inetd(8) is referred to as the “Internet Super-Server” because it manages connections for several services. When a connection is received by inetd, it determines which program the connection is destined for, spawns the particular process and delegates the socket to it (the program is invoked with the service socket as its standard input, output and error descriptors). Running one instance of inetd reduces the overall system load as compared to running each daemon individually in stand-alone mode.
Primarily, inetd is used to spawn other daemons, but several trivial protocols are handled directly, such as chargen, auth, and daytime.
This section will cover the basics in configuring inetd through its command-line options and its configuration file, /etc/inetd.conf.
inetd is initialized through the /etc/rc.conf system. The inetd_enable option is set to NO by default, but is often times turned on by sysinstall with the medium security profile. Placing:
inetd_enable="YES"or
inetd_enable="NO"into /etc/rc.conf can enable or disable inetd starting at boot time.
Additionally, different command-line options can be passed to inetd via the inetd_flags option.
inetd synopsis:
inetd [-d] [-l] [-w] [-W] [-c maximum] [-C rate] [-a address |
hostname] [-p filename] [-R rate] [configuration file]
Turn on debugging.
Turn on logging of successful connections.
Turn on TCP Wrapping for external services (on by default).
Turn on TCP Wrapping for internal services which are built into inetd (on by default).
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.
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.
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.
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 the jail(8) environment.
When 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.
Specify an alternate file in which to store the process ID.
These options can be passed to inetd using the inetd_flags option in /etc/rc.conf. By default, inetd_flags is set to -wW, which turns on TCP wrapping for inetd's internal and external services. For novice users, these parameters usually do not need to be modified or even entered in /etc/rc.conf.
注: An external service is a daemon outside of inetd, which is invoked when a connection is received for it. On the other hand, an internal service is one that inetd has the facility of offering within itself.
Configuration of inetd is controlled through the /etc/inetd.conf file.
When a modification is made to /etc/inetd.conf, inetd can be forced to re-read its configuration file by sending a HangUP signal to the inetd process as shown:
Each line of the configuration file specifies an individual daemon. Comments in the file are preceded by a “#”. The format of /etc/inetd.conf is as follows:
service-name
socket-type
protocol
{wait|nowait}[/max-child[/max-connections-per-ip-per-minute]]
user[:group][/login-class]
server-program
server-program-arguments
An example entry for the ftpd daemon using IPv4:
ftp stream tcp nowait root /usr/libexec/ftpd ftpd -l
This is the service name of the particular daemon. It must correspond to a service listed in /etc/services. This determines which port inetd must listen to. If a new service is being created, it must be placed in /etc/services first.
Either stream, dgram, raw, or seqpacket. stream must be used for connection-based, TCP daemons, while dgram is used for daemons utilizing the UDP transport protocol.
One of the following:
wait|nowait indicates whether the 	 daemon invoked
from inetd is 	 able to handle its own socket or not.
	 dgram socket types must use the 	 wait option, while stream socket 	 daemons, which are usually
multi-threaded, should use 	 nowait. wait usually 	 hands off multiple sockets to a single daemon,
while 	 nowait spawns a child daemon for each 	 new
socket.
The maximum number of child daemons 	 inetd may spawn
can be set 	 using the max-child option. If a limit 	
of ten instances of a particular daemon is needed, a 	 /10
would be placed after 	 nowait.
In addition to max-child, another 	 option limiting
the maximum connections from a single 	 place to a particular daemon can be enabled.
	 max-connections-per-ip-per-minute does 	 just this.
A value of ten here would limit any particular 	 IP address connecting to a
particular service to ten 	 attempts per minute. This is useful to prevent 	
intentional or unintentional resource consumption and 	 Denial of Service (DoS)
attacks to a machine.
In this field, wait or 	 nowait is mandatory. 	 max-child
and 	 max-connections-per-ip-per-minute are 	
optional.
A stream-type multi-threaded daemon without any 	 max-child or 	 max-connections-per-ip-per-minute limits 	 would simply be: nowait.
The same daemon with a maximum limit of ten daemons would read: nowait/10.
Additionally, the same setup with a limit of twenty connections per IP address per minute and a maximum total limit of ten child daemons would read: nowait/10/20.
These options are all utilized by the default settings of the fingerd daemon, as seen here:
finger stream tcp nowait/3/10 nobody /usr/libexec/fingerd fingerd -s
This is the username that the particular daemon should run as. Most commonly, daemons run as the root user. For security purposes, it is common to find some servers running as the daemon user, or the least privileged nobody user.
The full path of the daemon to be executed when a 	 connection is received. If the
daemon is a service 	 provided by inetd internally, 	
then internal should be 	 used.
This works in conjunction with 	 server-program by
specifying the 	 arguments, starting with argv[0], 	
passed to the daemon on invocation. If 	 mydaemon -d is the
command line, 	 mydaemon -d would be the value of 	
server-program-arguments. Again, if 	 the daemon is an
internal service, use 	 internal here.
Depending on the security profile chosen at install, many of inetd's daemons may be enabled by default. If there is no apparent need for a particular daemon, disable it! Place a “#” in front of the daemon in question in /etc/inetd.conf, and then send a hangup signal to inetd. Some daemons, such as fingerd, may not be desired at all because they provide an attacker with too much information.
Some daemons are not security-conscious and have long, or 	non-existent timeouts
for connection attempts. This allows an 	attacker to slowly send connections to a
particular daemon, 	thus saturating available resources. It may be a good idea to
	place max-connections-per-ip-per-minute and 	max-child limitations on certain 	daemons.
By default, TCP wrapping is turned on. Consult the hosts_access(5) manual page for more information on placing TCP restrictions on various inetd invoked daemons.
daytime, time, echo, discard, chargen, and auth are all internally provided services of inetd.
The auth service provides identity (ident, identd) network services, and is configurable to a certain degree.
Consult the inetd(8) manual page for more in-depth information.
本文及其他文件,可由此下載:ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/doc/。
若有 FreeBSD 方面疑問,請先閱讀 FreeBSD 相關文件,如不能解決的話,再洽詢
<questions@FreeBSD.org>。
關於本文件的問題,請洽詢 <doc@FreeBSD.org>。