| KRB5_ACL_MATCH_FILE(3) | Library Functions Manual | KRB5_ACL_MATCH_FILE(3) |
NAME¶
krb5_acl_match_file,
krb5_acl_match_string —
ACL matching functions
LIBRARY¶
Kerberos 5 Library (libkrb5, -lkrb5)SYNOPSIS¶
krb5_error_codekrb5_acl_match_file(krb5_context
context, const char *file, const
char *format, ...);
krb5_error_code
krb5_acl_match_string(krb5_context
context, const char *string,
const char *format, ...);
DESCRIPTION¶
krb5_acl_match_file matches ACL format against each line
in a file. Lines starting with # are treated like comments and ignored.
krb5_acl_match_string matches ACL format
against a string.
The ACL format has three format specifiers: s, f, and r. Each specifier will retrieve one argument from the variable arguments for either matching or storing data. The input string is split up using " " and "\t" as a delimiter; multiple " " and "\t" in a row are considered to be the same.
- s
- Matches a string using strcmp(3) (case sensitive).
- f
- Matches the string with fnmatch(3). The flags argument (the last argument) passed to the fnmatch function is 0.
- r
- Returns a copy of the string in the char ** passed in; the copy must be
freed with free(3). There is no need to
free(3) the string on error: the function will clean up
and set the pointer to
NULL.
All unknown format specifiers cause an error.
EXAMPLES¶
char *s;
ret = krb5_acl_match_string(context, "foo", "s", "foo");
if (ret)
krb5_errx(context, 1, "acl didn't match");
ret = krb5_acl_match_string(context, "foo foo baz/kaka",
"ss", "foo", &s, "foo/*");
if (ret) {
/* no need to free(s) on error */
assert(s == NULL);
krb5_errx(context, 1, "acl didn't match");
}
free(s);
SEE ALSO¶
krb5(3)| May 12, 2006 | HEIMDAL |