This manual page describes the configuration of the SSSD Kerberos Cache Manager (KCM). KCM is a process that stores, tracks and manages Kerberos credential caches. It originates in the Heimdal Kerberos project, although the MIT Kerberos library also provides client side (more details on that below) support for the KCM credential cache.
In a setup where Kerberos caches are managed by KCM, the Kerberos library (typically used through an application, like e.g., kinit(1), is a ""KCM client"" and the KCM daemon is being referred to as a ""KCM server"". The client and server communicate over a UNIX socket.
The KCM server keeps track of each credential caches's owner and performs access check control based on the UID and GID of the KCM client. The root user has access to all credential caches.
The KCM credential cache has several interesting properties:
This allows the system to use a collection-aware credential cache, yet share the credential cache between some or no containers by bind-mounting the socket.
The KCM default client idle timeout is 5 minutes, this allows more time for user interaction with command line tools such as kinit.
In order to use KCM credential cache, it must be selected as the default credential type in krb5.conf(5), The credentials cache name must be only "KCM:" without any template expansions. For example:
[libdefaults] default_ccache_name = KCM:
Next, make sure the Kerberos client libraries and the KCM server must agree on the UNIX socket path. By default, both use the same path /var/run/.heim_org.h5l.kcm-socket. To configure the Kerberos library, change its "kcm_socket" option which is described in the krb5.conf(5) manual page.
Finally, make sure the SSSD KCM server can be contacted. The KCM service is typically socket-activated by systemd(1). Unlike other SSSD services, it cannot be started by adding the "kcm" string to the "service" directive.
systemctl start sssd-kcm.socket systemctl enable sssd-kcm.socket
Please note your distribution may already configure the units for you.
The credential caches are stored in a database, much like SSSD caches user or group entries. The database is typically located at "/var/lib/sss/secrets".
The sssd-kcm service is typically socket-activated systemd(1). To generate debug logs, add the following either to the /etc/sssd/sssd.conf file directly or as a configuration snippet to /etc/sssd/conf.d/ directory:
[kcm] debug_level = 10
Then, restart the sssd-kcm service:
systemctl restart sssd-kcm.service
Finally, run whatever use-case doesn't work for you. The KCM logs will be generated at /var/log/sssd/sssd_kcm.log. It is recommended to disable the debug logs when you no longer need the debugging to be enabled as the sssd-kcm service can generate quite a large amount of debugging information.
Please note that configuration snippets are, at the moment, only processed if the main configuration file at /etc/sssd/sssd.conf exists at all.
The KCM service is configured in the "kcm" section of the sssd.conf file. Please note that because the KCM service is typically socket-activated, it is enough to just restart the "sssd-kcm" service after changing options in the "kcm" section of sssd.conf:
systemctl restart sssd-kcm.service
The KCM service is configured in the "kcm" For a detailed syntax reference, refer to the "FILE FORMAT" section of the sssd.conf(5) manual page.
The generic SSSD service options such as "debug_level" or "fd_limit" are accepted by the kcm service. Please refer to the sssd.conf(5) manual page for a complete list. In addition, there are some KCM-specific options as well.
socket_path (string)
Default: /var/run/.heim_org.h5l.kcm-socket
Note: on platforms where systemd is supported, the socket path is overwritten by the one defined in the sssd-kcm.socket unit file.
max_ccaches (integer)
Default: 0 (unlimited, only the per-UID quota is enforced)
max_uid_ccaches (integer)
Default: 64
max_ccache_size (integer)
Default: 65536
The SSSD upstream - https://github.com/SSSD/sssd/