold above which the tmpfs storage method is used.)   Since
              Linux  4.8,  the payload data is encrypted when stored in tmpfs,
              thereby preventing it from being written unencrypted  into  swap
              space.
       There  are  more  specialized key types available also, but they aren't
       discussed here because they aren't intended for normal user-space use.
       Key type names that begin with a  period  ('.')  are  reserved  to  the
       implementation.
   Keyrings
       As  previously  mentioned, keyrings are a special type of key that con-
       tain links to other keys (which may include other keyrings).  Keys  may
       be linked to by multiple keyrings.  Keyrings may be considered as anal-
       ogous to UNIX directories where each directory contains a set  of  hard
       links to files.
       Various operations (system calls) may be applied only to keyrings:
       Adding A  key  may  be  added  to a keyring by system calls that create
              keys.  This prevents the new key from being immediately  deleted
              when the system call releases its last reference to the key.
       Linking
              A  link  may  be  added  to  a keyring pointing to a key that is
              already known, provided this does not create a  self-referential
              cycle.
       Unlinking
              A  link  may be removed from a keyring.  When the last link to a
              key is removed, that key will be scheduled for deletion  by  the
              garbage collector.
       Clearing
              All the links may be removed from a keyring.
       Searching
              A  keyring  may  be  considered the root of a tree or subtree in
              which keyrings form the branches and  non-keyrings  the  leaves.
              This  tree  may be searched for a key matching a particular type
              and description.
       See    keyctl_clear(3),    keyctl_link(3),    keyctl_search(3),     and
       keyctl_unlink(3) for more information.
   Anchoring keys
       To prevent a key from being garbage collected, it must anchored to keep
       its reference count elevated when it is not in active use by  the  ker-
       nel.
       Keyrings  are  used to anchor other keys: each link is a reference on a
       key.  Note that keyrings themselves are just keys and are also  subject
       to  the  same  anchoring requirement to prevent them being garbage col-
       lected.
       The kernel makes available a number of anchor keyrings.  Note that some
       of these keyrings will be created only when first accessed.
       Process keyrings
              Process  credentials themselves reference keyrings with specific
              semantics.  These keyrings are pinned as long as the set of cre-
              dentials exists, which is usually as long as the process exists.
              There  are  three  keyrings  with  different inheritance/sharing
              rules: the session-keyring(7) (inherited and shared by all child
              processes),  the  process-keyring(7) (shared by all threads in a
              process) and the thread-keyring(7)  (specific  to  a  particular
              thread).
              As  an  alternative to using the actual keyring IDs, in calls to
              add_key(2), keyctl(2), and request_key(2), the  special  keyring
              values  KEY_SPEC_SESSION_KEYRING,  KEY_SPEC_PROCESS_KEYRING, and
              KEY_SPEC_THREAD_KEYRING can be used to refer to the caller's own
              instances of these keyrings.
       User keyrings
              Each  UID  known  to  the  kernel has a record that contains two
              keyrings: the user-keyring(7) and  the  user-session-keyring(7).
              These exist for as long as the UID record in the kernel exists.
              As  an  alternative to using the actual keyring IDs, in calls to
              add_key(2), keyctl(2), and request_key(2), the  special  keyring
              values  KEY_SPEC_USER_KEYRING  and KEY_SPEC_USER_SESSION_KEYRING
              can be used to refer to the  caller's  own  instances  of  these
              keyrings.
              A link to the user keyring is placed in a new session keyring by
              pam_keyinit(8) when a new login session is initiated.
       Persistent keyrings
              There is a persistent-keyring(7) available to each UID known  to
              the  system.   It  may persist beyond the life of the UID record
              previously mentioned, but has an expiration time set  such  that
              it is automatically cleaned up after a set time.  The persistent
              keyring permits, for example, cron(8) scripts to use credentials
              that are left in the persistent keyring after the user logs out.
              Note that the expiration time of the persistent keyring is reset
              every time the persistent key is requested.
