/* SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2008 Nicola Gigante SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2009-2012 Dario Freddi SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later */ #ifndef KAUTH_ACTION_REPLY_H #define KAUTH_ACTION_REPLY_H #include "kauthcore_export.h" #include #include #include #include #include /** @namespace KAuth @section kauth_intro Introduction The KDE Authorization API allows developers to write desktop applications that run high-privileged tasks in an easy, secure and cross-platform way. Previously, if an application had to do administrative tasks, it had to be run as root, using mechanisms such as sudo or graphical equivalents, or by setting the executable's setuid bit. This approach has some drawbacks. For example, the whole application code, including GUI handling and network communication, had to be done as root. More code that runs as root means more possible security holes. The solution is the caller/helper pattern. With this pattern, the privileged code is isolated in a small helper tool that runs as root. This tool includes only the few lines of code that actually need to be run with privileges, not the whole application logic. All the other parts of the application are run as a normal user, and the helper tool is called when needed, using a secure mechanism that ensures that the user is authorized to do so. This pattern is not very easy to implement, because the developer has to deal with a lot of details about how to authorize the user, how to call the helper with the right privileges, how to exchange data with the helper, etc.. This is where the new KDE Authorization API becomes useful. Thanks to this new library, every developer can implement the caller/helper pattern to write application that require high privileges, with a few lines of code in an easy, secure and cross-platform way. Not only: the library can also be used to lock down some actions in your application without using a helper but just checking for authorization and verifying if the user is allowed to perform it. The KDE Authorization library uses different backends depending on the system where it's built. As far as the user authorization is concerned, it currently uses polkit-1 on linux and Authorization Services on Mac OSX, and a Windows backend will eventually be written, too. At the communication layer, the library uses D-Bus on every supported platform. @section kauth_concepts Concepts There are a few concepts to understand when using the library. Much of those are carried from underlying APIs such as polkit-1, so if you know something about them there shouldn't be problems. An action is a single task that needs to be done by the application. You refer to an action using an action identifier, which is a string in reverse domain name syntax (to avoid duplicates). For example, if the date/time control center module needs to change the date, it would need an action like "org.kde.datatime.change". If your application has to perform more than one privileged task, you should configure more than one action. This allows system administrators to fine tune the policies that allow users to perform your actions. The authorization is the process that is executed to decide if a user can perform an action or not. In order to execute the helper as root, the user has to be authorized. For example, on linux, che policykit backend will look at the policykit policy database to see what requirements the user has to meet in order to execute the action you requested. The policy set for that action could allow or deny that user, or could say the user has to authenticate in order to gain the authorization. The authentication is the process that allows the system to know that the person is in front of the console is who he says to be. If an action can be allowed or not depending on the user's identity, it has to be proved by entering a password or any other identification data the system requires. A typical session with the authorization API is like this: - The user want to perform some privileged task - The application asks the system if the user is authorized. - The system asks the user to authenticate, if needed, and reply the application. - The application uses some system-provided mechanism to execute the helper's code as the root user. Previously, you had to set the setuid bit to do this, but we have something cool called "D-Bus activation" that doesn't require the setuid bit and is much more flexible. - The helper code, immediately after starting, checks if the caller is authorized to do what it asks. If not the helper immediately exits! - If the caller is authorized, the helper executes the task and exits. - The application receives data back from the helper. All these steps are managed by the library. Following sections will focus on how to write the helper to implement your actions and how to call the helper from the application. @section kauth_helper Writing the helper tool The first thing you need to do before writing anything is to decide what actions you need to implement. Every action needs to be identified by a string in the reverse domain name syntax. This helps to avoid duplicates. An example of action id is "org.kde.datetime.change" or "org.kde.ksysguard.killprocess". Action names can only contain lowercase letters and dots (not as the first or last char). You also need an identifier for your helper. An application using the KDE auth api can implement and use more than one helper, implementing different actions. An helper is uniquely identified in the system context with a string. It, again, is in reverse domain name syntax to avoid duplicates. A common approach is to call the helper like the common prefix of your action names. For example, the Date/Time kcm module could use a helper called "org.kde.datetime", to perform actions like "org.kde.datetime.changedate" and "org.kde.datetime.changetime". This naming convention simplifies the implementation of the helper. From the code point of view, the