Ingredients needed:
Here follows the procedure:
Purchase or otherwise procure the RedHat 6.1 (further referred as RH, latest version number is 6.1 at the time of writing) distribution and compatible hardware. One can get a full RH CDROM for about $2.00 including shipping and handling at http://www.cheapbytes.com. This version will not contain such luxuries as secure web server and extra software. For those you should turn to RedHat website. Or probably buying the PC with Linux RH pre-installed is an option for some.
Install the RH following the *instructions on the package* (might be added here later). CDROM install is very easy to perform. I suggest using text-mode setup, in my case their new graphical one failed miserably. When asked about the installation type (Server/Workstation/Custom) choose Server or Custom (if you know what you are doing)-you can always add software later. Some other important installation decisions are outlined further.
If you hardware really is compatible the installation process will detect and configure it correctly. Otherwise, refer to corresponding documentation for troubleshooting network card, modem, video card, etc problems (mostly HOWTOs and mini-HOWTOs, some are in References section below).
If you network card is detected properly you will be asked for an IP address of your machine, gateway address and network mask and the address of the DNS server (might be your own machine if you plan to set it up this way). Have all this info handy. Also you will be asked for a machine name and domain name. We will use a sample domain name you.com and the machine will be named ns (that gives us a fully qualified domain name (FQDN) ns.you.com). You should use whatever domain you registered (see Setting Up Your New Domain Mini-HOWTO, link in References section below) and intend to use as you primary domain (not a virtual). For the gateway address we will use a sample 111.222.333.111 address. Gateway is likely the router that connects your machine (or your LAN) to the outside world.
Enable shadow and MD5 passwords for greater security.
First of those makes the file that contains encrypted
passwords readable only to root
user
and the second allows longer and harder to crack passwords.
As it will be a standalone machine do not enable NIS/NFS.
After installation finishes and machine reboots you will see the login prompt. Enter login and password (for the root account) and start configuring you new Linux station.
First (and fast), add a line:
ALL:ALL
to your /etc/hosts.deny file. That would (to some known extent)
prevent other people from accessing your machine while you are doing the
configuration. That will also prevent you from doing the same. For
further configuration efforts (that can be done remotely, by the way)
secure shell is
recommended. Download the RPM package for RH from one of the many sites
and install it (as root) using: rpm -U ssh*rpm or similar
command (depends upon the version). You will have to get both client and
server packages (if you want to ssh from this machines as well as to
this machine). Upon installation all necessary post-installation commands
(like server key generation)
are run automatically by the RPM package. You will have to start server
manually using command /etc/rc.d/init.d/sshd start.Some early
versions of ssh-1 and also all versions of ssh-1 compiled with RSAREF library
contain a buffer-overflow bug. Use ssh-2 or the latest version of ssh-1
without RSAREF. If you do this you will have to allow access using ssh
from some trusted machine (described later) in /etc/hosts.allow file.
If you want to be really rigorous in you configuration pursuits go to single use mode by giving the command init 1, in this case all work is to be done locally and you would not be able to test you network-related configuration as network is not available in this mode.
To further enhance your security ipchains software (that is usually part of your Linux distribution) can be used (for that refer to IPCHAINS HOWTO, link in References). It takes quite a bit more efforts to configure it than TCP wrappers, although some automated tools are available for that too.
Now lets deal with unnecessary services. Please note that my idea of "unnecessary" might not be 100% same as yours.
comment out all the lines, but those
ftp stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd in.ftpd -L -l -i -a
telnet stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd in.telnetd
Check this by using the command: grep -v '\#' /etc/inetd.conf
If you will be using the secure shell (ssh), telnet is also not necessary and can be removed. Secure shell can either be started as a daemon on system startup or as a service from /etc/inetd.conf. Default configuration (used by the RPM package) is to start is as a daemon. Sshd can be compiled to refer to /etc/hosts.allow file for access control. In this case, while you will not have it in your /etc/inetd.conf, it will still use the settings from /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny. The advantages of this method is faster connection as the sshd will not have to regenerate server key every time somebody connects. On the other hand, if you start it from /etc/inetd.conf it will be more isolated from the outside world. More lines will be added to /etc/inetd.conf as necessary (POP3 is one of those).
