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HOSTS_ACCESS(5)						       HOSTS_ACCESS(5)

NAME
       hosts_access - format of	host access control files

DESCRIPTION
       This  manual  page  describes  a	simple access control language that is
       based on	client (host name/address, user	 name),	 and  server  (process
       name,  host name/address) patterns.  Examples are given at the end. The
       impatient reader	is encouraged to skip to the EXAMPLES  section	for  a
       quick introduction.

       An  extended version of the access control language is described	in the
       hosts_options(5)	document. The extensions  are  turned  on  at  program
       build time by building with -DPROCESS_OPTIONS.

       In the following	text, daemon is	the the	process	name of	a network dae-
       mon process, and	client is the name and/or address of a host requesting
       service.	 Network  daemon process names are specified in	the inetd con-
       figuration file.

ACCESS CONTROL FILES
       The access control software consults two	files. The search stops	at the
       first match:

       o      Access  will  be	granted	when a (daemon,client) pair matches an
	      entry in the /etc/hosts.allow file.

       o      Otherwise, access	will be	denied	when  a	 (daemon,client)  pair
	      matches an entry in the /etc/hosts.deny file.

       o      Otherwise, access	will be	granted.

       A  non-existing	access	control	file is	treated	as if it were an empty
       file. Thus, access control can be turned	off  by	 providing  no	access
       control files.

ACCESS CONTROL RULES
       Each access control file	consists of zero or more lines of text.	 These
       lines are processed in order of appearance. The search terminates  when
       a match is found.

       o      A	 newline  character  is	ignored	when it	is preceded by a back-
	      slash character. This permits you	to break up long lines so that
	      they are easier to edit.

       o      Blank  lines  or	lines  that  begin  with  a  `#' character are
	      ignored.	This permits you to insert comments and	whitespace  so
	      that the tables are easier to read.

       o      All  other  lines	 should	 satisfy  the following	format,	things
	      between [] being optional:

		 daemon_list : client_list [ : shell_command ]

       daemon_list is a	list of	one or more daemon process names (argv[0] val-
       ues) or wildcards (see below).

       client_list  is	a list of one or more host names, host addresses, pat-
       terns or	wildcards (see below) that will	be matched against the	client
       host name or address.

       The  more  complex forms	daemon@host and	user@host are explained	in the
       sections	on server endpoint patterns and	on  client  username  lookups,
       respectively.

       List elements should be separated by blanks and/or commas.

       With  the  exception  of	 NIS (YP) netgroup lookups, all	access control
       checks are case insensitive.

PATTERNS
       The access control language implements the following patterns:

       o      A	string that begins with	 a  `.'	 character.  A	host  name  is
	      matched  if  the last components of its name match the specified
	      pattern.	For example, the pattern `.tue.nl'  matches  the  host
	      name `wzv.win.tue.nl'.

       o      A	 string	 that  ends  with  a  `.' character. A host address is
	      matched if its first numeric fields match	the given string.  For
	      example,	the pattern `131.155.' matches the address of (almost)
	      every host on the	Eindhoven University network (131.155.x.x).

       o      A	string that begins with	an `@' character is treated as an  NIS
	      (formerly	 YP)  netgroup name. A host name is matched if it is a
	      host member of the specified netgroup. Netgroup matches are  not
	      supported	for daemon process names or for	client user names.

       o      An  expression of	the form `n.n.n.n/m.m.m.m' is interpreted as a
	      `net/mask' pair. A host address is matched if `net' is equal  to
	      the  bitwise AND of the address and the `mask'. For example, the
	      net/mask	pattern	 `131.155.72.0/255.255.254.0'  matches	 every
	      address in the range `131.155.72.0' through `131.155.73.255'.

       o      An  expression  of the form `[n:n:n:n:n:n:n:n]/m'	is interpreted
	      as a `[net]/prefixlen' pair. A IPv6 host address is  matched  if
	      `prefixlen'  bits	 of  `net' is equal to the `prefixlen' bits of
	      the  address.   For   example,   the   [net]/prefixlen   pattern
	      `[3ffe:505:2:1::]/64'   matches	every  address	in  the	 range
	      `3ffe:505:2:1::' through `3ffe:505:2:1:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff'.

       o      A	string that begins with	a `/' character	is treated as  a  file
	      name.  A	host name or address is	matched	if it matches any host
	      name or address pattern listed in	the named file.	The file  for-
	      mat is zero or more lines	with zero or more host name or address
	      patterns separated by whitespace.	 A file	name  pattern  can  be
	      used anywhere a host name	or address pattern can be used.

