nis_object.x revision 32555
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30
31/*
32 *	nis_object.x
33 *
34 *	Copyright (c) 1988-1992 Sun Microsystems Inc
35 *	All Rights Reserved.
36 */
37
38/* From: %#pragma ident	"@(#)nis_object.x	1.10	94/05/03 SMI" */
39
40#if RPC_HDR
41%
42%#ifndef __nis_object_h
43%#define __nis_object_h
44%
45#endif
46/*
47 * 	This file defines the format for a NIS object in RPC language.
48 * It is included by the main .x file and the database access protocol
49 * file. It is common because both of them need to deal with the same
50 * type of object. Generating the actual code though is a bit messy because
51 * the nis.x file and the nis_dba.x file will generate xdr routines to
52 * encode/decode objects when only one set is needed. Such is life when
53 * one is using rpcgen.
54 *
55 * Note, the protocol doesn't specify any limits on such things as
56 * maximum name length, number of attributes, etc. These are enforced
57 * by the database backend. When you hit them you will no. Also see
58 * the db_getlimits() function for fetching the limit values.
59 *
60 */
61
62/* Some manifest constants, chosen to maximize flexibility without
63 * plugging the wire full of data.
64 */
65const NIS_MAXSTRINGLEN = 255;
66const NIS_MAXNAMELEN   = 1024;
67const NIS_MAXATTRNAME  = 32;
68const NIS_MAXATTRVAL   = 2048;
69const NIS_MAXCOLUMNS   = 64;
70const NIS_MAXATTR      = 16;
71const NIS_MAXPATH      = 1024;
72const NIS_MAXREPLICAS  = 128;
73const NIS_MAXLINKS     = 16;
74
75const NIS_PK_NONE      = 0;	/* no public key (unix/sys auth) */
76const NIS_PK_DH	       = 1;	/* Public key is Diffie-Hellman type */
77const NIS_PK_RSA       = 2;	/* Public key if RSA type */
78const NIS_PK_KERB      = 3;	/* Use kerberos style authentication */
79
80/*
81 * The fundamental name type of NIS. The name may consist of two parts,
82 * the first being the fully qualified name, and the second being an
83 * optional set of attribute/value pairs.
84 */
85struct nis_attr {
86	string	zattr_ndx<>;	/* name of the index 		*/
87	opaque	zattr_val<>;	/* Value for the attribute. 	*/
88};
89
90typedef string nis_name<>;	/* The NIS name itself. */
91
92/* NIS object types are defined by the following enumeration. The numbers
93 * they use are based on the following scheme :
94 *		     0 - 1023 are reserved for Sun,
95 * 		1024 - 2047 are defined to be private to a particular tree.
96 *		2048 - 4095 are defined to be user defined.
97 *		4096 - ...  are reserved for future use.
98 */
99
100enum zotypes {
101	BOGUS_OBJ  	= 0,	/* Uninitialized object structure 	*/
102	NO_OBJ   	= 1,	/* NULL object (no data)	 	*/
103	DIRECTORY_OBJ 	= 2,	/* Directory object describing domain 	*/
104	GROUP_OBJ  	= 3,	/* Group object (a list of names) 	*/
105	TABLE_OBJ  	= 4,	/* Table object (a database schema) 	*/
106	ENTRY_OBJ  	= 5,	/* Entry object (a database record) 	*/
107	LINK_OBJ   	= 6, 	/* A name link.				*/
108	PRIVATE_OBJ   	= 7 	/* Private object (all opaque data) 	*/
109};
110
111/*
112 * The types of Name services NIS knows about. They are enumerated
113 * here. The Binder code will use this type to determine if it has
114 * a set of library routines that will access the indicated name service.
115 */
116enum nstype {
117	UNKNOWN = 0,
118	NIS = 1,	/* Nis Plus Service		*/
119	SUNYP = 2,	/* Old NIS Service		*/
120	IVY = 3,	/* Nis Plus Plus Service	*/
121	DNS = 4,	/* Domain Name Service		*/
122	X500 = 5,	/* ISO/CCCIT X.500 Service	*/
123	DNANS = 6,	/* Digital DECNet Name Service	*/
124	XCHS = 7,	/* Xerox ClearingHouse Service	*/
125	CDS= 8
126};
127
128/*
129 * DIRECTORY - The name service object. These objects identify other name
130 * servers that are serving some portion of the name space. Each has a
131 * type associated with it. The resolver library will note whether or not
132 * is has the needed routines to access that type of service.
