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freebsd/eBones/man/kshd.8
Geoff Rehmet 60643d379b Initial import of eBones.
(Including all changes for FreeBSD - importing the original eBones distribution
would be too complex at this stage, since I don't have access to Piero's 
CVS.)
(If you want to include eBones in your system, don't forget to include
MAKE_EBONES in /etc/make.conf.)
(This stuff is now also suppable from braae.ru.ac.za.)

Bones originally from MIT SIPB.
Original port to FreeBSD 1.x  by Piero Serini.
Moved to FreeBSD 2.0 by Doug Rabson and Geoff Rehmet.
Nice bug fixes from Doug Rabson.
1994-09-30 14:50:09 +00:00

153 lines
4.5 KiB
Groff

.\" from: kshd.8,v 4.1 89/01/23 11:39:41 jtkohl Exp $
.\" $Id: kshd.8,v 1.2 1994/07/19 19:27:50 g89r4222 Exp $
.\"
.\" Copyright (c) 1983 The Regents of the University of California.
.\" All rights reserved.
.\"
.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are permitted
.\" provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
.\" duplicated in all such forms and that any documentation,
.\" advertising materials, and other materials related to such
.\" distribution and use acknowledge that the software was developed
.\" by the University of California, Berkeley. The name of the
.\" University may not be used to endorse or promote products derived
.\" from this software without specific prior written permission.
.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR
.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED
.\" WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
.\"
.\" @(#)rshd.8 6.5 (Berkeley) 9/19/88
.\"
.TH KSHD 8 "Kerberos Version 4.0" "MIT Project Athena"
.UC 5
.SH NAME
kshd \- remote shell server
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B /usr/etc/kshd
.SH DESCRIPTION
.I Kshd
is the server for the
.IR kcmd (3)
routine and, consequently, for the
.IR rsh (1)
program. The server provides remote execution facilities
with authentication based on Kerberos.
.PP
.I Kshd
listens for service requests at the port indicated in
the ``kshell'' service specification; see
.IR services (5).
When a service request is received the following protocol
is initiated:
.IP 1)
The server reads characters from the socket up
to a null (`\e0') byte. The resultant string is
interpreted as an ASCII number, base 10.
.IP 2)
If the number received in step 1 is non-zero,
it is interpreted as the port number of a secondary
stream to be used for the
.BR stderr .
A second connection is then created to the specified
port on the client's machine.
.IP 3)
The server checks the client's source address
and requests the corresponding host name (see
.IR gethostbyaddr (3N),
.IR hosts (5)
and
.IR named (8)).
If the hostname cannot be determined,
the dot-notation representation of the host address is used.
.IP 4)
A Kerberos ticket/authenticator pair are retrieved on the initial socket.
.IP 5)
A null terminated user name of at most 16 characters
is retrieved on the initial socket. This user name
is interpreted as a user identity to use on the
.BR server 's
machine.
.IP 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.
.IP 7)
.I Kshd
then validates the user according to the following steps.
The local (server-end) user name is looked up in the password file
and a
.I chdir
is performed to the user's home directory. If either
the lookup or
.I chdir
fail, the connection is terminated. The \&.klogin file in the home
directory is used to mediate access to the account (via \fIkuserok\fP(3))
by the Kerberos principal named in the ticket/authenticator. If this
authorization check fails, the connection is terminated.
.IP 8)
A null byte is returned on the initial socket
and the command line is passed to the normal login
shell of the user. The
shell inherits the network connections established
by
.IR kshd .
.SH DIAGNOSTICS
Except for the last one listed below,
all diagnostic messages
are returned on the initial socket,
after which any network connections are closed.
An error is indicated by a leading byte with a value of
1 (0 is returned in step 8 above upon successful completion
of all the steps prior to the execution of the login shell).
.PP
.B ``remuser too long''
.br
The name of the user on the remote machine is
longer than 16 characters.
.PP
.B ``command too long ''
.br
The command line passed exceeds the size of the argument
list (as configured into the system).
.PP
.B ``Login incorrect.''
.br
No password file entry for the user name existed.
.PP
.B ``No remote directory.''
.br
The
.I chdir
command to the home directory failed.
.PP
.B ``Permission denied.''
.br
The authorization procedure described above failed.
.PP
.B ``Can't make pipe.''
.br
The pipe needed for the
.BR stderr ,
wasn't created.
.PP
.B ``Try again.''
.br
A
.I fork
by the server failed.
.PP
.B ``<shellname>: ...''
.br
The user's login shell could not be started. This message is returned
on the connection associated with the
.BR stderr ,
and is not preceded by a flag byte.
.SH SEE ALSO
rsh(1), kerberos(3), kuserok(3)
.SH BUGS
A facility to allow all data exchanges to be encrypted should be
present.
.PP
A more extensible protocol should be used.