dwww Home | Manual pages | Find package

session-keyring(7)      Miscellaneous Information Manual     session-keyring(7)

NAME
       session-keyring - session shared process keyring

DESCRIPTION
       The  session  keyring  is  a  keyring used to anchor keys on behalf of a
       process.  It is typically created by pam_keyinit(8) when a user logs  in
       and  a  link  will be added that refers to the user-keyring(7).  Option-
       ally, PAM(7) may revoke the session keyring on logout.  (In typical con-
       figurations, PAM does do this revocation.)  The session keyring has  the
       name (description) _ses.

       A special serial number value, KEY_SPEC_SESSION_KEYRING, is defined that
       can be used in lieu of the actual serial number of the calling process's
       session keyring.

       From the keyctl(1) utility, '@s' can be used instead of a numeric key ID
       in much the same way.

       A  process's  session keyring is inherited across clone(2), fork(2), and
       vfork(2).  The session keyring is preserved across execve(2), even  when
       the  executable is set-user-ID or set-group-ID or has capabilities.  The
       session keyring is destroyed when the last process that refers to it ex-
       its.

       If a process doesn't have a session keyring when it is  accessed,  then,
       under  certain  circumstances,  the  user-session-keyring(7) will be at-
       tached as the session keyring and under others  a  new  session  keyring
       will be created.  (See user-session-keyring(7) for further details.)

   Special operations
       The  keyutils  library provides the following special operations for ma-
       nipulating session keyrings:

       keyctl_join_session_keyring(3)
              This operation allows the caller to change  the  session  keyring
              that  it  subscribes to.  The caller can join an existing keyring
              with a specified name (description), create a new keyring with  a
              given name, or ask the kernel to create a new "anonymous" session
              keyring  with the name "_ses".  (This function is an interface to
              the keyctl(2) KEYCTL_JOIN_SESSION_KEYRING operation.)

       keyctl_session_to_parent(3)
              This operation allows the caller to  make  the  parent  process's
              session keyring to the same as its own.  For this to succeed, the
              parent  process  must have identical security attributes and must
              be single threaded.   (This  function  is  an  interface  to  the
              keyctl(2) KEYCTL_SESSION_TO_PARENT operation.)

       These operations are also exposed through the keyctl(1) utility as:

           keyctl session
           keyctl session - [<prog> <arg1> <arg2> ...]
           keyctl session <name> [<prog> <arg1> <arg2> ...]

       and:

           keyctl new_session

SEE ALSO
       keyctl(1), keyctl(3), keyctl_join_session_keyring(3),
       keyctl_session_to_parent(3), keyrings(7), PAM(7), persistent-keyring(7),
       process-keyring(7), thread-keyring(7), user-keyring(7),
       user-session-keyring(7), pam_keyinit(8)

Linux man-pages 6.9.1              2024-05-02                session-keyring(7)

Generated by dwww version 1.16 on Tue Dec 16 04:59:48 CET 2025.