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KLOGIND

NAME

klogind − remote login server

SYNOPSIS

klogind [ −rcpPef ] [[ −w[ip|maxhostlen[,[no]striplocal ]] ] [ −D port ]

DESCRIPTION

Klogind is the server for the rlogin(1) program. The server is based on rlogind(8) but uses Kerberos authentication.

The klogind server is invoked by inetd(8) when it receives a connection on the port indicated in /etc/inetd.conf. A typical /etc/inetd.conf configuration line for klogind might be:

klogin stream tcp nowait root /usr/lib/mit/sbin/klogind klogind −e5c

When a service request is received, the following protocol is initiated:

1)

Check authentication.

2)

Check authorization via the access-control files .k5login and .klogin in the user’s home directory.

3)

Prompt for password if any checks fail and the -p option was supplied.

If the authentication succeeds, login the user by calling the accompanying login.krb5.

klogind allows Kerberos V5 authentication with the .k5login access control file to be trusted. If this authorization check is passed, then the user is allowed to log in. If the user has no .k5login file, the login will be authorized if the results of krb5_aname_to_localname conversion matches the account name. Unless special rules are configured, this will be true if and only if the Kerberos principal of the connecting user is in the default local realm and the principal portion matches the account name.

The configuration of klogind is done by command line arguments passed by inetd. The options are:

−P

Prompt the user for a password. If the −P option is passed, then the password is verified in addition to all other checks.

−e

Create an encrypted session.

−c

Require Kerberos V5 clients to present a cryptographic checksum of initial connection information like the name of the user that the client is trying to access in the initial authenticator. This checksum provides additionl security by preventing an attacker from changing the initial connection information. If this option is specified, older Kerberos V5 clients that do not send a checksum in the authenticator will not be able to authenticate to this server. This option is mutually exclusive with the -i option.

If neither the -c or -i options are specified,then checksums are validated if presented. Since it is difficult to remove a checksum from an authenticator without making the authenticator invalid, this default mode is almost as significant of a security improvement as -c if new clients are used. It has the additional advantage of backwards compatability with some clients. Unfortunately, clients before Kerberos V5, Beta5, generate invalid checksums; if these clients are used, the -i option must be used.

−i

Ignore authenticator checksums if provided. This option ignore authenticator checksusm presented by current Kerberos clients to protect initial connection information; it is the opposite of -c. This option is provided because some older clients -- particularly clients predating the release of Kerberos V5 Beta5 (May 1995) -- present bogus checksums that prevent Kerberos authentication from succeeding in the default mode.

The parent of the login process manipulates the master side of the pseduo terminal, operating as an intermediary between the login process and the client instance of the rlogin(1) program. In normal operation, the packet protocol described in pty(4) is invoked to provide ^S/^Q type facilities and propagate interrupt signals to the remote programs. The login process propagates the client terminal’s baud rate and terminal type, as found in the environment variable, ‘‘TERM’’; see environ(7). The screen or window size of the terminal is requested from the client, and window size changes from the client are propagated to the pseudo terminal.

Klogind supports the following options to control the form of the hostname passed to login(1):
−w
[ip|maxhostlen[,[no]striplocal]]

Controls the form of the remote hostname passed to login(1). Specifying ip results in the numeric IP address always being passed to login(1). Specifying a number, maxhostlen, sets the maximum length of the hostname passed to login(1) before it will be passed as a numeric IP address. If maxhostlen is 0, then the system default, as determined by the utmp or utmpx structures, is used. The nostriplocal and striplocal options, which must be preceded by a comma, control whether or not the local host domain is stripped from the remote hostname. By default, the equivalent of striplocal is in effect.

Klogind supports five options which are used for testing purposes:

−S keytab

Set the keytab file to use.

−M realm

Set the Kerberos realm to use.

−L login

Set the login program to use. This option only has an effect if DO_NOT_USE_K_LOGIN was not defined when klogind was compiled.

−D port

Run in standalone mode, listening on port. The daemon will exit after one connection and will not background itself.

−f

Allows for standalone daemon operation. A new child is started for each incoming connection and waits for it to finish before accepting the next connection. This automagically figures out which port to bind to if no port is specified.

DIAGNOSTICS

All diagnostic messages are returned on the connection associated with the stderr, after which any network connections are closed. An error is indicated by a leading byte with a value of 1.

‘‘Try again.’’
A fork by the server failed.

‘‘/bin/sh: ...’’
The user’s login shell could not be started.

SEE ALSO

rlogind(8), rlogin(1)

BUGS

A more extensible protocol should be used.

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