A distributed access control system
dacs [-v | --verbose] [--dumpenv] [--license] [--version] dacs dacs-command [\m[blue]dacsoptions\m[]\s-2\u[1]\d\s+2] [...] dacs-command [-u uri-prefix | -uj jurisdiction-name | -un | -up jurisdiction-name | -us] [-c dacs.conf]
[-sc site.conf] [-ll logging-level] [-format fmt] [-q] [-t] [-Dname=value]
[-v | --verbose] [--dumpenv] [--enable-dump] [--license] [--std] [--version]
This program is part of the DACS suite.
DACS is a general-purpose, Web-based authentication and access control system. It provides single sign-on functionality and flexible access control to content and services provided by web servers. DACS consists of an Apache module (\m[blue]mod_auth_dacs\m[]\s-2\u[2]\d\s+2) through which Apache communicates with DACS to make access control decisions, a suite of CGI programs that provide DACS web services, and a collection of utility commands that provide various support and administrative functions for DACS. Some of these utilities, such as \m[blue]dacshttp(1)\m[]\s-2\u[3]\d\s+2 and \m[blue]sslclient(1)\m[]\s-2\u[4]\d\s+2, are completely general-purpose.
The DACS access control engine and authentication components can also be used from the command line, within a CGI environment or completely independently of the Web.
For important information about DACS, including installation instructions, please see \m[blue]dacs.readme(7)\m[]\s-2\u[5]\d\s+2 and \m[blue]dacs.install(7)\m[]\s-2\u[6]\d\s+2.
NO WARRANTY
This software is provided by Dss "as is" and any express or implied warranties, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, or non-infringement, are disclaimed. In no event shall Dss be liable for any direct, indirect, incidental, special, exemplary, or consequential damages (including, but not limited to, procurement of substitute goods or services; loss of use, data, or profits; or business interruption) however caused and on any theory of liability, whether in contract, strict liability, or tort (including negligence or otherwise) arising in any way out of the use of this software, even if advised of the possibility of such damage.
By convention, the names of all DACS web services begin with the prefix "dacs_" (e.g., dacs_conf). Starting with release 1.4.17, all commands that implement DACS functionality begin with the prefix "dacs" (e.g., dacsconf). Many DACS web services have command analogues. The names of web services that are used internally by DACS (i.e., they are never called directly by users) begin with "local_" (e.g., local_passwd_authenticate). General-purpose web services and commands do not follow a naming convention, other than not using any of the previously mentioned prefixes.
The document type definitions (DTDs) that are maintained in the dtd-xsd directory are used to document file formats or describe the arguments to a DACS web service or its reply. In the current implementation, these DTD files are not used during XML validation. Attributes of type CDATA may have additional constraints on their values; consult the relevant documentation. The files are technically not valid DTDs, because they lack a document type declaration (DOCTYPE); an appropriate DOCTYPE is generated programmatically at the time a DTD is emitted.
Important
DACS does not prevent certain kinds of attacks against web sites, such as \m[blue]Denial of service attacks\m[]\s-2\u[7]\d\s+2, \m[blue]Cross-site scripting (XSS)\m[]\s-2\u[8]\d\s+2 or \m[blue]Cross-site request forgery (CSRF)\m[]\s-2\u[9]\d\s+2. When combined with appropriate web site protective measures, however, DACS does provide mechanisms to make these types of attacks more difficult.
The technical documentation for DACS consists of a set of manual pages. In the HTML collection, an \m[blue]index page\m[]\s-2\u[10]\d\s+2 includes a table of contents, links to special annotations within the technical documentation, and lists of variables, configuration directives, and XML Document Type Definitions.
Tip
Each HTML manual page contains a font size selection tool near its bottom. If JavaScript is enabled, the currently selected font size can be changed and a global preference set. To choose a font size for the current page, click on one of the four boxes. To make the current selection your preference across manual pages, site visits, and browser sessions, click on the "set" button, which will set an HTTP cookie. If a preference has not been set in this way (i.e., there is no cookie) and a manual page is visited with the query parameter DACSMANFONT set to 0, 1, 2, or 3 (representing smallest to largest point sizes), the corresponding font will be selected and the preference automatically set (if a preference has been set, the parameter is ignored).
Areas of the documentation labeled "Security" discuss important security considerations; please pay special attention to them. Areas labeled "Tip" provide pointers to time-saving (and sometimes aggravation-reducing) techniques and recommended practices.
In pathnames and URLs that appear in examples, the text "..." represents text that has been omitted because it is not relevant to the discussion at hand, or which may vary depending on configuration details, such as where something has been installed (e.g., .../dacs/bin/dacshttp).
Unless otherwise stated, URLs used in examples are fictitious and most likely will not work. The reserved domain name example.com is often used (\m[blue]RFC 2606\m[]\s-2\u[11]\d\s+2).
In instructions and examples, a '%' is generally used to signify a command line prompt:
% date Sun Apr 1 15:33:11 PDT 2007
Sometimes another character is used to signify a prompt, however, such as when demonstrating the interactive mode of \m[blue]dacsexpr(1)\m[]\s-2\u[12]\d\s+2:
> 1 + 1 2
An extended form of \m[blue]BNF notation\m[]\s-2\u[13]\d\s+2 is used to describe syntax concisely. We hope it is both understandable and familiar, but some inconsistencies and ambiguities may occur throughout the documentation; this is being improved slowly. A term in a production may include a regular expression type specification, with '+' meaning one or more occurrences of the term, and '*' zero or more occurrences. Any one of a set of characters is specified within square brackets, and a range of consecutive characters (in ASCII code sequence) is separated by a hyphen (e.g., [A-Za-z0-9\-_]+ means "one or more alphabetic characters, digits, hyphens, or underscores"). In other contexts, square brackets indicate an optional term. Single and double quotes specify literal characters. Note that XML DTDs use their own syntax, which is somewhat different, and in some cases grammars followed in relevant RFCs are respected for clarity or in examples.
