fwd.c (fw_log): Report the timezone in log messages.
[fwd] / fwd.1.in
... / ...
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1.\" -*-nroff-*-
2.\"
3.\" Manual page for fwd
4.\"
5.\" (c) 1999 Straylight/Edgeware
6.\"
7.
8.\"----- Licensing notice ---------------------------------------------------
9.\"
10.\" This file is part of the `fwd' port forwarder.
11.\"
12.\" `fwd' is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
13.\" it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
14.\" the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
15.\" (at your option) any later version.
16.\"
17.\" `fwd' is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
18.\" but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
19.\" MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
20.\" GNU General Public License for more details.
21.\"
22.\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
23.\" along with `fwd'; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
24.\" Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
25.
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91.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
92.
93.TH fwd 1 "1 July 1999" "Straylight/Edgeware" "fwd port forwarder"
94.
95.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
96.SH NAME
97.
98fwd \- port forwarder
99.
100.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
101.SH SYNOPSIS
102.
103.B fwd
104.RB [ \-dlq ]
105.RB [ \-p
106.IR file ]
107.RB [ \-f
108.IR file ]
109.RB [ \-s
110.IR user ]
111.RB [ \-g
112.IR group ]
113.IR config-stmt ...
114.
115.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
116.SH "DESCRIPTION"
117.
118The
119.B fwd
120program is a simple port forwarder. It supports a number of features
121the author hasn't found in similar programs:
122.TP
123.I "Connection logging"
124Each connection attempt to the forwarder is logged, giving the time of
125the connection, the DNS-resolved hostname (if available), and the user
126name resulting from an RFC931 lookup. These lookups are done
127asynchronously to the main forwarder's operation.
128.TP
129.I "Access control"
130Each forwarded port may have an access control list attached to it.
131Only authorized hosts are allowed to connect. Access control checks are
132performed by quick checks on the client's IP address.
133.TP
134.I "Nonblocking single-process design"
135The internal structure of the server is completely nonblocking. The
136connections don't block; the reading and writing don't block; the name
137lookups don't block. This is all done in a single process, with the
138single exception of the DNS resolver.
139.TP
140.I "Support for Unix-domain sockets"
141Connections from and to Unix-domain sockets can be handled just as
142easily as more normal Internet sockets. Access control doesn't work on
143Unix domain sockets, though. (Yet.)
144.SS "Command line options"
145The
146.B fwd
147program understands a few simple command line options:
148.TP
149.B "\-h, \-\-help"
150Displays a screen of help text on standard output and exits
151successfully.
152.TP
153.B "\-v, \-\-version"
154Writes the version number to standard output and exits successfully.
155.TP
156.B "\-u, \-\-usage"
157Writes a terse usage summary to standard output and exits successfully.
158.TP
159.B "\-G, \-\-grammar"
160Writes a summary of the configuration file grammar to standard output
161and exits successfully.
162.TP
163.B "\-O, \-\-options"
164Writes a summary of the source and target options to standard output and
165exits successfully.
166.TP
167.BI "\-f, \-\-file=" file
168Read configuration information from
169.IR file .
170Equivalent to an
171.RB ` include
172.IR file '
173configuration file statement.
174.TP
175.B "\-d, \-\-daemon, \-\-fork"
176Forks into the background after reading the configuration and
177initializing properly.
178.TP
179.B "\-l, \-\-syslog, \-\-log"
180Emit logging information to the system log, rather than standard error.
181.TP
182.BI "\-p, \-\-pidfile=" file
183Write
184.BR fwd 's
185process-id to
186.I file
187during start-up. If
188.B \-d
189is given too, then the process-id is written after forking (obviously).
190.TP
191.B "\-q, \-\-quiet"
192Don't output any logging information. This option is not recommended
193for normal use, although it can make system call traces clearer so I use
194it when debugging.
195.TP
196.BI "\-s, \-\-setuid=" user
197Change uid to that of
198.IR user ,
199which may be either a user name or uid number, after initializing all
200the sources. This will usually require elevated privileges.
