s6-networking
Software
skarnet.org
The s6-tcpserver-access program
s6-tcpserver-access is a command-line TCP access
control tool, and additionally performs some fine-tuning on a
TCP socket. It is meant to be run after
s6-tcpserver and before
the application program on the s6-tcpserver command line,
just like tcpwrappers' tcpd program.
Interface
s6-tcpserver-access [ -v verbosity ] [ -W | -w ] [ -D | -d ] [ -H | -h ] [ -R | -r ] [ -P | -p ] [ -l localname ] [ -B banner ] [ -t timeout ] [ -i rulesdir | -x rulesfile ] prog...
- s6-tcpserver-access checks it is run under a UCSPI server tool
such as s6-tcpserver,
s6-tcpserver4 or
s6-tcpserver6, or their
stripped-down versions
s6-tcpserver4d or
s6-tcpserver6d.
- It checks that the remote end of the connection fits the
accepted criteria defined by the database contained in rulesdir
or rulesfile. If the database tells it to reject the connection,
the program exits 1.
- It sets up a few additional environment variables.
- It executes into prog...,
unless the first matching rule in the rule database
includes instructions to override prog....
Environment variables
s6-tcpserver-access expects to inherit some environment variables from
its parent:
- PROTO: normally TCP, but could be anything else, like SSL.
- ${PROTO}REMOTEIP: the remote address of the socket, i.e. the client's
IP address. This can be IPv4 or (if the underlying skalibs supports it) IPv6.
- ${PROTO}REMOTEPORT: the remote port of the socket.
Additionally, it exports the following variables before executing into
prog...:
- ${PROTO}LOCALIP: set to the local address of the socket.
- ${PROTO}LOCALPORT: set to the local port of the socket.
- ${PROTO}REMOTEINFO: normally unset, but set to the information
retrieved from ${PROTO}REMOTEIP via the IDENT protocol if the -r
option has been given.
- ${PROTO}REMOTEHOST: set to the remote host name obtained from
a DNS lookup. Unset if the -H option has been given.
- ${PROTO}LOCALHOST: set to the local host name obtained from a
DNS lookup. If the -l option has been given, set to
localname instead.
Also, the access rules database can instruct s6-tcpserver-access to set
up, or unset, more environment variables, depending on the client address.
Options
- -v verbosity : be more or less verbose, i.e.
print more or less information to stderr:
- 0: only log error messages.
- 1: only log error and warning messages, and accepted connections.
This is the default.
- 2: also log rejected connections and more warning messages.
- 3: also log detailed warning messages from DNS and IDENT resolution.
- -W : non-fatal. If errors happen during DNS or IDENT
resolution, the connection process is not aborted. However, incorrect or
incomplete results might still prevent a legitimate connection from being
authenticated against a DNS name. This is the default.
- -w : fatal. Errors during DNS or IDENT resolution will
drop the connection.
- -D : disable Nagle's algorithm. Sets the TCP_NODELAY
flag on the network socket.
- -d : enable Nagle's algorithm. This is the default.
- -H : disable DNS lookups for the ${PROTO}LOCALHOST and
${PROTO}REMOTEHOST environment variables.
- -h : enable DNS lookups. This is the default.
- -R : disable IDENT lookups for the ${PROTO}REMOTEINFO
environment variable. This is the default.
- -r : enable IDENT lookups. This should only be done
for legacy programs that need it.
- -P : no paranoid DNS lookups. This is the default.
- -p : paranoid. After looking up a name for the remote
host, s6-tcpserver-access will lookup IP addresses for this name, and drop
the connection if none of the results matches the address the connection
is originating from. Note that this still does not replace real
authentication via a cryptographic protocol.
- -l localname : use localname
as the value for the ${PROTO}LOCALHOST environment variable, instead of
looking it up in the DNS.
- -B banner : print banner to
the network as soon as the connection is attempted, even before
checking client credentials. The point is to speed up network protocols
that start with a server-side message.
- -t timeout : set a timeout on all the
operations performed by s6-tcpserver-access. If it is not able to do
its job in timeout milliseconds, it will instantly exit 99.
The default is 0, meaning no such timeout.
- -i rulesdir : check client credentials
against a filesystem-based database in the rulesdir directory.
- -x rulesfile : check client credentials
against a cdb
database in the rulesfile file. -i and -x are
mutually exclusive.
Access rule checking
s6-tcpserver-access checks its client connection against
a ruleset. This ruleset can be implemented:
- either in the filesystem as an arborescence of directories and files,
if the -i option has been given. This option is the most flexible
one: the directory format is simple enough for scripts to understand and
modify it, and the ruleset can be changed dynamically. This is practical,
for instance, for roaming users.
- or in a CDB
file, if the -x option has been given. This option is the most
efficient one if the ruleset is static enough: a lot less system calls are
needed to perform searches in a CDB than in the filesystem.
The exact format of the ruleset is described on the
s6-accessrules-cdb-from-fs page.
s6-tcpserver-access first gets the remote address ip of the
client and converts it to canonical form. Then it checks it with the
s6_accessrules_keycheck_ip46()
function. In other words, it tries to match broader and broader network
prefixes of ip, from ip4/ip_32 to
ip4/0.0.0.0_0 if ip is v4, or from
ip6/ip_128 to ip6/::_0 if ip
is v6. If the result is:
- S6_ACCESSRULES_ERROR: it immediately exits 111.
- S6_ACCESSRULES_DENY: it immediately exits 1.
- S6_ACCESSRULES_ALLOW: it grants access.
- S6_ACCESSRULES_NOTFOUND: more information is needed.
In the last case, if DNS lookups have been deactivated (-H) then access
is denied. But if s6-tcpserver-access is authorized to perform DNS lookups,
then it gets the remote name of the client, remotehost, and
checks it with the
s6_accessrules_keycheck_reversedns()
function. In other words, it tries to match shorter and shorter suffixes
of remotehost, from reversedns/remotehost to
reversedns/@.
This time, the connection is denied is the result is anything else than
S6_ACCESSRULES_ALLOW.
Note that even if the access check succeeds, the connection can still be
denied if paranoid mode has been requested (-p) and a forward DNS
query on remotehost does not match ip.
Environment and executable modifications
s6-tcpserver-access interprets non-empty env subdirectories
and exec files
it finds in the matching rule of the ruleset, as explained
in the s6-accessrules-cdb-from-fs
page.
- An env subdirectory is interpreted as if the
s6-envdir
command had been called before executing prog: the environment
is modified according to the contents of env.
- An exec file containing newprog completely
bypasses the rest of s6-tcpserver-access' command line. After
environment modifications, if any, s6-tcpserver-access execs into
execlineb -c newprog.
Notes
- s6-tcpserver-access works with
s6-tcpserver4d, handling IPv4 addresses,
as well as
s6-tcpserver6d, handling IPv6 addresses.
It will automatically detect the remote address type and match it against the
correct subdatabase.
- s6-tcpserver-access may perform several DNS queries. For efficiency
purposes, it does as many of them as possible in parallel. However, if asked
to do an IDENT query, it does not parallelize it with DNS queries. Take
that into account when estimating a proper timeout value.