Check what services are running by using: ps ax. You will
get something similar to the sample
output below:
PID TTY STAT TIME COMMAND
1 ? S 0:04 init
2 ? SW 0:30 [kflushd]
3 ? SW 0:32 [kupdate]
4 ? SW 0:00 [kpiod]
5 ? SW 0:03 [kswapd]
6 ? SW< 0:00 [mdrecoveryd]
296 ? SW 0:00 [apmd]
349 ? S 0:00 syslogd -m 0
360 ? S 0:00 klogd
376 ? S 0:00 /usr/sbin/atd
392 ? S 0:00 crond
412 ? S 0:00 inetd
454 ttyS0 S 0:00 gpm -t ms
533 tty2 SW 0:00 [mingetty]
534 tty3 SW 0:00 [mingetty]
535 tty4 SW 0:00 [mingetty]
536 tty5 SW 0:00 [mingetty]
537 tty6 SW 0:00 [mingetty]
667 tty1 SW 0:00 [mingetty]
4540 ? S 0:00 httpd
5176 ? S 0:00 httpd
5177 ? S 0:00 httpd
5178 ? S 0:00 httpd
5179 ? S 0:00 httpd
5180 ? S 0:00 httpd
5181 ? S 0:00 httpd
5182 ? S 0:00 httpd
5183 ? S 0:00 httpd
7321 ? S 0:00 /usr/sbin/sshd <<<<< only after you installed sshd to run on startup
7323 pts/0 S 0:00 -bash
7336 pts/0 R 0:00 ps ax
Lets concentrate on processes that listen to network, such as lpd. Since we do not plan to use our server for printing (we sure might, I just don't describe it here), I suggest we remove the printer daemon by: rpm -e lpd . If rpm complains about any dependencies (like, in my case, printfilter and rhprinttool), add them to your rpm -e command and repeat it. Other services that might be removed are NFS, NIS, samba etc, if they got installed by mistake. Again, these are useful things, I am just following the *golden rule* "remove the software you don't currently use". And, with RH RPM it is really easy to add it any time in the future.
Some more basic security settings can be obtained from
Armoring Linux
paper. As suggested there, lets make a wheel group with trusted users
(in our case, only user you
will be able to do /bin/su
and to
run cron jobs (together with root).
vi /etc/group
, add a line (if it doesn't exist):
wheel:x:10:root,you. If line exists, just add
you
in the end
as shown.
You don't have to use vi (and I understand it very well), just use your favorite editor
(for a nice reasonably user-friendly editor try pico
, distributed
together with mail program pine
, the latter is part of most Linux distributions)/bin/chgrp wheel /bin/suchange group ownership to
wheel
group on /bin/su
/bin/chmod 4750 /bin/suchange mode on
/bin/su
To only allow root
and you
to submit cron jobs create a
file called /etc/cron.allow that contains usernames that you want to
be able to run cron jobs. This file might look like this:
root
you
I suggest you do not install X Windows as it will bring new concern that you might not be prepared to deal with.
Now we are ready to enable our machine to handle multiple IP addresses for virtual hosting. At that point, the IP Aliasing HOWTO might come handy (see link in References). For several reasons, IP-based virtual hosting is better (if you have enough IP addresses, that is). For instance, reverse lookups would succeed, if done from the browser side. It might also be needed for hosting cryptographically enabled websites (commonly known as "secure websites"). Older browsers (not supporting HTTP 1.1) will get unhappy too.
The changes would be concentrated in /etc/rc.d/ directory.
