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xinetd is a powerful replacement for inetd. Original site: http://www.xinetd.org xinetd has access control mechanisms, extensive logging capabilities, the ability to make services available based on time, can place limits on the number of servers that can be started, and has deployable defence mechanisms to protect against port scanners, among other things. There are a number of differences between xinetd and inetd. The largest difference to the end user is the config file. xinetd's config file format is more C like, and somewhat similar to bind 8's. *** NOTE *** xinetd's reconfig signal is now SIGHUP. SIGUSR2 still works for now, but should be considered deprecated. The state dump signal is now SIGUSR1. *** *** There are a couple of compile time options to xinetd: -------------------------------------------------------------------------- --with-libwrap : This option to the configure script tells xinetd to compile in support for tcp wrappers. You must already have libwrap installed on your system. This option will have xinetd pay attention to your /etc/hosts.{allow|deny} files. With this option turned on, xinetd will first look at your /etc/hosts.{allow|deny} files, then if access is granted, it goes through xinetd's internal access control mechanisms. Note that xinetd passes the server name if there is one, otherwise it uses the service id, *not* the service name to libwrap - this is a change from previous behaviour. --with-loadavg : This option to the configure script tells xinetd to compile in support for the max_load configuration option. This option allows you to have certain services disabled when the system load gets above a specified level. This is highly operating system specific. It currently has been tested on linux, and there is developmental support for solaris 2.6 and higher. --with-inet6 : Services default to IPv6 (PF_INET6) sockets. Now that IPv6 support is fully integrated into xinetd, this option is almost meaningless. IPv6 sockets are available with the "IPv6" service flag, even without this option. --with-howl=PATH: Adds howl mdns advertising support to xinetd. PATH is the prefix where howl is installed, such as /usr/local, /usr, etc. PATH is not optional. configure will not automatically detect howl's installed location. Access Control: -------------------------------------------------------------------------- As of xinetd 2.1.8.8pre3 there is a change in the handling of names specified in the access control directives, only_from and no_access. For numerical entries in these fields, nothing has changed. The way it used to be: When xinetd started, it would lookup the name(s) specified. It would then collect all the IP addresses associated with that name, and store them in the access control lists. This led to problems of acls being out of date, and access controls being messed up when names were specified. It did have the advantage of not waiting for a lookup to happen when you connected. The way it is now: xinetd keeps all the names you specify on the access control directives. When a client attempts to connect to a service, a reverse lookup is performed on the client's IP address. The canonical name returned is compared with the specified names. If the first character of the name being specified in the config file is a '.', then all hosts within that domain are matched. For example, if I put .synack.net, all hosts with a reverse mapping that are in .synack.net domain, are matched. libwrap support: ---------------------------------------------------------------------- For libwrap access control, the access control is done by the server name for the service. So, if you have an entry like this: service telnet { ... server = /usr/sbin/in.telnetd ... } Your corresponding hosts.{allow|deny} entry would look something like this: in.telnetd: ALL However, many services don't have a "server". Internal services and redirection services don't have a "server" line in the configuration file. For these services, the service name is used. For example: server telnet { ... redirect = 10.0.0.1 23 ... } Your hosts.{allow|deny} entry would look something like this: telnet: ALL So, in general, if a service has a "server" attribute to it, access control is performed based on that entry. If a service does not have a "server" attribute, (internal and redirection services) then access control is based on the service name. This is only for libwrap access control. itox: -------------------------------------------------------------------------- I will continue to keep itox in the distribution, and fix any bugs or compatibility issues that come to my attention, but I probably won't get around to adding features. If someone else would like to pick this up, let me know and I'd be happy to incorporate changes. I have made a quick perl script (xconv.pl) to replace itox. xconv.pl does a straight translation of inetd.conf file syntax to xinetd.conf. It handles tcpd correctly, warns on the use of rpc services, sets the REUSE flag, and handles groups properly if your inetd.conf file supports them. xinetd was originally written by panos@cs.colorado.edu. At least one other version of xinetd has been seen floating around the net. This version is being maintained by Rob Braun (bbraun@synack.net) and bug reports for this version should be directed there. Known bugs: On some BSD's, you may need to set 'groups = yes' in your services. If you need this, and you don't specify 'groups = yes', you'll get a log message telling you it is needed, when you connect to a service. Bug reports/comments/suggestions/flames for this version should be sent to bbraun@synack.net
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xinetd is a secure replacement for inetd
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