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SUDO_PLUGIN(5) |
FreeBSD File Formats Manual |
SUDO_PLUGIN(5) |
sudo_plugin —
Sudo Plugin API
Starting with version 1.8, sudo supports a plugin API
for policy and session logging. Plugins may be compiled as dynamic shared
objects (the default on systems that support them) or compiled statically into
the sudo binary itself. By default, the
sudoers plugin provides audit, security policy and I/O
logging capabilities. Via the plugin API, sudo can be
configured to use alternate plugins provided by third parties. The plugins to
be used are specified in the
sudo.conf(5)
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.
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
sudo.conf(5)
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[],
char * const plugin_options[], const char **errstr);
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[], const char **errstr);
int (*list)(int argc, char * const argv[], int verbose,
const char *list_user, const char **errstr);
int (*validate)(const char **errstr);
void (*invalidate)(int remove);
int (*init_session)(struct passwd *pwd, char **user_env[],
const char **errstr);
void (*register_hooks)(int version,
int (*register_hook)(struct sudo_hook *hook));
void (*deregister_hooks)(int version,
int (*deregister_hook)(struct sudo_hook *hook));
struct sudo_plugin_event * (*event_alloc)(void);
};
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[],
char * const plugin_options[], const char **errstr);
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
Conversation API for
details). 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
Conversation API for
details). 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 options the user specified when running
sudo . As such, they will only be present when
the corresponding option 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.
The following values may be set by
sudo :
- bsdauth_type=string
- Authentication type, if specified by the
-a option, to use on systems where
BSD authentication is supported.
- closefrom=number
- If specified, the user has requested via the
-C option 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.
- cmnd_chroot=string
- The root directory (see
chroot(2))
to run the command in, as specified by the user via the
-R option. The plugin may ignore or
restrict the user's ability to specify a new root directory. Only
available starting with API version 1.16.
- cmnd_cwd=string
- The working directory to run the command in, as specified by the
user via the
-D option. The plugin may
ignore or restrict the user's ability to specify a new working
directory. Only available starting with API version 1.16.
- debug_flags=string
- A debug file path name followed by a space and a comma-separated
list of debug flags that correspond to the plugin's
Debug entry in
sudo.conf(5),
if there is one. The flags are passed to the plugin exactly as
they appear in
sudo.conf(5).
The syntax used by sudo and the
sudoers plugin is
subsystem@priority but a
plugin is free to use a different format so long as it does not
include a comma (‘, ’). Prior
to sudo 1.8.12, there was no way to
specify plugin-specific debug_flags so the value
was always the same as that used by the
sudo front-end and did not include a path
name, only the flags themselves. As of version 1.7 of the plugin
interface, sudo will only pass
debug_flags if
sudo.conf(5)
contains a plugin-specific Debug
entry.
- ignore_ticket=bool
- Set to true if the user specified the
-k
option along with a command, indicating that the user wishes to
ignore any cached authentication credentials.
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.
- 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
- login_class=string
- BSD login class to use when setting
resource limits and nice value, if specified by the
-c option.
- login_shell=bool
- Set to true if the user specified the
-i
option, indicating that the user wishes to run a login shell.
- max_groups=int
- The maximum number of groups a user may belong to. This will only
be present if there is a corresponding setting in
sudo.conf(5).
- 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.
- noninteractive=bool
- Set to true if the user specified the
-n
option, 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.
- plugin_dir=string
- The default plugin directory used by the
sudo front-end. This is the default
directory set at compile time and may not correspond to the
directory the running plugin was loaded from. It may be used by a
plugin to locate support files.
- plugin_path=string
- The path name of plugin loaded by the
sudo
front-end. The path name will be a fully-qualified unless the
plugin was statically compiled into
sudo .
- preserve_environment=bool
- Set to true if the user specified the
-E
option, indicating that the user wishes to preserve the
environment.
- preserve_groups=bool
- Set to true if the user specified the
-P
option, indicating that the user wishes to preserve the group
vector instead of setting it based on the runas user.
- progname=string
- The command name that sudo was run as, typically
“sudo” or “sudoedit”.
- prompt=string
- The prompt to use when requesting a password, if specified via the
-p option.
- remote_host=string
- The name of the remote host to run the command on, if specified
via the
-h option. Support for running the
command on a remote host is meant to be implemented via a helper
program that is executed in place of the user-specified command.
The sudo front-end is only capable of
executing commands on the local host. Only available starting with
API version 1.4.
- run_shell=bool
- Set to true if the user specified the
-s
option, indicating that the user wishes to run a shell.
- runas_group=string
- The group name or group-ID to run the command as, if specified via
the
-g option.
- runas_user=string
- The user name or user-ID to run the command as, if specified via
the
-u option.
- selinux_role=string
- SELinux role to use when executing the command, if specified by
the
-r option.
- selinux_type=string
- SELinux type to use when executing the command, if specified by
the
-t option.
- set_home=bool
- Set to true if the user specified the
-H
option. If true, set the HOME environment
variable to the target user's home directory.
- sudoedit=bool
- Set to true when the
-e option 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.
- timeout=string
- Command timeout specified by the user via the
-T option. Not all plugins support command
timeouts and the ability of the user to set a timeout may be
restricted by policy. The format of the timeout string is
plugin-specific.
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.
The following values may be set by
sudo :
- 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.
- cwd=string
- The user's current working directory.
- egid=gid_t
- The effective group-ID of the user invoking
sudo .
- euid=uid_t
- The effective 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.
- host=string
- The local machine's hostname as returned by the
gethostname(2)
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.
- pgid=int
- The ID of the process group that the running
sudo process is a member of. Only
available starting with API version 1.2.
- pid=int
- The process ID of the running
sudo
process. Only available starting with API version 1.2.
- ppid=int
- The parent process ID of the running
sudo
process. Only available starting with API version 1.2.
- rlimit_as=soft,hard
- The maximum size to which the process's address space may grow (in
bytes), if supported by the operating system. The soft and hard
limits are separated by a comma. A value of
“infinity” indicates that there is no limit. Only
available starting with API version 1.16.
- rlimit_core=soft,hard
- The largest size core dump file that may be created (in bytes).
The soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. A value of
“infinity” indicates that there is no limit. Only
available starting with API version 1.16.
- rlimit_cpu=soft,hard
- The maximum amount of CPU time that the process may use (in
seconds). The soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. A
value of “infinity” indicates that there is no
limit. Only available starting with API version 1.16.
- rlimit_data=soft,hard
- The maximum size of the data segment for the process (in bytes).
The soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. A value of
“infinity” indicates that there is no limit. Only
available starting with API version 1.16.
- rlimit_fsize=soft,hard
- The largest size file that the process may create (in bytes). The
soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. A value of
“infinity” indicates that there is no limit. Only
available starting with API version 1.16.
- rlimit_locks=soft,hard
- The maximum number of locks that the process may establish, if
supported by the operating system. The soft and hard limits are
separated by a comma. A value of “infinity”
indicates that there is no limit. Only available starting with API
version 1.16.
- rlimit_memlock=soft,hard
- The maximum size that the process may lock in memory (in bytes),
if supported by the operating system. The soft and hard limits are
separated by a comma. A value of “infinity”
indicates that there is no limit. Only available starting with API
version 1.16.
- rlimit_nofile=soft,hard
- The maximum number of files that the process may have open. The
soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. A value of
“infinity” indicates that there is no limit. Only
available starting with API version 1.16.
- rlimit_nproc=soft,hard
- The maximum number of processes that the user may run
simultaneously. The soft and hard limits are separated by a comma.
A value of “infinity” indicates that there is no
limit. Only available starting with API version 1.16.
- rlimit_rss=soft,hard
- The maximum size to which the process's resident set size may grow
(in bytes). The soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. A
value of “infinity” indicates that there is no
limit. Only available starting with API version 1.16.
- rlimit_stack=soft,hard
- The maximum size to which the process's stack may grow (in bytes).
The soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. A value of
“infinity” indicates that there is no limit. Only
available starting with API version 1.16.