201.TP
202.BI "\-g, \-\-setgid=" group
203Change gid to that of
204.IR group ,
205which may be either a group name or gid number, after initializing all
206the sources. If the operating system understands supplementary groups
207then the supplementary groups list is altered to include only
208.IR group .
209.PP
210Any further command line arguments are interpreted as configuration
211lines to be read. Configuration supplied in command line arguments has
212precisely the same syntax as configuration in files. If there are no
213configuration statements on the command line, and no
214.B \-f
215options were supplied, configuration is read from standard input, if
216stdin is not a terminal.
217.
218.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
219.SH "CONFIGURATION LANGUAGE"
220.
221The
222.B fwd
223program has a fairly sophisticated configuration language to let you
224describe which things should be forwarded where and what special
225features there should be.
226.SS "Lexical structure"
227There are four types of characters.
228.TP
229.I "word constituent characters"
230Word constituent characters are gathered together into words.
231Depending on its surrounding context, a word might act as a keyword or a
232string. All alphanumerics are word constituents, as is the hyphen
233.RB ` \- '.
234Other characters may change their status in future versions.
235.TP
236.I "self-delimiting characters"
237Self-delimiting characters always stand alone. They act as punctuation,
238shaping the sequence of words into more complex grammatical forms. The
239characters
240.RB ` { ',
241.RB ` } ',
242.RB ` [ ',
243.RB ` ] ',
244.RB ` / ',
245.RB ` , ',
246.RB ` = ',
247.RB ` : ',
248.RB ` ; '
249and
250.RB ` . '
251are self-delimiting. Note that while some characters, e.g.,
252.RB ` [ '
253and
254.RB ` ; ',
255require escaping by the shell, they are mostly optional in the grammar
256and can tend to be omitted in quick hacks at the shell prompt.
257.TP
258.I "whitespace characters"
259Whitespace characters separate words but are otherwise ignored. All
260`normal' whitespace characters (e.g., space, tab and newline) are
261considered to be whitespace for these purposes.
262.TP
263.I "special characters"
264There are three special characters. The
265.RB ` # '
266character, if it appears at the start of a word, introduces a
267.I comment
268which extends to the end of the current line or command-line argument.
269Within a word, it behaves like a normal word-constituent character. The
270backslash
271.RB ` \e '
272escapes the following character causing it to be interpreted as a word
273constituent regardless of its normal type. The double-quote
274.RB ` """" '
275escapes all characters other than backslashes up to the next
276double-quote and causes them to be regarded as word constituents. Note
277that you don't have to quote a whole word. The backslash can escape a
278quote character allowing you to insert it into a word if really
279necessary.
280.
281.SS "Basic syntax"
282The overall syntax looks a bit like this:
283.GS "Basic syntax"
284.I file
285::=
286.I empty
287|
288.I file
289.I stmt
290.RB [ ; ]
291.br
292.I stmt
293::=
294.I option-stmt
295|
296.I fwd-stmt
297.br
298.I fwd-stmt
299::=
300.B fwd
301.I source
302.I options
303.RB [ to | \-> ]
304.I target
305.I options
306.br
307.I options
308::=
309.B {
310.I option-seq
311.B }
312.br
313.I option-seq
314::=
315.I empty
316|
317.I option-stmt
318.RB [ ; ]
319.I option-seq
320.GE
321If you prefer, the keyword
322.RB ` fwd '
323may be spelt
324.RB ` fwd ',
325.RB ` forward ',
326or
327.RB ` from '.
328All are equivalent.
329.
330.SS "Sources and targets"
331Forwarding is set up by attaching
332.I targets
333to
334.IR sources .
335Sources are things which are capable of
336.I initiating
337one end of a data flow on their own, while targets are things which are
338capable of setting up the other end on demand. In the case of a TCP
339port forwarder, the part which listens for incoming client connections
340is the source, while the part which sets up outgoing connections to the
341destination server is the target.
