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1---
2title: JSON User Records
5fe63895 3category: Users, Groups and Home Directories
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4layout: default
5---
6
7# JSON User Records
8
9systemd optionally processes user records that go beyond the classic UNIX (or
10glibc NSS) `struct passwd`. Various components of systemd are able to provide
11and consume records in a more extensible format of a dictionary of key/value
12pairs, encoded as JSON. Specifically:
13
141. [`systemd-homed.service`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-homed.service.html)
15 manages `human` user home directories and embeds these JSON records
16 directly in the home directory images (see [Home
afcb3e75 17 Directories](https://systemd.io/HOME_DIRECTORY) for details).
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18
192. [`pam_systemd`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/pam_systemd.html)
20 processes these JSON records for users that log in, and applies various
21 settings to the activated session, including environment variables, nice
22 levels and more.
23
243. [`systemd-logind.service`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-logind.service.html)
25 processes these JSON records of users that log in, and applies various
26 resource management settings to the per-user slice units it manages. This
27 allows setting global limits on resource consumption by a specific user.
28
294. [`nss-systemd`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/nss-systemd.html)
30 is a glibc NSS module that synthesizes classic NSS records from these JSON
31 records, providing full backwards compatibility with the classic UNIX APIs
32 both for look-up and enumeration.
33
345. The service manager (PID 1) exposes dynamic users (i.e. users synthesized as
35 effect of `DynamicUser=` in service unit files) as these advanced JSON
36 records, making them discoverable to the rest of the system.
37
386. [`systemd-userdbd.service`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-userdbd.service.html)
39 is a small service that can translate UNIX/glibc NSS records to these JSON
40 user records. It also provides a unified [Varlink](https://varlink.org/) API
41 for querying and enumerating records of this type, optionally acquiring them
42 from various other services.
43
44JSON user records may contain various fields that are not available in `struct
45passwd`, and are extensible for other applications. For example, the record may
46contain information about:
47
481. Additional security credentials (PKCS#11 security token information,
49 biometrical authentication information, SSH public key information)
50
512. Additional user metadata, such as a picture, email address, location string,
52 preferred language or timezone
53
543. Resource Management settings (such as CPU/IO weights, memory and tasks
55 limits, classic UNIX resource limits or nice levels)
56
574. Runtime parameters such as environment variables or the `nodev`, `noexec`,
58 `nosuid` flags to use for the home directory
59
605. Information about where to mount the home directory from
61
62And various other things. The record is intended to be extensible, for example
63the following extensions are envisioned:
64
651. Windows network credential information
66
672. Information about default IMAP, SMTP servers to use for this user
68
693. Parental control information to enforce on this user
70
714. Default parameters for backup applications and similar
72
73Similar to JSON User Records there are also [JSON Group
56b3eddb 74Records](https://systemd.io/GROUP_RECORD) that encapsulate UNIX groups.
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75
76JSON User Records may be transferred or written to disk in various protocols
77and formats. To inquire about such records defined on the local system use the
56b3eddb 78[User/Group Lookup API via Varlink](https://systemd.io/USER_GROUP_API).
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79
80## Why JSON?
81
82JSON is nicely extensible and widely used. In particular it's easy to
83synthesize and process with numerous programming languages. It's particularly
84popular in the web communities, which hopefully should make it easy to link
85user credential data from the web and from local systems more closely together.
86
87## General Structure
88
89The JSON user records generated and processed by systemd follow a general
90structure, consisting of seven distinct "sections". Specifically:
91
921. Various fields are placed at the top-level of user record (the `regular`
93 section). These are generally fields that shall apply unconditionally to the
94 user in all contexts, are portable and not security sensitive.
95
962. A number of fields are located in the `privileged` section (a sub-object of
97 the user record). Fields contained in this object are security sensitive,
98 i.e. contain information that the user and the administrator should be able
99 to see, but other users should not. In many ways this matches the data
100 stored in `/etc/shadow` in classic Linux user accounts, i.e. includes
101 password hashes and more. Algorithmically, when a user record is passed to
102 an untrusted client, by monopolizing such sensitive records in a single
103 object field we can easily remove it from view.
104
1053. A number of fields are located in objects inside the `perMachine` section
106 (an array field of the user record). Primarily these are resource
107 management-related fields, as those tend to make sense on a specific system
108 only, e.g. limiting a user's memory use to 1G only makes sense on a specific
109 system that has more than 1G of memory. Each object inside the `perMachine`
110 array comes with a `matchMachineId` or `matchHostname` field which indicate
111 which systems to apply the listed settings to. Note that many fields
112 accepted in the `perMachine` section can also be set at the top level (the
113 `regular` section), where they define the fallback if no matching object in
114 `perMachine` is found.
115
1164. Various fields are located in the `binding` section (a sub-sub-object of the
117 user record; an intermediary object is inserted which is keyed by the
118 machine ID of the host). Fields included in this section "bind" the object
119 to a specific system. They generally include non-portable information about
120 paths or UID assignments, that are true on a specific system, but not
121 necessarily on others, and which are managed automatically by some user
122 record manager (such as `systemd-homed`). Data in this section is considered
123 part of the user record only in the local context, and is generally not
124 ported to other systems. Due to that it is not included in the reduced user
125 record the cryptographic signature defined in the `signature` section is
126 calculated on. In `systemd-homed` this section is also removed when the
127 user's record is stored in the `~/.identity` file in the home directory, so
128 that every system with access to the home directory can manage these
129 `binding` fields individually. Typically, the binding section is persisted
130 to the local disk.
131
1325. Various fields are located in the `status` section (a sub-sub-object of the
133 user record, also with an intermediary object between that is keyed by the
134 machine ID, similar to the way the `binding` section is organized). This
135 section is augmented during runtime only, and never persisted to disk. The
136 idea is that this section contains information about current runtime
137 resource usage (for example: currently used disk space of the user), that
138 changes dynamically but is otherwise immediately associated with the user
139 record and for many purposes should be considered to be part of the user
140 record.
141
1426. The `signature` section contains one or more cryptographic signatures of a
143 reduced version of the user record. This is used to ensure that only user
144 records defined by a specific source are accepted on a system, by validating
145 the signature against the set of locally accepted signature public keys. The
146 signature is calculated from the JSON user record with all sections removed,
147 except for `regular`, `privileged`, `perMachine`. Specifically, `binding`,
148 `status`, `signature` itself and `secret` are removed first and thus not
149 covered by the signature. This section is optional, and is only used when
150 cryptographic validation of user records is required (as it is by
151 `systemd-homed.service` for example).
