Copyright 1989 AT&T
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/usr/sbin/in.telnetd [-a authmode] [-EXUh] [-s tos] [-S keytab] [-M realm]
in.telnetd operates by allocating a pseudo-terminal device for a client, then creating a login process which has the subsidiary side of the pseudo-terminal as its standard input, output, and error. in.telnetd manipulates the manager side of the pseudo-terminal, implementing the TELNET protocol and passing characters between the remote client and the login process.
When a TELNET session starts up, in.telnetd sends TELNET options to the client side indicating a willingness to do remote echo of characters, and to suppress go ahead. The pseudo-terminal allocated to the client is configured to operate in "cooked" mode, and with XTABS, ICRNL and ONLCR enabled. See termio(4I).
in.telnetd is willing to do: echo, binary, suppress go ahead, and timing mark. in.telnetd is willing to have the remote client do: binary, terminal type, terminal size, logout option, and suppress go ahead.
in.telnetd also allows environment variables to be passed, provided that the client negotiates this during the initial option negotiation. The DISPLAY environment variable may be sent this way, either by the TELNET general environment passing methods, or by means of the XDISPLOC TELNET option. DISPLAY can be passed in the environment option during the same negotiation where XDISPLOC is used. Note that if you use both methods, use the same value for both. Otherwise, the results may be unpredictable.
These options are specified in Internet standards RFC 1096, RFC 1408, RFC 1510, RFC 1571, RFC 2941, RFC 2942, RFC 2946, and RFC 1572. The following Informational draft is also supported: RFC 2952.
The banner printed by in.telnetd is configurable. The default is (more or less) equivalent to `uname -sr` and will be used if no banner is set in /etc/default/telnetd. To set the banner, add a line of the form
BANNER="..."
to /etc/default/telnetd. Nonempty banner strings are fed to shells for evaluation. The default banner may be obtained by
BANNER="\e\er\e\en\e\er\e\en`uname -s` `uname -r`\e\er\e\en\e\er\e\en"
and no banner will be printed if /etc/default/telnetd contains
BANNER=""
This option may be used for specifying what mode should be used for authentication. There are several valid values for authmode: valid
Only allows connections when the remote user can provide valid authentication information to identify the remote user, and is allowed access to the specified account without providing a password.
Only allows connections when the remote user can provide valid authentication information to identify the remote user. The login(1) command will provide any additional user verification needed if the remote user is not allowed automatic access to the specified account.
This is the default state. Authentication information is not required. If no or insufficient authentication information is provided, then the login(1) program provides the necessary user verification.
This disables the authentication code. All user verification happens through the login(1) program.
Disables encryption support negotiation.
Disables displaying host specific information before login has been completed.
Uses the indicated Kerberos V5 realm. By default, the daemon will determine its realm from the settings in the krb5.conf(5) file.
Sets the IP TOS option.
Sets the KRB5 keytab file to use. The /etc/krb5/krb5.keytab file is used by default.
Refuses connections that cannot be mapped to a name through the getnameinfo(3SOCKET) function.
Disables Kerberos V5 authentication support negotiation.
The telnet protocol only uses single DES for session protection\(emclients request service tickets with single DES session keys. The KDC must know that host service principals that offer the telnet service support single DES, which, in practice, means that such principals must have single DES keys in the KDC database.
In order for Kerberos authentication to work, a host/<FQDN> Kerberos principal must exist for each Fully Qualified Domain Name associated with the telnetd server. Each of these host/<FQDN> principals must have a keytab entry in the /etc/krb5/krb5.keytab file on the telnetd server. An example principal might be:
host/bigmachine.eng.example.com
See kadmin(8) for instructions on adding a principal to a krb5.keytab file. See for a discussion of Kerberos authentication.
in.telnetd uses pam(3PAM) for authentication, account management, session management, and password management. The PAM configuration policy, listed through /etc/pam.conf, specifies the modules to be used for in.telnetd. Here is a partial pam.conf file with entries for the telnet command using the UNIX authentication, account management, session management, and password management modules.
telnet auth requisite pam_authtok_get.so.1 telnet auth required pam_dhkeys.so.1 telnet auth required pam_unix_auth.so.1 telnet account requisite pam_roles.so.1 telnet account required pam_projects.so.1 telnet account required pam_unix_account.so.1 telnet session required pam_unix_session.so.1 telnet password required pam_dhkeys.so.1 telnet password requisite pam_authtok_get.so.1 telnet password requisite pam_authtok_check.so.1 telnet password required pam_authtok_store.so.1
If there are no entries for the telnet service, then the entries for the "other" service will be used. If multiple authentication modules are listed, then the user may be prompted for multiple passwords.
For a Kerberized telnet service, the correct PAM service name is ktelnet.
Alexander, S. RFC 1572, TELNET Environment Option. Network Information Center, SRI International, Menlo Park, Calif., January 1994.
Borman, Dave. RFC 1408, TELNET Environment Option. Network Information Center, SRI International, Menlo Park, Calif., January 1993.
Borman, Dave. RFC 1571, TELNET Environment Option Interoperability Issues. Network Information Center, SRI International, Menlo Park, Calif., January 1994.
Crispin, Mark. RFC 727, TELNET Logout Option. Network Information Center, SRI International, Menlo Park, Calif., April 1977.
Marcy, G. RFC 1096, TELNET X Display Location Option. Network Information Center, SRI International, Menlo Park, Calif., March 1989.
Postel, Jon, and Joyce Reynolds. RFC 854, TELNET Protocol Specification. Network Information Center, SRI International, Menlo Park, Calif., May 1983.
Waitzman, D. RFC 1073, TELNET Window Size Option. Network Information Center, SRI International, Menlo Park, Calif., October 1988.
Kohl, J., Neuman, C., The Kerberos Network Authentication Service (V5), RFC 1510. September 1993.
Ts'o, T. and J. Altman, Telnet Authentication Option, RFC 2941. September 2000.
Ts'o, T., Telnet Authentication: Kerberos Version 5, RFC 2942. September 2000.
Ts'o, T., Telnet Data Encryption Option, RFC 2946. September 2000.
Ts'o, T., Telnet Encryption: DES 64 bit Cipher Feedback, RFC 2952. September 2000.
Binary mode has no common interpretation except between similar operating systems.
The terminal type name received from the remote client is converted to lower case.
The packet interface to the pseudo-terminal should be used for more intelligent flushing of input and output queues.
in.telnetd never sends TELNET go ahead commands.
The pam_unix(7) module is no longer supported. Similar functionality is provided by pam_authtok_check(7), pam_authtok_get(7), pam_authtok_store(7), pam_dhkeys(7), pam_passwd_auth(7), pam_unix_account(7), pam_unix_auth(7), and pam_unix_session(7).
The in.telnetd service is managed by the service management facility, smf(7), under the service identifier:
svc:/network/telnet
Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling, disabling, or requesting restart, can be performed using svcadm(8). Responsibility for initiating and restarting this service is delegated to inetd(8). Use inetadm(8) to make configuration changes and to view configuration information for this service. The service's status can be queried using the svcs(1) command.