342.PP
343Essentially, all
344.B fwd
345does is set up a collection of sources and targets based on your
346configuration file so that when a source decides to initiate a data
347flow, it tells its target to set its end up, and then squirts data back
348and forth between the two until there's no more.
349.PP
350Some sources are
351.IR persistent :
352they stay around indefinitely setting up multiple attachments to
353targets. Others are
354.IR transient :
355they set up one connection and then disappear. If all the sources
356defined are transient, then
357.B fwd
358will quit when no more active sources remain and all connections have
359terminated.
360.PP
361The
362.B fwd
363program is fairly versatile. It allows you to attach any supported type
364of source to any supported type of target. This will, I hope, be the
365case in all future versions.
366.PP
367The syntax of a
368.I source
369or
370.I target
371depend on the source or target type, and are therefore described in the
372sections specific to the various types.
373.
374.SS "Options structure"
375Most of the objects that
376.B fwd
377knows about (including sources and targets, but also other more specific
378things such as socket address types) can have their behaviour modified
379by
380.IR options .
381The options available at a particular point in the configuration depend
382on the
383.IR context .
384A global option, outside of a
385.I fwd-stmt
386has no context unless it is explicitly qualified, and affects global
387behaviour. A local option, applied to a source or target in a
388.IR fwd-stmt ,
389has the context of the type of source or target to which it is applied,
390and affects only that source or target.
391.PP
392Note that it's important to distinguish between an option's context
393(which is affected by its qualification) and its local or global
394status. No matter how qualified, a global option will always control
395default options for objects, and a local option will only affect a
396specific source or target.
397.PP
398The syntax for qualifying options is like this:
399.GS "Option syntax"
400.I option-stmt
401::=
402.I q-option
403.br
404.I q-option
405::=
406.I option
407.br
408 |
409.I prefix
410.B .\&
411.I q-option
412.br
413 |
414.I prefix
415.B {
416.I option-seq
417.B }
418.br
419.I prefix
420::=
421.I word
422.GE
423Thus, you may qualify either an individual option or a sequence of
424options. The two are equivalent; for example,
425.VS
426exec.rlimit {
427 core = 0;
428 cpu = 60;
429}
430.VE
431means the same as
432.VS
433exec.rlimit.core = 0;
434exec.rlimit.cpu = 0;
435.VE
436For each option, there is a sequence of prefixes which maximally qualify
437that option. An option prefixed with this sequence is
438.IR "fully qualified" .
439In actual use, some or all of those prefixes may be omitted. However,
440it's possible for the option to become
441.I ambiguous
442if you do this. For example, the option
443.B fattr.owner
444may refer either to
445.B file.fattr.owner
446or to
447.BR socket.unix.fattr.owner .
448In this case, the ambiguity is benign: a local option will have as its
449context an appropriate source or target, and both global options
450actually control the same default. However, the option
451.B logging
452may mean either
453.B socket.logging
454or
455.BR exec.logging ,
456which have separate defaults, and which one you actually get depends on
457the exact implementation of
458.BR fwd 's
459option parser. (Currently this would resolve to
460.BR exec.logging ,
461although this may change in a later version.)
462.PP
463In this manual, options are usually shown in their fully-qualified form.
464.
465.SS "File attributes for created files: `fattr'"
466Both the
467.B file
468and
469.B socket
470sources and targets can create new filesystem objects. The
471.B fattr
472options allow control over the attributes of the newly-created objects.
473Both
474.B file
475and
476.B socket
477use the same set of defaults, so a prefix of
478.B fattr
479is good enough for setting global options, and the implicit context
480disambiguates local options.
481.PP
482The following file attribute options are supported:
483.OS "File attributes (`fattr')"
484.IB prefix .fattr.mode
485.RB [ = ]
486.I mode
487.OD
488Sets the permissions mode for a new file. The
489.I mode
490argument may be either an octal number or a
491.BR chmod (1)-style
492string which acts on the default permissions established by the
493prevailing
494.BR umask (2)
495setting. The characters
496.RB ` = '
497and
498.RB ` , '
499do not have to be quoted within the mode string.
