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DACSRLINK(1) DACS Commands Manual DACSRLINK(1)

NAME

dacsrlink - create and administer rule links

SYNOPSIS

dacsrlink [dacsoptions[1]] op [arg...]

DESCRIPTION

This program is part of the DACS suite.

The dacsrlink command is used to create and manage specially constructed URLs called Rlinks (rule links). Briefly, an Rlink is a URL that includes a special component called an Rname. The Rname identifies a specific DACS access control rule that is to be used with the URL, disabling the usual ACL searching algorithm for the request. Although no searching for the rule is done, the named ACL must still exist and match the request, such as through a suitable url_pattern. As with any access control rule, arbitrary expressions can be evaluated before access to the URL is allowed (or denied), including client redirection.

An Rlink is handled by dacs_acs(8)[2] during authorization checking. Because ACL searching is not performed for the request, Rlink processing can be more efficient. While the syntax of these rules is identical to that of normal access rules (acl.dtd[3]), not administered by dacsacl(1)[4] and they are not indexed.

A given resource may be referenced by Rlinks with different Rnames. Each instance of an Rlink for the resource may therefore have different access rights or cause different side effects. Depending on the application, the creator of an Rlink may expect it to be kept secret by everyone that receives it, resulting in a weak (though often sufficient) method of access control.

There are many applications of Rlinks. They can be used to provide:

•identity-restricted access to a resource without having to create per-identity accounts; when the Rlink is invoked (optionally accompanied by a password bound to the URL), the identity is available to the access control rule and an invoked web service just as if "real" DACS credentials had been used;

•a convenient, user-friendly acknowledgement mechanism that has a weak degree of security; e.g., by creating a link that a user can click on to continue an account registration step or confirm reading a licensing agreement;

•a link that can be used for user tracking;

•a way to override or customize another rule without modifying the original rule;

•access to a resource with per-user constraints; e.g., to restrict access to a file or application for a particular user to a given time, date, or duration;

•a simple front end for creating ordinary access control rules.

A DACS identity may be attached to an Rlink through the command's rlink and rname operations. When an Rlink with an attached identity is used, that identity is available to dacs_acs[2] for access control purposes. There are two modes of attachment: direct and indirect. Identities for use with the direct mode are encrypted using the jurisdiction_keys item type (see dacskey(1)[5]); the program's user must therefore be able to read these keys. Changing these keys will invalidate all existing encrypted identities. Refer to the imode[6] flag for details.

The identity associated with an Rlink need not exist outside of its use by the Rlink.

The special, temporary credentials associated with an Rlink have the authentication style "rlink" (refer to user()[7] with the style keyword), but not passwd, even if a password is required to gain access to a resource.

For additional information, refer to the description of the RLINK[8] configuration directive and dacs_acs(8)[9].

OPTIONS

dacsrlink recognizes the standard dacsoptions[1], which are immediately followed by an operation name (op), various operation-dependent flags, and finally non-flag arguments. The -- flag can be used to terminate the operation-dependent list of flags. Flags that are not recognized by the selected operation are ignored. A rule is always syntax checked (as by dacsacl(1)[4]) before being written; if an error is found, the operation is aborted. Several flags are recognized by more than one operation.

By default, the virtual filestore item type rlinks specifies where Rlinks are stored. This can be overridden for most operations by giving the -vfs flag, which can specify a DACS URI, alternate item type, or absolute pathname.


Security

Access to the rules and to listings of their names must be restricted, otherwise Rnames could be revealed. Only a DACS administrator should be permitted to list, create, modify, delete, etc. rules. dacs_acs must be able to access the rules if Rlinks are enabled. Ensure that file permissions are set appropriately.

The optional -out flag is followed by a filename to which the rule should be written instead of a filestore. If "-" is given as the filename, the standard output is used.

The default alphabet used to generate Rnames can be overridden using the -ralpha flag; alpha, which follows the flag, is a character specification in the syntax of strtr()[10] (e.g., "a-zA-Z0-9", which is the default). The default length of an Rname can be overridden using the -rlen flag. Alternatively, some operations take a -rname flag that specifies the Rname to use.

The following op arguments are understood:

Perform a syntax check on the rule identified by rname to the standard output. If no error is found, an exit status of 0 is returned, otherwise an error message is produced and 1 is returned.
Create a new Rname that is virtually identical to that of rname (only the name differs). If the -rname flag is given, use rname as the Rname instead of generating one.


[{-a | -allow}name] [{-p password} | {-pf file}]...
[-palg alg-name] [-r redirect-URL] [-rname rname] [-ralpha alpha] [-rlen len]
[-expires {seconds | date}] path...

Create a new, enabled Rlink and write it to either the filestore, a specified file, or the standard output. The optional -a (or -allow) flag is followed by name, which is a string that will become the argument to the user()[11] function that will be called from the allow clause of the ACL that is created. Each name will therefore be granted access to each of the named path arguments, which are URI path components relative to the current jurisdiction.

