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Module: kpass Version: 0.5 Distribution file: pykpass-0.5.tar.gz Author: Shumon Huque <shuque -at- isc.upenn.edu> kpass( username, password, service, host, kt_pathname ) EXAMPLE USAGE: from kpass import kpass, KpassError try: rc = kpass("frank", "bozo", "blah", None, "FILE:/etc/my.keytab") except KpassError, diag: print "Error: %s" % str(diag) else: if (rc == 1): print "Authentication success" else: print "Authentication failure" DESCRIPTION: This Python extension module provides a simple function called kpass() to perform password verification using Kerberos 5. It is intended for use by applications that cannot use the Kerberos protocol natively, but need to authenticate users against the Kerberos database. If it must be run on a system that receives a username and password over the network, steps should be taken to ensure that these are passed to that system in a cryptographically secure manner. kpass() attempts to validate a given user's Kerberos username and password. It does this in the following manner: it first obtains a Kerberos ticket for the specified service for the given username and password from the Kerberos AS. And then attempts to decrypt the ticket using the key stored in the specified keytable file to verify the authenticity of the AS response. The python 'None' type can be passed as the 4th (host) argument to use the fully canonicalized primary hostname of the system that the function is executed on. The fifth argument can also be 'None' to use the system's default keytab file (usually "FILE:/etc/krb5.keytab"). Note that previous versions of this module obtained a TGT from the AS and then subsequently used that to obtain the service ticket from the TGS. Directly obtaining the service ticket from the AS saves a round trip with the KDC and the associated cryptographic computations. Local password verification doesn't need a replay cache, so kpass() by disables it. This speeds things up quite a bit, if you are invoking this function many times in quick succession. kpass() returns 1 if password verification is successful, 0 if the username or password is incorrect and raises a custom exception of "KpassError" if a system error is encountered. kpass() relies on obtaining Kerberos realm and KDC information from the invoking environment. Typically it will get this from the system's Kerberos configuration file (krb5.conf) and/or DNS records. One quick way to override the default environment is to create a custom krb5.conf file and set the pathname to this file as the value of the KRB5_CONFIG environment variable. This distribution is accompanied by a PGP signature. My PGP public key can be obtained from <http://www.huque.com/~shuque/pgp/> or one of the PGP key servers. PRE-REQUISITES: - Python 2.x - MIT Kerberos V5 Release 1.3.x or newer (this package seems to work with recent versions of Heimdal also, but I have not tested this extensively). - Creation of an application service principal on the Kerberos server for use by this function. - Storing this principal and it's associated key in a local keytab file. INSTALLATION: 1. Edit the file "setup.py" if necessary, to reflect the proper locations of the MIT Kerberos 5 libraries, include files, and other paraphernalia for your system. 2. Build the distribution: python setup.py build 3. Install it (probably as 'root' to install system wide): python setup.py install (If you just want to install the module in your home directory, use "python setup.py install --home $HOME", which will usually put it in $HOME/lib/python/) 4. For testing the function, you'll need to edit the test/test1.py file appropriately for your environment (or write your own python code). Shumon Huque E-mail: <shuque -at- isc.upenn.edu> Web: http://www.huque.com/~shuque/ University of Pennsylvania. Copyright (c) 2005 - 2011, Shumon Huque. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Python itself.
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