500.OE
501.OS "File attributes (`fattr')"
502.IB prefix .fattr.owner
503.RB [ = ]
504.I user
505.OD
506Sets the owner for newly created files. On non-broken systems you will
507need to be the superuser to set the owner on a file. The
508.I user
509may either be a numeric uid or a username. The default is not to change
510the owner of the file once it's created. The synonyms
511.B uid
512and
513.B user
514are accepted in place of
515.BR owner .
516.OE
517.OS "File attributes (`fattr')"
518.IB prefix .fattr.group
519.RB [ = ]
520.I group
521.OD
522Sets the group for newly created files. You will usually need to be a
523member of the group in question order to set the group of a file. The
524.I group
525may either be a numeric gid or a group name. The default is not to
526change the group of the file once it's created. The synonym
527.B gid
528is accepted in place of
529.BR group .
530.OE
531.
532.SS "The `file' source and target types"
533The
534.B file
535source and target allow data to move to and from objects other
536than sockets within the Unix filesystem. (Unix-domain sockets are
537handled using the
538.B socket
539source and target.)
540.PP
541If a
542.B file
543is used as a source, it is set up immediately.
544.PP
545The syntax of
546.B file
547sources and targets is like this:
548.GS "File source and target"
549.I source
550::=
551.I file
552.br
553.I target
554::=
555.I file
556.br
557.I file
558::=
559.B file
560.RB [ .\& ]
561.I fspec
562.RB [ ,
563.IR fspec ]
564.br
565.I fspec
566::=
567.I fd-spec
568|
569.I name-spec
570|
571.I null-spec
572.br
573.I fd-spec
574::=
575.RB [[ : ] fd [ : ]]
576.IR number \c
577.RB | stdin | stdout
578.br
579.I name-spec
580::=
581.RB [[ : ] name [ : ]]
582.I file-name
583.br
584.I file-name
585::=
586.I path-seq
587|
588.B [
589.I path-seq
590.B ]
591.br
592.I path-seq
593::=
594.I path-elt
595|
596.I path-seq
597.I path-elt
598.br
599.I path-elt
600::=
601.B /
602|
603.I word
604.br
605.I null-spec
606::=
607.RB [ : ] null [ : ]
608.GE
609The
610.I file
611specification describes two files, the first to be used as input, the
612second to be used as output, each described by an
613.IR fspec .
614.PP
615If none of the keywords
616.RB ` fd ',
617.RB ` name '
618or
619.RB ` null '
620are given, the type of an
621.I fspec
622is deduced from its nature: if it matches one of the strings
623.RB ` stdin '
624or
625.RB ` stdout ',
626or begins with a digit, it's considered to be a file descriptor;
627otherwise it's interpreted as a filename.
628.PP
629A
630.RB ` name '
631spec describes a file by its name within the filesystem. It is opened
632when needed and closed again after use. For output files, the precise
633behaviour is controlled by options described below.
634.PP
635A
636.RB ` null '
637spec attaches the input or output of the source or target to
638.BR /dev/null .
639.PP
640An
641.RB ` fd '
642spec uses an existing open file descriptor, given either by number or a
643symbolic name. The name
644.RB ` stdin '
645refers to standard input (file descriptor 0 on normal systems) and
646.RB ` stdout '
647refers to standard output (file descriptor 1). The names work in
648exactly the same way as the equivalent file descriptor numbers.
649.PP
650If the output
651.I fspec
652is omitted, the input
653.I fspec
654is used for both input and output. Exception: if the input refers to
655standard input then the output will refer to standard output instead.
656.PP
657All
658.B file
659options apply equally to sources and targets. The options are as
660follows:
661.OS "File options"
662.B file.create
663.RB [ = ]
664.BR yes | no
665.OD
666Whether to create the output file if it doesn't exist. If
667.B no
668(the default), an error is reported if the file doesn't exist. If
669.BR yes ,
670the file is created if it doesn't exist.