Some of the key concepts used throughout the DACS documentation are defined in this section.
account
A persistent record that associates an identity (or username) with state information about the account (such as whether the account is enabled or disabled), information that is required to authenticate the identity (such as a digest of a password string), and possibly other sign-on related information. Note that DACS identities do not necessarily have a corresponding account. DACS does not provide mechanisms to administer "foreign" account types; for instance, although it can authenticate against them, it cannot create or list Unix or Windows accounts.
authentication
The procedure by which a person or program obtains credentials that represent a DACS identity, usually by asserting a DACS username that represents an identity and providing information that only that identity is likely to know or possess. After successful authentication, a person or program is said to have authenticated. DACS can interface with a wide variety of authentication methods and provides some of its own; new methods can easily be added.
authorization
The procedure that determines, in a particular context, whether a request for a given resource or object should be allowed. If an identity is authorized to perform a certain operation on the object, access is granted, otherwise it is denied. Access control rules are one method of describing which identity or identities should be granted - or denied - access to a particular resource. Coarse-grained access control involves making a high-level decision of whether access to an object should be granted; this is usually an all-or-nothing decision. Fine-grained access control is used within a program to decide whether access to a lower-level resource (some data, an administrative function, a menu) should be granted.
Note that unlike some systems, DACS does not predetermine which resources a particular user (identity) can and cannot access; that is, an administrator does not make a list of what rights each user has. Authorization is always determined by rule evaluation, in real time, when a user requests a resource. The only exemptions to this are some optional features: \m[blue]Authorization Caching\m[]\s-2\u[14]\d\s+2 and \m[blue]Rlinks\m[]\s-2\u[15]\d\s+2.
credentials
If authentication is successful, DACS returns information that can be used in subsequent operations to represent the authenticated identity. Credentials contain information about the identity, such as its name, and meta information, such as the time at which the credentials expire and become invalid. Credentials are protected cryptographically so that they are difficult to forge or alter. They must be kept secret, so that the identity cannot be used by anyone other than its owner, and must accompany a request made to a server so that DACS knows who is making the request. The particular mechanism used for this is not important provided credentials cannot be copied and reused; transporting credentials using the payload of an HTTP cookie over an SSL connection is typical, although sending credentials as the value of an HTTP extension header is another possibility.
Although there is no specific limit on the size of credentials as far as DACS is concerned, since they can be encapsulated within an HTTP cookie and returned to a browser, constraints on cookies imposed by browsers should be carefully considered.
Any jurisdiction can understand credentials produced by any other jurisdiction within the same federation. Therefore, a user only needs to be authenticated once to access web services at any jurisdiction using that identity.
Note that in DACS, credentials do not give their owner any rights or convey any authorization; DACS is not a \m[blue]capability-based system\m[]\s-2\u[16]\d\s+2. Credentials simply represent a DACS identity.
Refer to \m[blue]dacs_authenticate(8)\m[]\s-2\u[17]\d\s+2 for details.
current request
The event that has triggered the authorization check being processed by \m[blue]dacs_acs(8)\m[]\s-2\u[18]\d\s+2 is referred to as the current request. For a request for a DACS-wrapped web resource, this will be the HTTP request that is received by the web server for the resource. In situations where dacs_acs is not involved, such as when \m[blue]dacscheck(1)\m[]\s-2\u[19]\d\s+2 or \m[blue]dacsexpr(1)\m[]\s-2\u[12]\d\s+2 are used, the current request and its context are specified by command line arguments or are obtained from the \m[blue]execution environment\m[]\s-2\u[20]\d\s+2.
dacs_acs uses ${DACS::URI} as the path component of the current request. It is obtained from Apache's uri element of the current request_rec. This is the string that is used to match against access control rules.
Other DACS components determine the current HTTP request by examining several environment variables: HTTP_HOST (or SERVER_NAME and SERVER_PORT), REQUEST_URI, QUERY_STRING, and HTTPS.
The value of ${DACS::URI} and the path component of ${Env::REQUEST_URI} are not necessarily the same. After an internal redirect, for example, the latter's value is from the original URL, while the former's is from the target of the redirection.
The current request string is important because it may be used to determine the \m[blue]current federation\m[]\s-2\u[21]\d\s+2 and \m[blue]current jurisdiction\m[]\s-2\u[22]\d\s+2, and because it is used when searching for the access control rule to apply to the request.
DACS
Consisting of CGI-based web services, an Apache 2.0/2.2 module, and a collection of utilities, DACS provides authentication and authorization functionality. Transparent, coarse-grained role-based access control is available for web resources.
Programmatic, general-purpose role-based access control is available for virtually any program (using \m[blue]dacscheck(1)\m[]\s-2\u[19]\d\s+2). This is completely decoupled from Apache.
