NAME File::LckPwdF - Lock and unlock the passwd and shadow files with lckpwdf and ulckpwdf SYNOPSIS use File::LckPwdF; (lock_passwd(15)) || (die "Can't lock password file:\n$! stopped"); # ... do stuff with the passwd file ... (unlock_passwd()) || (die "Can't unlock password file:\n$! stopped"); DESCRIPTION This is a perl module to use lckpwdf(3) and ulckpwdf(3) to lock the /etc/passwd and (if present) /etc/shadow files. Functions exported automatically lock_passwd($timeout) $timeout works as follows: 1. The initial time is checked. 2. If $timeout is 0, it tries lckpwdf() until it succeeds, waiting a random time in between. 3. If $timeout is above 0, it tries lckpwdf() once. If that (or any following lckpwdf()) succeeds, it returns 1. It will try lckpwdf() until either it succeeds or the time is greater than the initial time plus $timeout. In the latter case, it returns 0. It waits a random time in between tries of lckpwdf(). The random timeout is controlled by $File::LckPwdF::Rand_Wait, which is exported on request. It is used via sleep int(rand($Rand_Wait) + 1); inside an until loop. This sleep is only done if $File::LckPwdF::Rand_Wait is above 0. $timeout defaults to $File::LckPwdF::Default_Timeout, which is also exported on request; the initial setting of $File::LckPwdF::Default_Timeout (the default default) is 15 seconds. The default setting for $File::LckPwdF::Rand_Wait is 10 seconds. unlock_passwd() This function uses ulckpwdf(). If lock_passwd() has previously been used to lock the passwd file, and unlock_passwd() has not been used to lock it, then it will be used to unlock the passwd file in an END: statement. (Admittedly, with many implementations of lckpwdf() this is not necessary, since when a process exits it loses the passwd file lock; it is present as a safety measure for those systems for which this is not true.) Functions exported by request lckpwdf() ulckpwdf() These are the xs-loaded versions of lckpwdf(3) and ulckpwdf(3), respectively. RETURN VALUE The lock_passwd() and unlock_passwd() functions return 1 on success and 0 on failure. The return values for lckpwdf() and ulckpwdf() are the same as for the system versions (lckpwdf(3) and ulckpwdf(3)). ERRORS If the effective UID is not 0, then lock_passwd() and unlock_passwd() set $! to EACCES if they fail (they do try once, just in case you've got a *really* weird setup). If the effective UID is 0, in the event of failure, lock_passwd() sets $! to: 1. if you've already locked the file through lock_passwd(), EALREADY 2. EAGAIN (or EWOULDBLOCK, if EAGAIN isn't present on your system and EWOULDBLOCK is; $File::LckPwdF::EAGAIN, which is exported on request, is equal to the value returned). unlock_passwd(), in the event of failure, sets $! to: 1. if you've already unlocked the file via unlock_passwd() or haven't locked it via lock_passwd(), EALREADY. 2. EINVAL. If you try to use a negative number for $timeout with lock_passwd($timeout), it carps, returns 0, and sets $! to EINVAL. CAVEATS This program only works if your system has lckpwdf(3) and ulckpwdf(3). This should be true of SVR4 systems; others will vary. If you use lock_passwd() and unlock_passwd(), lckpwdf(3) and ulckpwdf(3) need to have return values of 0+ for success and below 0 (usually -1) for failure. The timeout period for lock_passwd() is approximate, since many versions of lckpwdf() will keep trying for a total of 15 seconds to lock the passwd (and possibly shadow) files before they return an appropriate value. This module only keeps track on its own of whether the passwd file is locked if you always use lock_passwd() and unlock_passwd(). If you use lckpwdf() or ulckpwdf() by themselves for locking and unlocking, you will need to set $File::LckPwdF::Passwd_Locked to 1 for locked and 0 for unlocked yourself. BUGS I haven't written any good automated tests for this program yet. If anyone's interested, be my guest (or for any other improvements, of course). AUTHOR E. Allen Smith, . Copyright 1998. This software may be used, distributed, modified, etcetera under the same conditions as perl. FILES /etc/passwd, /etc/shadow SEE ALSO the perl(1) manpage, the lckpwdf(3) manpage, the ulckpwdf(3) manpage