671.OE
672.OS "File options"
673.B file.open
674.RB [ = ]
675.BR no | truncate | append
676.OD
677Controls the behaviour if the output file already exists. If
678.BR no ,
679an error is reported. If
680.B truncate
681(the default), the existing file is replaced by the new data. If
682.BR append ,
683the new data is appended to the file.
684.OE
685.OS "File options"
686.BR file.fattr. *
687.OD
688The
689.B file
690source and target also accept
691.B fattr
692options for controlling the attributes of the created file.
693.OE
694.PP
695Under no circumstances will
696.B fwd
697create a file through a `dangling' symbolic link.
698.
699.SS "The `exec' source and target types"
700The
701.B exec
702source and target execute programs and allow access to their standard
703input and output streams. Both source and target have the same syntax,
704which is as follows:
705.GS "Exec source and target"
706.I source
707::=
708.I exec
709.br
710.I target
711::=
712.I exec
713.br
714.I exec
715::=
716.BR exec
717.RB [ .\& ]
718.I cmd-spec
719.br
720.I cmd-spec
721::=
722.I shell-cmd
723|
724.RI [ prog-name ]
725.B [
726.I argv0
727.I arg-seq
728.B ]
729.br
730.I arg-seq
731::=
732.I word
733|
734.I arg-seq
735.I word
736.br
737.I shell-cmd
738::=
739.I word
740.br
741.I argv0
742::=
743.I word
744.GE
745If a single word is given, it is a
746.I shell-cmd
747and will be passed to the Bourne shell for execution. If a
748bracket-enclosed sequence of words is given, it is considered to be a
749list of arguments to pass to the program: if a
750.I prog-name
751is also supplied, it names the file containing the program to execute;
752otherwise the file named by the first argument
753.RI ( argv0 )
754is used.
755.PP
756Note that the shell command or program name string must, if present,
757have any delimiter characters (including
758.RB ` / '
759and
760.RB ` . ')
761quoted; this is not required in the
762.RB ` [ '-enclosed
763argument list.
764.PP
765The standard input and output of the program are forwarded to the other
766end of the connection. The standard error stream is caught by
767.B fwd
768and logged.
769.PP
770The
771.B exec
772source and target both understand the same set of options. The list of
773options supported is as follows:
774.OS "Exec options"
775.B exec.logging
776.RB [ = ]
777.BR yes | no
778.OD
779Whether to log the start and end of executed programs. If
780.B yes
781(the default), a log message is emitted when the program is started
782listing its process id, and another is emitted when the program finishes
783giving its process id and exit status. If
784.BR no ,
785these messages are not emitted. However the standard error stream is
786still logged. The
787.B log
788abbreviation is accepted as a synonym for
789.BR logging .
790.OE
791.OS "Exec options"
792.B exec.dir
793.RB [ = ]
794.I file-name
795.OD
796Sets the current directory from which the the program should be run.
797The default is not to change directory. The synonyms
798.BR cd ,
799.B chdir
800and
801.B cwd
802are accepted in place of
803.BR dir .
804.OE
805.OS "Exec options"
806.B exec.root
807.RB [ = ]
808.I file-name
809.OD
810Sets the root directory for the program, using the
811.BR chroot (2)
812system call. You must be the superuser for this option to work. The
813default is not to set a root directory. The synonym
814.B chroot
815is accepted in place of
816.BR root .
817.OE
818.OS "Exec options"
819.B exec.user
820.RB [ = ]
821.I user
822.OD
823Sets the user (real and effective uid) to run the program as. This will
824usually require superuser privileges to work. The default is not to
825change uid. The synonym
826.B uid
827is accepted in place of
828.BR user .
829.OE
830.OS "Exec options"
831.B exec.group
832.RB [ = ]
833.I group
834.OD
835Sets the group (real and effective gid) to run the program as. If
836running with superuser privileges, the supplementary groups list is
837cleared at the same time. The default is not to change gid (or clear
838the supplementary groups list). The synonym
839.B gid
840is accepted in place of
841.BR group .