helper is implemented as a QObject subclass. Every action is implemented by a public slot. In the example/ directory in the source code tree you find a complete example. Let's look at that. The helper.h file declares the class that implements the helper. It looks like: @snippet helper.cpp helper_declaration The slot names are the last part of the action name, without the helper's ID if it's a prefix, with all the dots replaced by underscores. In this case, the helper ID is "org.kde.kf6auth.example", so those three slots implement the actions "org.kde.kf6auth.example.read", "org.kde.kf6auth.example.write" and "org.kde.kf6auth.example.longaction". The helper ID doesn't have to appear at the beginning of the action name, but it's good practice. If you want to extend MyHelper to implement also a different action like "org.kde.datetime.changetime", since the helper ID doesn't match you'll have to implement a slot called org_kde_datetime_changetime(). The slot's signature is fixed: the return type is ActionReply, a class that allows you to return results, error codes and custom data to the application when your action has finished to run. Let's look at the read action implementation. Its purpose is to read files: @snippet helper.cpp helper_read_action First, the code creates a default reply object. The default constructor creates a reply that reports success. Then it gets the filename parameter from the argument QVariantMap, that has previously been set by the application, before calling the helper. If it fails to open the file, it creates an ActionReply object that notifies that some error has happened in the helper, then set the error code to that returned by QFile and returns. If there is no error, it reads the file. The contents are added to the reply. Because this class will be compiled into a standalone executable, we need a main() function and some code to initialize everything: you don't have to write it. Instead, you use the KAUTH_HELPER_MAIN() macro that will take care of everything. It's used like this: @snippet helper.cpp helper_main The first parameter is the string containing the helper identifier. Please note that you need to use this same string in the application's code to tell the library which helper to call, so please stay away from typos, because we don't have any way to detect them. The second parameter is the name of the helper's class. Your helper, if complex, can be composed of a lot of source files, but the important thing is to include this macro in at least one of them. To build the helper, KDE macros provide a function named kauth_install_helper_files(). Use it in your cmake file like this: @code add_executable( your sources...) target_link_libraries( your libraries...) install(TARGETS DESTINATION ${KAUTH_HELPER_INSTALL_DIR}) kauth_install_helper_files( ) @endcode As locale is not inherited, the auth helper will have the text codec explicitly set to use UTF-8. The first argument is the cmake target name for the helper executable, which you have to build and install separately. Make sure to INSTALL THE HELPER IN @c ${KAUTH_HELPER_INSTALL_DIR}, otherwise @c kauth_install_helper_files will not work. The second argument is the helper id. Please be sure to don't misspell it, and to not quote it. The user parameter is the user that the helper has to be run as. It usually is root, but some actions could require less strict permissions, so you should use the right user where possible (for example the user apache if you have to mess with apache settings). Note that the target created by this macro already links to libkauth and QtCore. @section kauth_actions Action registration To be able to authorize the actions, they have to be added to the policy database. To do this in a cross-platform way, we provide a cmake macro. It looks like: @code kauth_install_actions( ) @endcode The action definition file describes which actions are implemented by your code and which default security options they should have. It is a common text file in ini format, with one section for each action and some parameters. The definition for the read action is: @verbatim [org.kde.kf6auth.example.read] Name=Read action Description=Read action description Policy=auth_admin Persistence=session @endverbatim The name parameter is a text describing the action for who reads the file. The description parameter is the message shown to the user in the authentication dialog. It should be a finite phrase. The policy attribute specify the default rule that the user must satisfy to be authorized. Possible values are: - yes: the action should be always allowed - no: the action should be always denied - auth_self: the user should authenticate as itself - auth_admin: the user should authenticate as an administrator user The persistence attribute is optional. It says how long an authorization should be retained for that action. The values could be: - session: the authorization persists until the user logs-out - always: the authorization will persist indefinitely If this attribute is missing, the authorization will be queried every time. @note Only the PolicyKit and polkit-1 backends use this attribute. @warning With the polkit-1 backend, 'session' and 'always' have the same meaning. They just make the authorization persists for a few minutes. @section kauth_app Calling the helper from the application Once the helper is ready, we need to call it from the main application. In examples/client.cpp you can see how this is done. To create a reference to an action, an object of type Action has to be created. Every Action object refers to an action by its action id. Two objects with the same action id will act on the same action. With an Action object, you can authorize and execute the action. To execute an action you need to retrieve an ExecuteJob, which is a standard KJob that you can run synchronously or asynchronously. See the KJob documentation (from KCoreAddons) for more details. The piece of code that calls the action of the previous example is: @snippet client.cpp