sspi-rs is a Rust implementation of Security Support Provider Interface (SSPI). It ships with platform-independent implementations of Security Support Providers (SSP), and is able to utilize native Microsoft libraries when ran under Windows.
The purpose of sspi-rs is to clean the original interface from cluttering and provide users with Rust-friendly SSPs for execution under *nix or any other platform that is able to compile Rust.
The sspi-rs works in accordance with the MSDN documentation. At the moment, NT LAN Manager (NTLM) is implemented and available for platform independent execution. It is also possible to create your own SSPs by implementing the [SspiImpl
]() trait. More on that in the Documentation.
Some SSPI functions tend to be cumbersome, that's why sspi-rs allows to use SSPI in a convenient way by utilizing builders. Examples are available in the examples, example section, and Documentation.
Documentation will give you a comprehensive overlook of the crate. For the example of a simple use case, visit the examples folder.
The usage of the SSPs is as simple as creating an instance of the security provider and calling its functions.
Here is an example of acquiring a credentials handle and a timestamp of their validity:
use sspi::{CredentialUse, Ntlm, Sspi, Username, builders::EmptyInitializeSecurityContext, OwnedSecurityBuffer, ClientRequestFlags, DataRepresentation, SecurityBufferType, SspiImpl};
fn main() {
let account_name = "example_user";
let computer_name = "example_computer";
let mut ntlm = Ntlm::new();
let username = Username::new(&account_name, Some(&computer_name)).unwrap();
let identity = sspi::AuthIdentity {
username,
password: String::from("example_password").into(),
};
let mut acq_cred_result = ntlm
.acquire_credentials_handle()
.with_credential_use(CredentialUse::Outbound)
.with_auth_data(&identity)
.execute()
.unwrap();
let mut output_buffer = vec![OwnedSecurityBuffer::new(Vec::new(), SecurityBufferType::Token)];
// first time calling initialize_security_context, the input buffer should be empty
let mut input_buffer = vec![OwnedSecurityBuffer::new(Vec::new(), SecurityBufferType::Token)];
// create a builder for the first call to initialize_security_context
// the target should start with the protocol name, e.g. "HTTP/example.com" or "LDAP/example.com"
let mut builder = EmptyInitializeSecurityContext::<<Ntlm as SspiImpl>::CredentialsHandle>::new()
.with_credentials_handle(&mut acq_cred_result.credentials_handle)
.with_context_requirements(ClientRequestFlags::CONFIDENTIALITY | ClientRequestFlags::ALLOCATE_MEMORY)
.with_target_data_representation(DataRepresentation::Native)
.with_target_name("LDAP/example.com")
.with_input(&mut input_buffer)
.with_output(&mut output_buffer);
// call initialize_security_context
// Note: the initialize_security_context_impl returns a generator, for NTLM,
// this generator will never yield as NTLM requires no network communication to a third party
// but negotiate and kerberos do require network communication, so the generator is used to
// allow the caller to provide the network information through the generator.resume() method
// take a look at the examples/kerberos.rs for more information
let _result = ntlm
.initialize_security_context_impl(&mut builder)
.resolve_to_result()
.unwrap();
// ... exchange your token in output buffer with the server and repeat the process until either server is satisfied or an error is thrown
}
Example of acquiring an SSP provided by Windows:
let mut negotiate = SecurityPackage::from_package_type(
SecurityPackageType::Other(String::from("Negotiate"))
);
(Feel free to open a PR if you know about other projects!)
Licensed under either of:
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.