NAME¶
inetd —
internet
“super-server”
SYNOPSIS¶
inetd |
[-d]
[-R rate]
[--environment]
[--resolve]
[configuration_files
...] |
WARNING¶
The information in this man page may be inaccurate or incomplete. The
authoritative documentation for the
inetd utility is
contained in
inetutils.info document. To access it from your
command line, type
info inetd
The online copy of the documentation is available at the following address:
http://www.gnu.org/software/inetutils/manual.
DESCRIPTION¶
The
inetd program 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 options available for
inetd:
- -d,
--debug
- Turns on debugging.
- --environment
- Pass local and remote address data via environment
variables. See ENVIRONMENT below.
- -R,
--rate rate
- Specifies the maximum number of times a service can be
invoked in one minute; the default is 40.
- --resolve
- Resolve local and remote IP addresses and pass them to the
server program via TCPLOCALHOST and TCPREMOTEHOST
environment variables. See ENVIRONMENT below. This option implies
--environment.
- --version
- Shows the version.
- --help
- Shows the help.
Upon execution,
inetd reads its configuration information from
a configuration file on the command line, by default,
/etc/inetd.conf and /etc/inetd.d. If the configuration
pathname is a directory, all the files in the directory are read like a
configuration file. All of the configuration files are read and merged. There
must be an entry for each field in 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. The fields of the configuration file are as follows:
service name
socket type
protocol
wait/nowait[.max]
user
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.
The
service-name entry is the name of a valid service in the
file
/etc/services. For “internal” services
(discussed below), the service name
must be the official
name of the service (that is, the first entry in
/etc/services). 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 as given in
/etc/protocols. Examples might be “tcp” or
“udp”. TCPMUX services must use “tcp”.
The
wait/nowait[.max] 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
received 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”.
Comsat(8),
(
biff(1)) and
talkd(8) are both examples
of the latter type of datagram server.
Tftpd(8) is an
example of a multi-threaded datagram server. The optional “max”
suffix (separated from “wait” or “nowait” by a dot)
specifies the maximum number of times a service can be invoked in one minute;
the default is 40. If a service exceeds this limit,
inetd
will log the problem and stop servicing requests for the specific service for
ten minutes. See also the
-R option above.
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 optional “max” suffix (separated from “wait” or
“nowait” by a dot) is a decimal number that specifies the maximum
number of server instances that may be spawned from
inetd
within an interval of 60 seconds. It overrides the settings of the
-R
command line option.
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
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 should be just as arguments
normally are, starting with argv[0], which is the name of the program. If the
service is provided internally, the word “internal” should take
the place of this entry.
The
inetd program provides several “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 tcp based.
For details of these services, consult the appropriate RFC from the Network
Information Center.
The
inetd program rereads its configuration file when it
receives a hangup signal,
SIGHUP
. Services may be
added, deleted or modified when the configuration file is reread.
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 TCPMUX services in
inetd.conf.
ENVIRONMENT¶
If a connection is made with a streaming protocol (TCP) and if
--environment option has been given, inetd will set the following
environment variables before starting the program:
PROTO: always "TCP".
TCPLOCALIP: the local IP address of the interface which accepted the
connection.
TCPLOCALPORT: the port number on which the TCP connection was
established.
TCPREMOTEIP: the IP address of the remote client.
TCPREMOTEPORT: the port number on the client side of the TCP connection.
In addition, if given the
--remote option,
inetd will
set the following environment variables:
TCPLOCALHOST: the DNS name of
TCPLOCALIP.
TCPREMOTEHOST: the DNS name of
TCPREMOTEIP.
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
tcpmux/+date stream tcp nowait guest /bin/date date
tcpmux/phonebook stream tcp nowait guest /usr/local/bin/phonebook phonebook
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: 1) there are
lots of hosts requesting the service within a short time period, 2) a 'broken'
client program is requesting the service too frequently, 3) a malicious user
is running a program to invoke the service in a 'denial of service' attack, or
4) the invoked service program has an error that causes clients to retry
quickly. Use the [
-R] 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 file.
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 number
service: can't set gid number
The user or group ID for the entry's
user is invalid.
SEE ALSO¶
comsat(8),
fingerd(8),
ftpd(8),
rexecd(8),
rlogind(8),
rshd(8),
telnetd(8),
tftpd(8)
BUGS¶
The environment variables (see
ENVIRONMENT) are set only for TCP IPv4
nowait connections.
HISTORY¶
The
inetd command appeared in
4.3BSD.
TCPMUX is based on code and documentation by Mark Lottor.