DACS administrator
An individual (or individuals) responsible for managing the operation of DACS is called a DACS administrator (sometimes just "the administrator"). This individual is not necessarily a system administrator (e.g., superuser or root), although a small number of optional components of DACS must execute as user or group root. The DACS administrator need not be an Apache administrator; once Apache has been configured for DACS it typically requires very few modifications thereafter. The DACS administrator is responsible for configuring and testing DACS (probably installing and upgrading it, too), managing user accounts and access control rules, safeguarding security, backing up configuration and data files, and so on. The design of DACS allows some delegation of responsibility, largely based on file permissions. When invoked as a web service, each of the identities configured as a \m[blue]ADMIN_IDENTITY\m[]\s-2\u[23]\d\s+2 is effectively a DACS administrator; in this context, the system superuser has no significance.
DACS identity
Each authenticated user is assigned a name that consists of the name of the authenticating jurisdiction, its federation name, and a username. Each of these naming components must be syntactically correct. In some contexts the federation name is implicit; sometimes the jurisdiction name is also implicit. Entities such as individuals (people, but also programs, devices, etc.), federations, jurisdictions, and groups have names. It is the responsibility of jurisdictions to authenticate users. The syntax, meanings, and uniqueness of names is also a jurisdictional issue, and perhaps a federation-wide issue as well.
Each real world entity typically has a unique DACS identity, but this is left up to authenticating jurisdictions. Two or more identities are distinct if they do not refer to the same real world individual. Federated identity or single sign-on (SSO) is the ability to recognize a user identity across jurisdictions and even across federations.
Important
Keep in mind that regardless of the authentication method and account information used, two identical usernames (relative to the same jurisdiction and taking into account \m[blue]NAME_COMPARE\m[]\s-2\u[24]\d\s+2) are implicitly assumed to refer to the same identity by DACS. For instance, someone who authenticated as auggie by providing the correct Unix password is virtually indistinguishable from someone who authenticated as auggie using an Information Card. User credentials include information about the authentication method involved in their creation and the \m[blue]user()\m[]\s-2\u[25]\d\s+2 function can be used to obtain this information, but it would be unwise to base identities on this. It is strongly advised that a new DACS jurisdiction carefully develop an extensible plan for user naming.
DACS-wrapped
A web resource is said to be DACS-wrapped if the web server responsible for the resource calls DACS (more specifically, \m[blue]dacs_acs(8)\m[]\s-2\u[18]\d\s+2) to make an access control decision whenever it receives a request for the resource.
federation
A DACS federation consists of one or more jurisdictions. The jurisdictions comprising a federation coordinate information sharing through light-weight business practices implemented as a requirement of membership in a DACS federation; in other words, the members of a federation typically agree to observe certain rules of conduct to preserve overall security and so that users can obtain maximum benefit. A federation consisting of just one jurisdiction is not unusual.
item type
An item type is a name that maps to a \m[blue]VFS\m[]\s-2\u[26]\d\s+2 (virtual filestore) specification that configures how and where data is stored. The level of indirection that they provide means that access control rules, for example, can be configured to be in regular files, a Berkeley DB database, a remote database accessed by HTTP, and so on - all that is required is that the item type acls be properly configured. Some item types (like acls) are reserved and have special meaning to DACS, while others can be used by a DACS administrator for other purposes. An item type name is case sensitive and consists of alphanumerics, hyphens, and underscores, but must begin with an alphabetic character.
jurisdiction
A DACS jurisdiction is an autonomous administrative entity that authenticates its users, provides web services, or both. It may correspond to an organization, department, web server, or virtual host. Jurisdictions are sometimes created simply as an administrative convenience. Each jurisdiction is assigned a unique name within a federation.
A user's home jurisdiction is a jurisdiction that can authenticate that user. In situations where a user has multiple credentials obtained from different jurisdictions, the effective home jurisdiction for a request depends on which credentials are selected during authorization processing. Configuration directives are available to restrict the number of sets of credentials that may accompany a request.
user agent
A user agent is client-side software that interacts with other software (a server application, typically) on behalf of a user. A user is often a person but can also be software. A web browser, which is used to interact with a web server, is an example of a user agent.
DACS needs to name a variety of things so that they can be referred to in expressions, access control rules, configuration directives, and so on. While the URI syntax is used to name some kinds of objects within DACS, DACS also has its own concise naming schemes.
Note
The terms current federation (current jurisdiction) and this federation (this jurisdiction) are used in the documentation to refer to the federation (jurisdiction) associated with the configuration context in effect while DACS processes a request.
In general, the federation-name component of a name is optional; if absent, the current federation is assumed. Similarly, the jurisdiction-name may be elided and the current jurisdiction is implied.
Federations
Syntax:
federation-name::
Example:
DEMO::
The federation-name (usually obtained from a \m[blue]FEDERATION_NAME\m[]\s-2\u[27]\d\s+2 configuration directive) must begin with an alphabetic character and is followed by zero or more alphanumerics, hyphens, and underscores. A federation-name is ordinarily treated case sensitively (but see the \m[blue]NAME_COMPARE\m[]\s-2\u[24]\d\s+2 configuration directive and the \m[blue]user()\m[]\s-2\u[25]\d\s+2 function for alternate behaviours). There is no a priori limit on its length.
The \m[blue]FEDERATION_DOMAIN\m[]\s-2\u[28]\d\s+2 directive specifies the domain name suffix common to all jurisdictions in a federation.
