** Description changed: + This is fixed in krb5 1.15-2 in artful + + Upstream bug : http://krbdev.mit.edu/rt/Ticket/Display.html?id=8554 + Debian bug: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=856307 + Debian patch in 1.15-2 in artful: 0013-Fix-udp_preference_limit-with-SRV-records.patch + + TL;DR + kinit does not respect udp_preference_limit and always uses TCP to talk to the KDC when using the DNS SRV records to locate the service and these records show udp and tcp entries. + + Steps to reproduce on zesty, with all services on one machine for + simplicity (I suggest to use LXD): + + a) install the packages from zesty (not the proposed ones yet): + $ sudo apt install krb5-kdc krb5-admin-server bind9 + + When prompted for the realm, choose EXAMPLE.COM + When prompted for the KDC and Admin services server address, use the IP of your test machine/container (not localhost or 127.0.0.1) + The KDC will fail to start because there is no realm yet, that's not relevant for this bug. + + b) Edit /etc/krb5.conf and make the following changes: + - remove the "default_realm" line from the [libdefaults] section + - remove the EXAMPLE.COM realm block from the [realms] section + - add "dns_lookup_realm = true" to the [libdefaults] section + - add "dns_lookup_kdc = true" to the [libdefaults] section + - add "udp_preference_limit = 1" to the [libdefaults] section + + c) Edit /etc/bind/named.conf.local and add this zone block (for simplicity, we are skipping the reverse zone): + zone "example.com" { + type master; + file "/etc/bind/db.example.com"; + }; + + d) Create /etc/bind/db.example.com with this content: + $TTL 604800 + @ IN SOA example.com. ubuntu.example.com. ( + 1 ; Serial + 604800 ; Refresh + 86400 ; Retry + 2419200 ; Expire + 604800 ) ; Negative Cache TTL + ; + @ IN NS zesty-bug1683237.example.com. + zesty-bug1683237 IN A 10.0.100.249 + _kerberos TXT "EXAMPLE.COM" + _kerberos._udp SRV 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237 + _kerberos._tcp SRV 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237 + _kerberos-master._udp SRV 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237 + _kerberos-master._tcp SRV 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237 + _kerberos-adm._tcp SRV 0 0 749 zesty-bug1683237 + _kpasswd._udp SRV 0 0 464 zesty-bug1683237 + + Use the real IP of your test machine/container where I used + "10.0.100.249". You can also choose another hostname if you want, just + be consistent across the board. I chose "zesty-bug1683237". + + e) Restart bind + $ sudo service bind9 restart + + f) Do a few quick DNS tests: + $ dig +short @10.0.100.249 zesty-bug1683237.example.com + 10.0.100.249 + $ dig +short @10.0.100.249 -t TXT _kerberos.example.com + "EXAMPLE.COM" + $ dig +short @10.0.100.249 -t SRV _kerberos._udp.example.com + 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237.example.com. + $ dig +short @10.0.100.249 -t SRV _kerberos._tcp.example.com + 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237.example.com. + + g) Edit /etc/resolv.conf, ignoring the warning since we are not going to reboot or change network interfaces: + nameserver 10.0.100.249 # USE YOUR IP HERE + search example.com + + h) Create the EXAMPLE.COM kerberos realm: + $ sudo krb5_newrealm + When prompted for a password, use whatever you like. If you get an error about no default realm, then your TXT record in DNS is not working. Retrace your DNS configuration steps. + + i) Start the kerberos services: + $ sudo service krb5-kdc start + sudo service krb5-admin-server start + + j) Create a principal and test it: + $ sudo kadmin.local addprinc -pw ubuntu ubuntu + $ kinit ubuntu + Password for ubu...@example.com: + $ klist + (...) + 05/05/2017 13:10:01 05/05/2017 23:10:01 krbtgt/example....@example.com + (...) + + + Now we are ready to test the bug. + + Give that we have udp_preference_limit = 1 in /etc/krb5.conf, kinit + should use TCP instead of UDP. Let's check: + + $ KRB5_TRACE=/dev/stderr kinit + [7609] 1493989890.568980: Getting initial credentials for ubu...