Mercurial > prosody-modules
view mod_client_certs/README.md @ 6319:04c3273cb81f
mod_auth_cyrus: Add empty 'profile' table to SASL handler objects
This is for compatibility with Prosody's built-in util.sasl objects.
A SASL profile table usually includes methods supported by the backend, which
can be used by SASL mechanism handlers to perform operations (such as testing
the password). It also optionally contains a 'cb' field with channel binding
method handlers.
The Cyrus backend doesn't support channel binding, and doesn't have the same
concept of auth backend methods (it handles all that internally, and Prosody
has no insight or control over it).
Thus, we create an empty profile which informs Prosody that the SASL handler
does not support any of the auth or channel binding methods. Some features
will not work, but they didn't work anyway. This just makes it explicit.
This fixes a traceback in mod_sasl2_fast, which expected SASL handlers to
always contain a 'profile' field.
| author | Matthew Wild <mwild1@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| date | Thu, 04 Sep 2025 10:14:46 +0100 |
| parents | fe081789f7b5 |
| children |
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--- labels: - 'Stage-Alpha' summary: 'Client-side certificate management for Prosody' ... Introduction ============ [XEP-0257](http://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0257.html) specifies a protocol for clients to store and manage client side certificates. When a client presents a stored client side certificate during the TLS handshake, it can log in without supplying a password (using SASL EXTERNAL). This makes it possible to have multiple devices accessing an account, without any of them needing to know the password, and makes it easier to revoke access for a single device. Details ======= Each user can add their own certificates. These do not need to be signed by a trusted CA, yet they do need to be valid at the time of logging in and they should include an subjectAltName with otherName "id-on-xmppAddr" with the JID of the user. Generating your certificate --------------------------- 1. To generate your own certificate with a "id-on-xmppAddr" attribute using the command line `openssl` tool, first create a file called `client.cnf` with contents: [req] prompt = no x509_extensions = v3_extensions req_extensions = v3_extensions distinguished_name = distinguished_name [v3_extensions] extendedKeyUsage = clientAuth keyUsage = digitalSignature,keyEncipherment basicConstraints = CA:FALSE subjectAltName = @subject_alternative_name [subject_alternative_name] otherName.0 = 1.3.6.1.5.5.7.8.5;FORMAT:UTF8,UTF8:hamlet@shakespeare.lit [distinguished_name] commonName = Your Name emailAddress = hamlet@shakespeare.lit 2. Replace the values for `otherName.0` and `commonName` and `emailAddress` with your own values. The JID in `otherName.0` can either be a full JID or a bare JID, in the former case, the client can only use the resource specified in the resource. There are many other fields you can add, however, for SASL EXTERNAL, they will have no meaning. You can add more JIDs as `otherName.1`, `otherName.2`, etc. 3. Create a private key (as an example, a 4096 bits RSA key): openssl genrsa -out client.key 4096 4. Create the certificate request: openssl req -key client.key -new -out client.req -config client.cnf -extensions v3_extensions 5. Sign it yourself: openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in client.req -signkey client.key -out client.crt -extfile client.cnf -extensions v3_extensions The 365 means the certificate will be valid for a year starting now. The `client.key` **must** be kept secret, and is only needed by clients connecting using this certificate. The `client.crt` file contains the certificate that should be sent to the server using XEP-0257, and is also needed by clients connecting to the server. The `client.req` file is not needed anymore. Configuration ============= (None yet) Compatibility ============= ----- ----------------------------- 0.9 Works 0.8 Untested. Probably doesn't. ----- ----------------------------- Clients ======= (None?) TODO ==== Possible options to add to the configuration: - Require certificates to be signed by a trusted CA. - Do not require a id-on-xmppAddr - Remove expired certs after a certain time - Limit the number of certificates per user