To enable multiple IP addresses you kernel should support this. On a freshly
installed RH Linux it does. To verify it one should look into the config file
that was used to compile the kernel. In my case, it was
/usr/src/linux/configs/kernel-2.2.12-i686.config since the machine
has Pentium II processor. This file exists, if the kernel-source
RPM
package was installed. If line CONFIG_IP_ALIAS=y
is present in the
file than you are OK. While we are here, we can also confirm the ability to
forward IP packets (needed for dialup users PPP). This ability is present, but
not turned on by default. Also needed is the support for PPP protocol (line
CONFIG_PPP=m
, this means PPP support is compiled as a kernel loadable
module, CONFIG_PPP=y
is also OK)
The examples will use the ridiculous IP addresses 111.222.333.444-111.222.333.777 from C block 111.222.333.0. 111.222.333.444 is a real host IP (that is configured during RH installation), 111.222.333.555-777 are virtual addresses and 111.222.333.888 is a dialin user address (can be more of those).
Lets assume we want to configure 3 virtual hosts.
Two sets of commands will be used:
/sbin/ifconfig eth0:0 111.222.333.555
/sbin/ifconfig eth0:1 111.222.333.666
/sbin/ifconfig eth0:2 111.222.333.777
These will bind the IP addresses to (virtual) interfaces
eth0:0-eth0:2
.
/sbin/route add -host 111.222.333.555 dev eth0
/sbin/route add -host 111.222.333.666 dev eth0
/sbin/route add -host 111.222.333.777 dev eth0
These commands will add routes for those addresses and connect those to real
interface eth0
(ethernet card).
ifconfig
) will look
like this:
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 02:60:8C:4D:24:CE
inet addr:111.222.333.444 Bcast:255.255.255.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
RX packets:901597 errors:33 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:823
TX packets:433589 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
collisions:128327 txqueuelen:100
Interrupt:5 Base address:0x280
eth0:0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 02:60:8C:4D:24:CE
inet addr:111.222.333.555 Bcast:111.222.333.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
Interrupt:5 Base address:0x280
eth0:1 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 02:60:8C:4D:24:CE
inet addr:111.222.333.666 Bcast:111.222.333.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
Interrupt:5 Base address:0x280
eth0:2 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 02:60:8C:4D:24:CE
inet addr:111.222.333.777 Bcast:111.222.333.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
Interrupt:5 Base address:0x280
lo Link encap:Local Loopback
inet addr:127.0.0.1 Mask:255.0.0.0
UP LOOPBACK RUNNING MTU:3924 Metric:1
RX packets:26232 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
TX packets:26232 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
collisions:0 txqueuelen:0
All commands can be added to the bottom of /etc/rc.d/rc.local so that
the changes are saved after reboot. Strictly speaking, rebooting machine is
not required for adding new IP addresses. Please, do document all changes
you do to your machines. Many a good sysadmin (or, should I say not-so-good?)
were burned on that at some point in their careers.
Now we are ready to configure DNS. The easiest way would be to add the hostnames (real and all the virtual) that we want to be seen by the world to the configuration of some machine that already has bind (DNS daemon) running. But, since we are setting up ISP-in-a-box we might not be able to avoid "DNS fun".
Now, let me also try to defend the (well, questionable) choice of "outdated" version of bind 4.9.7 (last of the pre-8 series). I know that my arguments can be beaten, but I consider bind 4.9.7 much more time-tested and stable. The arguments for upgrading to 8.x (provided http://www.acmebw.com/askmrdns/00444.htm and http://www.dns.net/dnsrd/servers.html and, I guess, at many other places) still didn't seem to convince many people. And, lets not forget the "exploit of 1999" - ADMROCKS, that gives remote root access to almost any Linux machine running bind prior to 8.1.2 patch 3. Judging by the INCIDENTS mailing list, this is still a very popular way to attack RH versions 5.0-6.1 if no recommended upgrades are installed.
Here are the instructions, loosely following the DNS book from O'Reily (a good one, highly recommended to all, but very casual DNS user).
