72
63
><refentrytitle>mandos</refentrytitle>
73
64
<manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>, read by it at startup.
74
65
The file needs to list all clients that should be able to use
75
the service. The settings in this file can be overridden by
76
runtime changes to the server, which it saves across restarts.
77
(See the section called <quote>PERSISTENT STATE</quote> in
78
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>mandos</refentrytitle><manvolnum
79
>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.) However, any <emphasis
80
>changes</emphasis> to this file (including adding and removing
81
clients) will, at startup, override changes done during runtime.
66
the service. All clients listed will be regarded as enabled,
67
even if a client was disabled in a previous run of the server.
84
70
The format starts with a <literal>[<replaceable>section
117
<term><option>approval_delay<literal> = </literal><replaceable
118
>TIME</replaceable></option></term>
121
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
124
How long to wait for external approval before resorting to
125
use the <option>approved_by_default</option> value. The
126
default is <quote>PT0S</quote>, i.e. not to wait.
129
The format of <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is the same
130
as for <varname>timeout</varname> below.
136
<term><option>approval_duration<literal> = </literal
137
><replaceable>TIME</replaceable></option></term>
140
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
143
How long an external approval lasts. The default is 1
147
The format of <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is the same
148
as for <varname>timeout</varname> below.
154
<term><option>approved_by_default<literal> = </literal
155
>{ <literal >1</literal> | <literal>yes</literal> | <literal
156
>true</literal> | <literal>on</literal> | <literal
157
>0</literal> | <literal>no</literal> | <literal
158
>false</literal> | <literal>off</literal> }</option></term>
161
Whether to approve a client by default after
162
the <option>approval_delay</option>. The default
163
is <quote>True</quote>.
103
<term><option>timeout<literal> = </literal><replaceable
104
>TIME</replaceable></option></term>
107
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
110
The timeout is how long the server will wait (for either a
111
successful checker run or a client receiving its secret)
112
until a client is disabled and not allowed to get the data
113
this server holds. By default Mandos will use 1 hour.
116
The <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is specified as a
117
space-separated number of values, each of which is a
118
number and a one-character suffix. The suffix must be one
119
of <quote>d</quote>, <quote>s</quote>, <quote>m</quote>,
120
<quote>h</quote>, and <quote>w</quote> for days, seconds,
121
minutes, hours, and weeks, respectively. The values are
122
added together to give the total time value, so all of
123
<quote><literal>330s</literal></quote>,
124
<quote><literal>110s 110s 110s</literal></quote>, and
125
<quote><literal>5m 30s</literal></quote> will give a value
126
of five minutes and thirty seconds.
132
<term><option>interval<literal> = </literal><replaceable
133
>TIME</replaceable></option></term>
136
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
139
How often to run the checker to confirm that a client is
140
still up. <emphasis>Note:</emphasis> a new checker will
141
not be started if an old one is still running. The server
142
will wait for a checker to complete until the above
143
<quote><varname>timeout</varname></quote> occurs, at which
144
time the client will be disabled, and any running checker
145
killed. The default interval is 5 minutes.
148
The format of <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is the same
149
as for <varname>timeout</varname> above.
173
159
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
176
This option overrides the default shell command that the
177
server will use to check if the client is still up. Any
178
output of the command will be ignored, only the exit code
179
is checked: If the exit code of the command is zero, the
180
client is considered up. The command will be run using
181
<quote><command><filename>/bin/sh</filename>
162
This option allows you to override the default shell
163
command that the server will use to check if the client is
164
still up. Any output of the command will be ignored, only
165
the exit code is checked: If the exit code of the command
166
is zero, the client is considered up. The command will be
167
run using <quote><command><filename>/bin/sh</filename>
182
168
<option>-c</option></command></quote>, so
183
169
<varname>PATH</varname> will be searched. The default
184
170
value for the checker command is <quote><literal
185
171
><command>fping</command> <option>-q</option> <option
186
>--</option> %%(host)s</literal></quote>. Note that
187
<command>mandos-keygen</command>, when generating output
188
to be inserted into this file, normally looks for an SSH
189
server on the Mandos client, and, if it finds one, outputs
190
a <option>checker</option> option to check for the
191
client’s SSH key fingerprint – this is more secure against
172
>--</option> %%(host)s</literal></quote>.