Jurisdictions
Syntax:
[[federation-name:: | [::]] jurisdiction-name:
Examples:
DEMO::DSS: ::DSS: DSS:
The jurisdiction-name (usually obtained from a \m[blue]JURISDICTION_NAME\m[]\s-2\u[29]\d\s+2 configuration directive) must begin with an alphabetic character and is followed by zero or more alphanumerics, hyphens, and underscores. A jurisdiction-name is ordinarily treated case sensitively (but see the \m[blue]NAME_COMPARE\m[]\s-2\u[24]\d\s+2 configuration directive and the \m[blue]user()\m[]\s-2\u[25]\d\s+2 function for alternate behaviours). There is no a priori limit on its length.
Users
Syntax:
[[[federation-name:: | [::]] jurisdiction-name]:username
Examples:
DEMO::DSS:auggie ::DSS:auggie DSS:auggie :auggie
A full DACS identity includes a federation name component and a jurisdiction name component, in addition to the username. It is provided to DACS-wrapped programs as the value of the \m[blue]DACS_IDENTITY\m[]\s-2\u[30]\d\s+2 environment variable.
The username component, which is available to CGI programs as the value of the \m[blue]DACS_USERNAME\m[]\s-2\u[31]\d\s+2 environment variable, consists of one or more ASCII characters from the set of upper and lower case alphabetics, digits, and the following punctuation characters:
! # $ % & ' - . ; ? @ [ ^ _ ` { }
All characters having a value less than 041 (octal) or greater than 0176 (octal) are invalid, as are the following characters:
* , : + ( ) ~ < > = | \ / "
Notes
In addition to the alphanumeric characters, \m[blue]RFC 2396\m[]\s-2\u[32]\d\s+2 allows only the following characters ("pchar") to appear in the path component of a URI:
- _ . ! ~ * ' ( ) % : @ & = + $ ,
Some valid email addresses are not valid DACS usernames. For example, *bob*@example.com, "(bob)"@example.com, and \(bob\)@example.com are valid mailbox names as defined by \m[blue]RFC 822\m[]\s-2\u[33]\d\s+2 (Appendix D) and discussed in \m[blue]RFC 3696\m[]\s-2\u[34]\d\s+2 (Section 3), but both are invalid as DACS usernames. Unless quoted, the local-part component of an email address, which precedes the "@" character in the addr-spec, may not contain any of:
( ) < > @ , ; : \ " . [ ]
Additionally, the space and all US-ASCII control characters (octets 0 - 31) and DEL (127) are disallowed. Without quotes, the local-part may consist of any combination of alphabetics, digits, or any of the following characters:
! # $ % & ' * + - / = ? ^ _ ` . { | } ~
A period (".") may be used, but may not start or end the local-part, nor may two or more consecutive periods appear. Within double quotes, any ASCII character may appear if properly quoted (e.g., Auggie." ".O."\'"[email protected]). The maximum length of the local-part is 64 characters, and the maximum length of the domain component that appears after the "@" character is 255 characters.
There is currently no way to "quote" a DACS username, so some safe encoding method or transformation must be applied to these names.
DACS may create identities for internal use having username components that include characters that are normally invalid.
A username is case sensitive (but see the \m[blue]NAME_COMPARE\m[]\s-2\u[24]\d\s+2 configuration directive and the \m[blue]user()\m[]\s-2\u[25]\d\s+2 function for alternate behaviours). There is no a priori limit on its length.
The recommended practice is for jurisdictions to map their DACS usernames to lower case during the authentication procedure where possible and when the mappings are unique. The \m[blue]EXIT*\m[]\s-2\u[35]\d\s+2 directive may be used for this purpose.
Groups
Syntax:
[[federation-name:: | [::]] %[jurisdiction-name]:groupname
A groupname must begin with an alphabetic character and may be followed by any number of alphanumeric, hyphen ("-"), and underscore ("_") characters.
Examples:
%DEMO::DSS:friends %::DSS:friends %DSS:friends %:friends
Roles and Role Descriptors
Syntax:
Role-Descriptor -> Empty-String | Role-List Role-List -> Role | Role "," Role-List Role -> Basic-Role | Composite-Role Basic-Role -> [A-Za-z0-9\-_]+ Composite-Role -> Basic-Role "/" Basic-Role | Basic-Role "/" Composite-Role Empty-String -> ""
A role descriptor string (also called a role string or a role descriptor) consists of a comma separated list of roles. The name of a role (a Basic-Role) is constructed from upper and lower case letters, digits, hyphens, and underscores. A Composite-Role is constructed from two or more Basic-Role terms, separated by a slash character. Here are three examples of a role descriptor:
admin,wheel,root admin/hardware networks/programming,computer-science/systems/Project_X
Note
A role descriptor string contains no white space characters and may not begin or end with a comma or slash character. Two or more consecutive commas are illegal, as are two or more consecutive slashes.
The \m[blue]setvar()\m[]\s-2\u[36]\d\s+2 function can be used to separate a composite role into its basic roles.
Please refer to \m[blue]dacs.groups(5)\m[]\s-2\u[37]\d\s+2 for additional information.