- sid=int
- The session ID of the running
sudo process
or 0 if sudo is not part of a POSIX job
control session. Only available starting with API version
1.2.
- tcpgid=int
- The ID of the foreground process group associated with the
terminal device associated with the
sudo
process or 0 if there is no terminal present. Only available
starting with API version 1.2.
- 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= ”.
- uid=uid_t
- The real user-ID of the user invoking
sudo .
- umask=octal
- The invoking user's file creation mask. Only available starting
with API version 1.10.
- user=string
- The name of the user invoking
sudo .
- 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.
- plugin_options
- Any (non-comment) strings immediately after the plugin path are passed
as arguments to the plugin. These arguments are split on a white space
boundary and are passed to the plugin in the form of a
NULL -terminated array of strings. If no
arguments were specified, plugin_options will be the
NULL pointer.
The plugin_options parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.2. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
plugin_options. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- errstr
- If the
open () function returns a value other
than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or error
in errstr. The sudo
front-end will then pass this value to any registered audit plugins.
The string stored in errstr must remain valid
until the plugin's close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.15. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
errstr. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- close
-
void (*close)(int exit_status, int error);
The close () function is called when
sudo is finished, shortly before it exits.
Starting with API version 1.15, close () is
called regardless of whether or not a command was actually executed.
This makes it possible for plugins to perform cleanup even when a
command was not run. It is not possible to tell whether a command was
run based solely on the arguments passed to the
close () function. To determine if a command was
actually run, the plugin must keep track of whether or not the
check_policy () function returned
successfully.
The function arguments are as follows:
- exit_status
- The command's exit status, as returned by the
wait(2)
system call, or zero if no command was run. 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
zero.
If no close () function is defined, no
I/O logging plugins are loaded, and neither the
timeout not use_pty options are set
in the command_info list, the
sudo front-end may execute the command directly
instead of running it as a child process.
- 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.
Returns 1 on success, 0 on failure, -1 if a general error
occurred, or -2 if there was a usage error, although the return value is
currently ignored.
- check_policy
-
int (*check_policy)(int argc, char * const argv[], char *env_add[],
char **command_info[], char **argv_out[], char **user_env_out[],
const char **errstr);
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 (environment variables may include command
line options). 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(2)
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 :
- chroot=string
- The root directory to use when running the command.
- closefrom=number
- If specified,
sudo will close all files
descriptors with a value of number or
higher.
- command=string
- Fully qualified path to the command to be executed.
- cwd=string
- The current working directory to change to when executing the
command. If
sudo is unable to change to
the new working directory, the command will not be run unless
cwd_optional is also set (see below).
- cwd_optional=bool
- If enabled,
sudo will treat an inability
to change to the new working directory as a non-fatal error. This
setting has no effect unless cwd is also
set.
- exec_background=bool
- By default,
sudo runs a command as the
foreground process as long as sudo itself
is running in the foreground. When
exec_background is enabled and the command is
being run in a pseudo-terminal (due to I/O logging or the
use_pty setting), the command will be run as a
background process. Attempts to read from the controlling terminal
(or to change terminal settings) will result in the command being
suspended with the SIGTTIN signal (or
SIGTTOU in the case of terminal settings).
If this happens when sudo is a foreground
process, the command will be granted the controlling terminal and
resumed in the foreground with no user intervention required. The
advantage of initially running the command in the background is
that sudo need not read from the terminal
unless the command explicitly requests it. Otherwise, any terminal
input must be passed to the command, whether it has required it or
not (the kernel buffers terminals so it is not possible to tell
whether the command really wants the input). This is different
from historic sudo behavior or when the command
is not being run in a pseudo-terminal.
For this to work seamlessly, the operating system must
support the automatic restarting of system calls. Unfortunately,
not all operating systems do this by default, and even those
that do may have bugs. For example, macOS fails to restart the
tcgetattr () and
tcsetattr () system calls (this is a bug
in macOS). Furthermore, because this behavior depends on the
command stopping with the SIGTTIN or
SIGTTOU signals, programs that catch
these signals and suspend themselves with a different signal
(usually SIGTOP ) will not be
automatically foregrounded. Some versions of the linux
su(1)
command behave this way. Because of this, a plugin should not
set exec_background unless it is explicitly
enabled by the administrator and there should be a way to
enabled or disable it on a per-command basis.
This setting has no effect unless I/O logging is
enabled or use_pty is enabled.
- execfd=number
- If specified,
sudo will use the
fexecve(2)
system call to execute the command instead of
execve(2).
The specified number must refer to an open file
descriptor.
- 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_group=string
- The group that will own newly created I/O log files and
directories. This is a hint to the I/O logging plugin which may
choose to ignore it.
- iolog_mode=octal
- The file permission mode to use when creating I/O log files and
directories. This is a hint to the I/O logging plugin which may
choose to ignore it.
- iolog_user=string
- The user that will own newly created I/O log files and
directories. 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- noexec=bool
- If set, prevent the command from executing other programs.
- preserve_fds=list
- A comma-separated list of file descriptors that should be
preserved, regardless of the value of the
closefrom setting. Only available starting with
API version 1.5.
- preserve_groups=bool
- If set,
sudo will preserve the user's
group vector instead of initializing the group vector based on
runas_user .
- rlimit_as=soft,hard
- The maximum size to which the process's address space may grow (in
bytes), if supported by the operating system. The soft and hard
limits are separated by a comma. If only a single value is
specified, both the hard and soft limits are set. A value of
“infinity” indicates that there is no limit. A value
of “user” will cause the invoking user's resource
limit to be preserved. A value of “default” will
cause the target user's default resource limit to be used on
systems that allow per-user resource limits to be configured. Only
available starting with API version 1.17.
- rlimit_core=soft,hard
- The largest size core dump file that may be created (in bytes).
The soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. If only a
single value is specified, both the hard and soft limits are set.
A value of “infinity” indicates that there is no
limit. A value of “user” will cause the invoking
user's resource limit to be preserved. A value of
“default” will cause the target user's default
resource limit to be used on systems that allow per-user resource
limits to be configured. Only available starting with API version
1.17.
- rlimit_cpu=soft,hard
- The maximum amount of CPU time that the process may use (in
seconds). The soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. If
only a single value is specified, both the hard and soft limits
are set. A value of “infinity” indicates that there
is no limit. A value of “user” will cause the
invoking user's resource limit to be preserved. A value of
“default” will cause the target user's default
resource limit to be used on systems that allow per-user resource
limits to be configured. Only available starting with API version
1.17.
- rlimit_data=soft,hard
- The maximum size of the data segment for the process (in bytes).
The soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. If only a
single value is specified, both the hard and soft limits are set.
A value of “infinity” indicates that there is no
limit. A value of “user” will cause the invoking
user's resource limit to be preserved. A value of
“default” will cause the target user's default
resource limit to be used on systems that allow per-user resource
limits to be configured. Only available starting with API version
1.17.
- rlimit_fsize=soft,hard
- The largest size file that the process may create (in bytes). The
soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. If only a single
value is specified, both the hard and soft limits are set. A value
of “infinity” indicates that there is no limit. A
value of “user” will cause the invoking user's
resource limit to be preserved. A value of “default”
will cause the target user's default resource limit to be used on
systems that allow per-user resource limits to be configured. Only
available starting with API version 1.17.
- rlimit_locks=soft,hard
- The maximum number of locks that the process may establish, if
supported by the operating system. The soft and hard limits are
separated by a comma. If only a single value is specified, both
the hard and soft limits are set. A value of
“infinity” indicates that there is no limit. A value
of “user” will cause the invoking user's resource
limit to be preserved. A value of “default” will
cause the target user's default resource limit to be used on
systems that allow per-user resource limits to be configured. Only
available starting with API version 1.17.