133 * The oarmask structure defines an access rights mask on a per object
134 * type basis for the name spaces. The only bits currently used are
135 * create and destroy. By enabling or disabling these access rights for
136 * a specific object type for a one of the accessor entities (owner,
137 * group, world) the administrator can control what types of objects
138 * may be freely added to the name space and which require the
139 * administrator's approval.
140 */
141struct oar_mask {
142	u_long	oa_rights;	/* Access rights mask 	*/
143	zotypes	oa_otype;	/* Object type 		*/
144};
145
146struct endpoint {
147	string		uaddr<>;
148	string		family<>;   /* Transport family (INET, OSI, etc) */
149	string		proto<>;    /* Protocol (TCP, UDP, CLNP,  etc)   */
150};
151
152/*
153 * Note: pkey is a netobj which is limited to 1024 bytes which limits the
154 * keysize to 8192 bits. This is consider to be a reasonable limit for
155 * the expected lifetime of this service.
156 */
157struct nis_server {
158	nis_name	name; 	 	/* Principal name of the server  */
159	endpoint	ep<>;  		/* Universal addr(s) for server  */
160	u_long		key_type;	/* Public key type		 */
161	netobj		pkey;		/* server's public key  	 */
162};
163
164struct directory_obj {
165	nis_name   do_name;	 /* Name of the directory being served   */
166	nstype	   do_type;	 /* one of NIS, DNS, IVY, YP, or X.500 	 */
167	nis_server do_servers<>; /* <0> == Primary name server     	 */
168	u_long	   do_ttl;	 /* Time To Live (for caches) 		 */
169	oar_mask   do_armask<>;  /* Create/Destroy rights by object type */
170};
171
172/*
173 * ENTRY - This is one row of data from an information base.
174 * The type value is used by the client library to convert the entry to
175 * it's internal structure representation. The Table name is a back pointer
176 * to the table where the entry is stored. This allows the client library
177 * to determine where to send a request if the client wishes to change this
178 * entry but got to it through a LINK rather than directly.
179 * If the entry is a "standalone" entry then this field is void.
180 */
181const EN_BINARY   = 1;	/* Indicates value is binary data 	*/
182const EN_CRYPT    = 2;	/* Indicates the value is encrypted	*/
183const EN_XDR      = 4;	/* Indicates the value is XDR encoded	*/
184const EN_MODIFIED = 8;	/* Indicates entry is modified. 	*/
185const EN_ASN1     = 64;	/* Means contents use ASN.1 encoding    */
186
187struct entry_col {
188	u_long	ec_flags;	/* Flags for this value */
189	opaque	ec_value<>;	/* It's textual value	*/
190};
191
192struct entry_obj {
193	string 	en_type<>;	/* Type of entry such as "passwd" */
194	entry_col en_cols<>;	/* Value for the entry		  */
195};
196
197/*
198 * GROUP - The group object contains a list of NIS principal names. Groups
199 * are used to authorize principals. Each object has a set of access rights
200 * for members of its group. Principal names in groups are in the form
201 * name.directory and recursive groups are expressed as @groupname.directory
202 */
203struct group_obj {
204	u_long		gr_flags;	/* Flags controlling group	*/
205	nis_name	gr_members<>;  	/* List of names in group 	*/
206};
207
208/*
209 * LINK - This is the LINK object. It is quite similar to a symbolic link
210 * in the UNIX filesystem. The attributes in the main object structure are
211 * relative to the LINK data and not what it points to (like the file system)
212 * "modify" privleges here indicate the right to modify what the link points
213 * at and not to modify that actual object pointed to by the link.