client_how_to_call_helper First of all, it creates the action object specifying the action id. Then it loads the filename (we want to read a forbidden file) into the arguments() QVariantMap, which will be directly passed to the helper in the read() slot's parameter. This example code uses a synchronous call to execute the action and retrieve the reply. If the reply succeeded, the reply data is retrieved from the returned QVariantMap object. Please note that you have to explicitly set the helper ID to the action: this is done for added safety, to prevent the caller from accidentally invoking a helper, and also because KAuth actions may be used without a helper attached (the default). Please note that if your application is calling the helper multiple times it must do so from the same thread. @section kauth_async Asynchronous calls, data reporting, and action termination For a more advanced example, we look at the action "org.kde.kf6auth.example.longaction" in the example helper. This is an action that takes a long time to execute, so we need some features: - The helper needs to regularly send data to the application, to inform about the execution status. - The application needs to be able to stop the action execution if the user stops it or close the application. The example code follows: @snippet helper.cpp helper_longaction In this example, the action is only waiting a "long" time using a loop, but we can see some interesting line. The progress status is sent to the application using the HelperSupport::progressStep(int) and HelperSupport::progressStep(const QVariantMap &) methods. When those methods are called, the HelperProxy associated with this action will emit the HelperProxy::progressStep(const QString &, int) and HelperProxy::progressStepData(const QString &, const QVariantMap &) signals, respectively, reporting back the data to the application. The method that takes an integer argument is the one used here. Its meaning is application dependent, so you can use it as a sort of percentage. If you want to report custom data back to the application, you can use the other method that takes a QVariantMap object which is directly passed to the app. In this example code, the loop exits when the HelperSupport::isStopped() returns true. This happens when the application calls the HelperProxy::stopAction() method on the corresponding action object. The stopAction() method, this way, asks the helper to stop the action execution. It's up to the helper to obbey to this request, and if it does so, it should return from the slot, _not_ exit. @section kauth_other Other features It doesn't happen very frequently that you code something that doesn't require some debugging, and you'll need some tool, even a basic one, to debug your helper code as well. For this reason, the KDE Authorization library provides a message handler for the Qt debugging system. This means that every call to qDebug() & co. will be reported to the application, and printed using the same qt debugging system, with the same debug level. If, in the helper code, you write something like: @code qDebug() << "I'm in the helper"; @endcode You'll see something like this in the application's output: @verbatim Debug message from the helper: I'm in the helper @endverbatim Remember that the debug level is preserved, so if you use qFatal() you won't only abort the helper (which isn't suggested anyway), but also the application. */ namespace KAuth { class ActionReplyData; /** * @class ActionReply actionreply.h * * @brief Class that encapsulates a reply coming from the helper after executing * an action * * Helper applications will return this to describe the result of the action. * * Callers should access the reply though the KAuth::ExecuteJob job. * * @since 4.4 */ class KAUTHCORE_EXPORT ActionReply { public: /** * Enumeration of the different kinds of replies. */ enum Type { KAuthErrorType, ///< An error reply generated by the library itself. HelperErrorType, ///< An error reply generated by the helper. SuccessType, ///< The action has been completed successfully }; static const ActionReply SuccessReply(); ///< An empty successful reply. Same as using the default constructor static const ActionReply HelperErrorReply(); ///< An empty reply with type() == HelperError and errorCode() == -1 static const ActionReply HelperErrorReply(int error); ///< An empty reply with type() == HelperError and error is set to the passed value static const ActionReply NoResponderReply(); ///< errorCode() == NoResponder static const ActionReply NoSuchActionReply(); ///< errorCode() == NoSuchAction static const ActionReply InvalidActionReply(); ///< errorCode() == InvalidAction static const ActionReply AuthorizationDeniedReply(); ///< errorCode() == AuthorizationDenied static const ActionReply UserCancelledReply(); ///< errorCode() == UserCancelled static const ActionReply HelperBusyReply(); ///< errorCode() == HelperBusy static const ActionReply AlreadyStartedReply(); ///< errorCode() == AlreadyStartedError static const ActionReply DBusErrorReply(); ///< errorCode() == DBusError /** * The enumeration of the possible values of errorCode() when type() is ActionReply::KAuthError */ enum Error { NoError = 0, ///< No error. NoResponderError, ///< The helper responder object hasn't been set. This shouldn't happen if you use the KAUTH_HELPER macro in the helper source NoSuchActionError, ///< The action you tried to execute doesn't exist. InvalidActionError, ///< You tried to execute an invalid action object AuthorizationDeniedError, ///< You don't have the authorization to execute the action UserCancelledError, ///< Action execution has been cancelled by the user HelperBusyError, ///< The helper is busy executing another action (or group of actions). Try later AlreadyStartedError, ///< The action was already started and is currently running DBusError, ///< An error from D-Bus occurred BackendError, ///< The underlying backend reported an error }; /// Default constructor. Sets type() to Success and errorCode() to