- rlimit_memlock=soft,hard
- The maximum size that the process may lock in memory (in bytes),
if supported by the operating system. The soft and hard limits are
separated by a comma. If only a single value is specified, both
the hard and soft limits are set. A value of
“infinity” indicates that there is no limit. A value
of “user” will cause the invoking user's resource
limit to be preserved. A value of “default” will
cause the target user's default resource limit to be used on
systems that allow per-user resource limits to be configured. Only
available starting with API version 1.17.
- rlimit_nofile=soft,hard
- The maximum number of files that the process may have open. The
soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. If only a single
value is specified, both the hard and soft limits are set. A value
of “infinity” indicates that there is no limit. A
value of “user” will cause the invoking user's
resource limit to be preserved. A value of “default”
will cause the target user's default resource limit to be used on
systems that allow per-user resource limits to be configured. Only
available starting with API version 1.17.
- rlimit_nproc=soft,hard
- The maximum number of processes that the user may run
simultaneously. The soft and hard limits are separated by a comma.
If only a single value is specified, both the hard and soft limits
are set. A value of “infinity” indicates that there
is no limit. A value of “user” will cause the
invoking user's resource limit to be preserved. A value of
“default” will cause the target user's default
resource limit to be used on systems that allow per-user resource
limits to be configured. Only available starting with API version
1.17.
- rlimit_rss=soft,hard
- The maximum size to which the process's resident set size may grow
(in bytes). The soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. If
only a single value is specified, both the hard and soft limits
are set. A value of “infinity” indicates that there
is no limit. A value of “user” will cause the
invoking user's resource limit to be preserved. A value of
“default” will cause the target user's default
resource limit to be used on systems that allow per-user resource
limits to be configured. Only available starting with API version
1.17.
- rlimit_stack=soft,hard
- The maximum size to which the process's stack may grow (in bytes).
The soft and hard limits are separated by a comma. If only a
single value is specified, both the hard and soft limits are set.
A value of “infinity” indicates that there is no
limit. A value of “user” will cause the invoking
user's resource limit to be preserved. A value of
“default” will cause the target user's default
resource limit to be used on systems that allow per-user resource
limits to be configured. Only available starting with API version
1.17.
- runas_egid=gid
- Effective group-ID to run the command as. If not specified, the
value of runas_gid is used.
- 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_group=string
- The name of the group the command will run as, if it is different
from the runas_user's default group. This value
is provided for auditing purposes only, the
sudo front-end uses
runas_egid and runas_gid when
executing the command.
- 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.
- runas_uid=uid
- User-ID to run the command as.
- runas_user=string
- The name of the user the command will run as, which should
correspond to runas_euid (or
runas_uid if runas_euid is not
set). This value is provided for auditing purposes only, the
sudo front-end uses
runas_euid and runas_uid 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.
- set_utmp=bool
- Create a utmp (or utmpx) entry when a pseudo-terminal 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.
- 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.
- sudoedit_checkdir=bool
- Set to false to disable directory writability checks in
sudoedit . By default,
sudoedit 1.8.16 and higher will check all
directory components of the path to be edited for writability by
the invoking user. Symbolic links will not be followed in writable
directories and sudoedit will refuse to
edit a file located in a writable directory. These restrictions
are not enforced when sudoedit is run by
root. The sudoedit_follow option can be set to
false to disable this check. Only available starting with API
version 1.8.
- sudoedit_follow=bool
- Set to true to allow
sudoedit to edit
files that are symbolic links. By default,
sudoedit 1.8.15 and higher will refuse to
open a symbolic link. The sudoedit_follow option
can be used to restore the older behavior and allow
sudoedit to open symbolic links. Only
available starting with API version 1.8.
- timeout=int
- Command timeout. If non-zero then when the timeout expires the
command will be killed.
- umask=octal
- The file creation mask to use when executing the command. This
value may be overridden by PAM or login.conf on some systems
unless the umask_override option is also
set.
- umask_override=bool
- Force the value specified by the umask option to
override any umask set by PAM or login.conf.
- use_pty=bool
- Allocate a pseudo-terminal 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
pseudo-terminal when an I/O log plugin is loaded.
- 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(2)
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.
- errstr
- If the
check_policy () function returns a value
other than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or
error in errstr. The
sudo front-end will then pass this value to
any registered audit plugins. The string stored in
errstr must remain valid until the plugin's
close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.15. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
errstr. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- list
-
int (*list)(int argc, char * const argv[], int verbose,
const char *list_user, const char **errstr);
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 .
The function arguments are as follows:
- 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(2)
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.
- 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.
- errstr
- If the
list () function returns a value other
than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or error
in errstr. The sudo
front-end will then pass this value to any registered audit plugins.
The string stored in errstr must remain valid
until the plugin's close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.15. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
errstr. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- validate
-
int (*validate)(const char **errstr);
The validate () function is called when
sudo is run with the -v
option. 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.
The function arguments are as follows:
- errstr
- If the
validate () function returns a value
other than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or
error in errstr. The
sudo front-end will then pass this value to
any registered audit plugins. The string stored in
errstr must remain valid until the plugin's
close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.15. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
errstr. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- invalidate
-
void (*invalidate)(int remove);
The invalidate () function is called
when sudo is run with the
-k or -K option. 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, char **user_env_out[]);
The init_session () function is called
before sudo sets up the execution environment
for the command. It is run in the parent sudo
process and before any user-ID or group-ID changes. This can be used to
perform session setup that is not supported by
command_info, such as opening the PAM session. The
close () function can be used to tear down the
session that was opened by init_session .
The pwd argument points to a passwd struct
for the user the command will be run as if the user-ID the command will
run as was found in the password database, otherwise it will be
NULL .
The user_env_out argument points to the
environment the command will run in, in the form of a
NULL -terminated vector of
“name=value” strings. This is the same string passed back
to the front-end via the Policy Plugin's user_env_out
parameter. If the init_session () function needs
to modify the user environment, it should update the pointer stored in
user_env_out. The expected use case is to merge the
contents of the PAM environment (if any) with the contents of
user_env_out. The user_env_out
parameter is only available starting with API version 1.2. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
user_env_out. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
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.
- register_hooks
-
void (*register_hooks)(int version,
int (*register_hook)(struct sudo_hook *hook));
The register_hooks () function is
called by the sudo front-end to register any hooks the plugin needs. If
the plugin does not support hooks,
register_hooks should be set to the
NULL pointer.
The version argument describes the version
of the hooks API supported by the sudo
front-end.
The register_hook () function should be
used to register any supported hooks the plugin needs. It returns 0 on
success, 1 if the hook type is not supported, and -1 if the major
version in struct hook does not match the
front-end's major hook API version.
See the Hook function
API section below for more information about hooks.
The register_hooks () function is only
available starting with API version 1.2. If the
sudo front-end doesn't support API version 1.2
or higher, register_hooks will not be
called.
- deregister_hooks
-
void (*deregister_hooks)(int version,
int (*deregister_hook)(struct sudo_hook *hook));
The deregister_hooks () function is
called by the sudo front-end to deregister any hooks the plugin has
registered. If the plugin does not support hooks,
deregister_hooks should be set to the
NULL pointer.
The version argument describes the version
of the hooks API supported by the sudo
front-end.
The deregister_hook () function should
be used to deregister any hooks that were put in place by the
register_hook () function. If the plugin tries to
deregister a hook that the front-end does not support,
deregister_hook will return an error.
See the Hook function
API section below for more information about hooks.
The deregister_hooks () function is
only available starting with API version 1.2. If the
sudo front-end doesn't support API version 1.2
or higher, deregister_hooks will not be
called.
- event_alloc
-
struct sudo_plugin_event * (*event_alloc)(void);
The event_alloc () function is used to
allocate a struct sudo_plugin_event which
provides access to the main sudo event loop.
Unlike the other fields, the event_alloc ()
pointer is filled in by the sudo front-end, not
by the plugin.
See the Event API section
below for more information about events.
The event_alloc () function is only
available starting with API version 1.15. If the
sudo front-end doesn't support API version 1.15
or higher, event_alloc () will not be set.