That is how they look like (if you are unfamiliar with bind 4.x configuration file format, please, do read either the O'Reily DNS book or any of the HOWTOs or documents at bind pages, or, better, all of the above. You also have an option of using them without understanding, but this is a bad idea in general):
/etc/named.boot
This is the main config file for bind 4.9.x.
directory /etc/namedb
;cache-obtained from internic, usually
cache . db.cache
;main config files
primary you.com db.you
;reverse lookups
primary 333.222.111.in-addr.arpa db.111.222.333
;localhost.localnet configs
primary 0.0.127.in-addr.arpa db.127.0.0
;virtual Domains
primary yoursite1.net db.yoursite1
primary yoursite2.net db.yoursite2
primary yoursite3.net db.yoursite3
/etc/namedb/db.you
; defines our local hosts at you.com, just one in our case, and its aliases
@ IN SOA ns.you.com. root.ns.you.com. (
2000012190 7200 1800 3600000 7200 )
;name servers and mail servers
IN NS ns.you.com.
IN MX 10 ns.you.com.
IN A 111.222.333.444
ns IN A 111.222.333.444
;address of the canonical names
localhost IN A 127.0.0.1
gateway IN A 111.222.333.111
;aliases (to use in ftp: ftp ftp.you.com etc, for clarity)
www CNAME ns
mail CNAME ns
ftp CNAME ns
pop3 CNAME ns
/etc/namedb/db.111.222.333
;reverse mapping of our IP addresses
.
;origin is 333.222.111.in-addr.arpa
333.222.111.in-addr.arpa. IN SOA ns.you.com. root.ns.you.com. (
1999121501 7200 1800 3600000 7200 )
;name Servers
IN NS ns.you.com.
;addresses point to canonical name
444.333.222.111.in-addr.arpa. IN PTR ns.you.com.
;dialups
888 IN PTR dialup.you.com.
;virtual hosts
555 IN PTR yoursite1.com.
666 IN PTR yoursite2.com.
777 IN PTR yoursite3.com.
;local loop config file
0.0.127.in-addr.arpa. IN SOA ns.you.com. root.ns.you.com. (
1997072200 7200 1800 3600000 7200 )
IN NS ns.you.com.
1 IN PTR localhost.
; yoursite1.com
@ IN SOA virtual root.virtual (
1999092201 ; Serial: update each time the file is changed
7200 ; refresh, sec
1800 ; retry, sec
3600000 ; expire, sec
7200 ) ; minimum TTL
;name Servers
IN NS ns.you.com.
IN MX 10 virtual
IN A 111.222.333.555
;address of the canonical names
localhost IN A 127.0.0.1
gateway IN A 111.222.333.111
virtual IN A 111.222.333.555
IN MX 10 virtual
;aliases
www CNAME virtual
mail CNAME virtual
ftp CNAME virtual
pop3 CNAME virtual
; yoursite2.com
@ IN SOA virtual root.virtual (
1999092201 ; Serial: update each time the file is changed
7200 ; refresh, sec
1800 ; retry, sec
3600000 ; expire, sec
7200 ) ; minimum TTL
;name Servers
IN NS ns.you.com.
IN MX 10 virtual
IN A 111.222.333.666
;address of the canonical names
localhost IN A 127.0.0.1
gateway IN A 111.222.333.111
virtual IN A 111.222.333.666
IN MX 10 virtual
;aliases
www CNAME virtual
mail CNAME virtual
ftp CNAME virtual
pop3 CNAME virtual
; yoursite3.com
@ IN SOA virtual root.virtual (
1999092201 ; Serial: update each time the file is changed
7200 ; refresh, sec
1800 ; retry, sec
3600000 ; expire, sec
7200 ) ; minimum TTL
;name Servers
IN NS ns.you.com.
