xref: /illumos-gate/usr/src/cmd/tcpd/Makefile (revision 99ea293e719ac006d413e4fde6ac0d5cd4dd6c59)
1#
2# Copyright 2009 Sun Microsystems, Inc.  All rights reserved.
3# Use is subject to license terms.
4#
5# Copyright 2011 Nexenta Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
6#
7# Copyright (c) 2018, Joyent, Inc.
8
9PROG=		safe_finger tcpd tcpdchk tcpdmatch try-from
10
11include		../Makefile.cmd
12
13CFLAGS +=	$(CCVERBOSE)
14CPPFLAGS +=	$(ACCESS) $(PARANOID) $(NETGROUP) $(TLI) \
15		$(UMASK) $(STYLE) $(TABLES) $(KILL_OPT) $(BUGS) \
16		-DRFC931_TIMEOUT=$(RFC931_TIMEOUT) \
17		-DFACILITY=$(FACILITY) -DSEVERITY=$(SEVERITY) \
18		-DREAL_DAEMON_DIR=\"$(REAL_DAEMON_DIR)\" \
19		-I../../lib/libwrap
20tcpd tcpdmatch try-from := \
21		LDLIBS += -lwrap
22tcpdchk :=	LDLIBS += -lwrap -lnsl
23
24CERRWARN +=	-erroff=E_FUNC_HAS_NO_RETURN_STMT
25CERRWARN +=	-erroff=E_IMPLICIT_DECL_FUNC_RETURN_INT
26CERRWARN +=	-_gcc=-Wno-unused-variable
27CERRWARN +=	-_gcc=-Wno-parentheses
28CERRWARN +=	$(CNOWARN_UNINIT)
29CERRWARN +=	-_gcc=-Wno-implicit-function-declaration
30CERRWARN +=	-_gcc=-Wno-return-type
31CERRWARN +=	-_gcc=-Wno-clobbered
32
33# not linted
34SMATCH=off
35
36# Various components must export interfaces, but also contain name-space
37# clashes with system libraries.
38MAPFILE.INT.D=	$(MAPFILE.NGB) mapfile-intf-tcpdchk
39MAPFILE.INT.M=	$(MAPFILE.NGB) mapfile-intf-tcpdmatch
40MAPFILE.INT.F=	$(MAPFILE.NGB) mapfile-intf-tryfrom
41
42tcpdchk :=	LDFLAGS +=$(MAPFILE.INT.D:%=-Wl,-M%)
43tcpdmatch :=	LDFLAGS +=$(MAPFILE.INT.M:%=-Wl,-M%)
44try-from :=	LDFLAGS +=$(MAPFILE.INT.F:%=-Wl,-M%)
45
46.KEEP_STATE:
47
48all:		$(PROG)
49
50install:	all $(ROOTUSRSBINPROG)
51
52clean:
53		$(RM) *.o
54
55TCPDMATCH_OBJ=	tcpdmatch.o fakelog.o inetcf.o scaffold.o
56
57tcpdmatch:	$(TCPDMATCH_OBJ) $(LIB) $(MAPFILE.INTF.M)
58		$(LINK.c) -o $@ $(TCPDMATCH_OBJ) $(LDLIBS)
59		$(POST_PROCESS)
60
61try-from:	try-from.o fakelog.o $(LIB) $(MAPFILE.INTF.F)
62		$(LINK.c) -o $@ try-from.o fakelog.o $(LDLIBS)
63		$(POST_PROCESS)
64
65TCPDCHK_OBJ=	tcpdchk.o fakelog.o inetcf.o scaffold.o
66
67tcpdchk:	$(TCPDCHK_OBJ) $(LIB) $(MAPFILE.INTF.C)
68		$(LINK.c) -o $@ $(TCPDCHK_OBJ) $(LDLIBS)
69		$(POST_PROCESS)
70
71include		../Makefile.targ
72
73# The rest of this file contains definitions more-or-less directly from the
74# original Makefile of the tcp_wrappers distribution.
75
76##############################
77# System parameters appropriate for Solaris 9
78
79REAL_DAEMON_DIR	= /usr/sbin
80TLI		= -DTLI
81NETGROUP	= -DNETGROUP
82
83##############################
84# Start of the optional stuff.
85
86###########################################
87# Optional: Turning on language extensions
88#
89# Instead of the default access control language that is documented in
90# the hosts_access.5 document, the wrappers can be configured to
91# implement an extensible language documented in the hosts_options.5
92# document.  This language is implemented by the "options.c" source
93# module, which also gives hints on how to add your own extensions.
94# Uncomment the next definition to turn on the language extensions
95# (examples: allow, deny, banners, twist and spawn).