- errstr
- If the
init_session () function returns a value
other than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or
error in errstr. The sudo
front-end will then pass this value to any registered audit plugins. The
string stored in errstr must remain valid until the
plugin's close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only available
starting with API version 1.15. A plugin must check
the API version specified by the sudo front-end
before using errstr. Failure to do so may result
in a crash.
Policy Plugin Version Macros
/* Plugin API version major/minor. */
#define SUDO_API_VERSION_MAJOR 1
#define SUDO_API_VERSION_MINOR 13
#define SUDO_API_MKVERSION(x, y) ((x << 16) | y)
#define SUDO_API_VERSION SUDO_API_MKVERSION(SUDO_API_VERSION_MAJOR,\
SUDO_API_VERSION_MINOR)
/* Getters and setters for API version */
#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_API_VERSION_SET_MINOR(vp, n) do { \
*(vp) = (*(vp) & 0xffff0000) | (n); \
} while(0)
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[], char * const command_info[],
int argc, char * const argv[], char * const user_env[],
char * const plugin_options[], const char **errstr);
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,
const char **errstr);
int (*log_ttyout)(const char *buf, unsigned int len,
const char **errstr);
int (*log_stdin)(const char *buf, unsigned int len,
const char **errstr);
int (*log_stdout)(const char *buf, unsigned int len,
const char **errstr);
int (*log_stderr)(const char *buf, unsigned int len,
const char **errstr);
void (*register_hooks)(int version,
int (*register_hook)(struct sudo_hook *hook));
void (*deregister_hooks)(int version,
int (*deregister_hook)(struct sudo_hook *hook));
int (*change_winsize)(unsigned int lines, unsigned int cols,
const char **errstr);
int (*log_suspend)(int signo, const char **errstr);
struct sudo_plugin_event * (*event_alloc)(void);
};
When an I/O plugin is loaded, sudo runs
the command in a pseudo-terminal. 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 (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-terminal 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.
If a logging function returns an error (-1), the running command
will be terminated and all of the plugin's logging functions will be
disabled. Other I/O logging plugins will still receive any remaining input
or output that has not yet been processed.
If an input logging function rejects the data by returning 0, the
command will be terminated and the data will not be passed to the command,
though it will still be sent to any other I/O logging plugins. If an output
logging function rejects the data by returning 0, the command will be
terminated and the data will not be written to the terminal, though it will
still be sent to any other I/O logging plugins.
The audit_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[], char * const command_info[],
int argc, char * const argv[], char * const user_env[],
char * const plugin_options[]);
The open () function is run before the
log_ttyin (),
log_ttyout (),
log_stdin (),
log_stdout (),
log_stderr (),
log_suspend (),
change_winsize (), or
show_version () functions are called. It is only
called if the version is being requested or if the policy plugin's
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 options the user specified when running
sudo . As such, they will only be present when
the corresponding option 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.
- command_info
- A vector of information describing the command being run in the form
of “name=value” strings. The vector is terminated by a
NULL pointer.
When parsing command_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. It can be zero, when
sudo is called with
-V .
- 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(2)
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.
- plugin_options
- Any (non-comment) strings immediately after the plugin path are
treated as arguments to the plugin. These arguments are split on a
white space boundary and are passed to the plugin in the form of a
NULL -terminated array of strings. If no
arguments were specified, plugin_options will be the
NULL pointer.
The plugin_options parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.2. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
plugin_options. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- errstr
- If the
open () function returns a value other
than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or error
in errstr. The sudo
front-end will then pass this value to any registered audit plugins.
The string stored in errstr must remain valid
until the plugin's close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.15. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
errstr. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- close
-
void (*close)(int exit_status, int error);
The close () function is called when
sudo is finished, shortly before it exits.
The function arguments are as follows:
- exit_status
- The command's exit status, as returned by the
wait(2)
system call, or zero if no command was run. 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 zero.
- 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 .
Returns 1 on success, 0 on failure, -1 if a general error
occurred, or -2 if there was a usage error, although the return value is
currently ignored.
- log_ttyin
-
int (*log_ttyin)(const char *buf, unsigned int len,
const char **errstr);
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 running 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.
- errstr
- If the
log_ttyin () function returns a value
other than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or
error in errstr. The
sudo front-end will then pass this value to
any registered audit plugins. The string stored in
errstr must remain valid until the plugin's
close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.15. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
errstr. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- log_ttyout
-
int (*log_ttyout)(const char *buf, unsigned int len,
const char **errstr);
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 running 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.
- errstr
- If the
log_ttyout () function returns a value
other than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or
error in errstr. The
sudo front-end will then pass this value to
any registered audit plugins. The string stored in
errstr must remain valid until the plugin's
close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.15. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
errstr. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- log_stdin
-
int (*log_stdin)(const char *buf, unsigned int len,
const char **errstr);
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 running 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.
- errstr
- If the
log_stdin () function returns a value
other than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or
error in errstr. The
sudo front-end will then pass this value to
any registered audit plugins. The string stored in
errstr must remain valid until the plugin's
close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.15. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
errstr. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- log_stdout
-
int (*log_stdout)(const char *buf, unsigned int len,
const char **errstr);
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 running 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.
- errstr
- If the
log_stdout () function returns a value
other than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or
error in errstr. The
sudo front-end will then pass this value to
any registered audit plugins. The string stored in
errstr must remain valid until the plugin's
close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.15. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
errstr. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- log_stderr
-
int (*log_stderr)(const char *buf, unsigned int len,
const char **errstr);
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 running 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.
- errstr
- If the
log_stderr () function returns a value
other than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or
error in errstr. The
sudo front-end will then pass this value to
any registered audit plugins. The string stored in
errstr must remain valid until the plugin's
close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.15. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
errstr. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- register_hooks
- See the Policy plugin API
section for a description of
register_hooks .
- deregister_hooks
- See the Policy plugin API
section for a description of
deregister_hooks .
- change_winsize
-
int (*change_winsize)(unsigned int lines, unsigned int cols,
const char **errstr);
The change_winsize () function is
called whenever the window size of the terminal changes from the initial
values specified in the user_info list. Returns
-1 if an error occurred, in which case no further calls to
change_winsize () will be made,
The function arguments are as follows:
- lines
- The number of lines (rows) in the re-sized terminal.
- cols
- The number of columns in the re-sized terminal.
- errstr
- If the
change_winsize () function returns a
value other than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the
failure or error in errstr. The
sudo front-end will then pass this value to
any registered audit plugins. The string stored in
errstr must remain valid until the plugin's
close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.15. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
errstr. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- log_suspend
-
int (*log_suspend)(int signo, const char **errstr);
The log_suspend () function is called
whenever a command is suspended or resumed. Logging this information
makes it possible to skip the period of time when the command was
suspended during playback of a session. Returns -1 if an error occurred,
in which case no further calls to log_suspend ()
will be made,
The function arguments are as follows:
- signo
- The signal that caused the command to be suspended, or
SIGCONT if the command was resumed.
- errstr
- If the
log_suspend () function returns a value
other than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or
error in errstr. The
sudo front-end will then pass this value to
any registered audit plugins. The string stored in
errstr must remain valid until the plugin's
close () function is called.
The errstr parameter is only
available starting with API version 1.15. A plugin
must check the API version specified by the
sudo front-end before using
errstr. Failure to do so may result in a
crash.
- event_alloc
-
struct sudo_plugin_event * (*event_alloc)(void);
The event_alloc () function is used
to allocate a struct sudo_plugin_event which
provides access to the main sudo event loop.
Unlike the other fields, the event_alloc ()
pointer is filled in by the sudo front-end,
not by the plugin.
See the Event API
section below for more information about events.
The event_alloc () function is only
available starting with API version 1.15. If the
sudo front-end doesn't support API version
1.15 or higher, event_alloc () will not be
set.
I/O Plugin Version Macros
Same as for the Policy
plugin API.