152
1537. The `secret` section contains secret user credentials, such as password or
154 PIN information. This data is never persisted, and never returned when user
155 records are inquired by a client, privileged or not. This data should only
156 be included in a user record very briefly, for example when certain very
157 specific operations are executed. For example, in tools such as
158 `systemd-homed` this section may be included in user records, when creating
159 a new home directory, as passwords and similar credentials need to be
160 provided to encrypt the home directory with.
161
162Here's a tabular overview of the sections and their properties:
163
164| Section | Included in Signature | Persistent | Security Sensitive | Contains Host-Specific Data |
165|------------|-----------------------|------------|--------------------|-----------------------------|
166| regular | yes | yes | no | no |
167| privileged | yes | yes | yes | no |
168| perMachine | yes | yes | no | yes |
169| binding | no | yes | no | yes |
170| status | no | no | no | yes |
171| signature | no | yes | no | no |
172| secret | no | no | yes | no |
173
174Note that services providing user records to the local system are free to
175manage only a subset of these sections and never include the others in
176them. For example, a service that has no concept of signed records (for example
177because the records it manages are inherently trusted anyway) does not have to
178bother with the `signature` section. A service that only defines records in a
179strictly local context and without signatures doesn't have to deal with the
180`perMachine` or `binding` sections and can include its data exclusively in the
181regular section. A service that uses a separate, private channel for
182authenticating users (or that doesn't have a concept of authentication at all)
183does not need to to be concerned with the `secret` section of user records, as
184the fields included therein are only useful when executing authentication
185operations natively against JSON user records.
186
58345a23 187The `systemd-homed` manager uses all seven sections for various
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188purposes. Inside the home directories (and if the LUKS2 backend is used, also
189in the LUKS2 header) a user record containing the `regular`, `privileged`,
190`perMachine` and `signature` sections is stored. `systemd-homed` also stores a
191version of the record on the host, with the same four sections and augmented
192with an additional, fifth `binding` section. When a local client enquires about
193a user record managed by `systemd-homed` the service will add in some
194additional information about the user and home directory in the `status`
195section — this version is only transferred via IPC and never written to
196disk. Finally the `secret` section is used during authentication operations via
197IPC to transfer the user record along with its authentication tokens in one go.
198
199## Fields in the `regular` section
200
201As mentioned, the `regular` section's fields are placed at the top level
202object. The following fields are currently defined:
203
204`userName` → The UNIX user name for this record. Takes a string with a valid
205UNIX user name. This field is the only mandatory field, all others are
206optional. Corresponds with the `pw_name` field of of `struct passwd` and the
207`sp_namp` field of `struct spwd` (i.e. the shadow user record stored in
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208`/etc/shadow`). See [User/Group Name Syntax](https://systemd.io/USER_NAMES) for
209the (relaxed) rules the various systemd components enforce on user/group names.
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210
211`realm` → The "realm" a user is defined in. This concept allows distinguishing
212users with the same name that originate in different organizations or
213installations. This should take a string in DNS domain syntax, but doesn't have
214to refer to an actual DNS domain (though it is recommended to use one for
215this). The idea is that the user `lpoetter` in the `redhat.com` realm might be
216distinct from the same user in the `poettering.hq` realm. User records for the
217same user name that have different realm fields are considered referring to
218different users. When updating a user record it is required that any new
219version has to match in both `userName` and `realm` field. This field is
220optional, when unset the user should not be considered part of any realm. A
221user record with a realm set is never compatible (for the purpose of updates,
222see above) with a user record without one set, even if the `userName` field matches.
223
224`realName` → The real name of the user, a string. This should contain the user's
225real ("human") name, and corresponds loosely to the GECOS field of classic UNIX
226user records. When converting a `struct passwd` to a JSON user record this
227field is initialized from GECOS (i.e. the `pw_gecos` field), and vice versa
228when converting back. That said, unlike GECOS this field is supposed to contain
229only the real name and no other information.
230
231`emailAddress` → The email address of the user, formatted as
232string. [`pam_systemd`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/pam_systemd.html)
233initializes the `$EMAIL` environment variable from this value for all login
234sessions.
235
236`iconName` → The name of an icon picked by the user, for example for the
237purpose of an avatar. This must be a string, and should follow the semantics
238defined in the [Icon Naming
239Specification](https://standards.freedesktop.org/icon-naming-spec/icon-naming-spec-latest.html).
240
241`location` → A free-form location string describing the location of the user,
242if that is applicable. It's probably wise to use a location string processable
243by geo-location subsystems, but this is not enforced nor required. Example:
244`Berlin, Germany` or `Basement, Room 3a`.
245
246`disposition` → A string, one of `intrinsic`, `system`, `dynamic`, `regular`,
247`container`, `reserved`. If specified clarifies the disposition of the user,
248i.e. the context it is defined in. For regular, "human" users this should be
249`regular`, for system users (i.e. users that system services run under, and
250similar) this should be `system`. The `intrinsic` disposition should be used
251only for the two users that have special meaning to the OS kernel itself,
252i.e. the `root` and `nobody` users. The `container` string should be used for
253users that are used by an OS container, and hence will show up in `ps` listings
254and such, but are only defined in container context. Finally `reserved` should
255be used for any users outside of these use-cases. Note that this property is
256entirely optional and applications are assumed to be able to derive the
257disposition of a user automatically from a record even in absence of this
258field, based on other fields, for example the numeric UID. By setting this
259field explicitly applications can override this default determination.
260
261`lastChangeUSec` → An unsigned 64bit integer value, referring to a timestamp in µs
262since the epoch 1970, indicating when the user record (specifically, any of the
263`regular`, `privileged`, `perMachine` sections) was last changed. This field is
264used when comparing two records of the same user to identify the newer one, and
265is used for example for automatic updating of user records, where appropriate.
266
267`lastPasswordChangeUSec` → Similar, also an unsigned 64bit integer value,
268indicating the point in time the password (or any authentication token) of the
269user was last changed. This corresponds to the `sp_lstchg` field of `struct
270spwd`, i.e. the matching field in the user shadow database `/etc/shadow`,
271though provides finer resolution.
272
273`shell` → A string, referring to the shell binary to use for terminal logins of
274this user. This corresponds with the `pw_shell` field of `struct passwd`, and
275should contain an absolute file system path. For system users not suitable for
276terminal log-in this field should not be set.
