qpsmtpd/plugins/auth/auth_cvm_unix_local
2013-04-21 00:50:39 -04:00

134 lines
3.5 KiB
Perl

#!perl -w
=head1 NAME
auth_cvm_unix_local - SMTP AUTH LOGIN module using
Bruce Guenther's Credential Validation Module (CVM)
http://untroubled.org/cvm/
=head1 SYNOPSIS
In config/plugins:
auth/auth_cvm_unix_local \
cvm_socket /var/lib/cvm/cvm-unix-local.socket \
enable_smtp no \
enable_ssmtp yes
=head1 BUGS
- Should probably handle auth-cram-md5 as well. However, this requires
access to the plain text password. We could store a separate database
of passwords purely for SMTP AUTH, for example as an optional
SMTPAuthPassword property of an account in the esmith::AccountsDB;
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This plugin implements an authentication plugin using Bruce Guenther's
Credential Validation Module (http://untroubled.org/cvm).
=head1 AUTHOR
Copyright 2005 Gordon Rowell <gordonr@gormand.com.au>
This software is free software and may be distributed under the same
terms as qpsmtpd itself.
=head1 VERSION
Version $Id: auth_cvm_unix_local,v 1.1 2005/06/09 22:50:06 gordonr Exp gordonr $
=cut
use strict;
use warnings;
use Qpsmtpd::Constants;
use Socket;
use constant SMTP_PORT => getservbyname("smtp", "tcp") || 25;
use constant SSMTP_PORT => getservbyname("ssmtp", "tcp") || 465;
sub register {
my ($self, $qp, %arg) = @_;
unless ($arg{cvm_socket}) {
$self->log(LOGERROR, "skip: requires cvm_socket argument");
return 0;
}
$self->{_args} = {%arg};
$self->{_enable_smtp} = $arg{enable_smtp} || 'no';
$self->{_enable_ssmtp} = $arg{enable_ssmtp} || 'yes';
my $port = $ENV{PORT} || SMTP_PORT;
return 0 if ($port == SMTP_PORT && $arg{enable_smtp} ne 'yes');
return 0 if ($port == SSMTP_PORT && $arg{enable_ssmtp} ne 'yes');
if ($arg{cvm_socket} =~ /^([\w\/.-]+)$/) {
$self->{_cvm_socket} = $1;
}
unless (-S $self->{_cvm_socket}) {
$self->log(LOGERROR, "skip: cvm_socket missing or not usable");
return 0;
}
$self->register_hook("auth-plain", "authcvm_plain");
$self->register_hook("auth-login", "authcvm_plain");
# $self->register_hook("auth-cram-md5", "authcvm_hash");
}
sub authcvm_plain {
my ($self, $transaction, $method, $user, $passClear, $passHash, $ticket) =
@_;
socket(SOCK, PF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0) or do {
$self->log(LOGERROR, "skip: socket creation attempt for: $user");
return (DENY, "authcvm");
};
# DENY, really? Should this plugin return a DENY when it cannot connect
# to the cvs socket? I'd expect such a failure to return DECLINED, so
# any other auth plugins could take a stab at authenticating the user
connect(SOCK, sockaddr_un($self->{_cvm_socket})) or do {
$self->log(LOGERROR, "skip: socket connection attempt for: $user");
return (DENY, "authcvm");
};
my $o = select(SOCK);
$| = 1;
select($o);
my ($u, $host) = split(/\@/, $user);
$host ||= "localhost";
print SOCK "\001$u\000$host\000$passClear\000\000";
shutdown SOCK, 1; # tell remote we're finished
my $ret = <SOCK>;
my ($s) = unpack("C", $ret);
if (!defined $s) {
$self->log(LOGERROR, "skip: no response from cvm for $user");
return (DECLINED);
}
if ($s == 0) {
$self->log(LOGINFO, "pass: authentication for: $user");
return (OK, "auth success for $user");
}
if ($s == 100) {
$self->log(LOGINFO, "fail: authentication failure for: $user");
return (DENY, 'auth failure (100)');
}
$self->log(LOGERROR, "skip: unknown response from cvm for $user");
return (DECLINED, "unknown result code ($s)");
}