IN MX 10 virtual
IN A 111.222.333.777
;address of the canonical names
localhost IN A 127.0.0.1
gateway IN A 111.222.333.111
virtual IN A 111.222.333.777
IN MX 10 virtual
;aliases
www CNAME virtual
mail CNAME virtual
ftp CNAME virtual
pop3 CNAME virtual
To server html pages httpd daemon is used. RH 6.1 comes with Apache 1.3.9 (latest version is currently 1.3.12). At that point it is wise to check RH site or its mirrors ( RH Mirrors) for updates.
Most changes that we are about to make concentrate in /etc/httpd/httpd.conf (RH standard location for Apache configuration). Default location for html pages (shown when you go to www.you.com) is /home/httpd/html. You can allocate directories for virtual hosts within the same /home/httpd, shown below are the following locations for them: /home/httpd/yoursite1, /home/httpd/yoursite2 and /home/httpd/yoursite3.
Below I provide the minimum necessary changes for your /etc/httpd/httpd.conf file:
<VirtualHost 111.222.333.555>
ServerAdmin webmaster@you.com
DocumentRoot /home/httpd/yoursite1
ServerName www.yoursite1.com
ErrorLog yoursite1-error_log
TransferLog yoursite1-access_log
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost 111.222.333.666>
ServerAdmin webmaster@you.com
DocumentRoot /home/httpd/yoursite2
ServerName www.yoursite2.com
ErrorLog yoursite2-error_log
TransferLog yoursite2-access_log
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost 111.222.333.777>
ServerAdmin webmaster@you.com
DocumentRoot /home/httpd/yoursite3
ServerName www.yoursite3.com
ErrorLog yoursite3-error_log
TransferLog yoursite3-access_log
</VirtualHost>
That configuration will cause all logs to be stored in one directory (whatever is specified as such) for all sites. If that is not desired the ErrorLog and TransferLog directives can be changed to point to the proper location separately for each virtual host. The pages for the "real" www.you.com will be stored in default location /home/httpd/html.
For more information, look at http://www.apache.org, Apache http server homepage. They have a lot of support pages, including those for virtual hosting setup (both IP-based and name-based [uses just 1 IP address]). Also useful is Linux WWW HOWTO (link in References section), section on virtual hosting.
Now we will deal with sendmail. Again, proposed are the minimum necessary changes to the stock RH /etc/sendmail.cf and /etc/sendmail.cw.
Dj$w.foo.com
and change it to
point to your main ("real", not virtual) server name (you.com, so it
will looks like this Dj$w.you.com
).
# sendmail.cw - include all aliases for your machine here.
you.com
ns.you.com
mail.you.com
yoursite1.com
mail.yoursite1.com
yoursite2.com
mail.yoursite2.com
yoursite3.com
mail.yoursite3.com
These are necessary so that sendmail accepts mail for these domains.This does not address the issue of user@yoursite1.com
and
user@yoursite2.com
mail getting to different mailboxes. For that
look into /etc/mail/virtusertable
functionality
(appropriate line in /etc/sendmail.cw is Kvirtuser hash -o
/etc/mail/virtusertable
, detailed info may be added here later).
Excellent documentation on that is on
http://www.sendmail.org/virtual, sendmail reference on virtual
hosting.
It is worthwhile to add that linuxconf proposes a somewhat different scheme for virtual email with separate spool directories for all domains (that cleanly solves the above "name-conflict" issue"), but that requires a special virtual-aware POP/IMAP server (included with RH) and is somewhat more complicated. It is recommended for bigger email volume sites with many users within each domain.
A few words about sendmail, it is a good idea (good from a security standpoint) to have sendmail run from inetd.conf and not as a standalone daemon. For that we need to add it to /etc/inetd.conf, remove it from /etc/rc.d/init.d, add the sendmail queue processing to cron. Here is what you have to do:
smtp stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /usr/sbin/sendmail -bs
exit 0
somewhere in
the very beginning (might not be the best way, be sure to document the changes
you do to these files) so that this file does nothing instead of starting sendmail
*/20 * * * * /usr/sbin/sendmail -qThat would process sendmail queue every 20 min (if it exists). The described steps will simplify sendmail access control and will let you regulate who can talk to you 25 port, not just who can send email through you. The lines in /etc/hosts.allow that let all machines from .com and .org domains send you email are as follows
sendmail: .com .orgPlease, note, that the daemon name, not protocol name is used here (sendmail, NOT smtp).