       Special keyrings
              There are special keyrings owned by the kernel that  can  anchor
              keys  for  special  purposes.   An example of this is the system
              keyring used for holding encryption keys  for  module  signature
              verification.
              These  special keyrings  are usually closed to direct alteration
              by user space.
       An originally planned "group keyring", for storing keys associated with
       each GID known to the kernel, is not so far implemented, is unlikely to
       be implemented.  Nevertheless, the constant KEY_SPEC_GROUP_KEYRING  has
       been defined for this keyring.
   Possession
       The  concept  of  possession is important to understanding the keyrings
       security model.  Whether a thread possesses a key is determined by  the
       following rules:
       (1) Any  key  or  keyring  that does not grant search permission to the
           caller is ignored in all the following rules.
       (2) A thread possesses its session-keyring(7), process-keyring(7),  and
           thread-keyring(7)  directly  because those keyrings are referred to
           by its credentials.
       (3) If a keyring is possessed, then any key it links to  is  also  pos-
           sessed.
       (4) If  any  key  a keyring links to is itself a keyring, then rule (3)
           applies recursively.
       (5) If a process is upcalled from the kernel to instantiate a key  (see
           request_key(2)), then it also possesses the requester's keyrings as
           in rule (1) as if it were the requester.
       Note that possession is not a fundamental property of a key,  but  must
       rather be calculated each time the key is needed.
       Possession  is  designed  to allow set-user-ID programs run from, say a
       user's shell to access the user's keys.  Granting  permissions  to  the
       key  possessor while denying them to the key owner and group allows the
       prevention of access to keys on the basis of UID and GID matches.
       When it creates the session keyring, pam_keyinit(8) adds a link to  the
       user-keyring(7),  thus making the user keyring and anything it contains
       possessed by default.
   Access rights
       Each key has the following security-related attributes:
       *  The owning user ID
       *  The ID of a group that is permitted to access the key
       *  A security label
       *  A permissions mask
       The permissions mask contains four sets of  rights.   The  first  three
       sets  are  mutually exclusive.  One and only one will be in force for a
       particular access check.  In order of descending priority, these  three
       sets are:
       user   The  set  specifies  the  rights  granted  if  the key's user ID
              matches the caller's filesystem user ID.
       group  The set specifies the rights granted if the user ID didn't match
              and  the  key's  group ID matches the caller's filesystem GID or
              one of the caller's supplementary group IDs.
       other  The set specifies the rights granted if neither the  key's  user
              ID nor group ID matched.
       The fourth set of rights is:
       possessor
              The  set  specifies the rights granted if a key is determined to
              be possessed by the caller.
       The complete set of rights for a key is the union of whichever  of  the
       first  three  sets is applicable plus the fourth set if the key is pos-
       sessed.
       The set of rights that may be granted in each of the four masks  is  as
       follows:
       view   The  attributes of the key may be read.  This includes the type,
              description, and access rights (excluding the security label).
       read   For a key: the payload of the key may be read.  For  a  keyring:
              the list of serial numbers (keys) to which the keyring has links
              may be read.
       write  The payload of the key  may  be  updated  and  the  key  may  be
              revoked.   For  a keyring, links may be added to or removed from
              the keyring, and the keyring  may  be  cleared  completely  (all
              links are removed),
       search For a key (or a keyring): the key may be found by a search.  For
              a keyring: keys and keyrings that are linked to by  the  keyring
              may be searched.
       link   Links may be created from keyrings to the key.  The initial link
              to a key that is established when the  key  is  created  doesn't
              require this permission.
       setattr
              The  ownership  details  and  security  label  of the key may be
              changed, the key's expiration time may be set, and the  key  may
              be revoked.
       In  addition  to  access rights, any active Linux Security Module (LSM)
       may prevent access to a key if its policy so dictates.  A  key  may  be
       given  a  security  label  or other attribute by the LSM; this label is
       retrievable via keyctl_get_security(3).
       See   keyctl_chown(3),   keyctl_describe(3),    keyctl_get_security(3),
       keyctl_setperm(3), and selinux(8) for more information.
