postgresql/src/backend/libpq/crypt.c

291 lines
7.6 KiB
C

/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* crypt.c
* Functions for dealing with encrypted passwords stored in
* pg_authid.rolpassword.
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2019, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
* src/backend/libpq/crypt.c
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#include "postgres.h"
#include <unistd.h>
#include "catalog/pg_authid.h"
#include "common/md5.h"
#include "common/scram-common.h"
#include "libpq/crypt.h"
#include "libpq/scram.h"
#include "miscadmin.h"
#include "utils/builtins.h"
#include "utils/syscache.h"
#include "utils/timestamp.h"
/*
* Fetch stored password for a user, for authentication.
*
* On error, returns NULL, and stores a palloc'd string describing the reason,
* for the postmaster log, in *logdetail. The error reason should *not* be
* sent to the client, to avoid giving away user information!
*/
char *
get_role_password(const char *role, char **logdetail)
{
TimestampTz vuntil = 0;
HeapTuple roleTup;
Datum datum;
bool isnull;
char *shadow_pass;
/* Get role info from pg_authid */
roleTup = SearchSysCache1(AUTHNAME, PointerGetDatum(role));
if (!HeapTupleIsValid(roleTup))
{
*logdetail = psprintf(_("Role \"%s\" does not exist."),
role);
return NULL; /* no such user */
}
datum = SysCacheGetAttr(AUTHNAME, roleTup,
Anum_pg_authid_rolpassword, &isnull);
if (isnull)
{
ReleaseSysCache(roleTup);
*logdetail = psprintf(_("User \"%s\" has no password assigned."),
role);
return NULL; /* user has no password */
}
shadow_pass = TextDatumGetCString(datum);
datum = SysCacheGetAttr(AUTHNAME, roleTup,
Anum_pg_authid_rolvaliduntil, &isnull);
if (!isnull)
vuntil = DatumGetTimestampTz(datum);
ReleaseSysCache(roleTup);
/*
* Password OK, but check to be sure we are not past rolvaliduntil
*/
if (!isnull && vuntil < GetCurrentTimestamp())
{
*logdetail = psprintf(_("User \"%s\" has an expired password."),
role);
return NULL;
}
return shadow_pass;
}
/*
* What kind of a password type is 'shadow_pass'?
*/
PasswordType
get_password_type(const char *shadow_pass)
{
char *encoded_salt;
int iterations;
uint8 stored_key[SCRAM_KEY_LEN];
uint8 server_key[SCRAM_KEY_LEN];
if (strncmp(shadow_pass, "md5", 3) == 0 &&
strlen(shadow_pass) == MD5_PASSWD_LEN &&
strspn(shadow_pass + 3, MD5_PASSWD_CHARSET) == MD5_PASSWD_LEN - 3)
return PASSWORD_TYPE_MD5;
if (parse_scram_secret(shadow_pass, &iterations, &encoded_salt,
stored_key, server_key))
return PASSWORD_TYPE_SCRAM_SHA_256;
return PASSWORD_TYPE_PLAINTEXT;
}
/*
* Given a user-supplied password, convert it into a secret of
* 'target_type' kind.
*
* If the password is already in encrypted form, we cannot reverse the
* hash, so it is stored as it is regardless of the requested type.
*/
char *
encrypt_password(PasswordType target_type, const char *role,
const char *password)
{
PasswordType guessed_type = get_password_type(password);
char *encrypted_password;
if (guessed_type != PASSWORD_TYPE_PLAINTEXT)
{
/*
* Cannot convert an already-encrypted password from one format to
* another, so return it as it is.
*/
return pstrdup(password);
}
switch (target_type)
{
case PASSWORD_TYPE_MD5:
encrypted_password = palloc(MD5_PASSWD_LEN + 1);
if (!pg_md5_encrypt(password, role, strlen(role),
encrypted_password))
elog(ERROR, "password encryption failed");
return encrypted_password;
case PASSWORD_TYPE_SCRAM_SHA_256:
return pg_be_scram_build_secret(password);
case PASSWORD_TYPE_PLAINTEXT:
elog(ERROR, "cannot encrypt password with 'plaintext'");
}
/*
* This shouldn't happen, because the above switch statements should
* handle every combination of source and target password types.