96#
97STYLE	= -DPROCESS_OPTIONS	# Enable language extensions.
98
99################################################################
100# Optional: Changing the default disposition of logfile records
101#
102# By default, logfile entries are written to the same file as used for
103# sendmail transaction logs. See your /etc/syslog.conf file for actual
104# path names of logfiles. The tutorial section in the README file
105# gives a brief introduction to the syslog daemon.
106#
107# Change the FACILITY definition below if you disagree with the default
108# disposition. Some syslog versions (including Ultrix 4.x) do not provide
109# this flexibility.
110#
111# If nothing shows up on your system, it may be that the syslog records
112# are sent to a dedicated loghost. It may also be that no syslog daemon
113# is running at all. The README file gives pointers to surrogate syslog
114# implementations for systems that have no syslog library routines or
115# no syslog daemons. When changing the syslog.conf file, remember that
116# there must be TABs between fields.
117#
118# The LOG_XXX names below are taken from the /usr/include/syslog.h file.
119
120FACILITY= LOG_MAIL	# LOG_MAIL is what most sendmail daemons use
121
122# The syslog priority at which successful connections are logged.
123
124SEVERITY= LOG_INFO	# LOG_INFO is normally not logged to the console
125
126######################################################
127# Optional: Changing the default file protection mask
128#
129# On many systems, network daemons and other system processes are started
130# with a zero umask value, so that world-writable files may be produced.
131# It is a good idea to edit your /etc/rc* files so that they begin with
132# an explicit umask setting.  On our site we use `umask 022' because it
133# does not break anything yet gives adequate protection against tampering.
134#
135# The following macro specifies the default umask for processes run under
136# control of the daemon wrappers. Comment it out only if you are certain
137# that inetd and its children are started with a safe umask value.
138
139UMASK	= -DDAEMON_UMASK=022
140
141#######################################
142# Optional: Turning off access control
143#
144# By default, host access control is enabled.  To disable host access
145# control, comment out the following definition.  Host access control
146# can also be turned off at runtime by providing no or empty access
147# control tables.
148
149ACCESS	= -DHOSTS_ACCESS
150
151####################################################
152# Optional: dealing with host name/address conflicts
153#
154# By default, the software tries to protect against hosts that claim to
155# have someone elses host name. This is relevant for network services
156# whose authentication depends on host names, such as rsh and rlogin.
157#
158# With paranoid mode on, connections will be rejected when the host name
159# does not match the host address. Connections will also be rejected when
160# the host name is available but cannot be verified.
161#
162# Comment out the following definition if you want more control over such
163# requests. When paranoid mode is off and a host name double check fails,
164# the client can be matched with the PARANOID access control pattern.
165#
166# Paranoid mode implies hostname lookup. In order to disable hostname
167# lookups altogether, see the next section.
168
169PARANOID= -DPARANOID
170
171# The default username lookup timeout is 10 seconds. This may not be long
172# enough for slow hosts or networks, but is enough to irritate PC users.
173
174RFC931_TIMEOUT = 10
175
176########################################################
177# Optional: Changing the access control table pathnames
178#
179# The HOSTS_ALLOW and HOSTS_DENY macros define where the programs will
180# look for access control information. Watch out for the quotes and
181# backslashes when you make changes.
182
183TABLES	= -DHOSTS_DENY=\"/etc/hosts.deny\" -DHOSTS_ALLOW=\"/etc/hosts.allow\"
184
185#############################################
186# Optional: Turning on host ADDRESS checking
187#
188# Optionally, the software tries to protect against hosts that pretend to
189# have someone elses host address. This is relevant for network services
190# whose authentication depends on host names, such as rsh and rlogin,
191# because the network address is used to look up the remote host name.
192#
193# The protection is to refuse TCP connections with IP source routing
194# options.
195#
196# This feature cannot be used with SunOS 4.x because of a kernel bug in
197# the implementation of the getsockopt() system call. Kernel panics have
198# been observed for SunOS 4.1.[1-3]. Symptoms are "BAD TRAP" and "Data
199# fault" while executing the tcp_ctloutput() kernel function.
200#
201# Reportedly, Sun patch 100804-03 or 101790 fixes this for SunOS 4.1.x.
202#
203# Uncomment the following macro definition if your getsockopt() is OK.
204#
205# -DKILL_IP_OPTIONS is not needed on modern UNIX systems that can stop
206# source-routed traffic in the kernel. Examples: 4.4BSD derivatives,
207# Solaris 2.x, and Linux. See your system documentation for details.
208#
209# KILL_OPT= -DKILL_IP_OPTIONS
210
211## End configuration options
212############################
213