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inetd.sec(4)

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NAME

inetd.sec — optional security file for inetd

DESCRIPTION

When inetd accepts a connection from a remote system, it checks the address of the host requesting the service against the list of hosts to be allowed or denied access to the specific service (see inetd(1M)). The file inetd.sec allows the system administrator to control which hosts (or networks in general) are allowed to use the system remotely. This file constitutes an extra layer of security in addition to the normal checks done by the services. It precedes the security of the servers; that is, a server is not started by the Internet daemon unless the host requesting the service is a valid host according to inetd.sec.

If file /var/adm/inetd.sec does not exist, security is limited to that implemented by the servers. inetd.sec and the directory /var/adm should be writable only by their owners. Changes to inetd.sec apply to any subsequent connections.

Lines in inetd.sec beginning with # are comments. Comments are not allowed at the end of a line of data.

The lines in the file contain a service name, permission field, and the Internet addresses or official names of the hosts and networks allowed to use that service in the local host. The fields in each line are as follows:

  • <service name> <allow|deny> <host/net addresses, host/net names>

service name is the name (not alias) of a valid service in file /etc/services. The service name for RPC-based services (NFS) is the name (not alias) of a valid service in file /etc/rpc. A service name in /etc/rpc corresponds to a unique RPC program number.

allow|deny determines whether the list of remote hosts in the next field is allowed or denied access to the specified service. Multiple allow|deny lines for each service are not unsupported. If there are multiple allow|deny lines for a particular service, all but the last line are ignored.

Addresses and names are separated by white space. Any mix of addresses and names is allowed. To continue a line, terminate it with \.

Host names and network names are the official names of the hosts or networks as returned by gethostbyaddr() or getnetbynumber(), respectively. Wildcard characters (*) and range characters (-) are allowed. The * and the - can be present in any of the fields of the address. An address field is a string of characters separated by a dot (.).

EXAMPLES

Use a wildcard character to permit a whole network to communicate with the local host without having to list all the hosts in that network. For example, to allow all hosts with network addresses starting with a 10, as well as the single host with address 192.54.24.5 to use rlogin:

login allow 10.* 192.54.24.5

On a system running NFS, deny host 192.54.24.5 access to sprayd, an RPC-based server:

sprayd deny 192.54.24.5

A range is a field containing a - character. To deny hosts in network 10 (arpa) with subnets 3 through 5 access to remsh:

shell deny 10.3-5.*

The following entry denies rlogin access to host cory.berkeley.edu, any hosts on the network named testlan, and the host with internet address 192.54.24.5:

login deny 192.54.24.5 cory.berkeley.edu testlan

If a remote service is not listed in the security file, or if it is listed but it is not followed by allow or deny, all remote hosts can attempt to use it. Security is then provided by the service itself. The following lines, if present in inetd.sec, allow or deny access to the service indicated:

  • Allow all hosts to use ftp:

    ftp

  • Deny all access to the shell service; i.e., remsh:

    shell deny

  • Allow access to the shell service by any host:

    shell allow

  • or

    shell

AUTHOR

inetd.sec was developed by HP.

NFS was developed by Sun Microsystems, Inc.

FILES

/var/adm/inetd.sec

© Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.