/* Audit plugin close function status types. */
#define SUDO_PLUGIN_NO_STATUS 0
#define SUDO_PLUGIN_WAIT_STATUS 1
#define SUDO_PLUGIN_EXEC_ERROR 2
#define SUDO_PLUGIN_SUDO_ERROR 3
#define SUDO_AUDIT_PLUGIN 3
struct audit_plugin {
unsigned int type; /* always SUDO_AUDIT_PLUGIN */
unsigned int version; /* always SUDO_API_VERSION */
int (*open)(unsigned int version, sudo_conv_t conversation,
sudo_printf_t sudo_printf, char * const settings[],
char * const user_info[], int submit_optind,
char * const submit_argv[], char * const submit_envp[],
char * const plugin_options[], const char **errstr);
void (*close)(int status_type, int status);
int (*accept)(const char *plugin_name,
unsigned int plugin_type, char * const command_info[],
char * const run_argv[], char * const run_envp[],
const char **errstr);
int (*reject)(const char *plugin_name, unsigned int plugin_type,
const char *audit_msg, char * const command_info[],
const char **errstr);
int (*error)(const char *plugin_name, unsigned int plugin_type,
const char *audit_msg, char * const command_info[],
const char **errstr);
int (*show_version)(int verbose);
void (*register_hooks)(int version,
int (*register_hook)(struct sudo_hook *hook));
void (*deregister_hooks)(int version,
int (*deregister_hook)(struct sudo_hook *hook));
struct sudo_plugin_event * (*event_alloc)(void);
}
An audit plugin can be used to log successful and unsuccessful
attempts to run sudo independent of the policy or
any I/O plugins. Multiple audit plugins may be specified in
sudo.conf(5).
The audit_plugin struct has the following fields:
- type
- The
type field should always be set to
SUDO_AUDIT_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 sudo_printf, char * const settings[],
char * const user_info[], int submit_optind,
char * const submit_argv[], char * const submit_envp[],
char * const plugin_options[], const char **errstr);
The audit open () function is run
before any other sudo plugin API functions. This
makes it possible to audit failures in the other plugins. 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 options the user specified when running
sudo . As such, they will only be present when
the corresponding option 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.
- submit_optind
- The index into submit_argv that corresponds to
the first entry that is not a command line option. If
submit_argv only consists of options, which may
be the case with the
-l or
-v options,
submit_argv[submit_optind] will evaluate to
the NULL pointer.
- submit_argv
- The argument vector
sudo was invoked with,
including all command line options. The
submit_optind argument can be used to determine
the end of the command line options.
- submit_envp
- The invoking user's environment in the form of a
NULL -terminated vector of
“name=value” strings.
When parsing submit_envp, the plugin
should split on the first equal sign
(‘= ’) since the
name field will never include one itself but the
value might.
- plugin_options
- Any (non-comment) strings immediately after the plugin path are
treated as arguments to the plugin. These arguments are split on a
white space boundary and are passed to the plugin in the form of a
NULL -terminated array of strings. If no
arguments were specified, plugin_options will be the
NULL pointer.
- errstr
- If the
open () function returns a value other
than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or error
in errstr. The sudo
front-end will then pass this value to any registered audit plugins.
The string stored in errstr must remain valid
until the plugin's close () function is
called.
- close
-
void (*close)(int status_type, int status);
The close () function is called when
sudo is finished, shortly before it exits.
The function arguments are as follows:
- status_type
- The type of status being passed. One of
SUDO_PLUGIN_NO_STATUS ,
SUDO_PLUGIN_WAIT_STATUS ,
SUDO_PLUGIN_EXEC_ERROR or
SUDO_PLUGIN_SUDO_ERROR .
- status
- Depending on the value of status_type, this
value is either ignored, the command's exit status as returned by the
wait(2)
system call, the value of
errno set by the
execve(2)
system call, or the value of errno resulting
from an error in the sudo front-end.
- accept
-
int (*accept)(const char *plugin_name, unsigned int plugin_type,
char * const command_info[], char * const run_argv[],
char * const run_envp[], const char **errstr);
The accept () function is called when a
command or action is accepted by a policy or approval plugin. The
function arguments are as follows:
- plugin_name
- The name of the plugin that accepted the command or
“sudo” for the
sudo
front-end.
- plugin_type
- The type of plugin that accepted the command, currently either
SUDO_POLICY_PLUGIN ,
SUDO_POLICY_APPROVAL , or
SUDO_FRONT_END . The
accept () function is called multiple
times--once for each policy or approval plugin that succeeds and once
for the sudo front-end. When called on behalf of the sudo front-end,
command_info may include information from an I/O
logging plugin as well.
Typically, an audit plugin is interested in either the
accept status from the sudo front-end or
from the various policy and approval plugins, but not both. It is
possible for the policy plugin to accept a command that is later
rejected by an approval plugin, in which case the audit plugin's
accept () and
reject () functions will
both be called.
- command_info
- An optional vector of information describing the command being run in
the form of “name=value” strings. The vector is
terminated by a
NULL pointer.
When parsing command_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.
- run_argv
- A
NULL -terminated argument vector describing a
command that will be run in the same form as what would be passed to
the
execve(2)
system call.
- run_envp
- The environment the command will be run with in the form of a
NULL -terminated vector of
“name=value” strings.
When parsing run_envp, the plugin should
split on the first equal sign
(‘= ’) since the
name field will never include one itself but the
value might.
- errstr
- If the
accept () function returns a value other
than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or error
in errstr. The sudo
front-end will then pass this value to any registered audit plugins.
The string stored in errstr must remain valid
until the plugin's close () function is
called.
- reject
-
int (*reject)(const char *plugin_name, unsigned int plugin_type,
const char *audit_msg, char * const command_info[],
const char **errstr);
The reject () function is called when a
command or action is rejected by a plugin. The function arguments are as
follows:
- plugin_name
- The name of the plugin that rejected the command.
- plugin_type
- The type of plugin that rejected the command, currently either
SUDO_POLICY_PLUGIN ,
SUDO_APPROVAL_PLUGIN , or
SUDO_IO_PLUGIN .
Unlike the accept () function, the
reject () function is not called on behalf of
the sudo front-end.
- audit_msg
- An optional string describing the reason the command was rejected by
the plugin. If the plugin did not provide a reason,
audit_msg will be the
NULL pointer.
- command_info
- An optional vector of information describing the command being run in
the form of “name=value” strings. The vector is
terminated by a
NULL pointer.
When parsing command_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.
- errstr
- If the
reject () function returns a value other
than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or error
in errstr. The sudo
front-end will then pass this value to any registered audit plugins.
The string stored in errstr must remain valid
until the plugin's close () function is
called.
- error
-
int (*error)(const char *plugin_name, unsigned int plugin_type,
const char *audit_msg, char * const command_info[],
const char **errstr);
The error () function is called when a
plugin or the sudo front-end returns an error.
The function arguments are as follows:
- plugin_name
- The name of the plugin that generated the error or
“sudo” for the
sudo
front-end.
- plugin_type
- The type of plugin that generated the error, or
SUDO_FRONT_END for the
sudo front-end.
- audit_msg
- An optional string describing the plugin error. If the plugin did not
provide a description, audit_msg will be the
NULL pointer.
- command_info
- An optional vector of information describing the command being run in
the form of “name=value” strings. The vector is
terminated by a
NULL pointer.
When parsing command_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.
- errstr
- If the
error () function returns a value other
than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or error
in errstr. The sudo
front-end will then pass this value to any registered audit plugins.
The string stored in errstr must remain valid
until the plugin's close () function is
called.
- 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.
Returns 1 on success, 0 on failure, -1 if a general error
occurred, or -2 if there was a usage error, although the return value is
currently ignored.
- register_hooks
- See the Policy plugin API
section for a description of
register_hooks .
- deregister_hooks
- See the Policy plugin API
section for a description of
deregister_hooks .
- event_alloc
-
struct sudo_plugin_event * (*event_alloc)(void);
The event_alloc () function is used to
allocate a struct sudo_plugin_event which
provides access to the main sudo event loop.
Unlike the other fields, the event_alloc ()
pointer is filled in by the sudo front-end, not
by the plugin.
