INNBIND(8)



INNBIND(8)                InterNetNews Documentation                INNBIND(8)

NAME
       innbind - Helper program to bind sockets to privileged ports

SYNOPSIS
       innbind [-p] fd,family,address,port [...]

DESCRIPTION
       innbind is a helper program that's not meant to be run directly.
       Instead, innd and nnrpd use it internally to bind to ports that require
       root privileges to bind to.

       This program must be installed setuid root in order for innd or nnrpd
       to bind to ports under 1024.  The only functions that it's willing to
       perform are to bind an open file descriptor to a given address and port
       or to create a new socket, bind it, and return the bound socket to its
       caller.  It can only be run as the news user (as specified at configure
       time), and will only bind to ports 119, 433, 563, an additional port
       specified with the --with-innd-port argument to configure, or ports
       numbered 1024 or higher.

       Each argument to innbind must be a comma-separated list of four
       elements.  The first is the file descriptor number that should be
       bound, the second is the numeric family of the socket (AF_INET or
       AF_INET6), the third is the local address to bind to (in dotted-quad
       format for IPv4 and in colon-separated address format for IPv6), and
       the fourth is the port number.  To bind to all addresses with IPv4, use
       0.0.0.0 as the address.  To bind to all addresses with IPv6, use "::"
       as the address.

       Multiple arguments can be specified to tell innbind to bind multiple
       sockets at the same time.  Any errors (other than permission denied
       -- see below) encountered will cause innbind to abort, and error
       messages will be sent both to syslog and to standard error.

       By default, innbind attempts to just bind the already open file
       descriptor that it inherits from its caller.  For each successfully
       bound file descriptor (in the order given on the command line), innbind
       prints "ok" and a newline to its standard output.

       On some systems (apparently just STREAMS-based systems), however, even
       a setuid root program cannot bind a socket to a privileged port that
       was created by a process that didn't have permissions.  If innbind gets
       permission denied when trying to bind a socket, it will print "no" and
       a newline to its standard output.  It will then create a new socket,
       bind it as specified, and then attempt to pass that socket back to its
       caller using the I_SENDFD STREAMS ioctl.  The caller should receive
       that file descriptor with I_RECVFD and use it instead of the one that
       it created.

       Note that file descriptor passing is only supported on STREAMS-based
       systems since it is done with ioctls over a pipe.  However, it is
       believed that those systems are exactly the systems that can't simply
       bind the inherited file descriptor.  If this assumption proves to be
       incorrect, traditional BSD file descriptor passing over a Unix domain
       socket will have to be added.

OPTIONS
       -p  If given as the first command-line argument, no attempt will be
           made to bind the inherited file descriptor and innbind will only
           try creation of a new file descriptor and passing it back via
           standard output.  This option is primarily useful for testing.

SECURITY
       As innbind is normally installed setuid root, security is even more of
       an issue for it than for other parts of INN.  It is a fairly short
       program, and if you understand C, you are encouraged to audit it
       yourself to be certain that it does only what it is supposed to do.
       The only INN library functions it uses are the vector functions, the
       message functions for error reporting, and xstrdup.

       The ports that will be bound are restricted to prevent potential
       attacks made possible by the ability to bind low-numbered ports, such
       as exploits of the rsh(1) family of commands on some systems.  If
       innbind is installed setuid root, it can only be executed by the news
       user to prevent other users on the system from being able to bind to
       even those few privileged ports that it allows.

       innbind uses no external configuration files; the only files it might
       open are through the system getpwnam(3) service to get the UID of the
       news user.  The only user input that it accepts are its command-line
       arguments.

