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in.rshd(8)

System Administration Commands                                      in.rshd(8)



NAME
       in.rshd, rshd - remote shell server

SYNOPSIS
       in.rshd [-k5eciU] [-s tos] [-S keytab] [-M realm]
            [-L env_var] host.port

DESCRIPTION
       in.rshd  is  the  server  for  the  rsh(1) program. The server provides
       remote execution facilities with authentication based on Kerberos V5 or
       privileged port numbers.


       in.rshd is invoked by inetd(8) each time a shell service is requested.


       When  Kerberos V5 authentication is required (this can be set with Ker‐
       beros-specific options listed below), the following protocol is  initi‐
       ated:

           1.     Check Kerberos V5 authentication.


           2.     Check the authorization rules.


           3.     A  null  byte is returned on the initial socket and the com‐
                  mand line is passed to the normal login shell of  the  user.
                  (The  PATH  variable is set to /usr/bin.) The shell inherits
                  the network connections established by in.rshd.




       In order for Kerberos authentication to work,  a  host/<FQDN>  Kerberos
       principal  must  exist  for each Fully Qualified Domain Name associated
       with the in.rshd server. Each of these host/<FQDN> principals must have
       a keytab entry in the /etc/krb5/krb5.keytab file on the in.rshd server.
       An example principal might be:


       host/bigmachine.eng.example.com


       See kadmin for instructions on adding  a  principal  to  a  krb5.keytab
       file.


       If Kerberos V5 authentication is not enabled, then in.rshd executes the
       following protocol:

           1.     The server checks the client's source port. If the  port  is
                  not in the range 512-1023, the server aborts the connection.
                  The client's host address (in hex) and port number (in deci‐
                  mal) are the arguments passed to in.rshd.


           2.     The  server  reads  characters  from the socket up to a null
                  (\0) byte. The resultant string is interpreted as  an  ASCII
                  number, base 10.


           3.     If  the  number received in step 2 is non-zero, it is inter‐
                  preted as the port number of a secondary stream to  be  used
                  for  the  stderr. A second connection is then created to the
                  specified port on the client's machine. The source  port  of
                  this second connection is also in the range 512-1023.


           4.     A  null-terminated  user  name  of at most 256 characters is
                  retrieved on the initial socket. This user  name  is  inter‐
                  preted as the user identity on the client's machine.


           5.     A  null  terminated  user  name of at most 256 characters is
                  retrieved on the initial socket. This user  name  is  inter‐
                  preted as a user identity to use on the server's machine.


           6.     A  null  terminated  command  to  be  passed  to  a shell is
                  retrieved on the initial socket. The length of  the  command
                  is  limited  by  the upper bound on the size of the system's
                  argument list.


           7.     in.rshd then validates the user according to  the  following
                  steps.  The  remote  user  name is looked up in the password
                  file and a chdir is performed to the user's home  directory.
                  If  the  lookup  fails, the connection is terminated. If the
                  chdir fails, it does a chdir to / (root). If the user is not
                  the  superuser,  (user ID 0), and if the pam_rhosts_auth PAM
                  module  is   configured   for   authentication,   the   file
                  /etc/hosts.equiv is consulted for a list of hosts considered
                  "equivalent". If the client's host name is present  in  this
                  file,  the  authentication is considered successful. See the
                  SECURITY section below for a discussion of  PAM  authentica‐
                  tion.

                  If  the lookup fails, or the user is the superuser, then the
                  file .rhosts in the home directory of  the  remote  user  is
                  checked for the machine name and identity of the user on the
                  client's machine. If this lookup fails,  the  connection  is
                  terminated


           8.     A  null  byte  is returned on the initial connection and the
                  command line is passed to the  normal  login  shell  of  the
                  user. The PATH variable is set to /usr/bin. The shell inher‐
                  its the network connections established by in.rshd.



OPTIONS
       The following options are supported:

       -L env_var    List of environment variables that need to be  saved  and
                     passed along.


       -s tos        Sets the IP  TOS option.


       -U            Refuses  connections  that  cannot  be  mapped  to a name
                     through the getnameinfo(3C) function.


USAGE
       rshd and in.rshd are IPv6-enabled. See ip6(4P). IPv6 is  not  currently
       supported with Kerberos V5 authentication.


