This introduces two new CLI commands:
* otpconfig-show
* otpconfig-mod
https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/4511
Reviewed-By: Thierry Bordaz <tbordaz@redhat.com>
Reviewed-By: Petr Vobornik <pvoborni@redhat.com>
This plugin ensures that all counter/watermark operations are atomic
and never decrement. Also, deletion is not permitted.
Because this plugin also ensures internal operations behave properly,
this also gives ipa-pwd-extop the appropriate behavior for OTP
authentication.
https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/4493https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/4494
Reviewed-By: Thierry Bordaz <tbordaz@redhat.com>
Reviewed-By: Martin Kosek <mkosek@redhat.com>
This also constitutes a rethinking of the token ACIs after the introduction
of SELFDN support.
Admins, as before, have full access to all token permissions.
Normal users have read/search/compare access to all of the non-secret data
for tokens assigned to them, whether managed by them or not. Users can add
tokens if, and only if, they will also manage this token.
Managers can also read/search/compare tokens they manage. Additionally,
they can write non-secret data to their managed tokens and delete them.
When a normal user self-creates a token (the default behavior), then
managedBy is automatically set. When an admin creates a token for another
user (or no owner is assigned at all), then managed by is not set. In this
second case, the token is effectively read-only for the assigned owner.
This behavior enables two important other behaviors. First, an admin can
create a hardware token and assign it to the user as a read-only token.
Second, when the user is deleted, only his self-managed tokens are deleted.
All other (read-only) tokens are instead orphaned. This permits the same
token object to be reasigned to another user without loss of any counter
data.
https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/4228https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/4259
Reviewed-By: Jan Cholasta <jcholast@redhat.com>