See the Event API section
below for more information about events.
The event_alloc () function is only
available starting with API version 1.17. If the
sudo front-end doesn't support API version 1.17
or higher, event_alloc () will not be set.
struct approval_plugin {
#define SUDO_APPROVAL_PLUGIN 4
unsigned int type; /* always SUDO_APPROVAL_PLUGIN */
unsigned int version; /* always SUDO_API_VERSION */
int (*open)(unsigned int version, sudo_conv_t conversation,
sudo_printf_t sudo_printf, char * const settings[],
char * const user_info[], int submit_optind,
char * const submit_argv[], char * const submit_envp[],
char * const plugin_options[], const char **errstr);
void (*close)(void);
int (*check)(char * const command_info[], char * const run_argv[],
char * const run_envp[], const char **errstr);
int (*show_version)(int verbose);
};
An approval plugin can be used to apply extra constraints after a
command has been accepted by the policy plugin. Unlike the other plugin
types, it does not remain open until the command completes. The plugin is
opened before a call to check () or
show_version () and closed shortly thereafter (audit
plugin functions must be called before the plugin is closed). Multiple
approval plugins may be specified in
sudo.conf(5).
The approval_plugin struct has the following fields:
- type
- The
type field should always be set to
SUDO_APPROVAL_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 sudo_printf, char * const settings[],
char * const user_info[], int submit_optind,
char * const submit_argv[], char * const submit_envp[],
char * const plugin_options[], const char **errstr);
The approval open () function is run
immediately before a call to the plugin's
check () or
show_version () functions. It is only called if
the version is being requested or if the policy plugin's
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
can be used by the plugin to interact with the user (see
Conversation API for
details). 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
Conversation API for
details). 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 options the user specified when running
sudo . As such, they will only be present when
the corresponding option 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.
- submit_optind
- The index into submit_argv that corresponds to
the first entry that is not a command line option. If
submit_argv only consists of options, which may
be the case with the
-l or
-v options,
submit_argv[submit_optind] will evaluate to
the NULL pointer.
- submit_argv
- The argument vector
sudo was invoked with,
including all command line options. The
submit_optind argument can be used to determine
the end of the command line options.
- submit_envp
- The invoking user's environment in the form of a
NULL -terminated vector of
“name=value” strings.
When parsing submit_envp, the plugin
should split on the first equal sign
(‘= ’) since the
name field will never include one itself but the
value might.
- plugin_options
- Any (non-comment) strings immediately after the plugin path are
treated as arguments to the plugin. These arguments are split on a
white space boundary and are passed to the plugin in the form of a
NULL -terminated array of strings. If no
arguments were specified, plugin_options will be the
NULL pointer.
- errstr
- If the
open () function returns a value other
than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or error
in errstr. The sudo
front-end will then pass this value to any registered audit plugins.
The string stored in errstr must remain valid
until the plugin's close () function is
called.
- close
-
The close () function is called after
the approval plugin's check () or
show_version () functions have been called. It
takes no arguments. The close () function is
typically used to perform plugin-specific cleanup, such as the freeing
of memory objects allocated by the plugin. If the plugin does not need
to perform any cleanup, close () may be set to
the NULL pointer.
- check
-
int (*check)(char * const command_info[], char * const run_argv[],
char * const run_envp[], const char **errstr);
The approval check () function is run
after the policy plugin check_policy () function
and before any I/O logging plugins. If multiple approval plugins are
loaded, they must all succeed for the command to be allowed. 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:
- command_info
- A vector of information describing the command being run in the form
of “name=value” strings. The vector is terminated by a
NULL pointer.
When parsing command_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.
- run_argv
- A
NULL -terminated argument vector describing a
command that will be run in the same form as what would be passed to
the
execve(2)
system call.
- run_envp
- The environment the command will be run with in the form of a
NULL -terminated vector of
“name=value” strings.
When parsing run_envp, the plugin should
split on the first equal sign
(‘= ’) since the
name field will never include one itself but the
value might.
- errstr
- If the
open () function returns a value other
than 1, the plugin may store a message describing the failure or error
in errstr. The sudo
front-end will then pass this value to any registered audit plugins.
The string stored in errstr must remain valid
until the plugin's close () function is
called.
- 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.
Returns 1 on success, 0 on failure, -1 if a general error
occurred, or -2 if there was a usage error, although the return value is
currently ignored.
The sudo front-end installs default signal handlers to
trap common signals while the plugin functions are run. The following signals
are trapped by default before the command is executed:
If a fatal signal is received before the command is executed,
sudo will call the plugin's
close () function with an exit status of 128 plus the
value of the signal that was received. This allows for consistent logging of
commands killed by a signal for plugins that log such information in their
close () function. An exception to this is
SIGPIPE , which is ignored until the command is
executed.
A plugin may temporarily install its own signal handlers but must
restore the original handler before the plugin function returns.
Beginning with plugin API version 1.2, it is possible to install hooks for
certain functions called by the sudo front-end.
Currently, the only supported hooks relate to the handling of
environment variables. Hooks can be used to intercept attempts to get, set,
or remove environment variables so that these changes can be reflected in
the version of the environment that is used to execute a command. A future
version of the API will support hooking internal
sudo front-end functions as well.
Hook structure
Hooks in sudo are described by the
following structure:
typedef int (*sudo_hook_fn_t)();
struct sudo_hook {
unsigned int hook_version;
unsigned int hook_type;
sudo_hook_fn_t hook_fn;
void *closure;
};
The sudo_hook structure has the following
fields:
- hook_version
- The
hook_version field should be set to
SUDO_HOOK_VERSION .
- hook_type
- The
hook_type field may be one of the following
supported hook types:
SUDO_HOOK_SETENV
- The C library
setenv(3)
function. Any registered hooks will run before the C library
implementation. The
hook_fn field should be a
function that matches the following typedef:
typedef int (*sudo_hook_fn_setenv_t)(const char *name,
const char *value, int overwrite, void *closure);
If the registered hook does not match the typedef the
results are unspecified.
SUDO_HOOK_UNSETENV
- The C library
unsetenv(3)
function. Any registered hooks will run before the C library
implementation. The
hook_fn field should be a
function that matches the following typedef:
typedef int (*sudo_hook_fn_unsetenv_t)(const char *name,
void *closure);
SUDO_HOOK_GETENV
- The C library
getenv(3)
function. Any registered hooks will run before the C library
implementation. The
hook_fn field should be a
function that matches the following typedef:
typedef int (*sudo_hook_fn_getenv_t)(const char *name,
char **value, void *closure);
If the registered hook does not match the typedef the
results are unspecified.
SUDO_HOOK_PUTENV
- The C library
putenv(3)
function. Any registered hooks will run before the C library
implementation. The
hook_fn field should be a
function that matches the following typedef:
typedef int (*sudo_hook_fn_putenv_t)(char *string,
void *closure);
If the registered hook does not match the typedef the
results are unspecified.
- hook_fn
- sudo_hook_fn_t hook_fn;
The hook_fn field should be set to the
plugin's hook implementation. The actual function arguments will vary
depending on the hook_type (see
hook_type above). In all cases, the
closure field of struct
sudo_hook is passed as the last function parameter. This can be
used to pass arbitrary data to the plugin's hook implementation.
The function return value may be one of the following:
SUDO_HOOK_RET_ERROR
- The hook function encountered an error.
SUDO_HOOK_RET_NEXT
- The hook completed without error, go on to the next hook (including
the system implementation if applicable). For example, a
getenv(3)
hook might return
SUDO_HOOK_RET_NEXT if the
specified variable was not found in the private copy of the
environment.
SUDO_HOOK_RET_STOP
- The hook completed without error, stop processing hooks for this
invocation. This can be used to replace the system implementation. For
example, a
setenv hook that operates on a
private copy of the environment but leaves
environ unchanged.