DIAGNOSTICS
       innbind may log the following messages to syslog and print them to
       standard error.

       cannot create socket for %s: %s
           (Fatal) innbind fell back on attempting to create a new socket to
           bind for the given argument, and the socket creation failed.

       cannot bind socket for %s: %s
           (Fatal) Calling bind for the socket corresponding to the given
           argument failed with a system error.  If the error indicates
           permission denied, make sure that innbind is setuid root.  This can
           also be caused by trying to use IPv6 on a system whose kernel does
           not support it.

       cannot bind to restricted port %hu in %s
           (Fatal) The port number portion of the given command-line argument
           is for a port below 1024 which is not 119, 433, 563, or a port
           given to --with-innd-port at configure time.  Other ports are not
           allowed for security reasons.

       cannot get socket options for file descriptor %d: %s
           (Fatal) innbind was unable to get the socket options for that file
           descriptor.  The most likely cause of this error is passing the
           wrong file descriptor number to innbind (a file descriptor that
           isn't open, or that corresponds to a regular file rather than a
           network socket).

       cannot get UID for %s
           (Fatal) innbind was unable to get the UID for the news user
           specified during configure (and defaulting to "news").  This
           normally means that user isn't in the system passwd file.

       cannot mark socket reusable for %s: %s
           (Fatal) innbind created a new socket for the given argument but was
           unable to mark its bind address reusable (the SO_REUSEADDR socket
           option).

       cannot pass file descriptor: %s
           (Fatal) innbind created and bound a new file descriptor but was
           unable to pass it back to its caller via its standard output, using
           the I_SENDFD STREAMS ioctl.

       invalid file descriptor %d: not SOCK_STREAM
           (Fatal) The given file descriptor is not a SOCK_STREAM socket.
           innbind can only bind SOCK_STREAM sockets.

       invalid IPv4 address %s in %s
           (Fatal) The IPv4 address specified in the given command-line option
           could not be parsed by inet_aton(3).  IPv4 addresses should be
           specified in the standard dotted-quad format (10.2.3.4).

       invalid IPv6 address %s in %s
           (Fatal) The IPv6 address specified in the given command-line option
           could not be parsed by inet_pton(3).  IPv6 addresses should be
           specified in RFC 4291 format (1080:0:0:0:8:800:200C:417A or
           1080::8:800:200C:417A).

       invalid command-line argument %s
           (Fatal) The specified command-line argument could not be parsed or
           was not in the correct format.

       invalid file descriptor %s in %s
           (Fatal) The file descriptor portion of the given command-line
           argument is not a non-negative integer.

       invalid port number %s in %s
           (Fatal) The port number portion of the given command-line argument
           is not a non-negative integer.

       invalid protocol family %s in %s
           (Fatal) The protocol family portion of the given command-line
           argument is not a non-negative integer.  It should be equal to
           either AF_INET or AF_INET6 on the system where innbind is run.

       must be run by user %s (%lu), not %lu
           (Fatal) When setuid root, innbind may only be run by the news user
           as specified at configure time ("news" by default), for security
           reasons.

       no addresses specified
           (Fatal) No arguments were given on the command line (except maybe
           -p).

       port may not be zero in %s
           (Fatal) The port number portion of the given command-line argument
           was zero.

       unknown protocol family %s in %s
           (Fatal) The protocol number portion of the given command-line
           argument is neither AF_INET nor AF_INET6.

EXAMPLES
       As mentioned above, innbind is never run directly, only by innd and
       other programs that need to bind to and listen to network ports.
       Sample invocations by innd would be:

           innbind 3,10,::,119

       to bind the IPv6 socket on file descriptor 3 to port 119, all
       addresses, or:

           innbind 6,2,10.0.0.3,433

       to bind the IPv4 socket on file descriptor 6 to port 433 in the address
       10.0.0.3.

HISTORY
       Written by Russ Allbery <eagle@eyrie.org> for InterNetNews.

       $Id: innbind.pod 9767 2014-12-07 21:13:43Z iulius $

SEE ALSO
       inet_aton(3), inet_pton(3), innd(8), nnrpd(8).

INN 2.6.4                         2015-09-20                        INNBIND(8)

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