remctl (3) - Linux Manuals
remctl: Simple remctl call to a remote server
NAME
remctl, remctl_result_free - Simple remctl call to a remote server
SYNOPSIS
#include <remctl.h>
struct remctl_result *
void remctl_result_free(struct remctl_result *result);
host is a hostname or IP address and must be non-NULL. port is the
port to connect to; if 0, the library first attempts to connect to the
registered port of 4373 and then tries the legacy port of 4444 if that
fails. Future versions of the library will drop this fallback to 4444.
principal is the service principal to use for authentication; if NULL,
"host/host" is used, with the realm determined by domain-realm
mapping. command is the command to run as a NULL-terminated array of
NUL-terminated strings.
If no principal is specified and the default is used, the underlying
GSS-API library may canonicalize host via DNS before determining the
service principal, depending on your library configuration. Specifying a
principal disables this behavior.
The remctl protocol uses Kerberos via GSS-API for authentication. The
underlying GSS-API library will use the default ticket cache for
authentication, so to successfully use remctl(), the caller should already
have Kerberos tickets for an appropriate realm stored in its default
ticket cache. The environment variable KRB5CCNAME can be used to control
which ticket cache is used. If the client needs to control which ticket
cache is used without changing the environment, use the full client API
along with remctl_set_ccache(3).
remctl() returns a newly allocated remctl_result struct, which has the
following members:
If error is non-NULL, a protocol error occurred and the command was not
successfully completed. Otherwise, standard output from the command will
be stored in stdout_buf with the length in stdout_len, standard error from
the command will be stored in stderr_buf with the length in stderr_len,
and status will hold the exit status of the command. Following the
standard Unix convention, a 0 status should normally be considered success
and any non-zero status should normally be considered failure, although a
given command may have its own exit status conventions.
remctl_result_free() frees the remctl_result struct when the calling
program is through with it.
If you want more control over the steps of the protocol, issue multiple
commands on the same connection, control the ticket cache or source IP,
set a timeout on replies, or send data as part of the command that
contains NULs, use the full API described in remctl_new(3),
remctl_open(3), remctl_commandv(3), and remctl_output(3).
The default port was changed to the IANA-registered port of 4373 in
version 2.11.
Support for IPv6 was added in version 2.4.
The canonicalization behavior is controlled by the GSS-API library; with
the MIT Kerberos GSS-API library, canonicalization can be disabled by
setting "rdns" to false in the [libdefaults] section of krb5.conf. It
can also be disabled by passing an explicit Kerberos principal name via
the principal argument, which will then be used without changes. If
canonicalization is desired, the caller may wish to canonicalize host
before calling remctl() to avoid problems with multiple DNS calls
returning different results.
The default behavior, when a port of 0 is given, of trying 4373 and
falling back to 4444 will be removed in a future version of this library
in favor of using the "remctl" service in /etc/services if set and
then falling back on only 4373. 4444 was the poorly-chosen original
remctl port and should be phased out.
Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are
permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and
this notice are preserved. This file is offered as-is, without any
warranty.
The current version of the remctl library and complete details of the
remctl protocol are available from its web page at
<http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/software/remctl/>.
DESCRIPTION
remctl() provides a simplified client API for the remctl protocol. Given
the host, port, service principal for authentication, and command to run,
it opens a connection to the remote system, sends the command via the
remctl protocol, reads the results, closes the connection, and returns the
result as a remctl_result struct.
struct remctl_result {
char *error; /* remctl error if non-NULL. */
char *stdout_buf; /* Standard output. */
size_t stdout_len; /* Length of standard output. */
char *stderr_buf; /* Standard error. */
size_t stderr_len; /* Length of standard error. */
int status; /* Exit status of remote command. */
};
RETURN VALUE
remctl() returns NULL on failure to allocate a new remctl_result struct or
on failure to allocate space to store an error message. Otherwise, it
returns a newly allocated remctl_result struct with either an error
message in the error field or the results of the command filled out as
described above. If remctl() returns NULL, errno will be set to an
appropriate error code (generally ENOMEM).
COMPATIBILITY
This interface has been provided by the remctl client library since its
initial release in version 2.0.
CAVEATS
If the principal argument to remctl() is NULL, most GSS-API libraries
will canonicalize the host using DNS before deriving the principal name
from it. This means that when connecting to a remctl server via a CNAME,
remctl() will normally authenticate using a principal based on the
canonical name of the host instead of the specified host parameter.
This behavior may cause problems if two consecutive DNS lookups of host
may return two different results, such as with some DNS-based
load-balancing systems.
NOTES
The remctl port number, 4373, was derived by tracing the diagonals of a
QWERTY keyboard up from the letters "remc" to the number row.
AUTHOR
Russ Allbery <eagle [at] eyrie.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2007, 2008, 2009, 2014 The Board of Trustees of the Leland
Stanford Junior University
SEE ALSO
remctl_new(3), remctl_open(3), remctl_command(3), remctl_commandv(3),
remctl_output(3), remctl_close(3)