842.OE
843.OS "Exec options"
844.BI exec.rlimit. limit \c
845.RB [ .hard | .soft ]
846.RB [ = ]
847.I value
848.OD
849Set resource limits for the program. The
850.I limit
851may be one of the resource limit names described in
852.BR setrlimit (2),
853in lower-case and without the
854.B RLIMIT_
855prefix; for example,
856.B RLIMIT_CORE
857becomes simply
858.BR core .
859The
860.I value
861is a number, followed optionally by
862.B k
863to multiply by 1024 (2\*(ss10\*(se),
864.B m
865to multiply by 1048576 (2\*(ss20\*(se), or
866.B g
867to multiply by 1073741824 (2\*(ss30\*(se); purists can use upper-case
868versions of these if they want. If
869.B .hard
870or
871.B .soft
872was specified, only the hard or soft limit is set; otherwise both are
873set to the same value. Only the superuser can raise the hard limit.
874The soft limit cannot be set above the hard limit.
875.OE
876.OS "Exec options"
877.B exec.env.clear
878.OD
879Clears the program's environment.
880.OE
881.OS "Exec options"
882.B exec.env.unset
883.I var
884.OD
885Removes
886.I var
887from the program's environment. It is not an error if no variable named
888.I var
889exists.
890.OE
891.OS "Exec options"
892.BR exec.env. [ set ]
893.I var
894.RB [ = ]
895.I value
896.OD
897Assigns the variable
898.I var
899the value
900.I value
901in the program's environment, possibly replacing the existing value.
902The
903.B set
904may be omitted if the
905.B env
906qualifier is present.
907.OE
908.PP
909Note that environment variable modifications are performed in order,
910global modifications before local ones.
911.
912.SS "The `socket' source and target types"
913The
914.B socket
915source and target provide access to network services. Support is
916currently provided for TCP/IP and Unix-domain sockets, although other
917address types can be added with reasonable ease.
918.PP
919The syntax for socket sources and targets is:
920.GS "Socket source and target"
921.ll +8i
922.I source
923::=
924.I socket-source
925.br
926.I target
927::=
928.I socket-target
929.br
930.I socket-source
931::=
932.RB [ socket [ .\& ]]
933.RB [[ : ] \c
934.IR addr-type \c
935.RB [ : ]]
936.I source-addr
937.br
938.I socket-target
939::=
940.RB [ socket [ .\& ]]
941.RB [[ : ] \c
942.IR addr-type \c
943.RB [ : ]]
944.I target-addr
945.ll -8i
946.GE
947The syntax of the source and target addresses depend on the address
948types, which are described below. The default address type, if no
949.I addr-type
950is given, is
951.BR inet .
952.PP
953Socket sources support options; socket targets do not. The source
954options provided are:
955.OS "Socket options"
956.BR socket. [ accept | accept-count ]
957.RB [ = ]
958.IR number | \c
959.B unlimited
960.OD
961Controls the number of connections that
962.B fw
963accepts at a time on a particular socket. This parameter affects how
964.B fw
965prioritizes between keeping up with connection turnover and processing
966existing connections. The default is 1, which strongly favours existing
967connections. The special value
968.B unlimited
969(or
970.BR infinite )
971removes any limit, and therefore favours connection turnover.
972.OE
973.OS "Socket options"
974.B socket.conn
975.RB [ = ]
976.IR number | \c
977.BR unlimited | one-shot
978.OD
979Controls the behaviour of the source when it receives connections. A
980.I number
981limits the number of simultaneous connections. The value
982.B unlimited
983(or
984.BR infinite )
985removes any limit on the number of connections possible. The value
986.B one-shot
987will remove the socket source after a single successful connection.
988(Connections refused by access control systems don't count here.)
989The default is to apply a limit of 256 concurrent connections. Use of
990the
991.B unlimited
992option is not recommended.
993.OE
994.OS "Socket options"
995.B socket.listen
996.RB [ = ]
997.I number
998.OD
999Sets the maximum of the kernel incoming connection queue for this socket
1000source. This is the number given to the
1001.BR listen (2)
1002system call. The default is 5.