   Searching for keys
       One  of  the  key  features of the Linux key-management facility is the
       ability to find a key that a process is retaining.  The  request_key(2)
       system  call is the primary point of access for user-space applications
       to find a key.  (Internally, the kernel has something similar available
       for use by internal components that make use of keys.)
       The search algorithm works as follows:
       (1) The  process  keyrings  are  searched  in  the following order: the
           thread thread-keyring(7) if it exists, the process-keyring(7) if it
           exists,  and then either the session-keyring(7) if it exists or the
           user-session-keyring(7) if that exists.
       (2) If the caller was a process that was invoked by the  request_key(2)
           upcall  mechanism,  then  the  keyrings  of  the original caller of
           request_key(2) will be searched as well.
       (3) The search of a  keyring  tree  is  in  breadth-first  order:  each
           keyring  is  searched first for a match, then the keyrings referred
           to by that keyring are searched.
       (4) If a matching key is found that is valid, then  the  search  termi-
           nates and that key is returned.
       (5) If  a  matching key is found that has an error state attached, that
           error state is noted and the search continues.
       (6) If no valid matching key is found, then the first noted error state
           is returned; otherwise, an ENOKEY error is returned.
       It  is  also  possible to search a specific keyring, in which case only
       steps (3) to (6) apply.
       See request_key(2) and keyctl_search(3) for more information.
   On-demand key creation
       If a key cannot be found, request_key(2) will, if given a  callout_info
       argument, create a new key and then upcall to user space to instantiate
       the key.  This allows keys to be created on an as-needed basis.
       Typically, this will involve the kernel creating  a  new  process  that
       executes the request-key(8) program, which will then execute the appro-
       priate handler based on its configuration.
       The handler is passed a special authorization key that  allows  it  and
       only  it  to  instantiate  the  new  key.   This is also used to permit
       searches  performed  by  the  handler  program  to  also   search   the
       requester's keyrings.
       See  request_key(2), keyctl_assume_authority(3), keyctl_instantiate(3),
       keyctl_negate(3),  keyctl_reject(3),   request-key(8),   and   request-
       key.conf(5) for more information.
   /proc files
       The  kernel  provides various /proc files that expose information about
       keys or define limits on key usage.
       /proc/keys (since Linux 2.6.10)
              This file exposes a list of  the  keys  for  which  the  reading
              thread  has view permission, providing various information about
              each key.  The thread need not possess the key for it to be vis-
              ible in this file.
              The  only  keys  included  in the list are those that grant view
              permission to the reading process (regardless of whether or  not
              it  possesses  them).   LSM security checks are still performed,
              and may filter out further keys that the process is  not  autho-
              rized to view.
              An example of the data that one might see in this file (with the
              columns numbered for easy reference below) is the following:
  (1)     (2)     (3)(4)    (5)     (6)   (7)   (8)        (9)
009a2028 I--Q---   1 perm 3f010000  1000  1000 user     krb_ccache:primary: 12
1806c4ba I--Q---   1 perm 3f010000  1000  1000 keyring  _pid: 2
25d3a08f I--Q---   1 perm 1f3f0000  1000 65534 keyring  _uid_ses.1000: 1
28576bd8 I--Q---   3 perm 3f010000  1000  1000 keyring  _krb: 1
2c546d21 I--Q--- 190 perm 3f030000  1000  1000 keyring  _ses: 2
30a4e0be I------   4   2d 1f030000  1000 65534 keyring  _persistent.1000: 1
32100fab I--Q---   4 perm 1f3f0000  1000 65534 keyring  _uid.1000: 2
32a387ea I--Q---   1 perm 3f010000  1000  1000 keyring  _pid: 2
3ce56aea I--Q---   5 perm 3f030000  1000  1000 keyring  _ses: 1
              The fields shown in each line of this file are as follows:
              ID (1) The ID (serial number) of the key, expressed in hexadeci-
                     mal.
