/* * Dropbear SSH * * Copyright (c) 2004 Martin Carlsson * Portions (c) 2004 Matt Johnston * All rights reserved. * * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy * of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal * in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights * to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell * copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is * furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: * * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in * all copies or substantial portions of the Software. * * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE * AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, * OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE * SOFTWARE. */ /* Validates a user password using PAM */ #include "includes.h" #include "session.h" #include "buffer.h" #include "dbutil.h" #include "auth.h" #ifdef ENABLE_SVR_PAM_AUTH #if defined(HAVE_SECURITY_PAM_APPL_H) #include #elif defined (HAVE_PAM_PAM_APPL_H) #include #endif struct UserDataS { char* user; char* passwd; }; /* PAM conversation function - for now we only handle one message */ int pamConvFunc(int num_msg, const struct pam_message **msg, struct pam_response **respp, void *appdata_ptr) { int rc = PAM_SUCCESS; struct pam_response* resp = NULL; struct UserDataS* userDatap = (struct UserDataS*) appdata_ptr; unsigned int msg_len = 0; unsigned int i = 0; char * compare_message = NULL; TRACE(("enter pamConvFunc")) if (num_msg != 1) { /* If you're getting here - Dropbear probably can't support your pam * modules. This whole file is a bit of a hack around lack of * asynchronocity in PAM anyway. */ dropbear_log(LOG_INFO, "pamConvFunc() called with >1 messages: not supported."); return PAM_CONV_ERR; } /* make a copy we can strip */ compare_message = m_strdup((*msg)->msg); /* Make the string lowercase. */ msg_len = strlen(compare_message); for (i = 0; i < msg_len; i++) { compare_message[i] = tolower(compare_message[i]); } /* If the string ends with ": ", remove the space. ie "login: " vs "login:" */ if (msg_len > 2 && compare_message[msg_len-2] == ':' && compare_message[msg_len-1] == ' ') { compare_message[msg_len-1] = '\0'; } switch((*msg)->msg_style) { case PAM_PROMPT_ECHO_OFF: if (!(strcmp(compare_message, "password:") == 0)) { /* We don't recognise the prompt as asking for a password, so can't handle it. Add more above as required for different pam modules/implementations. If you need to add an entry here please mail the Dropbear developer */ dropbear_log(LOG_NOTICE, "PAM unknown prompt '%s' (no echo)", compare_message); rc = PAM_CONV_ERR; break; } /* You have to read the PAM module-writers' docs (do we look like * module writers? no.) to find out that the module will * free the pam_response and its resp element - ie we _must_ malloc * it here */ resp = (struct pam_response*) m_malloc(sizeof(struct pam_response)); memset(resp, 0, sizeof(struct pam_response)); resp->resp = m_strdup(userDatap->passwd); m_burn(userDatap->passwd, strlen(userDatap->passwd)); (*respp) = resp; break; case PAM_PROMPT_ECHO_ON: if (!( (strcmp(compare_message, "login:" ) == 0) || (strcmp(compare_message, "please enter username:") == 0) || (strcmp(compare_message, "username:") == 0) )) { /* We don't recognise the prompt as asking for a username, so can't handle it. Add more above as required for different pam modules/implementations. If you need to add an entry here please mail the Dropbear developer */ dropbear_log(LOG_NOTICE, "PAM unknown prompt '%s' (with echo)", compare_message); rc = PAM_CONV_ERR; break; } /* You have to read the PAM module-writers' docs (do we look like * module writers? no.) to find out that the module will * free the