Concise User Syntax
Syntax:
ident -> '{' kwv-list '}' | user kwv-list -> kwv [',' kwv]* kwv -> kwv-user | kwv-group | kwv-attr | kwv-ip | kwv-expires kwv-user -> 'u=' [Q] user [Q] kwv-group -> 'g=' [Q] groups [Q] kwv-attr -> 'a=' [Q] attr [Q] kwv-expires -> 'e=' [Q] expires [Q] kwv-ip -> 'ip=' [Q] ip-addr [Q] user -> simple-name | DACS-identity groups -> group [',' group]* group -> groupname | role-descriptor attr -> any-alphabetic ip-addr -> any-IP-addr expires -> +rel-secs | date
where:
Q is an optional (matched) quote character;
whitespace may optionally precede most tokens;
a DACS-identity is a full or abbreviated \m[blue]DACS identity\m[]\s-2\u[38]\d\s+2
a simple-name is the username component of a DACS identity (i.e., without any colons); consequently in this context a "special" name, such as auth, is treated as :auth
role-descriptor must be a valid DACS role string and groupname must be a valid DACS group name (see \m[blue]dacs_authenticate(8)\m[]\s-2\u[39]\d\s+2 and \m[blue]dacs.groups(5)\m[]\s-2\u[40]\d\s+2);
an IP address is expressed in the Internet standard numeric dot notation (e.g., 10.0.0.1); and
the lifetime of credentials derived from the identity can be expressed either as a given number of seconds (e.g, "e=+3600") or a given date in one of the following formats (see \m[blue]strptime(3)\m[]\s-2\u[41]\d\s+2):
%a, %d-%b-%Y %H:%M:%S GMT %d-%b-%Y %b %d, %Y %b %d %Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ
When necessary, dates are interpreted relative to the current time or date. The lifetime is converted to its canonical form, which is the absolute time and date in seconds since the Epoch, based on the jurisdiction's clock. A date in the past can be specified; this might be useful for testing, for instance. If the identity is not used to create credentials, the expiry date is ignored, although it must be syntactically correct.
the only supported attribute value is "a", which means that the identity should be treated as an \m[blue]ADMIN_IDENTITY\m[]\s-2\u[23]\d\s+2 (refer to the -admin flag of \m[blue]dacscheck(1)\m[]\s-2\u[19]\d\s+2).
A name expressed in the concise syntax, gives a username and, optionally, roles and attributes for the identity. It is used by \m[blue]dacscheck(1)\m[]\s-2\u[19]\d\s+2, for instance.
DACS utility commands are usually installed as separate binaries, but DACS can (also or instead) be built with most of them combined into a single binary that is installed as dacs. The various utility programs may then be run as:
% dacs dacs-command [dacsoptions] [command-options]
For example:
% dacs dacskey -u foo.myfed.com outfile
Running the dacs utility without arguments will show the list of available sub-commands.
Most DACS programs perform the following actions when they start:
Determine the "mode" in which they should operate; for example, if the REMOTE_ADDR environment variable is present, programs will in general assume they should run as a web application rather than as a utility command
Process a standard set of command line arguments (\m[blue]dacsoptions\m[]\s-2\u[42]\d\s+2)
Set the process umask to 007 to disallow world access for any created files
Disable a core dump so that sensitive information cannot be revealed by examining them (but see \m[blue]--enable-dump\m[]\s-2\u[43]\d\s+2)
Refuse to operate if any configuration file cannot be found or has an error
For web services, make the DACS home directory the current working directory
If "secure mode" has been enabled, web services will only process HTTPS requests
Verify that the version required by a request is compatible with the version of DACS receiving the request
Process any program-specific command line arguments.
DACS programs make an effort to destroy sensitive information (such as passwords) as soon as it is no longer needed and not to write potentially sensitive information to log files unless specifically configured to do so.
Some DACS components may call other components using HTTP (possibly over SSL, depending on configuration). For example, authentication modules may be invoked as web services by \m[blue]dacs_authenticate(8)\m[]\s-2\u[39]\d\s+2. In all cases, these "internal" HTTP calls may not result in a redirection, such as through a 302 Found status code. Although this can sometimes be an inconvenience, it is, in part, a security measure.
Tip
When debugging a problem that may involve an internal HTTP request (especially related to authentication), verify that DACS is not receiving a redirect. Internal HTTP requests may also fail mysteriously because of incorrect or incomplete configuration of SSL parameters. Internal HTTP requests over SSL use \m[blue]sslclient(1)\m[]\s-2\u[4]\d\s+2, as does the \m[blue]dacshttp(1)\m[]\s-2\u[3]\d\s+2 command. If you suspect that an https-schemed URL may not be working, debug the problem using sslclient and then dacshttp.
To maintain data consistency, DACS creates exclusive locks using the \m[blue]fcntl(2)\m[]\s-2\u[44]\d\s+2 system call on files written in the directory configured through the \m[blue]TEMP_DIRECTORY\m[]\s-2\u[45]\d\s+2 directive.
Most DACS services and utilities write various kinds of messages to one or more log files. These messages can be invaluable when trying to figure out what DACS is doing, for security audits, or to see which DACS-wrapped resources are being accessed and in what ways.
Please refer to \m[blue]dacs.conf(5)\m[]\s-2\u[46]\d\s+2 for information about configuration directives related to logging. An assortment of command line flags, described below, are also related to logging.
Note
DACS can emit log messages before configuration processing is complete and configuration directives associated with logging are not in effect during this startup interval.
Because \m[blue]mod_auth_dacs\m[]\s-2\u[2]\d\s+2 is an Apache module, the Apache logging directives apply to it (and not the DACS directives) and its log messages are written to Apache log files.
Log files can quickly become large, especially when the logging level is set to debug or trace levels. Consider daily rotation or truncation.
The text of a log message may occasionally span several lines.