              Flags (2)
                     A set of flags describing the state of the key:
                     I   The key has been instantiated.
                     R   The key has been revoked.
                     D   The key is dead (i.e., the key type has been unregis-
                         tered).  (A key may be briefly in this  state  during
                         garbage collection.)
                     Q   The key contributes to the user's quota.
                     U   The  key is under construction via a callback to user
                         space; see request-key(2).
                     N   The key is negatively instantiated.
                     i   The key has been invalidated.
              Usage (3)
                     This is a count of the number of kernel credential struc-
                     tures that are pinning the key (approximately: the number
                     of threads and open file references that  refer  to  this
                     key).
              Timeout (4)
                     The  amount  of time until the key will expire, expressed
                     in human-readable form (weeks, days, hours, minutes,  and
                     seconds).   The  string  perm  here means that the key is
                     permanent (no timeout).  The string expd means  that  the
                     key  has  already  expired,  but has not yet been garbage
                     collected.
              Permissions (5)
                     The key permissions, expressed as four hexadecimal  bytes
                     containing,  from  left  to  right,  the possessor, user,
                     group, and other permissions.  Within each byte, the per-
                     mission bits are as follows:
                          0x01   view
                          Ox02   read
                          0x04   write
                          0x08   search
                          0x10   link
                          0x20   setattr
              UID (6)
                     The user ID of the key owner.
              GID (7)
                     The  group  ID  of the key.  The value -1 here means that
                     the key has no group ID; this can occur in  certain  cir-
                     cumstances for keys created by the kernel.
              Type (8)
                     The key type (user, keyring, etc.)
              Description (9)
                     The key description (name).  This field contains descrip-
                     tive information about the key.  For most key  types,  it
                     has the form
                          name[: extra-info]
                     The  name  subfield is the key's description (name).  The
                     optional extra-info field provides some further  informa-
                     tion  about  the  key.  The information that appears here
                     depends on the key type, as follows:
                     "user" and "logon"
                         The size in bytes of the key  payload  (expressed  in
                         decimal).
                     "keyring"
                         The  number  of  keys  linked  to the keyring, or the
                         string empty if there  are  no  keys  linked  to  the
                         keyring.
                     "big_key"
                         The  payload  size  in  bytes, followed either by the
                         string [file], if the key payload exceeds the thresh-
                         old that means that the payload is stored in a (swap-
                         pable) tmpfs(5) filesystem, or otherwise  the  string
                         [buff],  indicating  that  the key is small enough to
                         reside in kernel memory.
                     For the ".request_key_auth" key type (authorization  key;
                     see  request_key(2)),  the description field has the form
                     shown in the following example:
                         key:c9a9b19 pid:28880 ci:10
                     The three subfields are as follows:
                     key  The hexadecimal ID of the key being instantiated  in
                          the requesting program.
                     pid  The PID of the requesting program.
                     ci   The  length  of  the  callout  data  with  which the
                          requested key  should  be  instantiated  (i.e.,  the
                          length of the payload associated with the authoriza-
                          tion key).
       /proc/key-users (since Linux 2.6.10)
              This file lists various information for each user ID that has at
              least  one  key  on the system.  An example of the data that one
              might see in this file is the following:
                     0:    10 9/9 2/1000000 22/25000000
                    42:     9 9/9 8/200 106/20000
                  1000:    11 11/11 10/200 271/20000
              The fields shown in each line are as follows:
              uid    The user ID.
              usage  This is a kernel-internal  usage  count  for  the  kernel
                     structure used to record key users.
              nkeys/nikeys
                     The  total number of keys owned by the user, and the num-
                     ber of those keys that have been instantiated.
              qnkeys/maxkeys
                     The number of keys owned by the  user,  and  the  maximum
                     number of keys that the user may own.
              qnbytes/maxbytes
                     The  number  of  bytes  consumed  in payloads of the keys
                     owned by this user, and the upper limit on the number  of
                     bytes in key payloads for that user.