277
278`umask` → The `umask` to set for the user's login sessions. Takes an
279integer. Note that usually on UNIX the umask is noted in octal, but JSON's
280integers are generally written in decimal, hence in this context we denote it
281umask in decimal too. The specified value should be in the valid range for
282umasks, i.e. 0000…0777 (in octal as typical in UNIX), or 0…511 (in decimal, how
283it actually appears in the JSON record). This `umask` is automatically set by
284[`pam_systemd`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/pam_systemd.html)
285for all login sessions of the user.
286
287`environment` → An array of strings, each containing an environment variable
288and its value to set for the user's login session, in a format compatible with
289[`putenv()`](http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/putenv.3.html). Any
290environment variable listed here is automatically set by
291[`pam_systemd`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/pam_systemd.html)
292for all login sessions of the user.
293
294`timeZone` → A string indicating a preferred timezone to use for the user. When
295logging in
296[`pam_systemd`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/pam_systemd.html)
297will automatically initialize the `$TZ` environment variable from this
298string. The string should be a `tzdata` compatible location string, for
299example: `Europe/Berlin`.
300
301`preferredLanguage` → A string indicating the preferred language/locale for the
302user. When logging in
303[`pam_systemd`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/pam_systemd.html)
304will automatically initialize the `$LANG` environment variable from this
305string. The string hence should be in a format compatible with this environment
306variable, for example: `de_DE.UTF8`.
307
308`niceLevel` → An integer value in the range -20…19. When logging in
309[`pam_systemd`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/pam_systemd.html)
310will automatically initialize the login process' nice level to this value with,
311which is then inherited by all the user's processes, see
312[`setpriority()`](http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/setpriority.2.html) for
313more information.
314
315`resourceLimits` → An object, where each key refers to a Linux resource limit
316(such as `RLIMIT_NOFILE` and similar). Their values should be an object with
317two keys `cur` and `max` for the soft and hard resource limit. When logging in
318[`pam_systemd`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/pam_systemd.html)
319will automatically initialize the login process' resource limits to these
320values, which is then inherited by all the user's processes, see
321[`setrlimit()`](http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/setrlimit.2.html) for more
322information.
323
324`locked` → A boolean value. If true the user account is locked, the user may
325not log in. If this field is missing it should be assumed to be false,
326i.e. logins are permitted. This field corresponds to the `sp_expire` field of
327`struct spwd` (i.e. the `/etc/shadow` data for a user) being set to zero or
328one.
329
330`notBeforeUSec` → An unsigned 64bit integer value, indicating a time in µs since
331the UNIX epoch (1970) before which the record should be considered invalid for
332the purpose of logging in.
333
334`notAfterUSec` → Similar, but indicates the point in time *after* which logins
335shall not be permitted anymore. This corresponds to the `sp_expire` field of
336`struct spwd`, when it is set to a value larger than one, but provides finer
337granularity.
338
339`storage` → A string, one of `classic`, `luks`, `directory`, `subvolume`,
340`fscrypt`, `cifs`. Indicates the storage mechanism for the user's home
341directory. If `classic` the home directory is a plain directory as in classic
342UNIX. When `directory`, the home directory is a regular directory, but the
343`~/.identity` file in it contains the user's user record, so that the directory
344is self-contained. Similar, `subvolume` is a `btrfs` subvolume that also
345contains a `~/.identity` user record; `fscrypt` is an `fscrypt`-encrypted
346directory, also containing the `~/.identity` user record; `luks` is a per-user
347LUKS volume that is mounted as home directory, and `cifs` a home directory
348mounted from a Windows File Share. The five latter types are primarily used by
349`systemd-homed` when managing home directories, but may be used if other
350managers are used too. If this is not set `classic` is the implied default.
351
352`diskSize` → An unsigned 64bit integer, indicating the intended home directory
353disk space in bytes to assign to the user. Depending on the selected storage
354type this might be implement differently: for `luks` this is the intended size
355of the file system and LUKS volume, while for the others this likely translates
356to classic file system quota settings.
357
358`diskSizeRelative` → Similar to `diskSize` but takes a relative value, but
359specifies a fraction of the available disk space on the selected storage medium
360to assign to the user. This unsigned integer value is normalized to 2^32 =
361100%.
362
363`skeletonDirectory` → Takes a string with the absolute path to the skeleton
364directory to populate a new home directory from. This is only used when a home
365directory is first created, and defaults to `/etc/skel` if not defined.
366
367`accessMode` → Takes an unsigned integer in the range 0…511 indicating the UNIX
368access mask for the home directory when it is first created.
369
370`tasksMax` → Takes an unsigned 64bit integer indicating the maximum number of
371tasks the user may start in parallel during system runtime. This value is
372enforced on all tasks (i.e. processes and threads) the user starts or that are
373forked off these processes regardless if the change user identity (for example
374by setuid binaries/`su`/`sudo` and
375similar). [`systemd-logind.service`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-logind.service.html)
376enforces this by setting the `TasksMax` slice property for the user's slice
377`user-$UID.slice`.
378
379`memoryHigh`/`memoryMax` → These take unsigned 64bit integers indicating upper
380memory limits for all processes of the user (plus all processes forked off them
381that might have changed user identity), in bytes. Enforced by
382[`systemd-logind.service`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-logind.service.html),
383similar to `tasksMax`.
384
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385`cpuWeight`/`ioWeight` → These take unsigned integers in the range 1…10000
386(defaults to 100) and configure the CPU and IO scheduling weights for the
387user's processes as a whole. Also enforced by
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388[`systemd-logind.service`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-logind.service.html),
389similar to `tasksMax`, `memoryHigh` and `memoryMax`.
390
391`mountNoDevices`/`mountNoSuid`/`mountNoExecute` → Three booleans that control
392the `nodev`, `nosuid`, `noexec` mount flags of the user's home
393directories. Note that these booleans are only honored if the home directory
394is managed by a subsystem such as `systemd-homed.service` that automatically
395mounts home directories on login.
396
397`cifsDomain` → A string indicating the Windows File Sharing domain (CIFS) to
398use. This is generally useful, but particularly when `cifs` is used as storage
399mechanism for the user's home directory, see above.
400
401`cifsUserName` → A string indicating the Windows File Sharing user name (CIFS)
402to associate this user record with. This is generally useful, but particularly
403useful when `cifs` is used as storage mechanism for the user's home directory,
404see above.