       The  Kerberized rshd service runs on port 544 (kshell). The correspond‐
       ing FMRI entry is: :



         svc:/network/shell:kshell (rshd with kerberos (ipv4 only))


SECURITY
       in.rshd uses pam(3PAM) for authentication, account management, and ses‐
       sion   management.   The   PAM   configuration  policy,  configured  in
       /etc/pam.conf or per-service files in /etc/pam.d/, specifies  the  mod‐
       ules  to  be  used  for  in.rshd.  Here is a partial pam.conf file with
       entries for the rsh command using rhosts authentication,  UNIX  account
       management, and session management module.


       tab();   lw(0.7i)   lw(0.7i)   lw(0.82i)   lw(3.28i)   rshauthrequired‐
       pam_rhosts_auth.so.1

       rshaccountrequiredpam_unix_roles.so.1               rshsessionrequired‐
       pam_unix_projects.so.1 rshsessionrequiredpam_unix_account.so.1

       rshsessionrequiredpam_unix_session.so.1



       The equivalent PAM configuration using /etc/pam.d/ would be the follow‐
       ing entries in /etc/pam.d/rsh:

         auth         required   pam_rhosts_auth.so.1
         account      required   pam_unix_roles.so.1
         session      required   pam_unix_projects.so.1
         session      required   pam_unix_account.so.1
         session      required   pam_unix_session.so.1



       If there are no entries  for  the  rsh  service  in  /etc/pam.conf  and
       /etc/pam.d/rsh  does not exist then the entries for the "other" service
       in  /etc/pam.conf  are  used.  If  there  are  not   any   entries   in
       /etc/pam.conf  for  the  "other",  then the entries in /etc/pam.d/other
       will be used. To maintain the authentication requirement  for  in.rshd,
       the  rsh  entry must always be configured with the pam_rhosts_auth.so.1
       module.


       in.rshd can authenticate using Kerberos V5 authentication or pam(3PAM).
       For Kerberized rsh service, the appropriate PAM service name is krsh.

FILES
       /etc/hosts.equiv

       $HOME/.k5login         File  containing  Kerberos  principals  that are
                              allowed access.


       /etc/krb5/krb5.conf    Kerberos configuration file.


ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


       tab() box; cw(2.75i) |cw(2.75i) lw(2.75i) |lw(2.75i) ATTRIBUTE  TYPEAT‐
       TRIBUTE  VALUE  _ Availabilityservice/network/legacy-remote-utilities _
       Interface StabilityObsolete


SEE ALSO
       rsh(1),  svcs(1),  getnameinfo(3C),   pam(3PAM),   ip6(4P),   hosts(5),
       pam.conf(5),  attributes(7),  environ(7), krb5_auth_rules(7), pam_auth‐
       tok_check(7), pam_authtok_get(7), pam_authtok_store(7),  pam_dhkeys(7),
       pam_passwd_auth(7),       pam_rhosts_auth(7),      pam_unix_account(7),
       pam_unix_auth(7), pam_unix_session(7),  smf(7),  inetadm(8),  inetd(8),
       svcadm(8)

DIAGNOSTICS
       The  following diagnostic messages are returned on the connection asso‐
       ciated with stderr, after which any network connections are closed.  An
       error  is indicated by a leading byte with a value of 1 in step 8 above
       (0 is returned above upon successful completion of all the steps  prior
       to the command execution).

       locuser too long

           The  name  of  the  user on the client's machine is longer than 256
           characters.


       remuser too long

           The name of the user on the remote machine is longer than 256 char‐
           acters.


       command too long

           The  command  line passed exceeds the size of the argument list (as
           configured into the system).


       Hostname for your address unknown.

           No entry in  the  host  name  database  existed  for  the  client's
           machine.


       Login incorrect.

           No password file entry for the user name existed.


       Permission denied.

           The authentication procedure described above failed.


       Can't make pipe.

           The pipe needed for the stderr was not created.


       Try again.

           A fork by the server failed.


NOTES
       The  authentication  procedure  used here assumes the integrity of each
       client machine and the connecting medium. This is insecure, but  it  is
       useful in an "open" environment.


       A  facility  to  allow  all  data  exchanges  to be encrypted should be
       present.


       The in.rshd service is managed  by  the  service  management  facility,
       smf(7), under the service identifier:



         svc:/network/shell:default



       Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling, disabling, or
       requesting restart, can be performed  using  svcadm(8).  Responsibility
       for  initiating  and  restarting this service is delegated to inetd(8).
       Use inetadm(8) to make configuration changes and to view  configuration
       information for this service. The service's status can be queried using
       the svcs(1) command.


       This technology may be removed in a future release of Oracle Solaris.



Oracle Solaris 11.4               22 Feb 2017                       in.rshd(8)
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