       /proc/sys/kernel/keys/gc_delay (since Linux 2.6.32)
              The value in this file specifies the interval, in seconds, after
              which revoked and expired keys will be garbage  collected.   The
              purpose  of having such an interval is so that there is a window
              of time where user space can see an error (respectively  EKEYRE-
              VOKED and EKEYEXPIRED) that indicates what happened to the key.
              The default value in this file is 300 (i.e., 5 minutes).
       /proc/sys/kernel/keys/persistent_keyring_expiry (since Linux 3.13)
              This  file defines an interval, in seconds, to which the persis-
              tent keyring's expiration timer is reset each time  the  keyring
              is  accessed  (via  keyctl_get_persistent(3)  or  the  keyctl(2)
              KEYCTL_GET_PERSISTENT operation.)
              The default value in this file is 259200 (i.e., 3 days).
       The following files (which are writable by  privileged  processes)  are
       used  to  enforce  quotas  on the number of keys and number of bytes of
       data that can be stored in key payloads:
       /proc/sys/kernel/keys/maxbytes (since Linux 2.6.26)
              This is the maximum number of bytes of data that a nonroot  user
              can hold in the payloads of the keys owned by the user.
              The default value in this file is 20,000.
       /proc/sys/kernel/keys/maxkeys (since Linux 2.6.26)
              This is the maximum number of keys that a nonroot user may own.
              The default value in this file is 200.
       /proc/sys/kernel/keys/root_maxbytes (since Linux 2.6.26)
              This  is  the maximum number of bytes of data that the root user
              (UID 0 in the root user namespace) can hold in the  payloads  of
              the keys owned by root.
              The  default  value  in  this  file is 25,000,000 (20,000 before
              Linux 3.17).
       /proc/sys/kernel/keys/root_maxkeys (since Linux 2.6.26)
              This is the maximum number of keys that the root user (UID 0  in
              the root user namespace) may own.
              The  default  value  in this file is 1,000,000 (200 before Linux
              3.17).
       With respect to keyrings, note that each link in a keyring  consumes  4
       bytes of the keyring payload.
   Users
       The Linux key-management facility has a number of users and usages, but
       is not limited to those that already exist.
       In-kernel users of this facility include:
       Network filesystems - DNS
              The kernel uses the upcall mechanism provided  by  the  keys  to
              upcall  to  user  space  to do DNS lookups and then to cache the
              results.
       AF_RXRPC and kAFS - Authentication
              The AF_RXRPC network protocol and the in-kernel  AFS  filesystem
              use  keys  to store the ticket needed to do secured or encrypted
              traffic.  These are then looked  up  by  network  operations  on
              AF_RXRPC and filesystem operations on kAFS.
       NFS - User ID mapping
              The  NFS  filesystem uses keys to store mappings of foreign user
              IDs to local user IDs.
       CIFS - Password
              The CIFS filesystem uses keys to store passwords  for  accessing
              remote shares.
       Module verification
              The  kernel  build process can be made to cryptographically sign
              modules.  That signature  is  then  checked  when  a  module  is
              loaded.
       User-space users of this facility include:
       Kerberos key storage
              The  MIT  Kerberos  5  facility  (libkrb5) can use keys to store
              authentication tokens which can  be  made  to  be  automatically
              cleaned  up  a set time after the user last uses them, but until
              then permits them to hang around after the user has  logged  out
              so that cron(8) scripts can use them.
SEE ALSO
       keyctl(1), add_key(2), keyctl(2), request_key(2), keyctl(3),
       keyutils(7), persistent-keyring(7), process-keyring(7),
       session-keyring(7), thread-keyring(7), user-keyring(7),
       user-session-keyring(7), pam_keyinit(8), request-key(8)
       The kernel source files Documentation/crypto/asymmetric-keys.txt and
       under Documentation/security/keys (or, before Linux 4.13, in the file
       Documentation/security/keys.txt).
COLOPHON
       This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project.  A
       description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the
       latest version of this page, can be found at
       https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
Linux                             2017-09-15                       KEYRINGS(7)