The default value of the \m[blue]LOG_FORMAT\m[]\s-2\u[47]\d\s+2 directive, which controls the appearance of log messages, is defined in include/local.h as LOG_FORMAT_DEFAULT_WEB for DACS web services and LOG_FORMAT_DEFAULT_CMD for everything else. Here is a typical log message:
[Wed Jul 12 12:37:09 2006] [trace] [83648,1060,-] [dacs_acs:"acslib"] Allow clause grants access
Audit-Class Log Messages
In the case of audit-class messages, a string within parentheses may sometimes follow an identity, as in the examples below. This string, called a tracker, associates log messages with a particular origin and can be used to trace a user's sequence of service requests using log messages throughout a federation. This can be useful when debugging, looking for security problems, or forensic analysis.
For an unauthenticated user, the tracker can only be derived heuristically, from elements of the execution context. The user's IP address, user agent string, and SSL client certificate, when available, are used. If two of these tracker strings differ, the requests are typically coming from different hosts, browsers, or users, but this is not necessarily always the case. Similarly, if the same tracker string is associated with two log messages, the service requests are not necessarily being issued by the same user.
For an authenticated user, the tracker string consists of the heuristically-derived string, followed by a comma, followed by a string uniquely associated with the user's credentials. This tracker has a high probability of being unique and having a one-to-one mapping with a particular user.
Consider these (condensed) log file entries:
[Wed Jul 12 15:56:24 2006] [notice] [83963,1067,A] [dacs_acs:"authlib"] *** Access granted to unauthenticated user (7vJLWzv5) from 10.0.0.124 for /cgi-bin/dacs/dacs_current_credentials [Wed Jul 12 15:56:27 2006] [notice] [83965,1073,A] [dacs_acs:"authlib"] *** Access granted to unauthenticated user (7vJLWzv5) from 10.0.0.124 for /cgi-bin/dacs/dacs_authenticate [Wed Jul 12 15:56:27 2006] [debug] [83966,172,A] [dacs_authenticate:"authlib"] Authentication succeeded for HOME:bobo (7vJLWzv5,wA/Pudyp3f0) [Wed Jul 12 15:56:30 2006] [notice] [83973,1078,A] [dacs_acs:"authlib"] *** Access granted to DSS::HOME:bobo (7vJLWzv5,wA/Pudyp3f0) from 10.0.0.124 for /cgi-bin/dacs/dacs_current_credentials
In the first two of the log messages above, the tracker 7vJLWzv5 appears, meaning that the two requests probably came from the same (unauthenticated) user. With the third log message, the user has been authenticated and the tracker 7vJLWzv5,wA/Pudyp3f0 is used. Because these trackers all share the same prefix, the first two requests probably also came from someone who authenticated as DSS::HOME:bobo. The last request, for /cgi-bin/dacs/dacs_current_credentials, definitely came from that user. If this user were to signout and then issue more service requests anywhere in the federation DSS, each log message would contain the tracker 7vJLWzv5.
Security
Tracking the requests of anonymous users reliably is difficult to do well. A cookie-based approach may do better in some situations but has its own drawbacks (such as being totally ineffective when the user has disabled cookies).
DACS includes a feature, enabled as a build-time option (see \m[blue]dacs.install(7)\m[]\s-2\u[48]\d\s+2), whereby a jurisdiction can track the activity of all of its users (i.e., those users that authenticate at the jurisdiction). Each successful authentication event, explicit signout event, and user-submitted web service request event can be recorded at the user's home jurisdiction in the format defined by \m[blue]dacs_user_info.dtd\m[]\s-2\u[49]\d\s+2. This information can be valuable for getting a better understanding of what is happening in a federation, including helping to diagnose performance and security issues. It is the basis of features like displays of recent account activity, and it might also be used to create new capabilities, such as a concurrent login limit or an adaptive authentication component to implement layered authentication or risk-based authentication.
To specify where and how a home jurisdiction should maintain these records, the user_info item type must be defined at that jurisdiction; if it is not defined, no records will be written at that jurisdiction, although the jurisdiction will still try to send event records to other jurisdictions. For maximum benefit, the feature should be enabled at all jurisdictions in a federation since all user activity throughout the federation can then be logged.
If a jurisdiction wants to monitor the activity of its users at other jurisdictions, it must allow those jurisdictions to invoke its \m[blue]dacs_vfs(8)\m[]\s-2\u[50]\d\s+2 service by adding an appropriate access control rule.
Security
It is critical for any such rule to require the \m[blue]dacs_admin()\m[]\s-2\u[51]\d\s+2 predicate.
Note
The \m[blue]dacs_admin(8)\m[]\s-2\u[52]\d\s+2 tools provides an interface to these records. It should eventually be extended to collect and organize records found at all jurisdictions in a federation to facilitate analysis. Because they are text files with a relatively simple format, administrators should not find it difficult to apply common text processing tools or write short, custom programs for this purpose. Commands analogous to \m[blue]last(1)\m[]\s-2\u[53]\d\s+2, \m[blue]who(1)\m[]\s-2\u[54]\d\s+2, and \m[blue]sa(8)\m[]\s-2\u[55]\d\s+2 are being considered.
Each jurisdiction should write records to its own place (i.e., jurisdictions should not share the same VFS object for user_info).
This database will grow indefinitely; an administrator is responsible for rotating or truncating it. If previous and active sign on information is important (see \m[blue]dacs_current_credentials(8)\m[]\s-2\u[56]\d\s+2), prune only the request records (i.e., the acs elements). Another acceptable method is to discard (or archive) some proportion of older records (say, half) and keep some of the newer records.
The data format is subject to change.
A directive to enable or disable this feature at run-time may be added.
Internal administrative events are not recorded.
Because logging off (via \m[blue]dacs_signout(8)\m[]\s-2\u[57]\d\s+2) is optional, the end of a session can sometimes only be inferred or approximated from the expiry of credentials or the time of the last recorded event.