WILDCARDS
       The access control language supports explicit wildcards:

       ALL    The universal wildcard, always matches.

       LOCAL  Matches any host whose name does not contain a dot character.

       UNKNOWN
	      Matches  any  user  whose	 name is unknown, and matches any host
	      whose name or address are	unknown.  This pattern should be  used
	      with  care:  host	names may be unavailable due to	temporary name
	      server problems. A network address will be unavailable when  the
	      software	cannot	figure	out what type of network it is talking
	      to.

       KNOWN  Matches any user whose name is known, and	matches	any host whose
	      name  and	 address  are  known. This pattern should be used with
	      care: host names may be unavailable due to temporary name	server
	      problems.	  A network address will be unavailable	when the soft-
	      ware cannot figure out what type of network it is	talking	to.

       PARANOID
	      Matches any host whose name does not match  its  address.	  When
	      tcpd  is built with -DPARANOID (default mode), it	drops requests
	      from such	clients	even before  looking  at  the  access  control
	      tables.	Build  without	-DPARANOID  when you want more control
	      over such	requests.

OPERATORS
       EXCEPT Intended use is of the form: `list_1 EXCEPT list_2';  this  con-
	      struct  matches  anything	 that matches list_1 unless it matches
	      list_2.  The EXCEPT operator can be used in daemon_lists and  in
	      client_lists.  The EXCEPT	operator can be	nested:	if the control
	      language would permit the	use of parentheses, `a EXCEPT b	EXCEPT
	      c' would parse as	`(a EXCEPT (b EXCEPT c))'.

SHELL COMMANDS
       If the first-matched access control rule	contains a shell command, that
       command is subjected to %<letter>  substitutions	 (see  next  section).
       The  result is executed by a /bin/sh child process with standard	input,
       output and error	connected to /dev/null.	 Specify an `&'	at the end  of
       the command if you do not want to wait until it has completed.

       Shell  commands	should	not  rely  on  the  PATH setting of the	inetd.
       Instead,	they should use	absolute path names, or	they should begin with
       an explicit PATH=whatever statement.

       The  hosts_options(5)  document	describes an alternative language that
       uses the	shell command field in a different and incompatible way.

% EXPANSIONS
       The following expansions	are available within shell commands:

       %a (%A)
	      The client (server) host address.

       %c     Client information: user@host, user@address,  a  host  name,  or
	      just an address, depending on how	much information is available.

       %d     The daemon process name (argv[0] value).

       %h (%H)
	      The client (server) host name or address,	if the	host  name  is
	      unavailable.

       %n (%N)
	      The client (server) host name (or	"unknown" or "paranoid").

       %p     The daemon process id.

       %s     Server  information: daemon@host,	daemon@address,	or just	a dae-
	      mon name,	depending on how much information is available.

       %u     The client user name (or "unknown").

       %%     Expands to a single `%' character.

       Characters in % expansions that may confuse the shell are  replaced  by
       underscores.

SERVER ENDPOINT	PATTERNS
       In  order  to distinguish clients by the	network	address	that they con-
       nect to,	use patterns of	the form:

	  process_name@host_pattern : client_list ...

       Patterns	like these can be used when the	machine	has different internet
       addresses with different	internet hostnames.  Service providers can use
       this facility to	offer FTP, GOPHER or WWW archives with internet	 names
       that  may  even belong to different organizations. See also the `twist'
       option  in  the	hosts_options(5)  document.  Some  systems   (Solaris,
       FreeBSD)	can have more than one internet	address	on one physical	inter-
       face; with other	systems	you may	have to	resort to SLIP or  PPP	pseudo
       interfaces that live in a dedicated network address space.

       The  host_pattern  obeys	 the  same  syntax  rules  as  host  names and
       addresses in client_list	context. Usually, server endpoint  information
       is available only with connection-oriented services.