A password that applies only to this user can optionally follow as the next argument using a -p or -pf flag; its hashed value will be embedded in the Rlink and compared against a hash of an argument named PASSWORD that must be submitted with the Rlink. If a -p or -pf flag precedes any -a (-allow) flag, however, it establishes a default password for all users specified later on the command line. The -pf flag is followed by a filename from which the password is read; if file is "-", the password is read from the standard input. A password may be specified even if no -a flag is present; the request will not have an identity bound to it but a valid PASSWORD argument must be provided. The -palg flag overrides the default password hashing algorithm (see password()[12]).

If the -rname flag is given, rname is used as the Rname instead of generating one. The -expires flag assigns an expires_expr attribute to the Rlink, which will render the Rlink invalid after the specified date. The flag is followed either by an unsigned integer, which is interpreted as a number of seconds in the future, or a date in one of the recognized formats[13].

If the -r flag appears, no usernames can be specified. An attempt to access any of the resources associated with the Rlink will cause the client to be redirected to redirect-URL, which may contain a properly encoded query component. This lets an Rlink serve as a "short link", akin to the services provided by bitly.com[14], TinyURL.com[15], and many others. Refer to the redirect()[16] function for additional information.


Note
Administrators should review the rule that is created. The show[17] operation can be used to display the rule and the edit[18] operation can be used to modify it.

Delete the Rname named rname in the selected filestore. This will effectively nullify all Rlinks that reference rname. To temporarily disable all Rlinks that reference an Rname, edit the rule and change its status attribute to disabled.
Interactively edit a copy of the rule named rname in the selected filestore. If the environment variable EDITOR is set, it is used as the name of the editor to use, otherwise the compile time symbol DEFAULT_EDITOR is used. When editing is completed, the rule is replaced with the edited copy, provided the new version is syntactically correct.
Decode and print rname-ident, an Rname with an identity component produced by the rlink or rname operations.
Print a listing of all Rnames in the selected filestore.
Emit an Rlink to the standard output that integrates rname into the uri according to link-mode. The link-mode is one of dacs_acs (or just acs), query, or path, representing the three general forms of an Rlink. If ident is specified, it describes a user in the concise user syntax[19] that is associated with the link. The ident may include an expiry date.

The -imode specifies whether a direct or indirect identity should be associated with the Rname, or whether there is none (the default). For direct, ident (specified by -i or -ident) is used; it describes an identity in the concise user syntax[19] that is associated with the link. For the indirect mode, a random identifier is generated (using the same algorithm selected for Rnames); if the -iptr flag is given, however, iptr is used as the identifier string.

If uri is a URI path component (i.e., it begins with a '/'), the configuration variable rlink_base_prefix must be defined; its value is prepended to the URI path.

Additional query arguments can be attached to the emitted link. If a password is required by the ACL for the resource, for example, a PASSWORD argument is required.

Implementation of query and path modes is incomplete, so URLs for those Rlinks must be generated manually.


[-rname rname]

This operation emits an Rname that satisfies the given constraints and prints it to the standard output. The Rname is suitable for use with the -rname flag. It does not create an ACL. This operation might be useful when Rlinks are created manually or using another program.

The -imode, -i, and -iptr flags are as described for the rlink operation.

Print the rule identified by rname to the standard output.

EXAMPLES

The following examples assume that the jurisdiction EXAMPLE includes the following configuration:

RLINK '"${Args::RNAME:?}" /usr/local/dacs/rlinks'
EVAL   ${Conf::rlink_base_prefix} = "https://www.example.com"
VFS    "[rlinks]file:///usr/local/dacs/rlinks"

These directives enable Rlink processing by dacs_acs(8)[2] and cause URLs generated by dacsrlink to be prefixed by https://www.example.com. ACLs that it creates will be stored as files in the /usr/local/dacs/rlinks directory.

This command creates an Rname called IRCl7p4Q, and associates it with the relative URL /cgi-bin/dacs/dacs_prenv. The Rname will expire in 300 seconds (relative to this jurisdiction's clock):

% dacsrlink -uj EXAMPLE create -expires 300 /cgi-bin/dacs/dacs_prenv
IRCl7p4Q

Once an Rname has been created, a URL can be generated that incorporates the Rname:

% dacsrlink -uj EXAMPLE rlink -lmode acs IRCl7p4Q /cgi-bin/dacs/dacs_prenv
https://www.example.com/cgi-bin/dacs/dacs_prenv?DACS_ACS=-rname+IRCl7p4Q

In this example, the Rname has been incorporated into the URL through the DACS_ACS argument[20].

To display the ACL for Rname IRCl7p4Q:

% dacsrlink -uj EXAMPLE show IRCl7p4Q
<acl_rule status="enabled" name="IRCl7p4Q" expires_expr='time(now) ge 1178917167'>

<services>
<service url_pattern="/cgi-bin/dacs/dacs_prenv"/>
</services>
<rule order="allow,deny">
<allow>
</allow>
</rule> </acl_rule>

Or, since the access control rule created by dacsrlink can be found in /usr/local/dacs/rlinks:

% cat /usr/local/dacs/rlinks/IRCl7p4Q

The default rule for dacs_prenv(8)[21] restricts access to a DACS administrator, but anyone who uses this Rlink before it expires will be granted access to dacs_prenv. This rule can be manually customized at anytime. Note that unlike ordinary access control rules, there is no index file for Rlinks.

