TELNETD(8) | System Manager's Manual | TELNETD(8) |
NAME¶
in.telnetd
— DARPA
TELNET protocol server
SYNOPSIS¶
in.telnetd |
[-Uhlkn46H ] [-D
debugmode]
[-I initid]
[-S tos]
[-X authtype]
[-r lowpty-highpty]
[-u len]
[-L /bin/login]
[-debug [port]] |
DESCRIPTION¶
The in.telnetd
command is a server which
supports the DARPA standard TELNET virtual terminal protocol.
in.telnetd
is normally invoked by the internet
server (see inetd(8)) for requests to connect to the
TELNET port as indicated by the /etc/services file
(see services(5)). The -debug
option may be used to start up in.telnetd
manually,
instead of through inetd(8). If started up this way,
port may be specified to run
in.telnetd
on an alternate TCP port number.
The in.telnetd
command accepts the
following options:
-D
debugmode- This option may be used for debugging purposes. This allows
in.telnetd
to print out debugging information to the connection, allowing the user to see whatin.telnetd
is doing. There are several possible values for debugmode:options
- Prints information about the negotiation of TELNET options.
report
- Prints the
options
information, plus some additional information about what processing is going on. netdata
- Displays the data stream received by
in.telnetd
. ptydata
- Displays data written to the pty.
exercise
- Has not been implemented yet.
-debug
- Enables debugging on each socket created by
in.telnetd
(seeSO_DEBUG
in socket(2)). -h
- Disables the printing of host-specific information before login has been completed.
-H
- Instruct the login program to suppress printing the hostname before the prompt.
-I
initid- This option is only applicable to UNICOS systems prior to 7.0. It specifies the ID from /etc/inittab to use when init starts login sessions. The default ID is “fe”.
-k
- This option is only useful if
in.telnetd
has been compiled with both linemode and kludge linemode support. If the-k
option is specified, then if the remote client does not support theLINEMODE
option, thenin.telnetd
will operate in character at a time mode. It will still support kludge linemode, but will only go into kludge linemode if the remote client requests it. (This is done by the client sending DONT SUPPRESS-GO-AHEAD and DONT ECHO.) The-k
option is most useful when there are remote clients that do not support kludge linemode, but pass the heuristic (if they respond with WILL TIMING-MARK in response to a DO TIMING-MARK) for kludge linemode support. -l
- Specifies line mode. Tries to force clients to use line-at-a-time mode. If the LINEMODE option is not supported, it will go into kludge linemode.
-n
- Disable TCP keep-alives. Normally
in.telnetd
enables the TCP keep-alive mechanism to probe connections that have been idle for some period of time to determine if the client is still there, so that idle connections from machines that have crashed or can no longer be reached may be cleaned up. -r
lowpty-highpty- This option is only enabled when
in.telnetd
is compiled for UNICOS. It specifies an inclusive range of pseudo-terminal devices to use. If the system has sysconf variable_SC_CRAY_NPTY
configured, the default pty search range is 0 to_SC_CRAY_NPTY;
otherwise, the default range is 0 to 128. Either lowpty or highpty may be omitted to allow changing either end of the search range. If lowpty is omitted, the - character is still required so thatin.telnetd
can differentiate highpty from lowpty. -S
tos-u
len- This option is used to specify the size of the field in the
utmp
structure that holds the remote host name. If the resolved host name is longer than len, the dotted decimal value will be used instead. This allows hosts with very long host names that overflow this field to still be uniquely identified. Specifying-u0
indicates that only dotted decimal addresses should be put into the utmp file. -U
- This option causes
in.telnetd
to refuse connections from addresses that cannot be mapped back into a symbolic name via the via the gethostbyaddr(3) routine. -X
authtype- This option is only valid if
in.telnetd
has been built with support for the authentication option. It disables the use of authtype authentication, and can be used to temporarily disable a specific authentication type without having to recompilein.telnetd
. -L
pathname- Specify pathname to an alternative login program.
-4
-6
- Specifies address family to be used on
-debug
mode. During normal operation (called from inetd(8))in.telnetd
will use the file descriptor passed from inetd(8).
in.telnetd
operates by allocating a
pseudo-terminal device (see pty(4)) for a client, then
creating a login process which has the slave side of the pseudo-terminal as
stdin
, stdout
, and
stderr
. in.telnetd
manipulates the master side of the pseudo-terminal, implementing the TELNET
protocol and passing characters between the remote client and the login
process.
When a TELNET session is started up,
in.telnetd
sends TELNET options to the client side
indicating a willingness to do the following TELNET options, which are
described in more detail below:
DO AUTHENTICATION WILL ENCRYPT DO TERMINAL TYPE DO TSPEED DO XDISPLOC DO NEW-ENVIRON DO ENVIRON WILL SUPPRESS GO AHEAD DO ECHO DO LINEMODE DO NAWS WILL STATUS DO LFLOW DO TIMING-MARK
The pseudo-terminal allocated to the client is configured to
operate in “cooked” mode, and with XTABS
and
CRMOD
enabled (see
tty(4)).
in.telnetd
has support for enabling
locally the following TELNET options:
- WILL ECHO
- When the
LINEMODE
option is enabled, aWILL ECHO
orWONT ECHO
will be sent to the client to indicate the current state of terminal echoing. When terminal echo is not desired, aWILL ECHO
is sent to indicate that in.telnetd will take care of echoing any data that needs to be echoed to the terminal, and then nothing is echoed. When terminal echo is desired, aWONT ECHO
is sent to indicate that in.telnetd will not be doing any terminal echoing, so the client should do any terminal echoing that is needed. - WILL BINARY
- Indicates that the client is willing to send a 8 bits of data, rather than the normal 7 bits of the Network Virtual Terminal.