Care must be taken when hooking C library functions, it is very
easy to create an infinite loop. For example, a
getenv(3)
hook that calls the
snprintf(3)
function may create a loop if the
snprintf(3)
implementation calls
getenv(3)
to check the locale. To prevent this, you may wish to use a static variable
in the hook function to guard against nested calls. For example:
static int in_progress = 0; /* avoid recursion */
if (in_progress)
return SUDO_HOOK_RET_NEXT;
in_progress = 1;
...
in_progress = 0;
return SUDO_HOOK_RET_STOP;
Hook API Version Macros
/* Hook API version major/minor */
#define SUDO_HOOK_VERSION_MAJOR 1
#define SUDO_HOOK_VERSION_MINOR 0
#define SUDO_HOOK_VERSION SUDO_API_MKVERSION(SUDO_HOOK_VERSION_MAJOR,\
SUDO_HOOK_VERSION_MINOR)
For getters and setters see the
Policy plugin API.
When sudo runs a command, it uses an event loop to
service signals and I/O. Events may be triggered based on time, a file or
socket descriptor becoming ready, or due to receipt of a signal. Starting with
API version 1.15, it is possible for a plugin to participate in this event
loop by calling the event_alloc () function.
Event structure
Events are described by the following structure:
typedef void (*sudo_plugin_ev_callback_t)(int fd, int what, void *closure);
struct sudo_plugin_event {
int (*set)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev, int fd, int events,
sudo_plugin_ev_callback_t callback, void *closure);
int (*add)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev, struct timespec *timeout);
int (*del)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev);
int (*pending)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev, int events,
struct timespec *ts);
int (*fd)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev);
void (*setbase)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev, void *base);
void (*loopbreak)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev);
void (*free)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev);
};
The sudo_plugin_event struct contains the following function
pointers:
set ()
-
int (*set)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev, int fd, int events,
sudo_plugin_ev_callback_t callback, void *closure);
The set () function takes the following
arguments:
- struct sudo_plugin_event *pev
- A pointer to the struct sudo_plugin_event itself.
- fd
- The file or socket descriptor for I/O-based events or the signal
number for signal events. For time-based events,
fd must be -1.
- events
- The following values determine what will trigger the event callback:
- SUDO_PLUGIN_EV_TIMEOUT
- callback is run after the specified timeout expires
- SUDO_PLUGIN_EV_READ
- callback is run when the file descriptor is readable
- SUDO_PLUGIN_EV_WRITE
- callback is run when the file descriptor is writable
- SUDO_PLUGIN_EV_PERSIST
- event is persistent and remains enabled until explicitly
deleted
- SUDO_PLUGIN_EV_SIGNAL
- callback is run when the specified signal is received
The SUDO_PLUGIN_EV_PERSIST flag
may be ORed with any of the event types. It is also possible to OR
SUDO_PLUGIN_EV_READ and
SUDO_PLUGIN_EV_WRITE together to run the
callback when a descriptor is ready to be either read from or
written to. All other event values are mutually exclusive.
- sudo_plugin_ev_callback_t callback
-
typedef void (*sudo_plugin_ev_callback_t)(int fd, int what,
void *closure);
The function to call when an event is triggered. The
callback () function is run with the
following arguments:
- fd
- The file or socket descriptor for I/O-based events or the signal
number for signal events.
- what
- The event type that triggered that callback. For events that have
multiple event types (for example
SUDO_PLUGIN_EV_READ and
SUDO_PLUGIN_EV_WRITE ) or have an
associated timeout, what can be used to
determine why the callback was run.
- closure
- The generic pointer that was specified in the
set () function.
- closure
- A generic pointer that will be passed to the callback function.
The set () function returns 1 on
success, and -1 if a error occurred.
add ()
-
int (*add)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev, struct timespec *timeout);
The add () function adds the event
pev to
sudo 's event loop. The
event must have previously been initialized via the
set () function. If the
timeout argument is not NULL, it should specify a
(relative) timeout after which the event will be triggered if the main
event criteria has not been met. This is often used to implement an I/O
timeout where the event will fire if a descriptor is not ready within a
certain time period. If the event is already present in the event loop,
its timeout will be adjusted to match the new
value, if any.
The add () function returns 1 on
success, and -1 if a error occurred.
del ()
-
int (*del)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev);
The del () function deletes the event
pev from
sudo 's event loop.
Deleted events can be added back via the add ()
function.
The del () function returns 1 on
success, and -1 if a error occurred.
pending ()
-
int (*pending)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev, int events,
struct timespec *ts);
The pending () function can be used to
determine whether one or more events is pending. The
events argument specifies which events to check
for. See the set () function for a list of valid
event types. If SUDO_PLUGIN_EV_TIMEOUT is
specified in events , the event has an associated
timeout and the ts pointer is non-NULL, it will be
filled in with the remaining time.
fd ()
-
int (*fd)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev);
The fd () function returns the
descriptor or signal number associated with the event
pev.
setbase ()
-
void (*setbase)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev, void *base);
The setbase () function sets the
underlying event base for
pev to the specified value. This can be used to
move an event created via event_alloc () to a new
event loop allocated by sudo's event subsystem. If
base is NULL ,
pev's event base is reset to the default value,
which corresponds to sudo 's main event loop.
Using this function requires linking the plugin with the sudo_util
library. It is unlikely to be used outside of the
sudoers plugin.
loopbreak ()
-
void (*loopbreak)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev);
The loopbreak () function causes
sudo 's event loop to
exit immediately and the running command to be terminated.
free ()
-
void (*free)(struct sudo_plugin_event *pev);
The free () function deletes the event
pev from the event loop and frees the memory
associated with it.
The sudo front-end does not support running remote
commands. However, starting with sudo 1.8.8, the
-h option may be used to specify a remote host that is
passed to the policy plugin. A plugin may also accept a
runas_user in the form of “user@hostname”
which will work with older versions of sudo . It is
anticipated that remote commands will be supported by executing a
“helper” program. The policy plugin should setup the execution
environment such that the sudo front-end will run the
helper which, in turn, will connect to the remote host and run the command.
For example, the policy plugin could utilize
ssh to perform remote command execution. The helper
program would be responsible for running ssh with
the proper options to use a private key or certificate that the remote host
will accept and run a program on the remote host that would setup the
execution environment accordingly.
Remote sudoedit functionality must be
handled by the policy plugin, not sudo itself as the
front-end has no knowledge that a remote command is being executed. This may
be addressed in a future revision of the plugin 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.
Conversation function structures
The conversation function takes as arguments pointers to the
following structures:
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_PROMPT_ECHO_OK 0x1000 /* flag: allow echo if no tty */
#define SUDO_CONV_PREFER_TTY 0x2000 /* flag: use tty if possible */
int msg_type;
int timeout;
const char *msg;
};
#define SUDO_CONV_REPL_MAX 1023
struct sudo_conv_reply {
char *reply;
};
typedef int (*sudo_conv_callback_fn_t)(int signo, void *closure);
struct sudo_conv_callback {
unsigned int version;
void *closure;
sudo_conv_callback_fn_t on_suspend;
sudo_conv_callback_fn_t on_resume;
};
Pointers to the conversation () and
printf ()-style functions are passed in to the
plugin's open () function when the plugin is
initialized. The following type definitions can be used in the declaration
of the open () function:
typedef int (*sudo_conv_t)(int num_msgs,
const struct sudo_conv_message msgs[],
struct sudo_conv_reply replies[], struct sudo_conv_callback *callback);
typedef int (*sudo_printf_t)(int msg_type, const char *fmt, ...);
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, that is, both
arrays must have the same number of elements. Each struct
sudo_conv_reply must have its reply member
initialized to NULL . The struct
sudo_conv_callback pointer, if not NULL ,
should contain function pointers to be called when the
sudo process is suspended and/or resumed during
conversation input. The on_suspend and
on_resume functions are called with the signal that
caused sudo to be suspended and the
closure pointer from the struct
sudo_conv_callback . These functions should return 0 on success and -1
on error. On error, the conversation will end and the conversation function
will return a value of -1. The intended use is to allow the plugin to
release resources, such as locks, that should not be held indefinitely while
suspended and then reacquire them when the process is resumed. The functions
are not actually invoked from within a signal handler.