405
406`cifsService` → A string indicating the Windows File Share service (CIFS) to
407mount as home directory of the user on login.
408
409`imagePath` → A string with an absolute file system path to the file, directory
410or block device to use for storage backing the home directory. If the `luks`
411storage is used this refers to the loopback file or block device node to store
412the LUKS volume on. For `fscrypt`, `directory`, `subvolume` this refers to the
413directory to bind mount as home directory on login. Not defined for `classic`
414or `cifs`.
415
416`homeDirectory` → A string with an absolute file system path to the home
417directory. This is where the image indicated in `imagePath` is mounted to on
418login and thus indicates the application facing home directory while the home
419directory is active, and is what the user's `$HOME` environment variable is set
420to during log-in. It corresponds to the `pw_dir` field of `struct passwd`.
421
422`uid` → An unsigned integer in the range 0…4294967295: the numeric UNIX user ID (UID) to
423use for the user. This corresponds to the `pw_uid` field of `struct passwd`.
424
425`gid` → An unsigned integer in the range 0…4294967295: the numeric UNIX group
426ID (GID) to use for the user. This corresponds to the `pw_gid` field of
427`struct passwd`.
428
429`memberOf` → An array of strings, each indicating a UNIX group this user shall
430be a member of. The listed strings must be valid group names, but it is not
431required that all groups listed exist in all contexts: any entry for which no
432group exists should be silently ignored.
433
434`fileSystemType` → A string, one of `ext4`, `xfs`, `btrfs` (possibly others) to
435use as file system for the user's home directory. This is primarily relevant
436when the storage mechanism used is `luks` as a file system to use inside the
437LUKS container must be selected.
438
439`partitionUuid` → A string containing a lower-case, text-formatted UUID, referencing
440the GPT partition UUID the home directory is located in. This is primarily
441relevant when the storage mechanism used is `luks`.
442
443`luksUuid` → A string containing a lower-case, text-formatted UUID, referencing
444the LUKS volume UUID the home directory is located in. This is primarily
445relevant when the storage mechanism used is `luks`.
446
447`fileSystemUuid` → A string containing a lower-case, text-formatted UUID,
448referencing the file system UUID the home directory is located in. This is
449primarily relevant when the storage mechanism used is `luks`.
450
451`luksDiscard` → A boolean. If true and `luks` storage is used controls whether
452the loopback block devices, LUKS and the file system on top shall be used in
453`discard` mode, i.e. erased sectors should always be returned to the underlying
454storage. If false and `luks` storage is used turns this behavior off. In
455addition, depending on this setting an `FITRIM` or `fallocate()` operation is
456executed to make sure the image matches the selected option.
457
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458`luksOfflineDiscard` → A boolean. Similar to `luksDiscard`, it controls whether
459to trim/allocate the file system/backing file when deactivating the home
460directory.
461
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462`luksCipher` → A string, indicating the cipher to use for the LUKS storage mechanism.
463
464`luksCipherMode` → A string, selecting the cipher mode to use for the LUKS storage mechanism.
465
466`luksVolumeKeySize` → An unsigned integer, indicating the volume key length in
467bytes to use for the LUKS storage mechanism.
468
469`luksPbkdfHashAlgorithm` → A string, selecting the hash algorithm to use for
470the PBKDF operation for the LUKS storage mechanism.
471
472`luksPbkdfType` → A string, indicating the PBKDF type to use for the LUKS storage mechanism.
473
474`luksPbkdfTimeCostUSec` → An unsigned 64bit integer, indicating the intended
475time cost for the PBKDF operation, when the LUKS storage mechanism is used, in
476µs.
477
478`luksPbkdfMemoryCost` → An unsigned 64bit integer, indicating the intended
479memory cost for the PBKDF operation, when LUKS storage is used, in bytes.
480
481`luksPbkdfParallelThreads` → An unsigned 64bit integer, indicating the intended
482required parallel threads for the PBKDF operation, when LUKS storage is used.
483
484`service` → A string declaring the service that defines or manages this user
485record. It is recommended to use reverse domain name notation for this. For
486example, if `systemd-homed` manages a user a string of `io.systemd.Home` is
487used for this.
488
489`rateLimitIntervalUSec` → An unsigned 64bit integer that configures the
490authentication rate limiting enforced on the user account. This specifies a
491timer interval (in µs) within which to count authentication attempts. When the
492counter goes above the value configured n `rateLimitIntervalBurst` log-ins are
493temporarily refused until the interval passes.
494
495`rateLimitIntervalBurst` → An unsigned 64bit integer, closely related to
496`rateLimitIntervalUSec`, that puts a limit on authentication attempts within
497the configured time interval.
498
499`enforcePasswordPolicy` → A boolean. Configures whether to enforce the system's
500password policy when creating the home directory for the user or changing the
501user's password. By default the policy is enforced, but if this field is false
502it is bypassed.
503
504`autoLogin` → A boolean. If true the user record is marked as suitable for
505auto-login. Systems are supposed to automatically log in a user marked this way
506during boot, if there's exactly one user on it defined this way.
507
508`stopDelayUSec` → An unsigned 64bit integer, indicating the time in µs the
509per-user service manager is kept around after the user fully logged out. This
510value is honored by
511[`systemd-logind.service`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-logind.service.html). If
512set to zero the per-user service manager is immediately terminated when the
513user logs out, and longer values optimize high-frequency log-ins as the
514necessary work to set up and tear down a log-in is reduced if the service
515manager stays running.
516
517`killProcesses` → A boolean. If true all processes of the user are
518automatically killed when the user logs out. This is enforced by
519[`systemd-logind.service`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-logind.service.html). If
520false any processes left around when the user logs out are left running.
521
522`passwordChangeMinUSec`/`passwordChangeMaxUSec` → An unsigned 64bit integer,
523encoding how much time has to pass at least/at most between password changes of
524the user. This corresponds with the `sp_min` and `sp_max` fields of `struct
525spwd` (i.e. the `/etc/shadow` entries of the user), but offers finer
526granularity.
527
528`passwordChangeWarnUSec` → An unsigned 64bit integer, encoding how much time to
529warn the user before their password expires, in µs. This corresponds with the
530`sp_warn` field of `struct spwd`.
531
532`passwordChangeInactiveUSec` → An unsigned 64bit integer, encoding how much
533time has to pass after the password expired that the account is
534deactivated. This corresponds with the `sp_inact` field of `struct spwd`.