1003.OE
1004.OS "Socket options"
1005.B socket.logging
1006.RB [ = ]
1007.BR yes | no
1008.OD
1009Whether to log incoming connections. If
1010.B yes
1011(the default) incoming connections are logged, together with information
1012about the client (where available) and whether the connection was
1013accepted or refused. If
1014.BR no ,
1015log messages are not generated.
1016.OE
1017.PP
1018Address types also provide their own options.
1019.
1020.SS "The `inet' socket address type"
1021.GL "Socket source and target"
1022.OL "Socket options"
1023The
1024.B inet
1025address type provides access to TCP ports. The
1026.B inet
1027source and target addresses have the following syntax:
1028.GS "Socket source and target"
1029.I inet-source-addr
1030::=
1031.RB [ port ]
1032.I port
1033.br
1034.I inet-target-addr
1035::=
1036.I address
1037.RB [ : ]
1038.I port
1039.br
1040.I address
1041::=
1042.I addr-elt
1043|
1044.I address
1045.I addr-elt
1046.br
1047.I addr-elt
1048::=
1049.B .\&
1050|
1051.I word
1052.GE
1053A
1054.I port
1055may be given as a port number or a service name from the
1056.B /etc/services
1057file (or YP map if you do that sort of thing). A
1058.B hostname
1059may be a textual hostname or a numerical IP address.
1060.PP
1061The
1062.B inet
1063source address accepts the following options:
1064.OS "Socket options"
1065.B socket.inet.source.addr
1066.RB [ = ]
1067.BR any | \c
1068.I addr
1069.OD
1070Specify the IP address on which to listen for incoming connections. The
1071default is
1072.BR any ,
1073which means to listen on all addresses, though it may be useful to
1074specify this explicitly, if the global setting is different.
1075.OE
1076.OS "Socket options"
1077.BR socket.inet.source. [ allow | deny ]
1078.RB [ host ]
1079.I addr
1080.RB [ /
1081.IR addr ]
1082.OD
1083Adds an entry to the source's access control list. If only one
1084.I address
1085is given, the entry applies only to that address; if two are given, the
1086first is a network address and the second is a netmask either in
1087dotted-quad format or a simple number of bits (e.g.,
1088.B /255.255.255.192
1089and
1090.B /26
1091mean the same), and the entry applies to any address which, when masked
1092by the netmask, is equal to the masked network address.
1093.OE
1094.OS "Socket options"
1095.BR socket.inet.source. [ allow | deny ]
1096.B priv-port
1097.OD
1098Accept or reject connections from low-numbered `privileged' ports, in
1099the range 0--1023.
1100.OE
1101.OS "Socket options"
1102.B socket.inet.dest.addr
1103.RB [ = ]
1104.BR any | \c
1105.I addr
1106.OD
1107Specify the IP address to bind the local socket to when making an
1108outbound connection. The default is
1109.BR any ,
1110which means to use whichever address the kernel thinks is most
1111convenient. This option is useful if the destination is doing
1112host-based access control and your server is multi-homed.
1113.OE
1114.OS "Socket options"
1115.B socket.inet.dest.priv-port
1116.RB [=]
1117.BR yes | no
1118.OD
1119Make a privileged connection (i.e., from a low-numbered port) to the
1120target. This only works if
1121.B fwd
1122was started with root privileges. However, it still works if
1123.B fwd
1124has
1125.I dropped
1126privileges after initialization (the
1127.B \-s
1128option). Before dropping privileges,
1129.B fwd
1130forks off a separate process which continues to run with root
1131privileges, and on demand passes sockets bound to privileged ports and
1132connected to the appropriate peer back to the main program. The
1133privileged child only passes back sockets connected to peer addresses
1134named in the configuration; even if the
1135.B fwd
1136process is compromised, it can't make privileged connections to other
1137addresses. Note that because of this privilege separation, it's also
1138not possible to reconfigure
1139.B fwd
1140to make privileged connections to different peer addresses later by
1141changing configuration files and sending the daemon a
1142.BR SIGHUP .