That would allow your system to handle email for all those domains.
POP3 configuration is easy (no "virtualization" is required for this setup). RH comes
equipped with imapd IMAP server. If you do not want to use IMAP functionality
or do not like this particular implementation (buffer overflow bugs were discovered in it at
some point) the good idea is to use
qpopper
, free POP3 daemon from Eudora
http://www.eudora.com/freeware/qpop.html. At the time of writing they
release the "stable" version (qpopper 2.53) and "public beta" ( qpopper 3.0,
release 34, now called "final beta").
It is important to note that versions earlier than 2.5 contain a
buffer overflow error that allows remote root exploit to be executed. Same
problem plagues "public betas" up to 3.0 release 21. Use either 2.53 or the
latest 3.0 beta (the former is better audited and the latter is better suited
for RH - seamlessly works with PAM authentication). I suggest using 3.0, so
the instructions below apply to that case.
wget ftp://ftp.qualcomm.com/eudora/servers/unix/popper/qpopper3.0b34.tar.Z
Retrieve the archive from Eudora site.
tar zxvf qpopper3.0b34.tar.Z
Uncompress and untar the contents.
cd qpopper
If you need explanation for this step, please, discontinue reading the document.
./configure --enable-specialauth --with-pam --enable-log-login --enable-shy
The options here are:
--enable-specialauth
: allows MD5 and shadow passwords
--with-pam
: allows the use of RH Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) technology
--enable-log-login
: log successful logins, not only failures (not really that
useful as it will use tcpd wrappers logging anyway)
--enable-shy
: conceal version number (yeah, a little pesky
manifestation of "security through obscurity")
make
That compiles the popper
/bon/cp popper/popper /usr/local/bin
Now copy it to /usr/local/bin and set the mode to
-rwx------ 1 root root 297008 Feb 16 15:41 /usr/local/lib/popperby using the command:
chmod 700 /usr/local/bin/popper
pop3 stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /usr/local/bin/popper -sThat would cause the tcpd wrapper to control access to popper. The lines to add in /etc/hosts.allow are
popper: .good.com .nice.orgThat will allow people from domains good.com and nice.org to read email via POP3 client from your machine.
To cause qpopper to use PAM authentication one must create a file for POP3
service in /etc/pam.d/
directory. File should be named "pop3" (same as line in
/etc/services
and qpopper compile-time option). The file looks like
this:
auth required /lib/security/pam_pwdb.so shadow
account required /lib/security/pam_pwdb.so
password required /lib/security/pam_cracklib.so
password required /lib/security/pam_pwdb.so nullok use_authtok md5 shadow
session required /lib/security/pam_pwdb.so
pop3 110/tcp # pop3 service
We will use only anonymous ftp and will not allow any non-anonymous user any access. Here we describe the anonymous ftp server setup that allows anonymous uploads. Any self-respecting guide on the subject will tell you that "this is a bad thing". But how is it worse than allowing users to ftp from untrusted location and transfer their passwords in clear text? Not everybody (especially, using Windows) can easily setup an ftp tunnel via ssh.
I suggest using the stock RH wu-ftpd (version 2.6.0 at the time of writing). While it is rumored that there are "more secure" ftp daemons (Pro-FTP?), wu-ftp appears to be one most commonly used.
RH installs the wu-ftpd (package wu-ftpd-2.6.0-1) by default in server
configuration. You are encouraged to check for updates as running ftp is an important
security concern. There is also a separate rpm package that creates a separate
directory for anonymous ftp home (anonftp-2.8-1).