CLIENT USERNAME	LOOKUP
       When  the  client  host	supports  the  RFC  931	protocol or one	of its
       descendants (TAP, IDENT,	RFC 1413) the wrapper  programs	 can  retrieve
       additional information about the	owner of a connection. Client username
       information, when available, is logged together with  the  client  host
       name, and can be	used to	match patterns like:

	  daemon_list :	... user_pattern@host_pattern ...

       The  daemon wrappers can	be configured at compile time to perform rule-
       driven username lookups (default) or to always interrogate  the	client
       host.   In  the	case  of  rule-driven username lookups,	the above rule
       would cause username lookup only	when  both  the	 daemon_list  and  the
       host_pattern match.

       A  user pattern has the same syntax as a	daemon process pattern,	so the
       same wildcards apply  (netgroup	membership  is	not  supported).   One
       should not get carried away with	username lookups, though.

       o      The  client  username  information  cannot be trusted when it is
	      needed most, i.e.	when the client	system has  been  compromised.
	      In  general,  ALL	 and (UN)KNOWN are the only user name patterns
	      that make	sense.

       o      Username lookups are possible only with TCP-based	services,  and
	      only  when  the client host runs a suitable daemon; in all other
	      cases the	result is "unknown".

       o      A	well-known UNIX	kernel bug may	cause  loss  of	 service  when
	      username	lookups	 are blocked by	a firewall. The	wrapper	README
	      document describes a procedure to	find out if  your  kernel  has
	      this bug.

       o      Username lookups may cause noticeable delays for non-UNIX	users.
	      The default timeout for username	lookups	 is  10	 seconds:  too
	      short to cope with slow networks,	but long enough	to irritate PC
	      users.

       Selective username lookups can alleviate	the last problem. For example,
       a rule like:

	  daemon_list :	@pcnetgroup ALL@ALL

       would  match members of the pc netgroup without doing username lookups,
       but would perform username lookups with all other systems.

DETECTING ADDRESS SPOOFING ATTACKS
       A flaw in the sequence number generator of many TCP/IP  implementations
       allows  intruders  to  easily impersonate trusted hosts and to break in
       via, for	example, the remote shell service.  The	 IDENT	(RFC931	 etc.)
       service	can  be	 used  to  detect such and other host address spoofing
       attacks.

       Before accepting	a client request, the wrappers can use the IDENT  ser-
       vice to find out	that the client	did not	send the request at all.  When
       the client host provides	IDENT service, a negative IDENT	lookup	result
       (the client matches `UNKNOWN@host') is strong evidence of a host	spoof-
       ing attack.

       A positive IDENT	lookup result (the  client  matches  `KNOWN@host')  is
       less  trustworthy.  It  is  possible  for an intruder to	spoof both the
       client connection and the IDENT	lookup,	 although  doing  so  is  much
       harder  than spoofing just a client connection. It may also be that the
       client's	IDENT server is	lying.

       Note: IDENT lookups don't work with UDP services.

EXAMPLES
       The language is flexible	enough that different types of access  control
       policy  can  be expressed with a	minimum	of fuss. Although the language
       uses two	access control tables, the most	common policies	can be	imple-
       mented with one of the tables being trivial or even empty.

       When  reading  the  examples  below it is important to realize that the
       allow table is scanned before the deny table, that  the	search	termi-
       nates  when  a match is found, and that access is granted when no match
       is found	at all.

       The examples use	host and domain	names. They can	be improved by includ-
       ing address and/or network/netmask information, to reduce the impact of
       temporary name server lookup failures.

MOSTLY CLOSED
       In this case, access is denied by default. Only	explicitly  authorized
       hosts are permitted access.

       The default policy (no access) is implemented with a trivial deny file:

       /etc/hosts.deny:
	  ALL: ALL

       This denies all service to all hosts, unless they are permitted	access
       by entries in the allow file.