The msg_type must be set to one of the following
values:
- SUDO_CONV_PROMPT_ECHO_OFF
- Prompt the user for input with echo disabled; this is generally used for
passwords. The reply will be stored in the replies
array, and it will never be
NULL .
- SUDO_CONV_PROMPT_ECHO_ON
- Prompt the user for input with echo enabled. The reply will be stored in
the replies array, and it will never be
NULL .
- SUDO_CONV_ERROR_MSG
- Display an error message. The message is written to the standard error
unless the
SUDO_CONV_PREFER_TTY flag is set, in
which case it is written to the user's terminal if possible.
- SUDO_CONV_INFO_MSG
- Display a message. The message is written to the standard output unless
the
SUDO_CONV_PREFER_TTY flag is set, in which
case it is written to the user's terminal if possible.
- SUDO_CONV_PROMPT_MASK
- Prompt the user for input but echo an asterisk character for each
character read. The reply will be stored in the replies
array, and it will never be
NULL . This can be used
to provide visual feedback to the user while reading sensitive information
that should not be displayed.
In addition to the above values, the following flag bits may also
be set:
- SUDO_CONV_PROMPT_ECHO_OK
- Allow input to be read when echo cannot be disabled when the message type
is
SUDO_CONV_PROMPT_ECHO_OFF or
SUDO_CONV_PROMPT_MASK . By default,
sudo will refuse to read input if the echo cannot
be disabled for those message types.
- SUDO_CONV_PREFER_TTY
- When displaying a message via
SUDO_CONV_ERROR_MSG
or SUDO_CONV_INFO_MSG , try to write the message to
the user's terminal. If the terminal is unavailable, the standard error or
standard output will be used, depending upon whether
SUDO_CONV_ERROR_MSG or
SUDO_CONV_INFO_MSG was used. The user's terminal
is always used when possible for input, this flag is only used for
output.
The timeout in seconds until the prompt will
wait for no more input. A zero value implies an infinite timeout.
The plugin is responsible for freeing the reply buffer located in
each struct sudo_conv_reply , if it is not
NULL . SUDO_CONV_REPL_MAX
represents the maximum length of the reply buffer (not including the
trailing NUL character). In practical terms, this is the longest password
sudo will support.
The printf ()-style function uses the same
underlying mechanism as the conversation () function
but only supports SUDO_CONV_INFO_MSG and
SUDO_CONV_ERROR_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.
See the sample plugin for an example of the
conversation () function usage.
As of sudo 1.9.0, the plugin
open () and close () functions
are called in the following order:
- audit open
- policy open
- approval open
- approval close
- I/O log open
- command runs
- command exits
- I/O log close
- policy close
- audit close
- sudo exits
Prior to sudo 1.9.0, the I/O log
close () function was called after
the policy close () function.
The sudoers plugin supports its own plugin interface to
allow non-Unix group lookups. This can be used to query a group source other
than the standard Unix group database. Two sample group plugins are bundled
with sudo , group_file, and
system_group, are detailed in
sudoers(5).
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
-
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 .
Group API 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)
For getters and setters see the Policy
plugin API.
The following revisions have been made to the Sudo Plugin API.
- Version 1.0
- Initial API version.
- Version 1.1 (sudo 1.8.0)
- The I/O logging plugin's
open () function was
modified to take the command_info list as an
argument.
- Version 1.2 (sudo 1.8.5)
- The Policy and I/O logging plugins'
open ()
functions are now passed a list of plugin parameters if any are specified
in
sudo.conf(5).
A simple hooks API has been introduced to allow plugins to
hook in to the system's environment handling functions.
The init_session Policy plugin
function is now passed a pointer to the user environment which can be
updated as needed. This can be used to merge in environment variables
stored in the PAM handle before a command is run.
- Version 1.3 (sudo 1.8.7)
- Support for the exec_background entry has been added to
the
command_info list.
The max_groups and
plugin_dir entries were added to the
settings list.
The version () and
close () functions are now optional. Previously,
a missing version () or
close () function would result in a crash. If no
policy plugin close () function is defined, a
default close () function will be provided by the
sudo front-end that displays a warning if the
command could not be executed.
The sudo front-end now installs
default signal handlers to trap common signals while the plugin
functions are run.
- Version 1.4 (sudo 1.8.8)
- The remote_host entry was added to the
settings list.
- Version 1.5 (sudo 1.8.9)
- The preserve_fds entry was added to the
command_info list.
- Version 1.6 (sudo 1.8.11)
- The behavior when an I/O logging plugin returns an error (-1) has changed.
Previously, the
sudo front-end took no action when
the log_ttyin (),
log_ttyout (), log_stdin (),
log_stdout (), or
log_stderr () function returned an error.
The behavior when an I/O logging plugin returns 0 has changed.
Previously, output from the command would be displayed to the terminal
even if an output logging function returned 0.
- Version 1.7 (sudo 1.8.12)
- The plugin_path entry was added to the
settings list.
The debug_flags entry now starts with a
debug file path name and may occur multiple times if there are multiple
plugin-specific Debug lines in the
sudo.conf(5)
file.
- Version 1.8 (sudo 1.8.15)
- The sudoedit_checkdir and
sudoedit_follow entries were added to the
command_info list. The default value of
sudoedit_checkdir was changed to true in sudo 1.8.16.
The sudo conversation function now takes a
pointer to a struct sudo_conv_callback as its
fourth argument. The sudo_conv_t definition has
been updated to match. The plugin must specify that it supports plugin
API version 1.8 or higher to receive a conversation function pointer
that supports this argument.
- Version 1.9 (sudo 1.8.16)
- The execfd entry was added to the
command_info list.
- Version 1.10 (sudo 1.8.19)
- The umask entry was added to the
user_info list. The iolog_group,
iolog_mode, and iolog_user entries
were added to the command_info list.
- Version 1.11 (sudo 1.8.20)
- The timeout entry was added to the
settings list.
- Version 1.12 (sudo 1.8.21)
- The
change_winsize field was added to the
io_plugin struct.
- Version 1.13 (sudo 1.8.26)
- The
log_suspend field was added to the io_plugin
struct.
- Version 1.14 (sudo 1.8.29)
- The umask_override entry was added to the
command_info list.
- Version 1.15 (sudo 1.9.0)
- The cwd_optional entry was added to the
command_info list.
The event_alloc field was added to the
policy_plugin and io_plugin structs.
The errstr argument was added to the
policy and I/O plugin functions which the plugin function can use to
return an error string. This string may be used by the audit plugin to
report failure or error conditions set by the other plugins.
The close () function is now is called
regardless of whether or not a command was actually executed. This makes
it possible for plugins to perform cleanup even when a command was not
run.
SUDO_CONV_REPL_MAX has increased from
255 to 1023 bytes.
Support for audit and approval plugins was added.
- Version 1.16 (sudo 1.9.3)
- Initial resource limit values were added to the
user_info list.
The cmnd_chroot and
cmnd_cwd enties were added to the
settings list.
- Version 1.17 (sudo 1.9.4)
- The event_alloc field was added to the audit_plugin and
approval_plugin structs.
- Version 1.18 (sudo 1.9.9)
- The policy may now set resource limit values in the
command_info list.
Many people have worked on sudo over the years; this
version consists of code written primarily by:
Todd C. Miller
See the CONTRIBUTORS.md file in the sudo
distribution (https://www.sudo.ws/about/contributors/) for an exhaustive
list of people who have contributed to sudo .
If you believe you have found a bug in sudo , you can
submit a bug report at https://bugzilla.sudo.ws/
Limited free support is available via the sudo-users mailing list, see
https://www.sudo.ws/mailman/listinfo/sudo-users to subscribe or search the
archives.
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.md file distributed with sudo or
https://www.sudo.ws/about/license/ for complete details.
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