NAME
inetd
—
internet
“super-server”
SYNOPSIS
inetd |
[-d ] [-l ]
[-w ] [-W ]
[-c maximum]
[-C rate]
[-a address |
hostname] [-p
filename] [-R
rate] [-s
maximum] [configuration
file] |
DESCRIPTION
Theinetd
utility should be run at boot time by
/etc/rc (see
rc(8)).
It then listens for connections on certain internet sockets. When a connection
is found on one of its sockets, it decides what service the socket corresponds
to, and invokes a program to service the request. The server program is
invoked with the service socket as its standard input, output and error
descriptors. After the program is finished, inetd
continues to listen on the socket (except in some cases which will be
described below). Essentially, inetd
allows running
one daemon to invoke several others, reducing load on the system.
The following options are available:
-d
- Turn on debugging.
-l
- Turn on logging of successful connections.
-w
- Turn on TCP Wrapping for external services. See the IMPLEMENTATION NOTES section for more information on TCP Wrappers support.
-W
- Turn on TCP Wrapping for internal services which are built in to
inetd
. -c
maximum- Specify the default maximum number of simultaneous invocations of each service; the default is unlimited. May be overridden on a per-service basis with the "max-child" parameter.
-C
rate- Specify the default maximum number of times a service can be invoked from a single IP address in one minute; the default is unlimited. May be overridden on a per-service basis with the "max-connections-per-ip-per-minute" parameter.
-R
rate- Specify the maximum number of times a service can be invoked in one minute; the default is 256. A rate of 0 allows an unlimited number of invocations.
-s
maximum- Specify the default maximum number of simultaneous invocations of each service from a single IP address; the default is unlimited. May be overridden on a per-service basis with the "max-child-per-ip" parameter.
-a
- Specify one specific IP address to bind to. Alternatively, a hostname can
be specified, in which case the IPv4 or IPv6 address which corresponds to
that hostname is used. Usually a hostname is specified when
inetd
is run inside a jail(8), in which case the hostname corresponds to that of the jail(8) environment.When the hostname specification is used and both IPv4 and IPv6 bindings are desired, one entry with the appropriate protocol type for each binding is required for each service in /etc/inetd.conf. For example, a TCP-based service would need two entries, one using “tcp4” for the protocol and the other using “tcp6”. See the explanation of the /etc/inetd.conf protocol field below.
-p
- Specify an alternate file in which to store the process ID.
Upon execution, inetd
reads its
configuration information from a configuration file which, by default, is
/etc/inetd.conf. There must be an entry for each
field of the configuration file, with entries for each field separated by a
tab or a space. Comments are denoted by a “#” at the beginning
of a line. There must be an entry for each field. The fields of the
configuration file are as follows:
service-name socket-type protocol {wait|nowait}[/max-child[/max-connections-per-ip-per-minute[/max-child-per-ip]]] user[:group][/login-class] server-program server-program-arguments
To specify an ONC RPC-based service, the entry would contain these fields:
service-name/version socket-type rpc/protocol {wait|nowait}[/max-child[/max-connections-per-ip-per-minute[/max-child-per-ip]]] user[:group][/login-class] server-program server-program-arguments
There are two types of services that inetd
can start: standard and TCPMUX. A standard service has a well-known port
assigned to it; it may be a service that implements an official Internet
standard or is a BSD-specific service. As described
in RFC 1078, TCPMUX services are nonstandard services that do not have a
well-known port assigned to them. They are invoked from
inetd
when a program connects to the
“tcpmux” well-known port and specifies the service name. This
feature is useful for adding locally-developed servers. TCPMUX requests are
only accepted when the multiplexor service itself is enabled, above and
beyond and specific TCPMUX-based servers; see the discussion of internal
services below.
The service-name entry is the name of a valid service in the file /etc/services, or the specification of a UNIX domain socket (see below). For “internal” services (discussed below), the service name should be the official name of the service (that is, the first entry in /etc/services). When used to specify an ONC RPC-based service, this field is a valid RPC service name listed in the file /etc/rpc. The part on the right of the “/” is the RPC version number. This can simply be a single numeric argument or a range of versions. A range is bounded by the low version to the high version - “rusers/1-3”. For TCPMUX services, the value of the service-name field consists of the string “tcpmux” followed by a slash and the locally-chosen service name. The service names listed in /etc/services and the name “help” are reserved. Try to choose unique names for your TCPMUX services by prefixing them with your organization's name and suffixing them with a version number.
