#include <xcb/xkb.h>
#include <err.h>
#include <assert.h>
-#ifdef USE_PAM
+#ifdef __OpenBSD__
+#include <bsd_auth.h>
+#else
#include <security/pam_appl.h>
#endif
#include <getopt.h>
#include <xkbcommon/xkbcommon-x11.h>
#include <cairo.h>
#include <cairo/cairo-xcb.h>
+#ifdef __OpenBSD__
+#include <strings.h> /* explicit_bzero(3) */
+#endif
#include "i3lock.h"
#include "xcb.h"
uint32_t last_resolution[2];
xcb_window_t win;
static xcb_cursor_t cursor;
-#ifdef USE_PAM
+#ifndef __OpenBSD__
static pam_handle_t *pam_handle;
#endif
int input_position = 0;
*
*/
static void clear_password_memory(void) {
+#ifdef __OpenBSD__
+ /* Use explicit_bzero(3) which was explicitly designed not to be
+ * optimized out by the compiler. */
+ explicit_bzero(password, strlen(password));
+#else
/* A volatile pointer to the password buffer to prevent the compiler from
* optimizing this out. */
volatile char *vpassword = password;
* compiler from optimizing the calls away, since the value of 'beep'
* is not known at compile-time. */
vpassword[c] = c + (int)beep;
+#endif
}
ev_timer *start_timer(ev_timer *timer_obj, ev_tstamp timeout, ev_callback_t callback) {
unlock_state = STATE_STARTED;
redraw_screen();
-#ifdef USE_PAM
+#ifdef __OpenBSD__
+ struct passwd *pw;
+
+ if (!(pw = getpwuid(getuid())))
+ errx(1, "unknown uid %u.", getuid());
+
+ if (auth_userokay(pw->pw_name, NULL, NULL, password) != 0) {
+ DEBUG("successfully authenticated\n");
+ clear_password_memory();
+
+ exit(0);
+ }
+#else
if (pam_authenticate(pam_handle, 0) == PAM_SUCCESS) {
DEBUG("successfully authenticated\n");
clear_password_memory();
redraw_screen();
}
-#ifdef USE_PAM
+#ifndef __OpenBSD__
/*
* Callback function for PAM. We only react on password request callbacks.
*
struct passwd *pw;
char *username;
char *image_path = NULL;
-#ifdef USE_PAM
+#ifndef __OpenBSD__
int ret;
struct pam_conv conv = {conv_callback, NULL};
#endif
* the unlock indicator upon keypresses. */
srand(time(NULL));
-#ifdef USE_PAM
+#ifndef __OpenBSD__
/* Initialize PAM */
if ((ret = pam_start("i3lock", username, &conv, &pam_handle)) != PAM_SUCCESS)
errx(EXIT_FAILURE, "PAM: %s", pam_strerror(pam_handle, ret));
errx(EXIT_FAILURE, "PAM: %s", pam_strerror(pam_handle, ret));
#endif
-/* Using mlock() as non-super-user seems only possible in Linux. Users of other
- * operating systems should use encrypted swap/no swap (or remove the ifdef and
- * run i3lock as super-user). */
-#if defined(__linux__)
+/* Using mlock() as non-super-user seems only possible in Linux and OpenBSD.
+ * Users of other operating systems should use encrypted swap/no swap
+ * (or remove the ifdef and run i3lock as super-user).
+ * NB: Alas, swap is encrypted by default on OpenBSD so swapping out
+ * is not necessarily an issue. */
+#if defined(__linux__) || defined(__OpenBSD__)
/* Lock the area where we store the password in memory, we don’t want it to
* be swapped to disk. Since Linux 2.6.9, this does not require any
* privileges, just enough bytes in the RLIMIT_MEMLOCK limit. */
} unlock_state_t;
typedef enum {
- STATE_AUTH_IDLE = 0, /* no authenticator interaction at the moment */
- STATE_AUTH_VERIFY = 1, /* currently verifying the password via authenticator */
- STATE_AUTH_LOCK = 2, /* currently locking the screen */
- STATE_AUTH_WRONG = 3, /* the password was wrong */
+ STATE_AUTH_IDLE = 0, /* no authenticator interaction at the moment */
+ STATE_AUTH_VERIFY = 1, /* currently verifying the password via authenticator */
+ STATE_AUTH_LOCK = 2, /* currently locking the screen */
+ STATE_AUTH_WRONG = 3, /* the password was wrong */
STATE_I3LOCK_LOCK_FAILED = 4 /* i3lock failed to load */
} auth_state_t;