- WILL SGA
- Indicates that it will not be sending IAC GA, go ahead, commands.
- WILL STATUS
- Indicates a willingness to send the client, upon request, of the current status of all TELNET options.
- WILL TIMING-MARK
- Whenever a DO TIMING-MARK command is received, it is always responded to with a WILL TIMING-MARK
- WILL LOGOUT
- When a DO LOGOUT is received, a WILL LOGOUT is sent in response, and the TELNET session is shut down.
- WILL ENCRYPT
- Only sent if
in.telnetd
is compiled with support for data encryption, and indicates a willingness to decrypt the data stream.
in.telnetd
has support for enabling
remotely the following TELNET options:
- DO BINARY
- Sent to indicate that in.telnetd is willing to receive an 8 bit data stream.
- DO LFLOW
- Requests that the client handle flow control characters remotely.
- DO ECHO
- This is not really supported, but is sent to identify a 4.2BSD telnet(1) client, which will improperly respond with WILL ECHO. If a WILL ECHO is received, a DONT ECHO will be sent in response.
- DO TERMINAL-TYPE
- Indicates a desire to be able to request the name of the type of terminal that is attached to the client side of the connection.
- DO SGA
- Indicates that it does not need to receive IAC GA, the go ahead command.
- DO NAWS
- Requests that the client inform the server when the window (display) size changes.
- DO TERMINAL-SPEED
- Indicates a desire to be able to request information about the speed of the serial line to which the client is attached.
- DO XDISPLOC
- Indicates a desire to be able to request the name of the X windows display that is associated with the telnet client.
- DO NEW-ENVIRON
- Indicates a desire to be able to request environment variable information, as described in RFC 1572.
- DO ENVIRON
- Indicates a desire to be able to request environment variable information, as described in RFC 1408.
- DO LINEMODE
- Only sent if
in.telnetd
is compiled with support for linemode, and requests that the client do line by line processing. - DO TIMING-MARK
- Only sent if
in.telnetd
is compiled with support for both linemode and kludge linemode, and the client responded with WONT LINEMODE. If the client responds with WILL TM, the it is assumed that the client supports kludge linemode. Note that the [-k
] option can be used to disable this. - DO AUTHENTICATION
- Only sent if
in.telnetd
is compiled with support for authentication, and indicates a willingness to receive authentication information for automatic login. - DO ENCRYPT
- Only sent if
in.telnetd
is compiled with support for data encryption, and indicates a willingness to decrypt the data stream.
FILES¶
- /etc/services
- /etc/inittab
- (UNICOS systems only)
- /etc/iptos
- (if supported)
SEE ALSO¶
STANDARDS¶
RFC-854
- TELNET PROTOCOL SPECIFICATION
RFC-855
- TELNET OPTION SPECIFICATIONS
RFC-856
- TELNET BINARY TRANSMISSION
RFC-857
- TELNET ECHO OPTION
RFC-858
- TELNET SUPPRESS GO AHEAD OPTION
RFC-859
- TELNET STATUS OPTION
RFC-860
- TELNET TIMING MARK OPTION
RFC-861
- TELNET EXTENDED OPTIONS - LIST OPTION
RFC-885
- TELNET END OF RECORD OPTION
RFC-1073
- Telnet Window Size Option
RFC-1079
- Telnet Terminal Speed Option
RFC-1091
- Telnet Terminal-Type Option
RFC-1096
- Telnet X Display Location Option
RFC-1123
- Requirements for Internet Hosts -- Application and Support
RFC-1184
- Telnet Linemode Option
RFC-1372
- Telnet Remote Flow Control Option
RFC-1416
- Telnet Authentication Option
RFC-1411
- Telnet Authentication: Kerberos Version 4
RFC-1412
- Telnet Authentication: SPX
RFC-1571
- Telnet Environment Option Interoperability Issues
RFC-1572
- Telnet Environment Option
BUGS¶
Some TELNET commands are only partially implemented.
Because of bugs in the original 4.2 BSD
telnet(1), in.telnetd
performs
some dubious protocol exchanges to try to discover if the remote client is,
in fact, a 4.2 BSD telnet(1).
Binary mode has no common interpretation except between similar operating systems (Unix in this case).
The terminal type name received from the remote client is converted to lower case.
in.telnetd
never sends TELNET IAC GA (go
ahead) commands.
WONT CRYPT. in.telnetd
talks over
insecure, unencrypted communications channels. Please use
sshd(8) instead.
March 1, 1994 | Linux 6.4.0-150600.23.25-default |