The socket-type should be one of “stream”, “dgram”, “raw”, “rdm”, or “seqpacket”, depending on whether the socket is a stream, datagram, raw, reliably delivered message, or sequenced packet socket. TCPMUX services must use “stream”.
The protocol must be a valid protocol or
“unix”. Examples are “tcp” or
“udp”, both of which imply IPv4 for backward compatibility.
The names “tcp4” and “udp4” specify IPv4 only.
The names “tcp6” and “udp6” specify IPv6 only.
The names “tcp46” and “udp46” specify that the
entry accepts both IPv4 and IPv6 connections via a wildcard
AF_INET6
socket. Rpc based services are specified
with the “rpc/tcp” or “rpc/udp” service type.
One can use specify IPv4 and/or IPv6 with the 4, 6 or 46 suffix, for example
“rpc/tcp6” or “rpc/udp46”. TCPMUX services must
use “tcp”, “tcp4”, “tcp6” or
“tcp46”.
The
wait/nowait
entry specifies whether the server that is invoked by
inetd
will take over the socket associated with the
service access point, and thus whether inetd
should
wait for the server to exit before listening for new service requests.
Datagram servers must use “wait”, as they are always invoked
with the original datagram socket bound to the specified service address.
These servers must read at least one datagram from the socket before
exiting. If a datagram server connects to its peer, freeing the socket so
inetd
can receive further messages on the socket, it
is said to be a “multi-threaded” server; it should read one
datagram from the socket and create a new socket connected to the peer. It
should fork, and the parent should then exit to allow
inetd
to check for new service requests to spawn new
servers. Datagram servers which process all incoming datagrams on a socket
and eventually time out are said to be “single-threaded”. The
comsat(8) and
talkd(8) utilities are examples of the latter type of datagram
server. The tftpd(8) utility is an example of a multi-threaded datagram
server.
Servers using stream sockets generally are multi-threaded and use
the “nowait” entry. Connection requests for these services are
accepted by inetd
, and the server is given only the
newly-accepted socket connected to a client of the service. Most
stream-based services operate in this manner. Stream-based servers that use
“wait” are started with the listening service socket, and must
accept at least one connection request before exiting. Such a server would
normally accept and process incoming connection requests until a timeout.
TCPMUX services must use “nowait”.
The maximum number of outstanding child processes (or “threads”) for a “nowait” service may be explicitly specified by appending a “/” followed by the number to the “nowait” keyword. Normally (or if a value of zero is specified) there is no maximum. Otherwise, once the maximum is reached, further connection attempts will be queued up until an existing child process exits. This also works in the case of “wait” mode, although a value other than one (the default) might not make sense in some cases. You can also specify the maximum number of connections per minute for a given IP address by appending a “/” followed by the number to the maximum number of outstanding child processes. Once the maximum is reached, further connections from this IP address will be dropped until the end of the minute. In addition, you can specify the maximum number of simultaneous invocations of each service from a single IP address by appending a “/” followed by the number to the maximum number of outstanding child processes. Once the maximum is reached, further connections from this IP address will be dropped.
The user entry should contain the user name of the user as whom the server should run. This allows for servers to be given less permission than root. The optional group part separated by “:” allows a group name other than the default group for this user to be specified. The optional login-class part separated by “/” allows specification of a login class other than the default “daemon” login class.
The server-program entry should contain the
pathname of the program which is to be executed by
inetd
when a request is found on its socket. If
inetd
provides this service internally, this entry
should be “internal”.
The server-program-arguments entry lists the arguments to be passed to the server-program, starting with argv[0], which usually is the name of the program. If the service is provided internally, the service-name of the service (and any arguments to it) or the word “internal” should take the place of this entry.
Currently, the only internal service to take arguments is “auth”. Without options, the service will always return “ERROR : HIDDEN-USER”. The available arguments to this service that alter its behavior are:
-d
fallback- Provide a fallback username. If the real
“auth” service is enabled (with the
-r
option discussed below), return this username instead of an error when lookups fail for either socket credentials or the username. If the real “auth” service is disabled, return this username for every request. This is primarily useful when running this service on a NAT machine. -g
- Instead of returning the user's name to the ident requester, report a
username made up of random alphanumeric characters, e.g.