535
536`passwordChangeNow` → A boolean. If true the user has to change their password
537on next login. This corresponds with the `sp_lstchg` field of `struct spwd`
538being set to zero.
539
540`pkcs11TokenUri` → An array of strings, each with an RFC 7512 compliant PKCS#11
541URI referring to security token (or smart card) of some form, that shall be
542associated with the user and may be used for authentication. The URI is used to
543search for an X.509 certificate and associated private key that may be used to
544decrypt an encrypted secret key that is used to unlock the user's account (see
545below). It's undefined how precise the URI is: during log-in it is tested
546against all plugged in security tokens and if there's exactly one matching
547private key found with it it is used.
548
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549`fido2HmacCredential` → An array of strings, each with a Base64-encoded FIDO2
550credential ID that shell be used for authentication with FIDO2 devices that
551implement the `hmac-secret` extension. The salt to pass to the FIDO2 device is
552found in `fido2HmacSalt`.
553
e1ef1e5d 554`privileged` → An object, which contains the fields of the `privileged` section
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555of the user record, see below.
556
557`perMachine` → An array of objects, which contain the `perMachine` section of
558the user record, and thus fields to apply on specific systems only, see below.
559
560`binding` → An object, keyed by machine IDs formatted as strings, pointing
561to objects that contain the `binding` section of the user record,
562i.e. additional fields that bind the user record to a specific machine, see
563below.
564
565`status` → An object, keyed by machine IDs formatted as strings, pointing to
566objects that contain the `status` section of the user record, i.e. additional
567runtime fields that expose the current status of the user record on a specific
568system, see below.
569
570`signature` → An array of objects, which contain cryptographic signatures of
571the user record, i.e. the fields of the `signature` section of the user record,
572see below.
573
574`secret` → An object, which contains the fields of the `secret` section of the
575user record, see below.
576
577## Fields in the `privileged` section
578
579As mentioned, the `privileged` section is encoded in a sub-object of the user
580record top-level object, in the `privileged` field. Any data included in this
581object shall only be visible to the administrator and the user themselves, and
582be suppressed implicitly when other users get access to a user record. It thus
583takes the role of the `/etc/shadow` records for each user, which has similarly
584restrictive access semantics. The following fields are currently defined:
585
586`passwordHint` → A user-selected password hint in free-form text. This should
587be a string like "What's the name of your first pet?", but is entirely for the
588user to choose.
589
ffc8eeae 590`hashedPassword` → An array of strings, each containing a hashed UNIX password
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591string, in the format
592[`crypt(3)`](http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/crypt.3.html) generates. This
593corresponds with `sp_pwdp` field of `struct spwd` (and in a way the `pw_passwd`
594field of `struct passwd`).
595
596`sshAuthorizedKeys` → An array of strings, each listing an SSH public key that
597is authorized to access the account. The strings should follow the same format
598as the lines in the traditional `~/.ssh/authorized_key` file.
599
600`pkcs11EncryptedKey` → An array of objects. Each element of the array should be
601an object consisting of three string fields: `uri` shall contain a PKCS#11
fe2520fb 602security token URI, `data` shall contain a Base64-encoded encrypted key and
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603`hashedPassword` shall contain a UNIX password hash to test the key
604against. Authenticating with a security token against this account shall work
605as follows: the encrypted secret key is converted from its Base64
606representation into binary, then decrypted with the PKCS#11 `C_Decrypt()`
607function of the PKCS#11 module referenced by the specified URI, using the
608private key found on the same token. The resulting decrypted key is then
609Base64-encoded and tested against the specified UNIX hashed password. The
fe2520fb 610Base64-encoded decrypted key may also be used to unlock further resources
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611during log-in, for example the LUKS or `fscrypt` storage backend. It is
612generally recommended that for each entry in `pkcs11EncryptedKey` there's also
613a matching one in `pkcs11TokenUri` and vice versa, with the same URI, appearing
614in the same order, but this should not be required by applications processing
615user records.
616
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617`fido2HmacSalt` → An array of objects, implementing authentication support with
618FIDO2 devices that implement the `hmac-secret` extension. Each element of the
619array should be an object consisting of three string fields: `credential`,
620`salt`, `hashedPassword`. The first two shall contain Base64-encoded binary
621data: the FIDO2 credential ID and the salt value to pass to the FIDO2
622device. During authentication this salt along with the credential ID is sent to
623the FIDO2 token, which will HMAC hash the salt with its internal secret key and
624return the result. This resulting binary key should then be Base64-encoded and
625used as string password for the further layers of the stack. The
626`hashedPassword` field of the `fido2HmacSalt` field shall be a UNIX password
627hash to test this derived secret key against for authentication. It is
628generally recommended that for each entry in `fido2HmacSalt` there's also a
629matching one in `fido2HmacCredential`, and vice versa, with the same credential
630ID, appearing in the same order, but this should not be required by
631applications processing user recrods.
632
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633## Fields in the `perMachine` section
634
635As mentioned, the `perMachine` section contains settings that shall apply to
636specific systems only. This is primarily interesting for resource management
637properties as they tend to require a per-system focus, however they may be used
638for other purposes too.
639
640The `perMachine` field in the top-level object is an array of objects. When
641processing the user record first the various fields on the top-level object
642should be used. Then this array should be iterated in order, and the various
643settings be applied that match either the indicated machine ID or host
644name. There may be multiple array entries that match a specific system, in
645which case all the object's setting should be applied. If the same option is
646set in the top-level object as in a per-machine object the latter wins and
647entirely undoes the setting in the top-level object (i.e. no merging of
648properties that are arrays themselves is done). If the same option is set in
649multiple per-machine objects the one specified later in the array wins (and
650here too no merging of individual fields is done, the later field always wins
651in full).
652
653The following fields are defined in this section:
654
655`matchMachineId` → An array of strings with each a formatted 128bit ID in
656hex. If any of the specified IDs match the system's local machine ID
657(i.e. matches `/etc/machine-id`) the fields in this object are honored.
658
659`matchHostname` → An array of string with a each a valid hostname. If any of
660the specified hostnames match the system's local hostname, the fields in this
661object are honored. If both `matchHostname` and `matchMachineId` are used
662within the same array entry, the object is honored when either match succeeds,
663i.e. the two match types are combined in OR, not in AND.
