Skip to content
/ whomst Public
forked from stuartpb/whomst

Gets user and group info, by any means necessary

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

vlasky/whomst

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

20 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

@vlasky/whomst

@vlasky/whomst is an updated fork of whomst. It provides missing Node.js functionality to retrieve UNIX user and group info.

whomst

Background

Node doesn't have a built-in function to resolve an OS username or groupname to a UID or GID (or vice versa). There are a few native modules that expose the functions necessary to get this information, but native modules can't always be relied upon (in environments where the toolchain isn't present, or the architecture isn't supported, or the targeted ABI is unmaintained, or any of a number of other possible ways native modules can break).

There are other ways to get this information, but they've all got possible pitfalls themselves. You can query the system database with the getent binary, but that will fail if getent isn't present. You can try reading the contents of /etc/passwd, but that will fail if the current user doesn't have permission to access /etc/passwd (or if user IDs are coming from a different source, such as LDAP). You can exploit the locations in Node's code where it calls out to the relevant functions as a side effect (namely process.setuid and os.userInfo, which both incorporate getpwnam under the hood), but this requires the user to have permission to setuid to the user being queried, not to mention being incredibly hacky. (Nonetheless, this last technique is the approach actually used internally by npm.)

For a program to truly be resilient against all these possible contingencies, it should be ready to try all of the possible techniques.

Implementation

whomst will try obtaining info, in order of availability, from:

  • the getpwnamand getgrnam functions from the posix module
  • the functions from the userid module (if installed)
  • the getent(1) binary
  • the contents of /etc/passwd and /etc/group
  • the results of doing a setuid or setgid with the given name (as used by the uid-number module)
  • as a last-ditch effort, seeing if the uid matches the current user's info

As of v0.1.2, not all of these code paths have been tested (though they are all believed to be implemented).

API

whomst.user andwhomst.group take a number or string and return a promise. whomst.sync.user and whomst.sync.group do the same thing, but synchronously instead of via promises.

These functions return objects compatible with the return values of the corresponding functions from the posix package. See the documentation for posix.getpwnam and posix.getgrnam for examples of returns from whomst.user and whomst.group, respectively.

Note that not all fields are guaranteed: if whomst.group has to fall back to the setgid hack method for determining a group's gid, the return value may only contain name and gid (or even only gid, if the name wasn't provided). This means that you may not be able to determine a group's name from its gid, if all the more-reliable mechanisms fail.

Tips

Unlike some similar modules like uid-number, whomst does not cache any results between calls (as these results could, in theory, change between two separate invocations). If you wish to cache results between calls to this function (say, if you're going to make thousands of calls to it in the space of a very short time), you may wish to implement a memoization layer like fast-memoize around whomst.

About

Gets user and group info, by any means necessary

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 74.9%
  • Shell 25.1%