“c0c993”. The
-g
flag overrides not only the user names, but also any fallback name, .fakeid or .noident files. -t
sec[.usec]- Specify a timeout for the service. The default timeout is 10.0 seconds.
-r
- Offer a real “auth” service, as per RFC 1413. All the remaining flags apply only in this case.
-i
- Return numeric user IDs instead of usernames.
-f
- If the file .fakeid exists in the home directory
of the identified user, report the username found in that file instead of
the real username. If the username found in
.fakeid is that of an existing user, then the real
username is reported. If the
-i
flag is also given then the username in .fakeid is checked against existing user IDs instead. -F
- same as
-f
but without the restriction that the username in .fakeid must not match an existing user. -n
- If the file .noident exists in the home directory of the identified user, return “ERROR : HIDDEN-USER”. This overrides any fakeid file which might exist.
-o
osname- Use osname instead of the name of the system as reported by uname(3).
The inetd
utility also provides several
other “trivial” services internally by use of routines within
itself. These services are “echo”, “discard”,
“chargen” (character generator), “daytime”
(human readable time), and “time” (machine readable time, in
the form of the number of seconds since midnight, January 1, 1900). All of
these services are available in both TCP and UDP versions; the UDP versions
will refuse service if the request specifies a reply port corresponding to
any internal service. (This is done as a defense against looping attacks;
the remote IP address is logged.) For details of these services, consult the
appropriate RFC document.
The TCPMUX-demultiplexing service is also implemented as an internal service. For any TCPMUX-based service to function, the following line must be included in inetd.conf:
tcpmux stream tcp nowait root internal
When given the -l
option
inetd
will log an entry to syslog each time a
connection is accepted, noting the service selected and the IP-number of the
remote requester if available. Unless otherwise specified in the
configuration file, and in the absence of the -W
and
-w
options, inetd
will log
to the “daemon” facility.
The inetd
utility rereads its
configuration file when it receives a hangup signal,
SIGHUP
. Services may be added, deleted or modified
when the configuration file is reread. Except when started in debugging
mode, or configured otherwise with the -p
option,
inetd
records its process ID in the file
/var/run/inetd.pid to assist in reconfiguration.
IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
TCP Wrappers
When given the -w
option,
inetd
will wrap all services specified as
“stream nowait” or “dgram” except for
“internal” services. If the -W
option
is given, such “internal” services will be wrapped. If both
options are given, wrapping for both internal and external services will be
enabled. Either wrapping option will cause failed connections to be logged
to the “auth” syslog facility. Adding the
-l
flag to the wrapping options will include
successful connections in the logging to the “auth”
facility.
Note that inetd
only wraps requests for a
“wait” service while no servers are available to service
requests. Once a connection to such a service has been allowed,
inetd
has no control over subsequent connections to
the service until no more servers are left listening for connection
requests.
When wrapping is enabled, the tcpd daemon is not required, as that functionality is builtin. For more information on TCP Wrappers, see the relevant documentation (hosts_access(5)). When reading that document, keep in mind that “internal” services have no associated daemon name. Therefore, the service name as specified in inetd.conf should be used as the daemon name for “internal” services.
TCPMUX
RFC 1078 describes the TCPMUX protocol: ``A TCP client connects to a foreign host on TCP port 1. It sends the service name followed by a carriage-return line-feed <CRLF>. The service name is never case sensitive. The server replies with a single character indicating positive (+) or negative (-) acknowledgment, immediately followed by an optional message of explanation, terminated with a <CRLF>. If the reply was positive, the selected protocol begins; otherwise the connection is closed.'' The program is passed the TCP connection as file descriptors 0 and 1.
If the TCPMUX service name begins with a “+”,
inetd
returns the positive reply for the program.
This allows you to invoke programs that use stdin/stdout without putting any
special server code in them.
The special service name “help” causes
inetd
to list the TCPMUX services which are enabled
in inetd.conf.
IPsec
The implementation includes a tiny hack to support IPsec policy
settings for each socket. A special form of comment line, starting with
“#@
”, is interpreted as a policy
specifier. Everything after the “#@
”
will be used as an IPsec policy string, as described in
ipsec_set_policy(3). Each policy specifier is applied to all
the following lines in inetd.conf until the next
policy specifier. An empty policy specifier resets the IPsec policy.
