Functions to query various properties about the context.
- is_established()
Returns nonzero as soon as the context has been established.
That means no further rounds through
GSSAPI.InitContext.init or GSSAPI.AcceptContext.accept ,
that the remote peer is authenticated as required, and that
the set of available services is complete (see services ).
- services()
Returns a bitfield of GSSAPI.*_FLAG flags for the
services that the context (currently) provides. This field is
complete only when the context establishment has finished,
i.e. when is_established returns nonzero.
See also GSSAPI.describe_services .
- locally_initiated()
Returns nonzero if the context is an initiator, zero if it is
an acceptor. (This is mainly useful in imported contexts.)
- source_name()
Returns the name of the context initiator. The name is always
an MN. Returns an anonymous name if used on the acceptor side
and the anonymous authentication service (c.f.
GSSAPI.ANON_FLAG ) was used.
- target_name()
Returns the name of the context acceptor. If a name is
returned then it is always an MN.
Zero is returned on the initiator side if the initiator didn't
specify a target name and the acceptor did not authenticate
itself (should never happen if mutual authentication (c.f.
GSSAPI.MUTUAL_FLAG ) is a required service).
The returned object is not necessarily the same one as was
passed to GSSAPI.InitContext.create , even though they are
likely to compare as equal (they might not be equal if the
passed name wasn't an MN).
- lifetime()
Returns the validity lifetime left for the context. Returns
zero if the context has expired, or Int.inf if there is no
time limit (in older pikes without Int.inf a large positive
integer is returned instead).
- mech()
Returns the mechanism that provides the context. The returned
value is its OID on dotted-decimal form.
These functions don't throw errors if the context is missing or
not completely established, even though they might not be able
to query the proper values then (GSS-API implementations are
known to not be completely reliable in handling these queries
for partly established contexts). The functions instead return
zero.