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73
><refentrytitle>mandos</refentrytitle>
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74
<manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>, read by it at startup.
67
75
The file needs to list all clients that should be able to use
68
the service. All clients listed will be regarded as enabled,
69
even if a client was disabled in a previous run of the server.
76
the service. The settings in this file can be overridden by
77
runtime changes to the server, which it saves across restarts.
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(See the section called <quote>PERSISTENT STATE</quote> in
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<citerefentry><refentrytitle>mandos</refentrytitle><manvolnum
80
>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.) However, any <emphasis
81
>changes</emphasis> to this file (including adding and removing
82
clients) will, at startup, override changes done during runtime.
72
85
The format starts with a <literal>[<replaceable>section
161
174
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
164
This option allows you to override the default shell
165
command that the server will use to check if the client is
166
still up. Any output of the command will be ignored, only
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the exit code is checked: If the exit code of the command
168
is zero, the client is considered up. The command will be
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run using <quote><command><filename>/bin/sh</filename>
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This option overrides the default shell command that the
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server will use to check if the client is still up. Any
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output of the command will be ignored, only the exit code
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is checked: If the exit code of the command is zero, the
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client is considered up. The command will be run using
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<quote><command><filename>/bin/sh</filename>
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<option>-c</option></command></quote>, so
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184
<varname>PATH</varname> will be searched. The default
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185
value for the checker command is <quote><literal
173
186
><command>fping</command> <option>-q</option> <option
174
>--</option> %%(host)s</literal></quote>.
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>--</option> %%(host)s</literal></quote>. Note that
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<command>mandos-keygen</command>, when generating output
189
to be inserted into this file, normally looks for an SSH
190
server on the Mandos client, and, if it finds one, outputs
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a <option>checker</option> option to check for the
192
client’s SSH key fingerprint – this is more secure against
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196
In addition to normal start time expansion, this option
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<term><option>extended_timeout<literal> = </literal><replaceable
205
>TIME</replaceable></option></term>
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This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
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Extended timeout is an added timeout that is given once
212
after a password has been sent successfully to a client.
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The timeout is by default longer than the normal timeout,
214
and is used for handling the extra long downtime while a
215
machine is booting up. Time to take into consideration
216
when changing this value is file system checks and quota
217
checks. The default value is 15 minutes.
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The format of <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is the same
221
as for <varname>timeout</varname> below.
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<term><option>fingerprint<literal> = </literal
186
228
><replaceable>HEXSTRING</replaceable></option></term>
189
This option is <emphasis>required</emphasis>.
192
This option sets the OpenPGP fingerprint that identifies
193
the public key that clients authenticate themselves with
194
through TLS. The string needs to be in hexidecimal form,
195
but spaces or upper/lower case are not significant.
231
This option is <emphasis>required</emphasis> if the
232
<option>key_id</option> is not set, and
233
<emphasis>optional</emphasis> otherwise.
236
This option sets the OpenPGP fingerprint that (before
237
GnuTLS 3.6.0) identified the public key that clients
238
authenticate themselves with through TLS. The string
239
needs to be in hexadecimal form, but spaces or upper/lower
240
case are not significant.
246
<term><option>key_id<literal> = </literal
247
><replaceable>HEXSTRING</replaceable></option></term>
250
This option is <emphasis>required</emphasis> if the
251
<option>fingerprint</option> is not set, and
252
<emphasis>optional</emphasis> otherwise.
255
This option sets the certificate key ID that (with GnuTLS
256
3.6.6 or later) identifies the public key that clients
257
authenticate themselves with through TLS. The string
258
needs to be in hexadecimal form, but spaces or upper/lower
259
case are not significant.
274
338
If present, this option must be set to a string of
275
339
base64-encoded binary data. It will be decoded and sent
276
to the client matching the above
277
<option>fingerprint</option>. This should, of course, be
278
OpenPGP encrypted data, decryptable only by the client.
340
to the client matching the above <option>key_id</option>
341
or <option>fingerprint</option>. This should, of course,
342
be OpenPGP encrypted data, decryptable only by the client.
279
343
The program <citerefentry><refentrytitle><command
280
344
>mandos-keygen</command></refentrytitle><manvolnum
281
345
>8</manvolnum></citerefentry> can, using its
299
363
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
302
The timeout is how long the server will wait (for either a
303
successful checker run or a client receiving its secret)
304
until a client is disabled and not allowed to get the data
305
this server holds. By default Mandos will use 5 minutes.
366
The timeout is how long the server will wait, after a
367
successful checker run, until a client is disabled and not
368
allowed to get the data this server holds. By default
369
Mandos will use 5 minutes. See also the
370
<option>extended_timeout</option> option.
308
The <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is specified as a
309
space-separated number of values, each of which is a
310
number and a one-character suffix. The suffix must be one
311
of <quote>d</quote>, <quote>s</quote>, <quote>m</quote>,
312
<quote>h</quote>, and <quote>w</quote> for days, seconds,
313
minutes, hours, and weeks, respectively. The values are
314
added together to give the total time value, so all of
315
<quote><literal>330s</literal></quote>,
316
<quote><literal>110s 110s 110s</literal></quote>, and
317
<quote><literal>5m 30s</literal></quote> will give a value
318
of five minutes and thirty seconds.
373
The <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is specified as an RFC
374
3339 duration; for example
375
<quote><literal>P1Y2M3DT4H5M6S</literal></quote> meaning
376
one year, two months, three days, four hours, five
377
minutes, and six seconds. Some values can be omitted, see
378
RFC 3339 Appendix A for details.
324
<term><option>extended_timeout<literal> = </literal><replaceable
325
>TIME</replaceable></option></term>
384
<term><option>enabled<literal> = </literal>{ <literal
385
>1</literal> | <literal>yes</literal> | <literal>true</literal
386
> | <literal >on</literal> | <literal>0</literal> | <literal
387
>no</literal> | <literal>false</literal> | <literal
388
>off</literal> }</option></term>
328
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
331
Extended timeout is an added timeout that is given once
332
after a password has been sent sucessfully to a client.
333
The timeout is by default longer than the normal timeout,
334
and is used for handling the extra long downtime while a
335
matchine is booting up. Time to take into consideration
336
when changing this value is system file checks and quota
337
checks. The default value is 15 minutes.
340
The format of <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is the same
341
as for <varname>timeout</varname> above.
391
Whether this client should be enabled by default. The
392
default is <quote>true</quote>.
388
439
<quote><literal>approval_duration</literal></quote>,
389
440
<quote><literal>created</literal></quote>,
390
441
<quote><literal>enabled</literal></quote>,
442
<quote><literal>expires</literal></quote>,
443
<quote><literal>key_id</literal></quote>,
391
444
<quote><literal>fingerprint</literal></quote>,
392
445
<quote><literal>host</literal></quote>,
393
446
<quote><literal>interval</literal></quote>,
490
546
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>mandos.conf</refentrytitle>
491
547
<manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
492
548
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>mandos</refentrytitle>
549
<manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
550
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>fping</refentrytitle>
493
551
<manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>
556
RFC 3339: <citetitle>Date and Time on the Internet:
557
Timestamps</citetitle>
561
The time intervals are in the "duration" format, as
562
specified in ABNF in Appendix A of RFC 3339.
497
569
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