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This document tries to describe the software layout and design of
nss-pam-ldapd. It should provide some help for contributing code to this
package.
CONTRIBUTING TO NSS-PAM-LDAPD
=============================
Contributions to nss-pam-ldapd are most welcome. Integrating contributions
will be done on a best-effort basis and can be made easier if the following
are considered:
* for large changes it is a good idea to send an email first
* send your patches in unified diff (diff -u) format
* try to use the svn version of the software to develop the patch
* clearly state which problem you're trying to solve and how this is
accomplished
* please follow the existing coding conventions
* patches
* please test the patch and include information on testing with the patch
(platforms tested, etc)
* contributions will be acknowledged in the AUTHORS file
* include a copyright statement in the patched code if you feel the
contribution is significant enough (e.g. more than a few lines)
* when including third-party code, retain copyright information (copyright
holder and license) and ensure that the license is LGPL compatible
Please contact Arthur de Jong <arthur@arthurdejong.org> if you want to
contribute or use the Debian BTS if you're using the Debian package.
BUILD DEPENDENCIES
==================
For building svn snapshots the following tools are needed:
* autoconf (2.61 is used but 2.59 is minimal)
* automake (1.10 is used)
* check (0.9.5 is used)
and of course the usual build tools (gcc/make/etc). Also see debian/control
(Build-Depends field) for libraries you need.
To build the svn snapshot run the autogen.sh shell script to build the
configure script. When developing patches please use --enable-warnings with
configure and don't introduce too many new warnings. For building the manual
pages docbook2x is used.
RELEASE VERSIONING
==================
A new versioning scheme was chosen over the nss_ldap release scheme. The
scheme is a simple major.minor numbering starting with 0.1. Until a 1.0
release is made the code will be considered work in progress. The interfaces
may change and features may be added and removed.
GENERAL DESIGN
==============
The basic design splits the functionality in two parts. The NSS part
interfaces with libc and translates the NSS requests into simple generic
requests (e.g. "get user with name test", "get group with gid 101" or "get all
shadow entries"). Translating these requests into LDAP requests is then the
job of the daemon (nslcd) so that the NSS part won't have to know anything
about LDAP (in fact replacing it with another lookup method should be very
simple).
nslcd -> OpenLDAP -> LDAP server
^
libc NSS -> libnss_ldap.so
design goals
------------
* make it as simple as possible
* design as specified above
* simpler configuration and semantics
* simpler, clearer and completer documentation
* split source code into manageable parts
* get rid of unneeded code and complexity
* split complexity in two parts (LDAP interface in server, NSS interface in
library)
* have a stable, easily maintainable piece of quality software
NSS MODULE
==========
The NSS module is implemented in the nss directory. The functions are split
into files according to the database they support. Functions look like:
_nss_ldap_FUNCTION_r(...)
This function opens the connection to the nslcd (with a time-out) builds the
correct data structures and does a request (write()) to the nslcd waiting
for an answer (again with a time-out)
The complete list of exported functions can be found in exports.linux and
prototypes.h.
Currently a number of macros are used to build most of the function bodies for
these functions. Part of this is defined in the common/nslcd-prot.h file and
the NSS-specific stuff is in nss/common.h.
Some useful links:
http://mirrors.usc.edu/pub/gnu/Manuals/glibc-2.2.3/html_chapter/libc_28.html#SEC596
http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/index.html
THE COMMUNICATIONS PROTOCOL
===========================
The protocol used for communicating between the NSS library and the nslcd
daemon is very simple and almost fully described in the nslcd.h header file.
The common/nslcd-prot.h header file defines some macros that are used for
reading and writing protocol entities (strings, 32-bit integers, etc).
Every NSS database has a corresponding source file in the nss and the nslcd
directory.
If the protocol is changed in an incompatible way the protocol version should
be incremented in nslcd.h. There is currently no versioning scheme available
for this.
A special module (common/tio.c) was made so we can define simpler semantics
for time-out values and buffer sizes. Both the NSS library and nslcd use this
module which means that it includes functionality that is needed for both
(e.g. large write buffers for the server part and large resettable read
buffers for the NSS part). Maybe building two modules from the same source
with different features in them is an option (e.g. the NSS part needs the
read buffers and handling of SIGPIPE and the nslcd part needs the write
buffers and possibly flushing in the background).
The common directory also contains some other generally useful modules that
are used in some components.
SERVER PART
===========
At the server end a dispatcher picks up the request and delegates it to one of
the database specific functions.
nslcd_FUNCION(...)
This functions fills in the correct parameters from the request. This
function should write responses to the stream. Almost all these functions
are generated from a macro in nslcd/common.h.
SECURITY NOTES
==============
This design does open up the system to more potential security issues as there
is now a local interface to a daemon with privileges. Before processes could
only potentially exploit bugs in the library and gain the privileges of the
process that was doing the name lookups. In this case the privileges of the
daemon are potentially exposed.
TEST SETUP
==========
In the test directory there are a number of tests available. See the file
README in the test directory for more details.
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