FINGERD(8) | MidnightBSD System Manager's Manual | FINGERD(8) |
fingerd
— remote
user information server
fingerd |
[-d ] [-k ]
[-s ] [-l ]
[-p filename] |
The fingerd
utility uses a simple protocol
based on RFC1196 that provides an interface to
finger(1) at several
network sites. It is supposed to return a friendly, human-oriented status
report on either the system at the moment or a particular person in depth.
There is no required format and the protocol consists mostly of specifying a
single “command line”, thus, fingerd
can also be used to implement other protocols in conjunction with the
-p
flag.
The fingerd
utility is started by
inetd(8), which listens
for TCP requests at port 79. Once connected it reads a single command line
terminated by a ⟨CRLF⟩ which is passed to
finger(1). The
fingerd
utility closes its connections as soon as
the output is finished.
If the line is null (i.e., just a ⟨CRLF⟩ is sent) then finger(1) returns a “default” report that lists all people logged into the system at that moment.
If a user name is specified (e.g., eric⟨CRLF⟩) then the response lists more extended information for only that particular user, whether logged in or not. Allowable “names” in the command line include both “login names” and “user names”. If a name is ambiguous, all possible derivations are returned.
The following options may be passed to
fingerd
as server program arguments in
/etc/inetd.conf:
-d
fingerd
will not attempt any network-related operations on
stdin, and it will print the full
finger
command line to
stderr before executing it.-k
-k
option in
finger(1) for
details.-s
-l
-p
fingerd
is
finger(1). By
specifying a customized local server, this option allows a system manager
to have more control over what information is provided to remote sites. If
-p
is specified, fingerd
will also set the environment variable
FINGERD_REMOTE_HOST
to the name of the host making
the request.The fingerd
utility appeared in
4.3BSD.
November 19, 2014 | midnightbsd-3.1 |