INETD(8) MachTen System Manager’s Manual INETD(8)
NAME
inetd - internet
‘‘super-server’’
SYNOPSIS
inetd [-d] [-R rate] [configuration file]
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 connec-
tion 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 be-
low). Essentially, inetd allows running one daemon to invoke
several
others, reducing load on the system.
The options available for inetd:
-d Turns on debugging.
-R rate
Specifies the maximum number of times a service can be
invoked in
one minute; the default is 1000.
Upon execution, inetd reads its
configuration information from a configu-
ration 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
user
server program
server program arguments
There are two types of services
that inetd can start: standard and TCP-
MUX. 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 nonstan-
dard 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 lo-
cally-chosen service name. The service names listed in
/etc/services and
the name ‘‘help’’ are reserved. Try
to choose unique names for your TCP-
MUX services by prefixing them with your
organization’s name and suffix-
ing 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 ser-
vices must use ‘‘stream’’.
The protocol must be a valid
protocol as given in /etc/protocols. Exam-
ples might be ‘‘tcp’’ or
‘‘udp’’. TCPMUX services must use
‘‘tcp’’.
The wait/nowait entry specifies
whether the server that is invoked by in-
etd will take over the socket associated with the service
access point,
and thus whether inetd should wait for the server to exit
before listen-
ing 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 ex-
ample 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 lis-
tening 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 user entry should contain
the user name of the user as whom the serv-
er 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 Net-
work 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 for-
eign host on TCP port 1. It sends the service name followed
by a car-
riage-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 pro-
gram is passed the TCP connection as file descriptors 0 and
1.
If the TCPMUX service name
begins with a ‘‘+’’, inetd returns
the posi-
tive 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.
EXAMPLES
Here are several example service entries for the various
types of ser-
vices:
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 ex-
ceeded the limit. The limit exists to prevent a broken
program or a mali-
cious 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 ser-
vice 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)
HISTORY
The inetd command appeared in 4.3BSD. TCPMUX is based on
code and docu-
mentation by Mark Lottor.
4.4BSD April 13, 1994 3