view usr/src/man/man1m/tcpdchk.1m @ 13659:57451298f940

1469 ttyc/ttyd should be an allowed console device Reviewed by: Milan Jurik <milan.jurik@xylab.cz> Reviewed by: Alexander Eremin <alexander.r.eremin@gmail.com> Approved by: Richard Lowe <richlowe@richlowe.net>
author Gary Mills <gary_mills@fastmail.fm>
date Thu, 05 Apr 2012 08:47:21 -0500
parents 5b2854ecc12d
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'\" t
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.\" Modified for Solaris to to add the Solaris stability classification,
.\" and to add a note about source availability.
.\"
.TH TCPDCHK 1M "Sep 15, 2011"
.SH NAME
tcpdchk \- tcp wrapper configuration checker
.SH SYNOPSYS
tcpdchk [-a] [-d] [-i inet_conf] [-v]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
\fItcpdchk\fR examines your tcp wrapper configuration and reports all
potential and real problems it can find. The program examines the
\fItcpd\fR access control files (by default, these are
\fI/etc/hosts.allow\fR and \fI/etc/hosts.deny\fR), and compares the
entries in these files against entries in the \fIinetd\fR
network configuration files.
.PP
\fItcpdchk\fR reports problems such as non-existent pathnames; services
that appear in \fItcpd\fR access control rules, but are not controlled
by \fItcpd\fR; services that should not be wrapped; non-existent host
names or non-internet address forms; occurrences of host aliases
instead of official host names; hosts with a name/address conflict;
inappropriate use of wildcard patterns; inappropriate use of NIS
netgroups or references to non-existent NIS netgroups; references to
non-existent options; invalid arguments to options; and so on.
.PP
Where possible, \fItcpdchk\fR provides a helpful suggestion to fix the
problem.
.SH OPTIONS
.IP -a
Report access control rules that permit access without an explicit
ALLOW keyword. This applies only when the extended access control
language is enabled (build with -DPROCESS_OPTIONS).
.IP -d
Examine \fIhosts.allow\fR and \fIhosts.deny\fR files in the current
directory instead of the default ones.
.IP "-i inet_conf"
Specify this option when \fItcpdchk\fR is unable to find your
\fIinetd.conf\fR network configuration file, or when
you suspect that the program uses the wrong one.
.IP -v
Display the contents of each access control rule.  Daemon lists, client
lists, shell commands and options are shown in a pretty-printed format;
this makes it easier for you to spot any discrepancies between what you
want and what the program understands.
.SH FILES
.PP
The default locations of the \fItcpd\fR access control tables are:
.PP
/etc/hosts.allow
.br
/etc/hosts.deny
.SH SEE ALSO
.na
.nf
tcpdmatch(1M), explain what tcpd would do in specific cases.
hosts_access(4), format of the tcpd access control tables.
hosts_options(4), format of the language extensions.
inetd.conf(4), format of the inetd control file.
inetd(1M), how to invoke tcpd from inetd using the libwrap library.
inetadm(1M), managing inetd services in the Service Management Framework.

.SH AUTHORS
.na
Wietse Venema (wietse@wzv.win.tue.nl),
Department of Mathematics and Computing Science,
Eindhoven University of Technology
Den Dolech 2, P.O. Box 513,
5600 MB Eindhoven, The Netherlands
\" @(#) tcpdchk.8 1.3 95/01/08 17:00:30
.\" Begin Sun update
.SH ATTRIBUTES
See
.BR attributes (5)
for descriptions of the following attributes:
.sp
.TS
box;
c | c
l | l .
ATTRIBUTE TYPE	ATTRIBUTE VALUE
=
Interface Stability	Committed
.TE
.\" End Sun update