1143.OE
1144.PP
1145The access control rules are examined in the order: local entries first,
1146then global ones, each in the order given in the configuration file.
1147The first matching entry is used. If no entries match, the behaviour is
1148the
1149.I opposite
1150of the last entry tried. If there are no entries defined, the default
1151is to allow all clients.
1152.
1153.SS "The `unix' socket address type"
1154.GL "Socket source and target"
1155.OL "Socket options"
1156The
1157.B unix
1158address type allows access to Unix-domain sockets. The syntax for
1159.B unix
1160source and target addresses is like this:
1161.GS "Socket source and target"
1162.I unix-source-addr
1163::=
1164.I file-name
1165.br
1166.I unix-target-addr
1167::=
1168.I file-name
1169.GE
1170The following options are supported by the
1171.B unix
1172source address type:
1173.OS "Socket options"
1174.BR socket.unix.fattr. *
1175.OD
1176The
1177.B unix
1178source address accepts
1179.B fattr
1180options to control the attributes of the socket file created.
1181.OE
1182.PP
1183Sockets are removed if
1184.B fwd
1185exits normally (which it will do if it runs out of sources or
1186connections, or if
1187.B fwd
1188shuts down in a clean way).
1189.SH "EXAMPLES"
1190To forward the local port 25 to a main mail server:
1191.VS
1192from 25 to mailserv:25
1193.VE
1194To attach a fortune server to a Unix-domain socket:
1195.VS
1196from unix:/tmp/fortunes
1197to exec [/usr/games/fortune] { user nobody }
1198.VE
1199To fetch a fortune from the server:
1200.VS
1201from file stdin, stdout to unix:/tmp/fortunes
1202.VE
1203To emulate
1204.BR cat (1):
1205.VS
1206from file stdin, null to file null, stdout
1207.VE
1208.sp -1 \" undo final space
1209.
1210.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
1211.SH "SIGNAL HANDLING"
1212.
1213The
1214.B fwd
1215program responds to various signals when it's running. If it receives
1216.B SIGTERM
1217or
1218.BR SIGINT ,
1219.B fwd
1220performs a
1221.I graceful
1222shutdown: it removes all of its sources, and will exit when no more
1223connections are running. (Note that if the disposition
1224.B SIGINT
1225was to ignore it,
1226.B fwd
1227does not re-enable the signal. You'll have to send
1228.B SIGTERM
1229in that case.) If
1230.B fwd
1231receives
1232.BR SIGQUIT ,
1233it performs an
1234.I abrupt
1235shutdown: it removes all sources and extant connections and closes down
1236more-or-less immediately.
1237.PP
1238Finally, if any configuration files (other than standard input) were
1239provided to
1240.B fwd
1241on its command line using the
1242.B \-f
1243option, a
1244.B SIGHUP
1245signal may be sent to instruct
1246.B fwd
1247to reload its configuration. Any existing connections are allowed to
1248run their course. If no such configuration files are available,
1249.B fwd
1250just logs a message about the signal and continues.
1251.
1252.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
1253.SH "GRAMMAR SUMMARY"
1254.
1255@@@ grammar
1256.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
1257.SH "OPTION SUMMARY"
1258.
1259@@@ option
1260.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
1261.SH "BUGS"
1262.
1263The syntax for IP addresses and filenames is nasty. (The filename
1264syntax used to be even nastier, though.)
1265.PP
1266IPv6 is not supported yet. Because of
1267.BR fwd 's
1268socket address architecture, it's probably not a major piece of work to
1269add.
1270.PP
1271Please inform me of any security problems you think you've identified in
1272this program. I take security very seriously, and I will fix security
1273holes as a matter of priority when I find out about them. I will be
1274annoyed if I have to read about problems on Bugtraq because they weren't
1275mailed to me first.
1276.PP
1277The program is too complicated, and this manual page is too long.
1278.
1279.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
1280.SH "AUTHOR"
1281.
1282Mark Wooding, <mdw@distorted.org.uk>
1283.
1284.\"----- That's all, folks --------------------------------------------------