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/* This file is part of the KDE libraries
Copyright (C) 2001-2002 Michael Häckel <haeckel@kde.org>
$Id$
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public
License version 2 as published by the Free Software Foundation.
This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License
along with this library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If not, write to
the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
*/
#ifndef TDESASL_H
#define TDESASL_H
#include <tqstring.h>
#include <tdelibs_export.h>
class KURL;
class TQStrIList;
/**
* This library can create responses for SASL authentication for a given
* challenge and a given secret. This way of authentication is common for
* SMTP, POP3, IMAP and LDAP.
*
* SASL is one way strong encryption and therefore useful for authentication,
* but not for secret information transfer.
* It is possibly to prove with SASL to know a shared secret like a password.
* It is not possible with SASL to transfer any other information in an
* encrypted way. For that purpose OpenPGP or SSL are useful.
*
* Currently PLAIN (RFC 2595), LOGIN (not really a SASL mechanism, but
* used like that in IMAP and SMTP), CRAM-MD5 (RFC 2195) and
* DIGEST-MD5 (RFC 2831) authentication are supported. PLAIN and
* LOGIN transmit the credentials in the clear (apart from a possible
* base64 encoding).
*
* For KDE 3.2, the API has been extended to allow transparent use of
* all currently supported SASL mechanisms. Example:
* \code
* KDESasl sasl( myUser, myPass, myProtocol );
* if ( !sasl.chooseMethod( myMechanismsSupportedByServer ) )
* return false; // couldn't agree on a method
*
* int numResponses = 0;
* if ( sasl.clientStarts() ) { // check whether we're supposed to start the dialog
* ++numResponses;
* mySendAuthCommand( sasl.method(), sasl.getResponse() );
* } else {
* mySendAuthCommand( sasl.method() );
* }
* for ( ; !sasl.dialogComplete( numResponses ) ; ++numResponses ) {
* TQByteArray challenge = myRecvChallenge();
* mySendResponse( sasl.getResponse( challenge ) );
* }
* return myCheckSuccess();
* \endcode
*
* @author Michael Häckel <haeckel@kde.org>
* @version $Id$
*/
class KIO_EXPORT KDESasl
{
public:
/**
* Construct a sasl object and initialize it with the username and password
* passed via the url.
*/
KDESasl(const KURL &aUrl);
/**
* This is a conveniece function and differs from the above function only by
* what arguments it accepts.
*/
KDESasl(const TQString &aUser, const TQString &aPass, const TQString &aProtocol);
/*
* You need to have a virtual destructor!
*/
virtual ~KDESasl();
/**
* @returns the most secure method from the given methods and use it for
* further operations.
*/
virtual TQCString chooseMethod(const TQStrIList aMethods);
/**
* Explicitely set the SASL method used.
*/
virtual void setMethod(const TQCString &aMethod);
/**
* @return the SASL method used.
* @since 3.2
*/
TQCString method() const;
/**
* @param numCalls number of times getResponse() has been called.
* @return whether the challenge/response dialog has completed
*
* @since 3.2
*/
bool dialogComplete( int numCalls ) const;
/**
* @return whether the currently selected mechanism results in
* cleartext passwords being sent over the network and thus should
* be used only under TLS/SSL cover or for legacy servers.
*
* @since 3.2
*/
bool isClearTextMethod() const;
/**
* Creates a response using the formerly chosen SASL method.
* For LOGIN authentication you have to call this function twice. KDESasl
* realizes on its own, if you are calling it for the first or for the
* second time.
* @param aChallenge is the challenge sent to create a response for
* @param aBase64 specifies, whether the authentication protocol uses base64
* encoding. The challenge is decoded from base64 and the response is
* encoded base64 if set to true.
*/
TQCString getResponse(const TQByteArray &aChallenge=TQByteArray(), bool aBase64 = true);
/**
* Create a response as above but place it in a QByteArray
*/
TQByteArray getBinaryResponse(const TQByteArray &aChallenge=TQByteArray(), bool aBase64=true);
/**
* Returns true if the client is supposed to initiate the
* challenge-respinse dialog with an initial response (which most
* protocols can transfer alongside the authentication command as an
* optional second parameter). This method relieves the sasl user
* from knowing details about the mechanism. If true, use
* #getResponse() with a null challenge.
*
* @since 3.2
*/
bool clientStarts() const;
protected:
/**
* PLAIN authentication as described in RFC 2595
*/
virtual TQByteArray getPlainResponse();
/**
* LOGIN authentication
*/
virtual TQByteArray getLoginResponse();
/**
* CRAM-MD5 authentication as described in RFC 2195
*/
virtual TQByteArray getCramMd5Response(const TQByteArray &aChallenge);
/**
* DIGEST-MD5 authentication as described in RFC 2831
*/
virtual TQByteArray getDigestMd5Response(const TQByteArray &aChallenge);
private:
TQString mProtocol, mUser, mPass;
TQCString mMethod;
bool mFirst;
};
#endif
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