       The  explicitly	authorized  hosts  are	listed in the allow file.  For
       example:

       /etc/hosts.allow:
	  ALL: LOCAL @some_netgroup
	  ALL: .foobar.edu EXCEPT terminalserver.foobar.edu

       The first rule permits access from hosts	in the local domain (no	`.' in
       the  host  name)	 and  from members of the some_netgroup	netgroup.  The
       second rule permits access from all  hosts  in  the  foobar.edu	domain
       (notice	the  leading  dot),  with the exception	of terminalserver.foo-
       bar.edu.

MOSTLY OPEN
       Here, access is granted by default; only	explicitly specified hosts are
       refused service.

       The  default  policy (access granted) makes the allow file redundant so
       that it can be omitted.	The explicitly non-authorized hosts are	listed
       in the deny file. For example:

       /etc/hosts.deny:
	  ALL: some.host.name, .some.domain
	  ALL EXCEPT in.fingerd: other.host.name, .other.domain

       The  first  rule	denies some hosts and domains all services; the	second
       rule still permits finger requests from other hosts and domains.

BOOBY TRAPS
       The next	example	permits	tftp requests from hosts in the	 local	domain
       (notice	the  leading  dot).  Requests from any other hosts are denied.
       Instead of the requested	file, a	finger probe is	sent to	the  offending
       host. The result	is mailed to the superuser.

       /etc/hosts.allow:
	  in.tftpd: LOCAL, .my.domain

       /etc/hosts.deny:
	  in.tftpd: ALL: (/some/where/safe_finger -l @%h | \
	       /usr/ucb/mail -s	%d-%h root) &

       The  safe_finger	 command  is  intended	for  use in back-fingering and
       should be installed in a	suitable place.	It limits possible damage from
       data sent by the	remote finger server.  It gives	better protection than
       the standard finger command.

       The expansion of	the %h (client host) and %d (service  name)  sequences
       is described in the section on shell commands.

       Warning:	 do not	booby-trap your	finger daemon, unless you are prepared
       for infinite finger loops.

       On network firewall systems this	trick can  be  carried	even  further.
       The typical network firewall only provides a limited set	of services to
       the outer world.	All other services can be "bugged" just	like the above
       tftp example. The result	is an excellent	early-warning system.

DIAGNOSTICS
       An error	is reported when a syntax error	is found in a host access con-
       trol rule; when the length of an	access control rule exceeds the	capac-
       ity  of	an  internal buffer; when an access control rule is not	termi-
       nated by	a newline character; when the result  of  %<letter>  expansion
       would  overflow	an  internal  buffer;  when  a	system call fails that
       shouldn't.  All problems	are reported via the syslog daemon.

IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
       Some operating systems are distributed with TCP Wrappers	as part	of the
       base  system. It	is common for such systems to build wrapping function-
       ality  into  networking	utilities.  Notably,  some  systems  offer  an
       inetd(8)	which does not require the use of the tcpd(8). Check your sys-
       tem's documentation for details.

FILES
       /etc/hosts.allow, (daemon,client) pairs that are	granted	access.
       /etc/hosts.deny,	(daemon,client)	pairs that are denied access.

SEE ALSO
       tcpd(8) tcp/ip daemon wrapper program.
       tcpdchk(8), tcpdmatch(8), test programs.

BUGS
       If a name server	lookup times out, the host name	will not be  available
       to the access control software, even though the host is registered.

       Domain name server lookups are case insensitive;	NIS (formerly YP) net-
       group lookups are case sensitive.

AUTHOR
       Wietse Venema (wietse@wzv.win.tue.nl)
       Department of Mathematics and Computing Science
       Eindhoven University of Technology
       Den Dolech 2, P.O. Box 513,
       5600 MB Eindhoven, The Netherlands

							       HOSTS_ACCESS(5)

NAME | DESCRIPTION | ACCESS CONTROL FILES | ACCESS CONTROL RULES | PATTERNS | WILDCARDS | OPERATORS | SHELL COMMANDS | % EXPANSIONS | SERVER ENDPOINT PATTERNS | CLIENT USERNAME LOOKUP | DETECTING ADDRESS SPOOFING ATTACKS | EXAMPLES | MOSTLY CLOSED | MOSTLY OPEN | BOOBY TRAPS | DIAGNOSTICS | IMPLEMENTATION NOTES | FILES | SEE ALSO | BUGS | AUTHOR

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