table of contents
- bookworm 252.30-1~deb12u2
- bookworm-backports 254.16-1~bpo12+1
- testing 256.7-3
- unstable 257~rc1-4
SYSTEMD-HOMED.SERVICE(8) | systemd-homed.service | SYSTEMD-HOMED.SERVICE(8) |
NAME¶
systemd-homed.service, systemd-homed - Home Area/User Account Manager
SYNOPSIS¶
systemd-homed.service
/lib/systemd/systemd-homed
DESCRIPTION¶
systemd-homed is a system service that may be used to create, remove, change or inspect home areas (directories and network mounts and real or loopback block devices with a filesystem, optionally encrypted).
Most of systemd-homed's functionality is accessible through the homectl(1) command.
See the Home Directories[1] documentation for details about the format and design of home areas managed by systemd-homed.service.
Each home directory managed by systemd-homed.service synthesizes a local user and group. These are made available to the system using the User/Group Record Lookup API via Varlink[2], and thus may be browsed with userdbctl(1).
KEY MANAGEMENT¶
User records are cryptographically signed with a public/private key pair (the signature is part of the JSON record itself). For a user to be permitted to log in locally the public key matching the signature of their user record must be installed. For a user record to be modified locally the private key matching the signature must be installed locally, too. The keys are stored in the /var/lib/systemd/home/ directory:
/var/lib/systemd/home/local.private
/var/lib/systemd/home/local.public
/var/lib/systemd/home/*.public
All key files listed above are in PEM format.
In order to migrate a home directory from a host "foobar" to another host "quux" it is hence sufficient to copy /var/lib/systemd/home/local.public from the host "foobar" to "quux", maybe calling the file on the destination /var/lib/systemd/home/foobar.public, reflecting the origin of the key. If the user record should be modifiable on "quux" the pair /var/lib/systemd/home/local.public and /var/lib/systemd/home/local.private need to be copied from "foobar" to "quux", and placed under the identical paths there, as currently only a single private key is supported per host. Note of course that the latter means that user records generated/signed before the key pair is copied in, lose their validity.
SEE ALSO¶
systemd(1), homed.conf(5), homectl(1), pam_systemd_home(8), userdbctl(1), org.freedesktop.home1(5)
NOTES¶
- 1.
- Home Directories
- 2.
- User/Group Record Lookup API via Varlink
systemd 254 |