195
175
In addition to normal start time expansion, this option
203
<term><option>extended_timeout<literal> = </literal><replaceable
204
>TIME</replaceable></option></term>
207
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
210
Extended timeout is an added timeout that is given once
211
after a password has been sent successfully to a client.
212
The timeout is by default longer than the normal timeout,
213
and is used for handling the extra long downtime while a
214
machine is booting up. Time to take into consideration
215
when changing this value is file system checks and quota
216
checks. The default value is 15 minutes.
219
The format of <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is the same
220
as for <varname>timeout</varname> below.
226
183
<term><option>fingerprint<literal> = </literal
227
184
><replaceable>HEXSTRING</replaceable></option></term>
233
190
This option sets the OpenPGP fingerprint that identifies
234
191
the public key that clients authenticate themselves with
235
through TLS. The string needs to be in hexadecimal form,
236
but spaces or upper/lower case are not significant.
242
<term><option>key_id<literal> = </literal
243
><replaceable>HEXSTRING</replaceable></option></term>
246
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
249
This option sets the certificate key ID that identifies
250
the public key that clients authenticate themselves with
251
through TLS. The string needs to be in hexadecimal form,
252
but spaces or upper/lower case are not significant.
258
<term><option><literal>host = </literal><replaceable
259
>STRING</replaceable></option></term>
262
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>, but highly
263
<emphasis>recommended</emphasis> unless the
264
<option>checker</option> option is modified to a
265
non-standard value without <quote>%%(host)s</quote> in it.
268
Host name for this client. This is not used by the server
269
directly, but can be, and is by default, used by the
270
checker. See the <option>checker</option> option.
276
<term><option>interval<literal> = </literal><replaceable
277
>TIME</replaceable></option></term>
280
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
283
How often to run the checker to confirm that a client is
284
still up. <emphasis>Note:</emphasis> a new checker will
285
not be started if an old one is still running. The server
286
will wait for a checker to complete until the below
287
<quote><varname>timeout</varname></quote> occurs, at which
288
time the client will be disabled, and any running checker
289
killed. The default interval is 2 minutes.
292
The format of <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is the same
293
as for <varname>timeout</varname> below.
299
<term><option>secfile<literal> = </literal><replaceable
300
>FILENAME</replaceable></option></term>
303
This option is only used if <option>secret</option> is not
304
specified, in which case this option is
305
<emphasis>required</emphasis>.
308
Similar to the <option>secret</option>, except the secret
309
data is in an external file. The contents of the file
310
should <emphasis>not</emphasis> be base64-encoded, but
311
will be sent to clients verbatim.
314
File names of the form <filename>~user/foo/bar</filename>
315
and <filename>$<envar>ENVVAR</envar>/foo/bar</filename>
192
through TLS. The string needs to be in hexidecimal form,
193
but spaces or upper/lower case are not significant.
331
208
If present, this option must be set to a string of
332
209
base64-encoded binary data. It will be decoded and sent
333
to the client matching the above <option>key_id</option>
334
or <option>fingerprint</option>. This should, of course,
335
be OpenPGP encrypted data, decryptable only by the client.
210
to the client matching the above
211
<option>fingerprint</option>. This should, of course, be
212
OpenPGP encrypted data, decryptable only by the client.
336
213
The program <citerefentry><refentrytitle><command
337
214
>mandos-keygen</command></refentrytitle><manvolnum
338
215
>8</manvolnum></citerefentry> can, using its
352
<term><option>timeout<literal> = </literal><replaceable
229
<term><option>secfile<literal> = </literal><replaceable
230
>FILENAME</replaceable></option></term>
233
This option is only used if <option>secret</option> is not
234
specified, in which case this option is
235
<emphasis>required</emphasis>.
238
Similar to the <option>secret</option>, except the secret
239
data is in an external file. The contents of the file
240
should <emphasis>not</emphasis> be base64-encoded, but
241
will be sent to clients verbatim.
244
File names of the form <filename>~user/foo/bar</filename>
245
and <filename>$<envar>ENVVAR</envar>/foo/bar</filename>
252
<term><option><literal>host = </literal><replaceable
253
>STRING</replaceable></option></term>
256
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>, but highly
257
<emphasis>recommended</emphasis> unless the
258
<option>checker</option> option is modified to a
259
non-standard value without <quote>%%(host)s</quote> in it.
262
Host name for this client. This is not used by the server
263
directly, but can be, and is by default, used by the
264
checker. See the <option>checker</option> option.
