HOSTS.EQUIV(5) File Formats and Configurations HOSTS.EQUIV(5)
NAME
hosts.equiv, rhosts - trusted remote hosts and users
DESCRIPTION
The
/etc/hosts.equiv and
.rhosts files provide the "remote
authentication" database for
rlogin(1),
rsh(1),
rcp(1), and
rcmd(3SOCKET). The files specify remote hosts and users that are
considered "trusted". Trusted users are allowed to access the local
system without supplying a password. The library routine
ruserok() (see
rcmd(3SOCKET)) performs the authentication procedure for
programs by using the
/etc/hosts.equiv and
.rhosts files. The
/etc/hosts.equiv file applies to the entire system, while individual
users can maintain their own
.rhosts files in their home directories.
These files bypass the standard password-based user authentication
mechanism. To maintain system security, care must be taken in
creating and maintaining these files.
The remote authentication procedure determines whether a user from a
remote host should be allowed to access the local system with the
identity of a local user. This procedure first checks the
/etc/hosts.equiv file and then checks the
.rhosts file in the home
directory of the local user who is requesting access. Entries in
these files can be of two forms. Positive entries allow access, while
negative entries deny access. The authentication succeeds when a
matching positive entry is found. The procedure fails when the first
matching negative entry is found, or if no matching entries are found
in either file. The order of entries is important. If the files
contain both positive and negative entries, the entry that appears
first will prevail. The
rsh(1) and
rcp(1) programs fail if the remote
authentication procedure fails. The
rlogin program falls back to the
standard password-based login procedure if the remote authentication
fails.
Both files are formatted as a list of one-line entries. Each entry
has the form:
hostname [
username]
Hostnames must be the official name of the host, not one of its
nicknames.
Negative entries are differentiated from positive entries by a `-'
character preceding either the
hostname or
username field.
Positive Entries
If the form:
hostname is used, then users from the named host are trusted. That is, they
may access the system with the same user name as they have on the
remote system. This form may be used in both the
/etc/hosts.equiv and
.rhosts files.
If the line is in the form:
hostname username then the named user from the named host can access the system. This
form may be used in individual
.rhosts files to allow remote users
to access the system
as a different local user. If this form is used
in the
/etc/hosts.equiv file, the named remote user will be allowed
to access the system as
any local user.
netgroup(5) can be used in either the
hostname or
username fields to
match a number of hosts or users in one entry. The form:
+@netgroup allows access from all hosts in the named netgroup. When used in the
username field, netgroups allow a group of remote users to access the
system as a particular local user. The form:
hostname +@netgroup allows all of the users in the named netgroup from the named host to
access the system as the local user. The form:
+@netgroup1 +@netgroup2 allows the users in
netgroup2 from the hosts in
netgroup1 to access
the system as the local user.
The special character `+' can be used in place of either
hostname or
username to match any host or user. For example, the entry
+ will allow a user from any remote host to access the system with the
same username. The entry
+ username will allow the named user from any remote host to access the system.
The entry
hostname + will allow any user from the named host to access the system as the
local user.
Negative Entries
Negative entries are preceded by a `-' sign. The form:
-hostname will disallow all access from the named host. The form:
-@netgroup means that access is explicitly disallowed from all hosts in the
named netgroup. The form:
hostname -username disallows access by the named user only from the named host, while
the form:
+ -@netgroup will disallow access by all of the users in the named netgroup from
all hosts.
Search Sequence
To help maintain system security, the
/etc/hosts.equiv file is not
checked when access is being attempted for super-user. If the user
attempting access is not the super-user,
/etc/hosts.equiv is searched
for lines of the form described above. Checks are made for lines in
this file in the following order:
1.
+ 2.
+@netgroup 3.
-@netgroup 4.
-hostname 5.
hostname The user is granted access if a positive match occurs. Negative
entries apply only to
/etc/hosts.equiv and may be overridden by
subsequent
.rhosts entries.
If no positive match occurred, the
.rhosts file is then searched if
the user attempting access maintains such a file. This file is
searched whether or not the user attempting access is the super-user.
As a security feature, the
.rhosts file must be owned by the user who
is attempting access. Checks are made for lines in
.rhosts in the
following order:
1.
+ 2.
+@netgroup 3.
-@netgroup 4.
-hostname 5.
hostnameFILES
/etc/hosts.equiv system trusted hosts and users
~/.rhosts user's trusted hosts and users
SEE ALSO
rcp(1),
rlogin(1),
rsh(1),
rcmd(3SOCKET),
hosts(5),
netgroup(5),
passwd(5)WARNINGS
Positive entries in
/etc/hosts.equiv that include a
username field
(either an individual named user, a netgroup, or `
+' sign) should be
used with extreme caution. Because
/etc/hosts.equiv applies system-
wide, these entries allow one, or a group of, remote users to access
the system
as any local user. This can be a security hole. For
example, because of the search sequence, an
/etc/hosts.equiv file
consisting of the entries
+ -hostxxx will not deny access to "hostxxx".
November 26, 2017 HOSTS.EQUIV(5)