664
665These two are the only two fields specific to this section. All other fields
666that may be used in this section are identical to the equally named ones in the
667`regular` section (i.e. at the top-level object). Specifically, these are:
668
669`iconName`, `location`, `shell`, `umask`, `environment`, `timeZone`,
670`preferredLanguage`, `niceLevel`, `resourceLimits`, `locked`, `notBeforeUSec`,
671`notAfterUSec`, `storage`, `diskSize`, `diskSizeRelative`, `skeletonDirectory`,
672`accessMode`, `tasksMax`, `memoryHigh`, `memoryMax`, `cpuWeight`, `ioWeight`,
673`mountNoDevices`, `mountNoSuid`, `mountNoExecute`, `cifsDomain`,
674`cifsUserName`, `cifsService`, `imagePath`, `uid`, `gid`, `memberOf`,
675`fileSystemType`, `partitionUuid`, `luksUuid`, `fileSystemUuid`, `luksDiscard`,
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676`luksOfflineDiscard`, `luksCipher`, `luksCipherMode`, `luksVolumeKeySize`,
677`luksPbkdfHashAlgorithm`, `luksPbkdfType`, `luksPbkdfTimeCostUSec`,
678`luksPbkdfMemoryCost`, `luksPbkdfParallelThreads`, `rateLimitIntervalUSec`,
679`rateLimitBurst`, `enforcePasswordPolicy`, `autoLogin`, `stopDelayUSec`,
680`killProcesses`, `passwordChangeMinUSec`, `passwordChangeMaxUSec`,
681`passwordChangeWarnUSec`, `passwordChangeInactiveUSec`, `passwordChangeNow`,
682`pkcs11TokenUri`, `fido2HmacCredential`.
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683
684## Fields in the `binding` section
685
686As mentioned, the `binding` section contains additional fields about the user
687record, that bind it to the local system. These fields are generally used by a
688local user manager (such as `systemd-homed.service`) to add in fields that make
689sense in a local context but not necessarily in a global one. For example, a
690user record that contains no `uid` field in the regular section is likely
691extended with one in the `binding` section to assign a local UID if no global
692UID is defined.
693
694All fields in the `binding` section only make sense in a local context and are
695suppressed when the user record is ported between systems. The `binding` section
696is generally persisted on the system but not in the home directories themselves
697and the home directory is supposed to be fully portable and thus not contain
698the information that `binding` is supposed to contain that binds the portable
699record to a specific system.
700
701The `binding` sub-object on the top-level user record object is keyed by the
702machine ID the binding is intended for, which point to an object with the
703fields of the bindings. These fields generally match fields that may also be
704defined in the `regular` and `perMachine` sections, however override
705both. Usually, the `binding` value should not contain settings different from
706those set via `regular` or `perMachine`, however this might happen if some
707settings are not supported locally (think: `fscrypt` is recorded as intended
708storage mechanism in the `regular` section, but the local kernel does not
709support `fscrypt`, hence `directory` was chosen as implicit fallback), or have
710been changed in the `regular` section through updates (e.g. a home directory
711was created with `luks` as storage mechanism but later the user record was
712updated to prefer `subvolume`, which however doesn't change the actual storage
713used already which is pinned in the `binding` section).
714
715The following fields are defined in the `binding` section. They all have an
716identical format and override their equally named counterparts in the `regular`
717and `perMachine` sections:
718
719`imagePath`, `homeDirectory`, `partitionUuid`, `luksUuid`, `fileSystemUuid`,
720`uid`, `gid`, `storage`, `fileSystemType`, `luksCipher`, `luksCipherMode`,
721`luksVolumeKeySize`.
722
723## Fields in the `status` section
724
725As mentioned, the `status` section contains additional fields about the user
726record that are exclusively acquired during runtime, and that expose runtime
727metrics of the user and similar metadata that shall not be persisted but are
728only acquired "on-the-fly" when requested.
729
730This section is arranged similarly to the `binding` section: the `status`
731sub-object of the top-level user record object is keyed by the machine ID,
732which points to the object with the fields defined here. The following fields
733are defined:
734
735`diskUsage` → An unsigned 64bit integer. The currently used disk space of the
736home directory in bytes. This value might be determined in different ways,
737depending on the selected storage mechanism. For LUKS storage this is the file
738size of the loopback file or block device size. For the
739directory/subvolume/fscrypt storage this is the current disk space used as
740reported by the file system quota subsystem.
741
742`diskFree` → An unsigned 64bit integer, denoting the number of "free" bytes in
743the disk space allotment, i.e. usually the difference between the disk size as
744reported by `diskSize` and the used already as reported in `diskFree`, but
745possibly skewed by metadata sizes, disk compression and similar.
746
747`diskSize` → An unsigned 64bit integer, denoting the disk space currently
748allotted to the user, in bytes. Depending on the storage mechanism this can mean
749different things (see above). In contrast to the top-level field of the same
750(or the one in the `perMachine` section), this field reports the current size
751allotted to the user, not the intended one. The values may differ when user
752records are updated without the home directory being re-sized.
753
754`diskCeiling`/`diskFloor` → Unsigned 64bit integers indicating upper and lower
755bounds when changing the `diskSize` value, in bytes. These values are typically
756derived from the underlying data storage, and indicate in which range the home
757directory may be re-sized in, i.e. in which sensible range the `diskSize` value
758should be kept.
759
760`state` → A string indicating the current state of the home directory. The
761precise set of values exposed here are up to the service managing the home
762directory to define (i.e. are up to the service identified with the `service`
763field below). However, it is recommended to stick to a basic vocabulary here:
764`inactive` for a home directory currently not mounted, `absent` for a home
765directory that cannot be mounted currently because it does not exist on the
766local system, `active` for a home directory that is currently mounted and
767accessible.
768
769`service` → A string identifying the service that manages this user record. For
770example `systemd-homed.service` sets this to `io.systemd.Home` to all user
771records it manages. This is particularly relevant to define clearly the context
772in which `state` lives, see above. Note that this field also exists on the
773top-level object (i.e. in the `regular` section), which it overrides. The
774`regular` field should be used if conceptually the user record can only be
775managed by the specified service, and this `status` field if it can
776conceptually be managed by different managers, but currently is managed by the
777specified one.
778
779`signedLocally` → A boolean. If true indicates that the user record is signed
780by a public key for which the private key is available locally. This means that
781the user record may be modified locally as it can be re-signed with the private
782key. If false indicates that the user record is signed by a public key
783recognized by the local manager but whose private key is not available
784locally. This means the user record cannot be modified locally as it couldn't
785be signed afterwards.
