dwww Home | Manual pages | Find package

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

NAME
       thread-keyring - per-thread keyring

DESCRIPTION
       The  thread  keyring  is  a  keyring  used to anchor keys on behalf of a
       process.  It is created only when a  thread  requests  it.   The  thread
       keyring has the name (description) _tid.

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

       From the keyctl(1) utility, '@t' can be used instead of a numeric key ID
       in  much  the same way, but as keyctl(1) is a program run after forking,
       this is of no utility.

       Thread keyrings are not inherited across clone(2) and  fork(2)  and  are
       cleared  by  execve(2).   A  thread keyring is destroyed when the thread
       that refers to it terminates.

       Initially, a thread does not have a thread keyring.  If a thread doesn't
       have a thread keyring when it is accessed, then it will be created if it
       is to be modified; otherwise the operation fails with the error ENOKEY.

SEE ALSO
       keyctl(1), keyctl(3), keyrings(7), persistent-keyring(7),
       process-keyring(7), session-keyring(7), user-keyring(7),
       user-session-keyring(7)

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

Generated by dwww version 1.16 on Tue Dec 16 04:15:26 CET 2025.