pam_response and its resp element - ie we _must_ malloc * it here */ resp = (struct pam_response*) m_malloc(sizeof(struct pam_response)); memset(resp, 0, sizeof(struct pam_response)); resp->resp = m_strdup(userDatap->user); TRACE(("userDatap->user='%s'", userDatap->user)) (*respp) = resp; break; case PAM_ERROR_MSG: case PAM_TEXT_INFO: if (msg_len > 0) { buffer * pam_err = buf_new(msg_len + 4); buf_setpos(pam_err, 0); buf_putbytes(pam_err, "\r\n", 2); buf_putbytes(pam_err, (*msg)->msg, msg_len); buf_putbytes(pam_err, "\r\n", 2); buf_setpos(pam_err, 0); send_msg_userauth_banner(pam_err); buf_free(pam_err); } break; default: TRACE(("Unknown message type")) rc = PAM_CONV_ERR; break; } m_free(compare_message); TRACE(("leave pamConvFunc, rc %d", rc)) return rc; } /* Process a password auth request, sending success or failure messages as * appropriate. To the client it looks like it's doing normal password auth (as * opposed to keyboard-interactive or something), so the pam module has to be * fairly standard (ie just "what's your username, what's your password, OK"). * * Keyboard interactive would be a lot nicer, but since PAM is synchronous, it * gets very messy trying to send the interactive challenges, and read the * interactive responses, over the network. */ void svr_auth_pam() { struct UserDataS userData = {NULL, NULL}; struct pam_conv pamConv = { pamConvFunc, &userData /* submitted to pamvConvFunc as appdata_ptr */ }; pam_handle_t* pamHandlep = NULL; char * password = NULL; unsigned int passwordlen; int rc = PAM_SUCCESS; unsigned char changepw; /* check if client wants to change password */ changepw = buf_getbool(ses.payload); if (changepw) { /* not implemented by this server */ send_msg_userauth_failure(0, 1); goto cleanup; } password = buf_getstring(ses.payload, &passwordlen); /* used to pass data to the PAM conversation function - don't bother with * strdup() etc since these are touched only by our own conversation * function (above) which takes care of it */ userData.user = ses.authstate.pw_name; userData.passwd = password; /* Init pam */ if ((rc = pam_start("sshd", NULL, &pamConv, &pamHandlep)) != PAM_SUCCESS) { dropbear_log(LOG_WARNING, "pam_start() failed, rc=%d, %s", rc, pam_strerror(pamHandlep, rc)); goto cleanup; } /* just to set it to something */ if ((rc = pam_set_item(pamHandlep, PAM_TTY, "ssh") != PAM_SUCCESS)) { dropbear_log(LOG_WARNING, "pam_set_item() failed, rc=%d, %s", rc, pam_strerror(pamHandlep, rc)); goto cleanup; } #ifdef HAVE_PAM_FAIL_DELAY /* We have our own random delay code already, disable PAM's */ (void) pam_fail_delay(pamHandlep, 0 /* musec_delay */); #endif /* (void) pam_set_item(pamHandlep, PAM_FAIL_DELAY, (void*) pamDelayFunc); */ if ((rc = pam_authenticate(pamHandlep, 0)) != PAM_SUCCESS) { dropbear_log(LOG_WARNING, "pam_authenticate() failed, rc=%d, %s", rc, pam_strerror(pamHandlep, rc)); dropbear_log(LOG_WARNING, "Bad PAM password attempt for '%s' from %s", ses.authstate.pw_name, svr_ses.addrstring); send_msg_userauth_failure(0, 1); goto cleanup; } if ((rc = pam_acct_mgmt(pamHandlep, 0)) != PAM_SUCCESS) { dropbear_log(LOG_WARNING, "pam_acct_mgmt() failed, rc=%d, %s", rc, pam_strerror(pamHandlep, rc)); dropbear_log(LOG_WARNING, "Bad PAM password attempt for '%s' from %s", ses.authstate.pw_name, svr_ses.addrstring); send_msg_userauth_failure(0, 1); goto cleanup; } /* successful authentication */ dropbear_log(LOG_NOTICE, "PAM password auth succeeded for '%s' from %s", ses.authstate.pw_name, svr_ses.addrstring); send_msg_userauth_success(); cleanup: if (password != NULL) { m_burn(password, passwordlen); m_free(password); } if (pamHandlep != NULL) { TRACE(("pam_end")) (void) pam_end(pamHandlep, 0 /* pam_status */); } } #endif /* ENABLE_SVR_PAM_AUTH */