214 */
215struct link_obj {
216	zotypes	 li_rtype;	/* Real type of the object	*/
217	nis_attr li_attrs<>;	/* Attribute/Values for tables	*/
218	nis_name li_name; 	/* The object's real NIS name	*/
219};
220
221/*
222 * TABLE - This is the table object. It implements a simple
223 * data base that applications and use for configuration or
224 * administration purposes. The role of the table is to group together
225 * a set of related entries. Tables are the simple database component
226 * of NIS. Like many databases, tables are logically divided into columns
227 * and rows. The columns are labeled with indexes and each ENTRY makes
228 * up a row. Rows may be addressed within the table by selecting one
229 * or more indexes, and values for those indexes. Each row which has
230 * a value for the given index that matches the desired value is returned.
231 * Within the definition of each column there is a flags variable, this
232 * variable contains flags which determine whether or not the column is
233 * searchable, contains binary data, and access rights for the entry objects
234 * column value.
235 */
236
237const TA_BINARY     = 1;	/* Means table data is binary 		*/
238const TA_CRYPT      = 2;	/* Means value should be encrypted 	*/
239const TA_XDR        = 4;	/* Means value is XDR encoded		*/
240const TA_SEARCHABLE = 8;	/* Means this column is searchable	*/
241const TA_CASE       = 16;	/* Means this column is Case Sensitive	*/
242const TA_MODIFIED   = 32;	/* Means this columns attrs are modified*/
243const TA_ASN1       = 64;	/* Means contents use ASN.1 encoding     */
244
245struct table_col {
246	string	tc_name<64>;	/* Column Name 	 	   */
247	u_long	tc_flags;	/* control flags	   */
248	u_long	tc_rights;	/* Access rights mask	   */
249};
250
251struct table_obj {
252	string 	  ta_type<64>;	 /* Table type such as "passwd"	*/
253	int	  ta_maxcol;	 /* Total number of columns	*/
254	u_char	  ta_sep;	 /* Separator character 	*/
255	table_col ta_cols<>; 	 /* The number of table indexes */
256	string	  ta_path<>;	 /* A search path for this table */
257};
258
259/*
260 * This union joins together all of the currently known objects.
261 */
262union objdata switch (zotypes zo_type) {
263        case DIRECTORY_OBJ :
264                struct directory_obj di_data;
265        case GROUP_OBJ :
266                struct group_obj gr_data;
267        case TABLE_OBJ :
268                struct table_obj ta_data;
269        case ENTRY_OBJ:
270                struct entry_obj en_data;
271        case LINK_OBJ :
272                struct link_obj li_data;
273        case PRIVATE_OBJ :
274                opaque	po_data<>;
275	case NO_OBJ :
276		void;
277        case BOGUS_OBJ :
278		void;
279        default :
280                void;
281};
282
283/*
284 * This is the basic NIS object data type. It consists of a generic part
285 * which all objects contain, and a specialized part which varies depending
286 * on the type of the object. All of the specialized sections have been
287 * described above. You might have wondered why they all start with an
288 * integer size, followed by the useful data. The answer is, when the
289 * server doesn't recognize the type returned it treats it as opaque data.
290 * And the definition for opaque data is {int size; char *data;}. In this
291 * way, servers and utility routines that do not understand a given type
292 * may still pass it around. One has to be careful in setting
293 * this variable accurately, it must take into account such things as
294 * XDR padding of structures etc. The best way to set it is to note one's
295 * position in the XDR encoding stream, encode the structure, look at the
296 * new position and calculate the size.
297 */
298struct nis_oid {
299	u_long	ctime;		/* Time of objects creation 	*/
300	u_long	mtime;		/* Time of objects modification */
301};
302
303struct nis_object {
304	nis_oid	 zo_oid;	/* object identity verifier.		*/
305	nis_name zo_name;	/* The NIS name for this object		*/
306	nis_name zo_owner;	/* NIS name of object owner.		*/
307	nis_name zo_group;	/* NIS name of access group.		*/
308	nis_name zo_domain;	/* The administrator for the object	*/
309	u_long	 zo_access;	/* Access rights (owner, group, world)	*/
310	u_long	 zo_ttl;	/* Object's time to live in seconds.	*/
311	objdata	 zo_data;	/* Data structure for this type 	*/
312};
313#if RPC_HDR
314%
315%#endif /* if __nis_object_h */
316%
317#endif
318