*/
elog(ERROR, "cannot encrypt password to requested type");
return NULL; /* keep compiler quiet */
}
/*
* Check MD5 authentication response, and return STATUS_OK or STATUS_ERROR.
*
* 'shadow_pass' is the user's correct password or password hash, as stored
* in pg_authid.rolpassword.
* 'client_pass' is the response given by the remote user to the MD5 challenge.
* 'md5_salt' is the salt used in the MD5 authentication challenge.
*
* In the error case, optionally store a palloc'd string at *logdetail
* that will be sent to the postmaster log (but not the client).
*/
int
md5_crypt_verify(const char *role, const char *shadow_pass,
const char *client_pass,
const char *md5_salt, int md5_salt_len,
char **logdetail)
{
int retval;
char crypt_pwd[MD5_PASSWD_LEN + 1];
Assert(md5_salt_len > 0);
if (get_password_type(shadow_pass) != PASSWORD_TYPE_MD5)
{
/* incompatible password hash format. */
*logdetail = psprintf(_("User \"%s\" has a password that cannot be used with MD5 authentication."),
role);
return STATUS_ERROR;
}
/*
* Compute the correct answer for the MD5 challenge.
*
* We do not bother setting logdetail for any pg_md5_encrypt failure
* below: the only possible error is out-of-memory, which is unlikely, and
* if it did happen adding a psprintf call would only make things worse.
*/
/* stored password already encrypted, only do salt */
if (!pg_md5_encrypt(shadow_pass + strlen("md5"),
md5_salt, md5_salt_len,
crypt_pwd))
{
return STATUS_ERROR;
}
if (strcmp(client_pass, crypt_pwd) == 0)
retval = STATUS_OK;
else
{
*logdetail = psprintf(_("Password does not match for user \"%s\"."),
role);
retval = STATUS_ERROR;
}
return retval;
}
/*
* Check given password for given user, and return STATUS_OK or STATUS_ERROR.
*
* 'shadow_pass' is the user's correct password hash, as stored in
* pg_authid.rolpassword.
* 'client_pass' is the password given by the remote user.
*
* In the error case, optionally store a palloc'd string at *logdetail
* that will be sent to the postmaster log (but not the client).
*/
int
plain_crypt_verify(const char *role, const char *shadow_pass,
const char *client_pass,
char **logdetail)
{
char crypt_client_pass[MD5_PASSWD_LEN + 1];
/*
* Client sent password in plaintext. If we have an MD5 hash stored, hash
* the password the client sent, and compare the hashes. Otherwise
* compare the plaintext passwords directly.
*/
switch (get_password_type(shadow_pass))
{
case PASSWORD_TYPE_SCRAM_SHA_256:
if (scram_verify_plain_password(role,
client_pass,
shadow_pass))
{
return STATUS_OK;
}
else
{
*logdetail = psprintf(_("Password does not match for user \"%s\"."),
role);
return STATUS_ERROR;
}
break;
case PASSWORD_TYPE_MD5:
if (!pg_md5_encrypt(client_pass,
role,
strlen(role),
crypt_client_pass))
{
/*
* We do not bother setting logdetail for pg_md5_encrypt
* failure: the only possible error is out-of-memory, which is
* unlikely, and if it did happen adding a psprintf call would
* only make things worse.
*/
return STATUS_ERROR;
}
if (strcmp(crypt_client_pass, shadow_pass) == 0)
return STATUS_OK;
else
{
*logdetail = psprintf(_("Password does not match for user \"%s\"."),
role);
return STATUS_ERROR;
}
break;
case PASSWORD_TYPE_PLAINTEXT:
/*
* We never store passwords in plaintext, so this shouldn't
* happen.
*/
break;
}
/*
* This shouldn't happen. Plain "password" authentication is possible
* with any kind of stored password hash.
*/
*logdetail = psprintf(_("Password of user \"%s\" is in unrecognized format."),
role);
return STATUS_ERROR;
}