270
<term><option>approved_by_default<literal> = </literal
271
>{ <literal >1</literal> | <literal>yes</literal> | <literal
272
>true</literal> | <literal>on</literal> | <literal
273
>0</literal> | <literal>no</literal> | <literal
274
>false</literal> | <literal>off</literal> }</option></term>
277
Whether to approve a client by default after
278
the <option>approval_delay</option>. The default
279
is <quote>True</quote>.
285
<term><option>approval_delay<literal> = </literal><replaceable
353
286
>TIME</replaceable></option></term>
356
289
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
359
The timeout is how long the server will wait, after a
360
successful checker run, until a client is disabled and not
361
allowed to get the data this server holds. By default
362
Mandos will use 5 minutes. See also the
363
<option>extended_timeout</option> option.
292
How long to wait for external approval before resorting to
293
use the <option>approved_by_default</option> value. The
294
default is <quote>0s</quote>, i.e. not to wait.
366
The <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is specified as an RFC
367
3339 duration; for example
368
<quote><literal>P1Y2M3DT4H5M6S</literal></quote> meaning
369
one year, two months, three days, four hours, five
370
minutes, and six seconds. Some values can be omitted, see
371
RFC 3339 Appendix A for details.
297
The format of <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is the same
298
as for <varname>timeout</varname> above.
377
<term><option>enabled<literal> = </literal>{ <literal
378
>1</literal> | <literal>yes</literal> | <literal>true</literal
379
> | <literal >on</literal> | <literal>0</literal> | <literal
380
>no</literal> | <literal>false</literal> | <literal
381
>off</literal> }</option></term>
304
<term><option>approval_duration<literal> = </literal
305
><replaceable>TIME</replaceable></option></term>
384
Whether this client should be enabled by default. The
385
default is <quote>true</quote>.
308
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
311
How long an external approval lasts. The default is 1
315
The format of <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is the same
316
as for <varname>timeout</varname> above.
425
356
<quote><literal>%%(<replaceable>foo</replaceable>)s</literal
426
357
></quote> will be replaced by the value of the attribute
427
358
<varname>foo</varname> of the internal
428
<quote><classname>Client</classname></quote> object in the
429
Mandos server. The currently allowed values for
430
<replaceable>foo</replaceable> are:
431
<quote><literal>approval_delay</literal></quote>,
432
<quote><literal>approval_duration</literal></quote>,
433
<quote><literal>created</literal></quote>,
434
<quote><literal>enabled</literal></quote>,
435
<quote><literal>expires</literal></quote>,
436
<quote><literal>key_id</literal></quote>,
437
<quote><literal>fingerprint</literal></quote>,
438
<quote><literal>host</literal></quote>,
439
<quote><literal>interval</literal></quote>,
440
<quote><literal>last_approval_request</literal></quote>,
441
<quote><literal>last_checked_ok</literal></quote>,
442
<quote><literal>last_enabled</literal></quote>,
443
<quote><literal>name</literal></quote>,
444
<quote><literal>timeout</literal></quote>, and, if using
445
D-Bus, <quote><literal>dbus_object_path</literal></quote>.
446
See the source code for details. <emphasis role="strong"
447
>Currently, <emphasis>none</emphasis> of these attributes
448
except <quote><literal>host</literal></quote> are guaranteed
449
to be valid in future versions.</emphasis> Therefore, please
450
let the authors know of any attributes that are useful so they
451
may be preserved to any new versions of this software.
359
<quote><classname>Client</classname></quote> object. See the
360
source code for details, and let the authors know of any
361
attributes that are useful so they may be preserved to any new
362
versions of this software.
454
365
Note that this means that, in order to include an actual
532
440
<refsect1 id="see_also">
533
441
<title>SEE ALSO</title>
535
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>intro</refentrytitle>
536
<manvolnum>8mandos</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
537
443
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>mandos-keygen</refentrytitle>
538
444
<manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
539
445
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>mandos.conf</refentrytitle>
540
446
<manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
541
447
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>mandos</refentrytitle>
542
<manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
543
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>fping</refentrytitle>
544
448
<manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>
549
RFC 3339: <citetitle>Date and Time on the Internet:
550
Timestamps</citetitle>
554
The time intervals are in the "duration" format, as
555
specified in ABNF in Appendix A of RFC 3339.
562
452
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