DACS programs and web services get much of their run-time configuration information by reading configuration files and examining environment variables. Some configuration information can be provided at compile-time. Several command line flags may be used to override default behaviour.
Note
All dacsoptions flags are processed left-to-right and must appear before any command-specific flag or argument. The first flag or argument that is not recognized as one of the dacsoptions terminates the list.
The most important dacsoptions are those that specify the location of configuration files and identify the jurisdiction section to use within a configuration file. Depending on the program and how it is used, configuration information may not be needed, may be optional, or may be required.
At most one of the command line flags to select a jurisdiction section can be specified. Refer to \m[blue]dacs.conf(5)\m[]\s-2\u[46]\d\s+2 for additional information on the configuration file and configuration processing.
Many DACS utilities recognize the following standard options, which are called dacsoptions:
-c dacs.conf
This tells DACS where it can find a configuration file for the jurisdiction on whose behalf it is acting. If this argument is not present, depending on how it was built, DACS may either try to use a compile-time specified file or it will try to use the value of the environment variable \m[blue]DACS_CONF\m[]\s-2\u[58]\d\s+2. For details, refer to \m[blue]Locating dacs.conf and site.conf\m[]\s-2\u[59]\d\s+2.
-Dname=value
The effect of this flag is to define variable name (which must be syntactically valid) in the DACS namespace to have the value value. Any quotes around value are retained, provided the shell has not already stripped them off. This flag may be repeated. These variables can subsequently be tested during configuration processing and rule processing; for example, the value of a configuration directive might depend on the value of a dacsoptions flag. Defining a name that happens to correspond to a dacsoptions flag has no effect other than to create the variable.
All dacsoptions flags (excluding this one) are automatically added to the DACS namespace as they are processed. A flag that is a "singleton" (e.g., -q) is initially assigned a value of one and is incremented on each subsequent appearance. A flag of the form -flagvalue is equivalent to -D-flag=value. Unused flags are undefined; if -q is not given, ${DACS::-q} will not be defined. For those flags that have synonyms, a variable for each synonym is created. If the name is used, explicitly or implicitly, later values replace earlier ones.
For example, if the dacsoptions are:
-c www.example.com -v --verbose -Dfoo="baz" -ll debug -D-ll=trace
then variables will be defined as follows:
${DACS::-c} is "www.example.com" ${DACS::-v} is "2" ${DACS::--verbose} is "2" ${DACS::foo} is "\"baz\"" ${DACS::-ll} is "trace"
The debugging level will be debug and not trace.
--dumpenv
Print all environment variables to stdout and then exit immediately.
--enable-dump
By default, DACS web services and most commands disable core dump generation as a security precaution. Because a core dump can be useful when debugging, this flag allows it to be created. As programs that are allowed to produce a core dump must change to the DACS_HOME directory, core dumps will be written there. Use this flag with care.
-format fmt
The output format is set to fmt, which is one of the following keywords (case insensitive): file, html, json, php, plain, text, xml, xmldtd, xmlsimple, or xmlschema. Not all output formats are supported by all programs. This flag overrides any \m[blue]FORMAT\m[]\s-2\u[60]\d\s+2 argument to a web service, which in turn overrides a program's default format. The default format depends on the particular program and way it is invoked. For additional information, refer to the \m[blue]description of the FORMAT argument\m[]\s-2\u[60]\d\s+2.
-ll logging-level
The logging level is set to log-level, which is one of the keywords recognized by the \m[blue]LOG_FILTER\m[]\s-2\u[61]\d\s+2 directive.
--license
Print the license for DACS to stdout and then exit immediately.
-q
Be quiet. This is equivalent to setting the logging level to warn.
-sc site.conf
This tells DACS that it can find a configuration file for the jurisdiction on whose behalf it is acting. If this argument is not present, depending on how it was built, DACS may either try to use a compile-time specified file or it will try to use the value of the environment variable \m[blue]DACS_CONF\m[]\s-2\u[58]\d\s+2. For details, refer to \m[blue]Locating dacs.conf and site.conf\m[]\s-2\u[59]\d\s+2.
--std
This flags the end of the common arguments. The next command line argument, if any, is specific to the program.
-t
Emit tracing information. This is equivalent to setting the logging level to trace. (Also see \m[blue]debug_dacs\m[]\s-2\u[62]\d\s+2.)
-u config-uri
This instructs DACS to use config-uri to select the jurisdiction section to use in the configuration file. For details, refer to \m[blue]The Jurisdiction Section\m[]\s-2\u[63]\d\s+2.
-uj jurisdiction-name
This instructs DACS to use the jurisdiction name jurisdiction-name to select the jurisdiction section to use in the configuration file. For details, refer to \m[blue]The Jurisdiction Section\m[]\s-2\u[63]\d\s+2.
-un
This instructs DACS not to process site.conf or dacs.conf. This may only be used with a small number of commands, such as \m[blue]dacsacl(1)\m[]\s-2\u[64]\d\s+2 and \m[blue]sslclient(1)\m[]\s-2\u[4]\d\s+2.
-up jurisdiction-name
NOT IMPLEMENTED. This instructs DACS to use the jurisdiction name jurisdiction-name to select the jurisdiction section to use in the configuration file and tells it that the web server is acting as a forward proxy; that is, jurisdiction-name does not necessarily "own" the requested URL. For details, refer to \m[blue]The Jurisdiction Section\m[]\s-2\u[63]\d\s+2.