As anonymous ftp always does a chroot()
system call (puts the user in the restricted file system) all necessary
binaries and libraries are required. The typical directory looks like this
(output of ls -lRa in /home/ftp):
.:
total 20
d--x--x--x 2 root root 4096 Feb 15 06:22 bin
d--x--x--x 2 root root 4096 Feb 15 06:22 etc
drwxrws-wt 2 root wheel 4096 Feb 18 19:51 incoming
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Feb 15 06:22 lib
drwxr-sr-x 3 root ftp 4096 Feb 15 23:34 pub
bin:
total 344
---x--x--x 1 root root 15204 Mar 21 1999 compress
---x--x--x 1 root root 52388 Mar 21 1999 cpio
---x--x--x 1 root root 50384 Mar 21 1999 gzip
---x--x--x 1 root root 29308 Mar 21 1999 ls
---------- 1 root root 62660 Mar 21 1999 sh
---x--x--x 1 root root 110668 Mar 21 1999 tar
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4 Feb 15 06:22 zcat -> gzip
etc:
total 40
-r--r--r-- 1 root root 53 Mar 21 1999 group
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 31940 Mar 21 1999 ld.so.cache
-r--r--r-- 1 root root 79 Mar 21 1999 passwd
incoming:
total 0
lib:
total 1212
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 77968 Mar 21 1999 ld-2.1.1.so
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 11 Feb 15 06:22 ld-linux.so.2 -> ld-2.1.1.so
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 1031004 Mar 21 1999 libc-2.1.1.so
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 13 Feb 15 06:22 libc.so.6 -> libc-2.1.1.so
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 77196 Mar 21 1999 libnsl-2.1.1.so
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 15 Feb 15 06:22 libnsl.so.1 -> libnsl-2.1.1.so
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 33596 Mar 21 1999 libnss_files-2.1.1.so
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 21 Feb 15 06:22 libnss_files.so.2 -> libnss_fi
les-2.1.1.so
pub:
total 0
Notice though, that for whatever reason, RH puts a copy of /bin/sh in /home/ftp/bin. I do not feel good about having it there, so it is chmoded to 0 by chmod 0 sh (can also be removed completely, but RPM might be slightly unhappy if you attempt to remove the package afterwards).
Permissions on /home/ftp directories and files should be carefully considered. In the above example, all of the system files are owned by root and are only readable (executable where necessary) by all. Files in bin are only executable (as is the directory itself to prevent listing of its contents).
The interesting part is permissions on pub and incoming.
Below follows the configuration file for ftp daemon (/etc/ftpaccess). It is well commented to the degree of being self-explanatory:
#ideas from <htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.wu-ftpd.org/pub/wu-ftpd/upload.configuration.HOWTO" name="ftp://ftp.wu-ftpd.org/pub/wu-ftpd/upload.configuration.HOWTO">
#only allow anonymous users-no other classes defined
class anonftp anonymous *
#number of users restriction with message shown when too many
limit remote 10 Any /toomany.msg
#prevent uploads everywhere (for now)
upload /home/ftp * no
#display the contents of some files upon login/cd
readme README* login
readme README* cwd=*
message /welcome.msg login
message .message cwd=*
#log all file transfers DISABLED
#log transfers anonymous
#prevent these file operations for anon users
delete no anonymous
overwrite no anonymous
#fast cd and aliasing for the same reason (not really necessary, but convenient)
alias inc: /incoming
cdpath /incoming
cdpath /pub
cdpath /
#what is allowed in paths
path-filter anonymous /etc/pathmsg ^[-A-Za-z0-9_\.]*$ ^\. ^-
#prevent the retrieval of some file
noretrieve .notar
#allow upload with NO subdirectory creation by anon users
upload /home/ftp /incoming yes root wheel 0400 nodirs
#allow upload with subdirectory creation by anon users DISABLED
#upload /home/ftp /incoming yes root wheel 0400 dirs
#prevent anon users to GET files from incoming (you might not like it, but it
#is a good idea-to prevent some people from using you ftp server to store
#their own stuff, pics, warez etc)
noretrieve /home/ftp/incoming
That would allow only anonymous users to do downloads and uploads in somewhat (!)
controlled manner.