Suppose Rname 8D8m5CTj is this ACL:

<acl_rule status="enabled" name="8D8m5CTj">

<services>
<service url_pattern="/cgi-bin/dacs/special"/>
</services>
<rule order="allow,deny">
<deny>
if (${Args::EMAIL} == "bob@example.com") {
redirect(BY_SIMPLE_REDIRECT, "http://dss.ca")
}
else {
redirect(BY_SIMPLE_REDIRECT, "http://metalogicsoftware.ca")
}
</deny>
</rule> </acl_rule>

While it is not required to use dacsrlink, a command like the following might be used to conveniently construct a URL:

% dacsrlink -uj EXAMPLE rlink -lmode acs 8D8m5CTj '/cgi-bin/dacs/special?EMAIL=bob@example.com'
http://www.example.com/cgi-bin/dacs/special?DACS_ACS=-rname+8D8m5CTj&EMAIL=bob@example.com

In this example, a user who submits the link would be redirected to http://dss.ca. As usual, a resource corresponding to the path /cgi-bin/dacs/special does not need to actually exist at the jurisdiction. This ACL can be generalized to examine the request and other context and perform arbitrary actions, perhaps by using an external program - see exec()[22]. A linkback[23] can be implemented in this way, for instance.

This command creates a rule that applies to two resources and grants access to two users:

% dacsrlink -uj EXAMPLE create -a :auggie -a :harley /private/a.html /private/b.html
7tW3SJou
% dacsrlink -uj EXAMPLE show 7tW3SJou
<acl_rule status="enabled" name="7tW3SJou">

<services>
<service url_pattern="/private/a.html"/>
<service url_pattern="/private/b.html"/>
</services>
<rule order="allow,deny">
<allow>
user(":auggie")
</allow>
<allow>
user(":harley")
</allow>
</rule> </acl_rule>

To generate URLs to give to these two users so that they can access these resource, commands like the following would be used:

% dacsrlink -uj EXAMPLE rlink -imode direct -i ":auggie" -lmode acs 7tW3SJou /private/a.html
https://www.example.com/private/a.html?DACS_ACS=-rname+7tW3SJou:HMGxWlccUihTtgbtJg
% dacsrlink -uj EXAMPLE rlink -imode direct -i ":harley" -lmode acs 7tW3SJou /private/b.html
https://www.example.com/private/b.html?DACS_ACS=-rname+7tW3SJou:qouYfT7pdwuLXHxodxE2

When the first of these links is invoked, it will appear as if EXAMPLE:auggie is accessing a.html. Since no expiration was specified for the identities or the resources, the two links will be valid indefinitely. The rule can be deleted at any time:

% dacsrlink -uj EXAMPLE delete 7tW3SJou

This demonstrates how to create a password-controlled link:

% dacsrlink -uj EXAMPLE create -a :auggie -p abracadabra /private/c.txt
rIPZaJeN
% dacsrlink -uj EXAMPLE show rIPZaJeN
<acl_rule status="enabled" name="rIPZaJeN">

<services>
<service url_pattern="/private/c.html"/>
</services>
<rule order="allow,deny">
<allow>
user(":auggie")
and password(check, ${Args::PASSWORD}, "2|XYZZYnahdnl3VtLqGtpbW|2GoDncq34p2EMO4PA5Uj6iWkFb9")
</allow>
</rule> </acl_rule> % dacsrlink -uj EXAMPLE rlink -imode direct -i :auggie -lmode acs rIPZaJeN /private/c.txt https://www.example.com/private/c.txt?DACS_ACS=-rname+rIPZaJeN:r6RdcTcmUyhTtgbtJg % dacshttp "https://www.example.com/private/c.txt?DACS_ACS=-rname+rIPZaJeN:r6RdcTcmUyhTtgbtJg&PASSWORD=abracadabra" Hello, world

DIAGNOSTICS

The program exits 0 if everything was fine, 1 if an error occurred.

SEE ALSO

dacs.acls(5)[24], dacs_acs(8)[2]

AUTHOR

Distributed Systems Software (www.dss.ca[25])

COPYING

Copyright © 2003-2014 Distributed Systems Software. See the LICENSE[26] file that accompanies the distribution for licensing information.

NOTES

1.
dacsoptions
2.
dacs_acs(8)
3.
acl.dtd
4.
dacsacl(1)
5.
dacskey(1)
6.
imode
7.
user()
8.
RLINK
9.
dacs_acs(8)
10.
strtr()
11.
user()
12.
password()
13.
recognized formats
14.
bitly.com
15.
TinyURL.com
16.
redirect()
17.
show
18.
edit
19.
concise user syntax
20.
DACS_ACS argument
21.
dacs_prenv(8)
22.
exec()
23.
linkback
24.
dacs.acls(5)
25.
www.dss.ca
26.
LICENSE
08/23/2020 DACS 1.4.40