-us
This instructs DACS to use the one-and-only jurisdiction section that appears in the configuration file. That is, the configuration file must contain exactly one jurisdiction section and that is the one that should be used. For details, refer to \m[blue]The Jurisdiction Section\m[]\s-2\u[63]\d\s+2.
-v
--verbose
Be more verbose, relative to the current logging level. This flag may be repeated.
--version
Print version information to stderr immediately and then exit. If -v appeared earlier on the command line, also print version information for each DACS source code file in this program.
Note
Complete version information is available only for statically linked programs. Also see \m[blue]dacsversion(1)\m[]\s-2\u[65]\d\s+2 and \m[blue]dacs_version(8)\m[]\s-2\u[66]\d\s+2.
Tip
If no command line flag is given to specify the jurisdiction section, the value of the environment variable DEFAULT_JURISDICTION will be used as if given with the -uj flag. This can be particularly useful when a host has only one jurisdiction configured because it makes it unnecessary to always specify the jurisdiction for DACS commands.
SERVER_NAME, SERVER_PORT, REQUEST_URI
May be used to determine the applicable jurisdiction.
dacs.conf
site.conf
\m[blue]DACS manual pages\m[]\s-2\u[67]\d\s+2, \m[blue]dacs_admin(8)\m[]\s-2\u[52]\d\s+2, \m[blue]dacs.install(7)\m[]\s-2\u[6]\d\s+2, \m[blue]dacs.readme(7)\m[]\s-2\u[5]\d\s+2
There should be some assistance for administering \m[blue]user activity records\m[]\s-2\u[68]\d\s+2.
Distributed Systems Software (\m[blue]www.dss.ca\m[]\s-2\u[69]\d\s+2)
Copyright2003-2013 Distributed Systems Software. See the \m[blue]LICENSE\m[]\s-2\u[70]\d\s+2 file that accompanies the distribution for licensing information.
dacsoptions
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.1.html#dacsoptions
mod_auth_dacs
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/mod_auth_dacs.html
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacshttp.1.html
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/sslclient.1.html
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.readme.7.html
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.install.7.html
Denial of service attacks
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denial-of-service_attack
Cross-site scripting (XSS)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_scripting
Cross-site request forgery (CSRF)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_request_forgery
index page
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/index.html
RFC 2606
http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2606.txt
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacsexpr.1.html
BNF notation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backus%E2%80%93Naur_form
Authorization Caching
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_acs.8.html#authorization_caching
Rlinks
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_acs.8.html#rlinks
capability-based system
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capabilities
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_authenticate.8.html#credentials
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_acs.8.html
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacscheck.1.html
execution environment
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=environ&apropos=0&sektion=7&manpath=FreeBSD+9.1-RELEASE&format=html
current federation
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/#current_federation
current jurisdiction
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/#current_jurisdiction
ADMIN_IDENTITY
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.conf.5.html#ADMIN_IDENTITY
NAME_COMPARE
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.conf.5.html#NAME_COMPARE
user()
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.exprs.5.html#user
VFS
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.conf.5.html#VFS
FEDERATION_NAME
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.conf.5.html#FEDERATION_NAME
FEDERATION_DOMAIN
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.conf.5.html#FEDERATION_DOMAIN
JURISDICTION_NAME
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.conf.5.html#JURISDICTION_NAME
DACS_IDENTITY
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_acs.8.html#var_env_dacs_identity
DACS_USERNAME
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_acs.8.html#var_env_dacs_username
RFC 2396
http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt
RFC 822
http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc822.txt
RFC 3696
http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3696.txt
EXIT*
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_authenticate.8.html#auth_directive_index
setvar()
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.exprs.5.html#setvar
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.groups.5.html#roles
DACS identity
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/#dacs_identity
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_authenticate.8.html
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.groups.5.html
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=strptime&apropos=0&sektion=3&manpath=FreeBSD+9.1-RELEASE&format=html
dacsoptions
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/#dacsoptions
--enable-dump
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/#enable-dump-arg
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=fcntl&apropos=0&sektion=2&manpath=FreeBSD+9.1-RELEASE&format=html
TEMP_DIRECTORY
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.conf.5.html#TEMP_DIRECTORY
dacs.conf(5)
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.conf.5.html
LOG_FORMAT
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.conf.5.html#LOG_FORMAT
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.install.7.html#configure_options
dacs_user_info.dtd
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/../dtd-xsd/dacs_user_info.dtd
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_vfs.8.html
dacs_admin()
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.exprs.5.html#DACS_ADMIN
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_admin.8.html
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=last&apropos=0&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+9.1-RELEASE&format=html
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=who&apropos=0&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+9.1-RELEASE&format=html
sa(8)
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=sa&apropos=0&sektion=8&manpath=FreeBSD+9.1-RELEASE&format=html
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_current_credentials.8.html
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_signout.8.html
DACS_CONF
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_acs.8.html#var_env_dacs_conf
Locating dacs.conf and site.conf
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.conf.5.html#locating_dacs.conf
FORMAT
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.services.8.html#FORMAT
LOG_FILTER
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.conf.5.html#logging_levels
debug_dacs
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_acs.8.html#debug_dacs
The Jurisdiction Section
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.conf.5.html#jurisdiction_section
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacsacl.1.html
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacsversion.1.html
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs_version.8.html
DACS manual pages
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/../man/index.html
user activity records
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/#tracking_user_activity
www.dss.ca
http://www.dss.ca
LICENSE
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/../misc/LICENSE