786
787`goodAuthenticationCounter` → An unsigned 64bit integer. This counter is
788increased by one on every successful authentication attempt, i.e. an
789authentication attempt where a security token of some form was presented and it
790was correct.
791
792`badAuthenticationCounter` → An unsigned 64bit integer. This counter is
793increased by one on every unsuccessfully authentication attempt, i.e. an
794authentication attempt where a security token of some form was presented and it
795was incorrect.
796
797`lastGoodAuthenticationUSec` → An unsigned 64bit integer, indicating the time
798of the last successful authentication attempt in µs since the UNIX epoch (1970).
799
800`lastBadAuthenticationUSec` → Similar, but the timestamp of the last
801unsuccessfully authentication attempt.
802
803`rateLimitBeginUSec` → An unsigned 64bit integer: the µs timestamp since the
804UNIX epoch (1970) where the most recent rate limiting interval has been
805started, as configured with `rateLimitIntervalUSec`.
806
807`rateLimitCount` → An unsigned 64bit integer, counting the authentication
808attempts in the current rate limiting interval, see above. If this counter
809grows beyond the value configured in `rateLimitBurst` authentication attempts
810are temporarily refused.
811
812`removable` → A boolean value. If true the manager of this user record
813determined the home directory being on removable media. If false it was
814determined the home directory is in internal built-in media. (This is used by
815`systemd-logind.service` to automatically pick the right default value for
816`stopDelayUSec` if the field is not explicitly specified: for home directories
817on removable media the delay is selected very low to minimize the chance the
818home directory remains in unclean state if the storage device is removed from
819the system by the user).
820
821## Fields in the `signature` section
822
823As mentioned, the `signature` section of the user record may contain one or
824more cryptographic signatures of the user record. Like all others, this section
825is optional, and only used when cryptographic validation of user records shall
826be used. Specifically, all user records managed by `systemd-homed.service` will
827carry such signatures and the service refuses managing user records that come
828without signature or with signatures not recognized by any locally defined
829public key.
830
831The `signature` field in the top-level user record object is an array of
832objects. Each object encapsulates one signature and has two fields: `data` and
833`key` (both are strings). The `data` field contains the actual signature,
fe2520fb 834encoded in Base64, the `key` field contains a copy of the public key whose
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835private key was used to make the signature, in PEM format. Currently only
836signatures with Ed25519 keys are defined.
837
838Before signing the user record should be brought into "normalized" form,
839i.e. the keys in all objects should be sorted alphabetically. All redundant
840white-space and newlines should be removed and the JSON text then signed.
841
842The signatures only cover the `regular`, `perMachine` and `privileged` sections
843of the user records, all other sections (include `signature` itself), are
844removed before the signature is calculated.
845
846Rationale for signing and threat model: while a multi-user operating system
847like Linux strives for being sufficiently secure even after a user acquired a
848local login session reality tells us this is not the case. Hence it is
849essential to restrict carefully which users may gain access to a system and
850which ones shall not. A minimal level of trust must be established between
851system, user record and the user themselves before a log-in request may be
852permitted. In particular if the home directory is provided in its own LUKS2
853encapsulated file system it is essential this trust is established before the
854user logs in (and hence the file system mounted), since file system
855implementations on Linux are well known to be relatively vulnerable to rogue
856disk images. User records and home directories in many context are expected to
857be something shareable between multiple systems, and the transfer between them
858might not happen via exclusively trusted channels. Hence it's essential that
859the user record is not manipulated between uses. Finally, resource management
860(which may be done by the various fields of the user record) is security
861sensitive, since it should forcefully lock the user into the assigned resource
862usage and not allow them to use more. The requirement of being able to trust
863the user record data combined with the potential transfer over untrusted
864channels suggest a cryptographic signature mechanism where only user records
865signed by a recognized key are permitted to log in locally.
866
867Note that other mechanisms for establishing sufficient trust exist too, and are
868perfectly valid as well. For example, systems like LDAP/ActiveDirectory
869generally insist on user record transfer from trusted servers via encrypted TLS
870channels only. Or traditional UNIX users created locally in `/etc/passwd` never
871exist outside of the local trusted system, hence transfer and trust in the
872source are not an issue. The major benefit of operating with signed user
873records is that they are self-sufficiently trusted, not relying on a secure
874channel for transfer, and thus being compatible with a more distributed model
875of home directory transfer, including on USB sticks and such.
876
877## Fields in the `secret` section
878
879As mentioned, the `secret` section of the user record should never be persisted
880nor transferred across machines. It is only defined in short-lived operations,
881for example when a user record is first created or registered, as the secret
882key data needs to be available to derive encryption keys from and similar.
883
884The `secret` field of the top-level user record contains the following fields:
885
886`password` → an array of strings, each containing a plain text password.
887
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888`tokenPin` → an array of strings, each containing a plain text PIN, suitable
889for unlocking security tokens that require that. (The field `pkcs11Pin` should
890be considered a compatibility alias for this field, and merged with `tokenPin`
891in case both are set.)
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892
893`pkcs11ProtectedAuthenticationPathPermitted` → a boolean. If set to true allows
894the receiver to use the PKCS#11 "protected authentication path" (i.e. a
895physical button/touch element on the security token) for authenticating the
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896user. If false or unset, authentication this way shall not be attempted.
897
898`fido2UserPresencePermitted` → a boolean. If set to true allows the receiver to
899use the FIDO2 "user presence" flag. This is similar to the concept of
900`pkcs11ProtectedAuthenticationPathPermitted`, but exposes the FIDO2 concept
901behind it. If false or unset authentication this way shall not be attempted.
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902
903## Mapping to `struct passwd` and `struct spwd`
904
905When mapping classic UNIX user records (i.e. `struct passwd` and `struct spwd`)
906to JSON user records the following mappings should be applied:
907
908| Structure | Field | Section | Field | Condition |
909|-----------------|-------------|--------------|------------------------------|----------------------------|
910| `struct passwd` | `pw_name` | `regular` | `userName` | |
911| `struct passwd` | `pw_passwd` | `privileged` | `password` | (See notes below) |
912| `struct passwd` | `pw_uid` | `regular` | `uid` | |
913| `struct passwd` | `pw_gid` | `regular` | `gid` | |
914| `struct passwd` | `pw_gecos` | `regular` | `realName` | |
915| `struct passwd` | `pw_dir` | `regular` | `homeDirectory` | |
916| `struct passwd` | `pw_shell` | `regular` | `shell` | |
917| `struct spwd` | `sp_namp` | `regular` | `userName` | |
918| `struct spwd` | `sp_pwdp` | `privileged` | `password` | (See notes below) |
919| `struct spwd` | `sp_lstchg` | `regular` | `lastPasswordChangeUSec` | (if `sp_lstchg` > 0) |
920| `struct spwd` | `sp_lstchg` | `regular` | `passwordChangeNow` | (if `sp_lstchg` == 0) |
921| `struct spwd` | `sp_min` | `regular` | `passwordChangeMinUSec` | |
922| `struct spwd` | `sp_max` | `regular` | `passwordChangeMaxUSec` | |
923| `struct spwd` | `sp_warn` | `regular` | `passwordChangeWarnUSec` | |
924| `struct spwd` | `sp_inact` | `regular` | `passwordChangeInactiveUSec` | |
925| `struct spwd` | `sp_expire` | `regular` | `locked` | (if `sp_expire` in [0, 1]) |
926| `struct spwd` | `sp_expire` | `regular` | `notAfterUSec` | (if `sp_expire` > 1) |
927
928At this time almost all Linux machines employ shadow passwords, thus the
929`pw_passwd` field in `struct passwd` is set to `"x"`, and the actual password
930is stored in the shadow entry `struct spwd`'s field `sp_pwdp`.
931
932## Extending These Records
933
934User records following this specifications are supposed to be extendable for
935various applications. In general, subsystems are free to introduce their own
936keys, as long as:
937
938* Care should be taken to place the keys in the right section, i.e. the most
939 appropriate for the data field.
940
941* Care should be taken to avoid namespace clashes. Please prefix your fields
942 with a short identifier of your project to avoid ambiguities and
943 incompatibilities.
944
945* This specification is supposed to be a living specification. If you need
946 additional fields, please consider submitting them upstream for inclusion in
947 this specification. If they are reasonably universally useful, it would be
948 best to list them here.
949
950## Examples
951
952The shortest valid user record looks like this:
953
954```json
955{
956 "userName" : "u"
957}
958```
959
960A reasonable user record for a system user might look like this:
961
962```json
963{
964 "userName" : "httpd",
965 "uid" : 473,
966 "gid" : 473,
967 "disposition" : "system",
968 "locked" : true
969}
970```
971
972A fully featured user record associated with a home directory managed by
973`systemd-homed.service` might look like this:
974
975```json
976{
977 "autoLogin" : true,
978 "binding" : {
979 "15e19cf24e004b949ddaac60c74aa165" : {
980 "fileSystemType" : "ext4",
981 "fileSystemUuid" : "758e88c8-5851-4a2a-b88f-e7474279c111",
982 "gid" : 60232,
983 "homeDirectory" : "/home/grobie",
984 "imagePath" : "/home/grobie.home",
985 "luksCipher" : "aes",
986 "luksCipherMode" : "xts-plain64",
987 "luksUuid" : "e63581ba-79fb-4226-b9de-1888393f7573",
988 "luksVolumeKeySize" : 32,
989 "partitionUuid" : "41f9ce04-c827-4b74-a981-c669f93eb4dc",
990 "storage" : "luks",
991 "uid" : 60232
992 }
993 },
994 "disposition" : "regular",
995 "enforcePasswordPolicy" : false,
996 "lastChangeUSec" : 1565950024279735,
997 "memberOf" : [
998 "wheel"
999 ],
1000 "privileged" : {
1001 "hashedPassword" : [
1002 "$6$WHBKvAFFT9jKPA4k$OPY4D4TczKN/jOnJzy54DDuOOagCcvxxybrwMbe1SVdm.Bbr.zOmBdATp.QrwZmvqyr8/SafbbQu.QZ2rRvDs/"
1003 ]
1004 },
1005 "signature" : [
1006 {
1007 "data" : "LU/HeVrPZSzi3MJ0PVHwD5m/xf51XDYCrSpbDRNBdtF4fDVhrN0t2I2OqH/1yXiBidXlV0ptMuQVq8KVICdEDw==",
1008 "key" : "-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----\nMCowBQYDK2VwAyEA/QT6kQWOAMhDJf56jBmszEQQpJHqDsGDMZOdiptBgRk=\n-----END PUBLIC KEY-----\n"
1009 }
1010 ],
1011 "userName" : "grobie",
1012 "status" : {
1013 "15e19cf24e004b949ddaac60c74aa165" : {
1014 "goodAuthenticationCounter" : 16,
1015 "lastGoodAuthenticationUSec" : 1566309343044322,
1016 "rateLimitBeginUSec" : 1566309342340723,
1017 "rateLimitCount" : 1,
1018 "state" : "inactive",
1019 "service" : "io.systemd.Home",
1020 "diskSize" : 161118667776,
1021 "diskCeiling" : 190371729408,
1022 "diskFloor" : 5242880,
1023 "signedLocally" : true
1024 }
1025 }
1026}
1027```
1028
1029When `systemd-homed.service` manages a home directory it will also include a
1030version of the user record in the home directory itself in the `~/.identity`
1031file. This version lacks the `binding` and `status` sections which are used for
1032local management of the user, but are not intended to be portable between
1033systems. It would hence look like this:
1034
1035```json
1036{
1037 "autoLogin" : true,
1038 "disposition" : "regular",
1039 "enforcePasswordPolicy" : false,
1040 "lastChangeUSec" : 1565950024279735,
1041 "memberOf" : [
1042 "wheel"
1043 ],
1044 "privileged" : {
1045 "hashedPassword" : [
1046 "$6$WHBKvAFFT9jKPA4k$OPY4D4TczKN/jOnJzy54DDuOOagCcvxxybrwMbe1SVdm.Bbr.zOmBdATp.QrwZmvqyr8/SafbbQu.QZ2rRvDs/"
1047 ]
1048 },
1049 "signature" : [
1050 {
1051 "data" : "LU/HeVrPZSzi3MJ0PVHwD5m/xf51XDYCrSpbDRNBdtF4fDVhrN0t2I2OqH/1yXiBidXlV0ptMuQVq8KVICdEDw==",
1052 "key" : "-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----\nMCowBQYDK2VwAyEA/QT6kQWOAMhDJf56jBmszEQQpJHqDsGDMZOdiptBgRk=\n-----END PUBLIC KEY-----\n"
1053 }
1054 ],
1055 "userName" : "grobie",
1056}
1057```