Now the fun part starts. We want the machine to allow dial-in access via attached (inserted?) modem or modems. It will provide either regular shell or restricted shell (that only executes pppd daemon). Windows 95/98 users should be able to effortlessly dial in using all default settings of their computers.
To handle login via serial line some version of getty
program is
needed. This program monitors the serial line (/dev/ttyS1 will be used
throughout the document, see serial HOWTO for details) and upon connection
shown the login prompt or starts a program.
I suggest using the mgetty program (as it has more features and is easier to setup than some of the competitors).
RH comes with mgetty-1.1.21-2
, that also has extensions to receive
faxes and voice mail (if the modem supports this). Check whether mgetty is
installed by doing: rpm -qa | grep mgetty.
After installing mgetty some reconfiguration is necessary. The files that should be changed and the details follow:
That enables mgetty to start when system is booted and be respawned accordingly. These lines should be added in the end.
#for dialins use mgetty
#note this S1 in the beginning of the line and ttyS1 in the end
S1:2345:respawn:/sbin/mgetty ttyS1
This file controls the pppd daemon whenever it is started. Some of the options here are optional (hey, that why they are called options, right?).
auth -chap +pap login modem crtscts debug proxyarp lock
ms-dns 111.222.333.444
Here is their brief meaning:
This file serves purpose similar to the previous one, but only applies to particular modem line. It specifies the IP address given to the remote machine (dynamic, in some sense, if you have more than one line) and the local IP as well.
111.222.333.444:111.222.333.888
This file is the main mgetty control file. Mgetty is Windows-PPP-aware, so it has provisions to start pppd automatically upon receiving connect from the Windows machine.
These lines should be present:
/AutoPPP/ - - /usr/sbin/pppd
Before adding them, check that some other version of similar command is absent there (commented out by default).
This is similar to /etc/password file, but only used for dialins and contains plain text passwords (apparently, only visible to root). All users that you want to be able to dialin must have their usernames and password listed in this file. They should enter the same username and password into Windows Dial Up Networking configuration.
# Secrets for authentication using PAP
# these two users below can use dialin
# client server secret pword remote IP addresses
dialinuser1 * b1ab1a!? 111.222.333.888
dialinuser2 * p8sSw0rD 111.222.333.888
Check that mgetty is running by looking for similar line in the output of
ps ax
command.
4625 ? S 0:00 /sbin/mgetty ttyS1
Now this machine will allow modem calls from any Windows 95/98 box.
This is really straightforward.
Now, after testing all the services, we are ready to open the access to this machine. The main access control facility in our case is TCP wrappers (tcpd). Their behavior is controlled by 2 files /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny, as was mentioned in the sections devoted to various network services. TCP wrappers configuration can be done in 2 distinct ways and we will employ the simplest.
Let our /etc/hosts.deny contain ALL:ALL
clause, thus
denying the access to all services (started from /etc/inetd.conf ) for
all hosts and all users on them. Now we can allow what we need explicitly in
/etc/hosts.allow, thus following the philosophy "what is not
expressly allowed is denied".
Lets assume we want to allow people to read and send email, we want some trusted hosts to update contents of the web pages and we want admin workstation to have full access. So we arrive at the following /etc/hosts.allow:
#
# hosts.allow This file describes the names of the hosts which are
# allowed to use the local INET services, as decided
# by the '/usr/sbin/tcpd' server.
#
ALL: 127.0.0.1 adminbox.some.net
#we rely on anti-relaying features of sendmail 8.9.x to fight spam
#and also restrict some sites that we don't want to see email from
sendmail: ALL EXCEPT .kr
popper: .com .edu .gov .mil
#these people can upload/download stuff
in.ftpd: .this.net .that.net