zero. ActionReply(); /** * @brief Constructor to directly set the type. * * This constructor directly sets the reply type. You shouldn't need to * directly call this constructor, because you can use the more convenient * predefined replies constants. You also shouldn't create a reply with * the KAuthError type because it's reserved for errors coming from the * library. * * @param type The type of the new reply */ ActionReply(Type type); /** * @brief Constructor that creates a KAuthError reply with a specified error code. * Do not use outside the library. * * This constructor is for internal use only, since it creates a reply * with KAuthError type, which is reserved for errors coming from the library. * * @param errorCode The error code of the new reply */ ActionReply(int errorCode); /// Copy constructor ActionReply(const ActionReply &reply); /// Virtual destructor virtual ~ActionReply(); /** * @brief Sets the custom data to send back to the application * * In the helper's code you can use this function to set an QVariantMap * with custom data that will be sent back to the application. * * @param data The new QVariantMap object. */ void setData(const QVariantMap &data); /** * @brief Returns the custom data coming from the helper. * * This method is used to get the object that contains the custom * data coming from the helper. In the helper's code, you can set it * using setData() or the convenience method addData(). * * @return The data coming from (or that will be sent by) the helper */ QVariantMap data() const; /** * @brief Convenience method to add some data to the reply. * * This method adds the pair @c key/value to the QVariantMap used to * report back custom data to the application. * * Use this method if you don't want to create a new QVariantMap only to * add a new entry. * * @param key The new entry's key * @param value The value of the new entry */ void addData(const QString &key, const QVariant &value); /// Returns the reply's type Type type() const; /** * @brief Sets the reply type * * Every time you create an action reply, you implicitly set a type. * Default constructed replies or ActionReply::SuccessReply have * type() == Success. * ActionReply::HelperErrorReply has type() == HelperError. * Predefined error replies have type() == KAuthError. * * This means you rarely need to change the type after the creation, * but if you need to, don't set it to KAuthError, because it's reserved * for errors coming from the library. * * @param type The new reply type */ void setType(Type type); /// Returns true if type() == Success bool succeeded() const; /// Returns true if type() != Success bool failed() const; /** * @brief Returns the error code of an error reply * * The error code returned is one of the values in the ActionReply::Error * enumeration if type() == KAuthError, or is totally application-dependent if * type() == HelperError. It also should be zero for successful replies. * * @return The reply error code */ int error() const; /** * @brief Returns the error code of an error reply * * The error code returned is one of the values in the ActionReply::Error * enumeration if type() == KAuthError. * Result is only valid if the type() == HelperError * * @return The reply error code */ Error errorCode() const; /** * @brief Sets the error code of an error reply * * If you're setting the error code in the helper because * you need to return an error to the application, please make sure * you already have set the type to HelperError, either by calling * setType() or by creating the reply in the right way. * * If the type is Success when you call this method, it will become KAuthError * * @param error The new reply error code */ void setError(int error); /** * @brief Sets the error code of an error reply * * @see * If you're setting the error code in the helper, use setError(int) * * If the type is Success when you call this method, it will become KAuthError * * @param errorCode The new reply error code */ void setErrorCode(Error errorCode); /** * @brief Gets a human-readble description of the error, if available * * Currently, replies of type KAuthError rarely report an error description. * This situation could change in the future. * * By now, you can use this method for custom errors of type HelperError. * * @return The error human-readable description */ QString errorDescription() const; /** * @brief Sets a human-readble description of the error * * Call this method from the helper if you want to send back a description for * a custom error. Note that this method doesn't affect the errorCode in any way * * @param error The new error description */ void setErrorDescription(const QString &error); /** * @brief Serialize the reply into a QByteArray. * * This is a convenience method used internally to sent the reply to a remote peer. * To recreate the reply, use deserialize() * * @return A QByteArray representation of this reply */ QByteArray serialized() const; /** * @brief Deserialize a reply from a QByteArray * * This method returns a reply from a QByteArray obtained from * the serialized() method. * * @param data A QByteArray obtained with serialized() */ static ActionReply deserialize(const QByteArray &data); /// Assignment operator ActionReply &operator=(const ActionReply &reply); /** * @brief Comparison operator * * This operator checks if the type and the error code of two replies are the same. * It doesn't compare the data or the error descriptions, so be careful. * * The suggested use is to compare a reply against one of the predefined error replies: * @code * if(reply == ActionReply::HelperBusyReply) { * // Do something... * } * @endcode * * Note that you can do it also by compare errorCode() with the relative enumeration value. */ bool operator==(const ActionReply &reply) const; /** * @brief Negated comparison operator * * See the operator==() for an important notice. */ bool operator!=(const ActionReply &reply) const; private: QSharedDataPointer d; }; } // namespace Auth Q_DECLARE_METATYPE(KAuth::ActionReply) #endif