If an invalid IPsec policy specifier appears in
inetd.conf, inetd
will
provide an error message via the
syslog(3) interface and abort execution.
UNIX Domain Sockets
In addition to running services on IP sockets,
inetd
can also manage UNIX
domain sockets. To do this you specify a protocol of
“unix” and specify the UNIX domain
socket as the service-name. The
service-type
may be “stream” or “dgram”. The specification of
the socket must be an absolute path name, optionally prefixed by an owner
and mode of the form
:user:group:mode:.
The specification:
:news:daemon:220:/var/run/sock
creates a socket owned by user “news” in group
“daemon” with permissions allowing only that user and group to
connect. The default owner is the user that inetd
is
running as. The default mode only allows the socket's owner to connect.
WARNING:
while creating a UNIX domain socket,
inetd
must change the ownership and permissions on
the socket. This can only be done securely if the directory in which the
socket is created is writable only by root. Do
NOT use
inetd
to create sockets in world writable
directories such as /tmp; use
/var/run or a similar directory instead.
Internal services may be run on UNIX domain sockets, in the usual way. In this case the name of the internal service is determined using the last component of the socket's pathname. For example, specifying a socket named /var/run/chargen would invoke the “chargen” service when a connection is received on that socket.
FILES
- /etc/inetd.conf
- configuration file
- /etc/netconfig
- network configuration data base
- /etc/rpc
- translation of service names to RPC program numbers
- /etc/services
- translation of service names to port numbers
- /var/run/inetd.pid
- the pid of the currently running
inetd
EXAMPLES
Here are several example service entries for the various types of services:
ftp stream tcp nowait root /usr/libexec/ftpd ftpd -l ntalk dgram udp wait root /usr/libexec/ntalkd ntalkd telnet stream tcp6 nowait root /usr/libexec/telnetd telnetd shell stream tcp46 nowait root /usr/libexec/rshd rshd tcpmux/+date stream tcp nowait guest /bin/date date tcpmux/phonebook stream tcp nowait guest /usr/local/bin/phonebook phonebook rstatd/1-3 dgram rpc/udp wait root /usr/libexec/rpc.rstatd rpc.rstatd /var/run/echo stream unix nowait root internal #@ ipsec ah/require chargen stream tcp nowait root internal #@
ERROR MESSAGES
The inetd
server logs error messages using
syslog(3). Important error messages and their explanations are:
- service/protocol server failing (looping), service terminated.
- The number of requests for the specified service in the past minute
exceeded the limit. The limit exists to prevent a broken program or a
malicious user from swamping the system. This message may occur for
several reasons:
- There are many hosts requesting the service within a short time period.
- A broken client program is requesting the service too frequently.
- A malicious user is running a program to invoke the service in a denial-of-service attack.
- The invoked service program has an error that causes clients to retry quickly.
Use the
-R
rate option, as described above, to change the rate limit. Once the limit is reached, the service will be reenabled automatically in 10 minutes. - service/protocol: No such user user, service ignored
- service/protocol: getpwnam: user: No such user
- No entry for user exists in the
passwd(5) database. The first message occurs when
inetd
(re)reads the configuration file. The second message occurs when the service is invoked. - service: can't set uid uid
- service: can't set gid gid
- The user or group ID for the entry's user field is invalid.
- setsockopt(SO_PRIVSTATE): Operation not supported
- The
inetd
utility attempted to renounce the privileged state associated with a socket but was unable to. - unknown rpc/udp or rpc/tcp
- No entry was found for either udp or tcp in the netconfig(5) database.
- unknown rpc/udp6 or rpc/tcp6
- No entry was found for either udp6 or tcp6 in the netconfig(5) database.
SEE ALSO
ipsec_set_policy(3), hosts_access(5), hosts_options(5), login.conf(5), netconfig(5), passwd(5), rpc(5), services(5), comsat(8), fingerd(8), ftpd(8), rlogind(8), rpcbind(8), rshd(8), talkd(8), telnetd(8), tftpd(8)
Michael C. St. Johns, Identification Protocol, RFC1413.
HISTORY
The inetd
utility appeared in
4.3BSD. TCPMUX is based on code and documentation by
Mark Lottor. Support for ONC RPC based services is modeled after that
provided by SunOS 4.1. The IPsec hack was contributed by the KAME project in
1999. The FreeBSD TCP Wrappers support first
appeared in FreeBSD 3.2.