@example.com + [7609] 1493989890.569904: Sending request (172 bytes) to EXAMPLE.COM + [7609] 1493989890.571991: Resolving hostname zesty-bug1683237.example.com. + [7609] 1493989890.576853: Sending initial UDP request to dgram 10.0.100.249:88 + (...) + + Uh oh, it's using UDP! + + With the fixed packages, the story is different: + $ KRB5_TRACE=/dev/stderr kinit + [14287] 1493990160.760430: Getting initial credentials for ubu...@example.com + [14287] 1493990160.761590: Sending request (172 bytes) to EXAMPLE.COM + [14287] 1493990160.763783: Resolving hostname zesty-bug1683237.example.com. + [14287] 1493990160.767803: Resolving hostname zesty-bug1683237.example.com. + [14287] 1493990160.770588: Initiating TCP connection to stream 10.0.100.249:88 + [14287] 1493990160.771724: Sending TCP request to stream 10.0.100.249:88 + (...) + + And if udp_preference_limit is removed from /etc/krb5.conf, the updated + packages start with UDP again. + + == Original description == + Zesty is now affected, please see the debian bug https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=856307 and upstream bug http://krbdev.mit.edu/rt/Ticket/Display.html?id=8554 Would it be possible to get 1.15.1 (already released upstream) in zesty /zesty-updates? Thanks Jochen
** Description changed: This is fixed in krb5 1.15-2 in artful Upstream bug : http://krbdev.mit.edu/rt/Ticket/Display.html?id=8554 Debian bug: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=856307 Debian patch in 1.15-2 in artful: 0013-Fix-udp_preference_limit-with-SRV-records.patch TL;DR kinit does not respect udp_preference_limit and always uses TCP to talk to the KDC when using the DNS SRV records to locate the service and these records show udp and tcp entries. Steps to reproduce on zesty, with all services on one machine for simplicity (I suggest to use LXD): a) install the packages from zesty (not the proposed ones yet): $ sudo apt install krb5-kdc krb5-admin-server bind9 When prompted for the realm, choose EXAMPLE.COM When prompted for the KDC and Admin services server address, use the IP of your test machine/container (not localhost or 127.0.0.1) The KDC will fail to start because there is no realm yet, that's not relevant for this bug. b) Edit /etc/krb5.conf and make the following changes: - remove the "default_realm" line from the [libdefaults] section - remove the EXAMPLE.COM realm block from the [realms] section - add "dns_lookup_realm = true" to the [libdefaults] section - add "dns_lookup_kdc = true" to the [libdefaults] section - add "udp_preference_limit = 1" to the [libdefaults] section c) Edit /etc/bind/named.conf.local and add this zone block (for simplicity, we are skipping the reverse zone): zone "example.com" { - type master; - file "/etc/bind/db.example.com"; + type master; + file "/etc/bind/db.example.com"; }; d) Create /etc/bind/db.example.com with this content: $TTL 604800 @ IN SOA example.com. ubuntu.example.com. ( - 1 ; Serial - 604800 ; Refresh - 86400 ; Retry - 2419200 ; Expire - 604800 ) ; Negative Cache TTL + 1 ; Serial + 604800 ; Refresh + 86400 ; Retry + 2419200 ; Expire + 604800 ) ; Negative Cache TTL ; @ IN NS zesty-bug1683237.example.com. zesty-bug1683237 IN A 10.0.100.249 _kerberos TXT "EXAMPLE.COM" _kerberos._udp SRV 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237 _kerberos._tcp SRV 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237 _kerberos-master._udp SRV 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237 _kerberos-master._tcp SRV 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237 _kerberos-adm._tcp SRV 0 0 749 zesty-bug1683237 _kpasswd._udp SRV 0 0 464 zesty-bug1683237 Use the real IP of your test machine/container where I used "10.0.100.249". You can also choose another hostname if you want, just be consistent across the board. I chose "zesty-bug1683237". e) Restart bind $ sudo service bind9 restart f) Do a few quick DNS tests: $ dig +short @10.0.100.249 zesty-bug1683237.example.com 10.0.100.249 $ dig +short @10.0.100.249 -t TXT _kerberos.example.com "EXAMPLE.COM" $ dig +short @10.0.100.249 -t SRV _kerberos._udp.example.com 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237.example.com. $ dig +short @10.0.100.249 -t SRV _kerberos._tcp.example.com 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237.example.com. g) Edit /etc/resolv.conf, ignoring the warning since we are not going to reboot or change network interfaces: nameserver 10.0.100.249 # USE YOUR IP HERE search example.com h) Create the EXAMPLE.COM kerberos realm: $ sudo krb5_newrealm When prompted for a password, use whatever you like. If you get an error about no default realm, then your TXT record in DNS is not working. Retrace your DNS configuration steps. i) Start the kerberos services: $ sudo service krb5-kdc start sudo service krb5-admin-server start j) Create a principal and test it: $ sudo kadmin.local addprinc -pw ubuntu ubuntu $ kinit ubuntu - Password for ubu...@example.com: + Password for ubu...@example.com: $ klist (...) 05/05/2017 13:10:01 05/05/2017 23:10:01 krbtgt/example....@example.com (...) - Now we are ready to test the bug. - Give that we have udp_preference_limit = 1 in /etc/krb5.conf, kinit + Given that we have udp_preference_limit = 1 in /etc/krb5.conf, kinit should use TCP instead of UDP. Let's check: $ KRB5_TRACE=/dev/stderr kinit [7609] 1493989890.568980: Getting initial credentials for ubu...@example.com [7609] 1493989890.569904: Sending request (172 bytes) to EXAMPLE.COM [7609] 1493989890.571991: Resolving hostname zesty-bug1683237.example.com. [7609] 1493989890.576853: Sending initial UDP request to dgram 10.0.100.249:88 (...) Uh oh, it's using UDP! With the fixed packages, the story is different: $ KRB5_TRACE=/dev/stderr kinit [14287] 1493990160.760430: Getting initial credentials for ubu...@example.com [14287] 1493990160.761590: Sending request (172 bytes) to EXAMPLE.COM [14287] 1493990160.763783: Resolving hostname zesty-bug1683237.example.com. [14287] 1493990160.767803: Resolving hostname zesty-bug1683237.example.com. [14287] 1493990160.770588: Initiating TCP connection to stream 10.0.100.249:88 [14287] 1493990160.771724: Sending TCP request to stream 10.0.100.249:88 (...) And if udp_preference_limit is removed from /etc/krb5.conf, the updated packages start with UDP again. == Original description == Zesty is now affected, please see the debian bug https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=856307 and upstream bug http://krbdev.mit.edu/rt/Ticket/Display.html?id=8554 Would it be possible to get 1.15.1 (already released upstream) in zesty /zesty-updates? Thanks Jochen -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Touch seeded packages, which is subscribed to krb5 in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1683237 Title: krb5-user: kinit fails for OTP user when using kdc discovery via DNS Status in krb5 package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in krb5 source package in Zesty: In Progress Status in krb5 package in Debian: Fix Released Bug description: This is fixed in krb5 1.15-2 in artful Upstream bug : http://krbdev.mit.edu/rt/Ticket/Display.html?id=8554 Debian bug: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=856307 Debian patch in 1.15-2 in artful: 0013-Fix-udp_preference_limit-with-SRV-records.patch TL;DR kinit does not respect udp_preference_limit and always uses TCP to talk to the KDC when using the DNS SRV records to locate the service and these records show both udp and tcp entries. Steps to reproduce on zesty, with all services on one machine for simplicity (I suggest to use LXD): a) install the packages from zesty (not the proposed ones yet): $ sudo apt install krb5-kdc krb5-admin-server bind9 When prompted for the realm, choose EXAMPLE.COM When prompted for the KDC and Admin services server address, use the IP of your test machine/container (not localhost or 127.0.0.1) The KDC will fail to start because there is no realm yet, that's not relevant for this bug. b) Edit /etc/krb5.conf and make the following changes: - remove the "default_realm" line from the [libdefaults] section - remove the EXAMPLE.COM realm block from the [realms] section - add "dns_lookup_realm = true" to the [libdefaults] section - add "dns_lookup_kdc = true" to the [libdefaults] section - add "udp_preference_limit = 1" to the [libdefaults] section c) Edit /etc/bind/named.conf.local and add this zone block (for simplicity, we are skipping the reverse zone): zone "example.com" { type master; file "/etc/bind/db.example.com"; }; d) Create /etc/bind/db.example.com with this content: $TTL 604800 @ IN SOA example.com. ubuntu.example.com. ( 1 ; Serial 604800 ; Refresh 86400 ; Retry 2419200 ; Expire 604800 ) ; Negative Cache TTL ; @ IN NS zesty-bug1683237.example.com. zesty-bug1683237 IN A 10.0.100.249 _kerberos TXT "EXAMPLE.COM" _kerberos._udp SRV 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237 _kerberos._tcp SRV 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237 _kerberos-master._udp SRV 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237 _kerberos-master._tcp SRV 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237 _kerberos-adm._tcp SRV 0 0 749 zesty-bug1683237 _kpasswd._udp SRV 0 0 464 zesty-bug1683237 Use the real IP of your test machine/container where I used "10.0.100.249". You can also choose another hostname if you want, just be consistent across the board. I chose "zesty-bug1683237". e) Restart bind $ sudo service bind9 restart f) Do a few quick DNS tests: $ dig +short @10.0.100.249 zesty-bug1683237.example.com 10.0.100.249 $ dig +short @10.0.100.249 -t TXT _kerberos.example.com "EXAMPLE.COM" $ dig +short @10.0.100.249 -t SRV _kerberos._udp.example.com 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237.example.com. $ dig +short @10.0.100.249 -t SRV _kerberos._tcp.example.com 0 0 88 zesty-bug1683237.example.com. g) Edit /etc/resolv.conf, ignoring the warning since we are not going to reboot or change network interfaces: nameserver 10.0.100.249 # USE YOUR IP HERE search example.com h) Create the EXAMPLE.COM kerberos realm: $ sudo krb5_newrealm When prompted for a password, use whatever you like. If you get an error about no default realm, then your TXT record in DNS is not working. Retrace your DNS configuration steps. i) Start the kerberos services: $ sudo service krb5-kdc start sudo service krb5-admin-server start j) Create a principal and test it: $ sudo kadmin.local addprinc -pw ubuntu ubuntu $ kinit ubuntu Password for ubu...@example.com: $ klist (...) 05/05/2017 13:10:01 05/05/2017 23:10:01 krbtgt/example....@example.com (...) Now we are ready to test the bug. Given that we have udp_preference_limit = 1 in /etc/krb5.conf, kinit should use TCP instead of UDP. Let's check: $ KRB5_TRACE=/dev/stderr kinit [7609] 1493989890.568980: Getting initial credentials for ubu...@example.com [7609] 1493989890.569904: Sending request (172 bytes) to EXAMPLE.COM [7609] 1493989890.571991: Resolving hostname zesty-bug1683237.example.com. [7609] 1493989890.576853: Sending initial UDP request to dgram 10.0.100.249:88 (...) Uh oh, it's using UDP! With the fixed packages, the story is different: $ KRB5_TRACE=/dev/stderr kinit [14287] 1493990160.760430: Getting initial credentials for ubu...@example.com [14287] 1493990160.761590: Sending request (172 bytes) to EXAMPLE.COM [14287] 1493990160.763783: Resolving hostname zesty-bug1683237.example.com. [14287] 1493990160.767803: Resolving hostname zesty-bug1683237.example.com. [14287] 1493990160.770588: Initiating TCP connection to stream 10.0.100.249:88 [14287] 1493990160.771724: Sending TCP request to stream 10.0.100.249:88 (...) And if udp_preference_limit is removed from /etc/krb5.conf, the updated packages start with UDP again. == Original description == Zesty is now affected, please see the debian bug https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=856307 and upstream bug http://krbdev.mit.edu/rt/Ticket/Display.html?id=8554 Would it be possible to get 1.15.1 (already released upstream) in zesty/zesty-updates? Thanks Jochen To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/krb5/+bug/1683237/+subscriptions -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~touch-packages Post to : touch-packages@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~touch-packages More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp