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Name

thread-keyring - per-thread keyring

Description

The thread keyring is a keyring used to anchor keys on behalf of a process. It is created only when a thread requests it. The thread keyring has the name (description) _tid.

A special serial number value, is defined that can be used in lieu of the actual serial number of the calling thread's thread keyring.

From the keyctl(1) utility, '@t' can be used instead of a numeric key ID in much the same way, but as keyctl(1) is a program run after forking, this is of no utility.

Thread keyrings are not inherited across clone(2) and fork(2) and are cleared by execve(2). A thread keyring is destroyed when the thread that refers to it terminates.

Initially, a thread does not have a thread keyring. If a thread doesn't have a thread keyring when it is accessed, then it will be created if it is to be modified; otherwise the operation fails with the error

See Also

  1. keyctl(1),
  2. keyctl(3),
  3. keyrings(7),
  4. persistent-keyring(7),
  5. process-keyring(7),
  6. session-keyring(7),
  7. user-keyring(7),
  8. user-session-keyring(7)

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