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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Trivial Unix Architecture question Post 70941 by tmarikle on Thursday 5th of May 2005 02:33:32 PM
Old 05-05-2005
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kelam_Magnus
The only feasible way I have heard is thru internet-facing boxes which run Xwindows and use web access...via DNS attacks or overflow attacks.
UNIX systems are not necessarily imune, they just aren't exploited like Windows systems. Set UID as well as buffer overrun vulnerabilities have been identified on UNIX systems from time to time for all sorts of applications including Oracle 9i, which was touted as unbreakable/unhackable. Who remembers the Morris worm that exploited sendmail and crahsed countless systems accross the net more than a decade ago? This attack was the first one that caught the world's attention due to its substantial impact. CERT has advised that yet another vulnerability exists in sendmail (albeit through unauthorized distrobutions) can be compromised even through a firewall.

Thomas
 

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mail_intro(7)						 Miscellaneous Information Manual					     mail_intro(7)

NAME
mail_intro - Introductory information on the Tru64 UNIX mail system DESCRIPTION
The Tru64 UNIX mail system enables you to exchange mail with other users on your system, as well as with other systems connected to your local network and with users on other networks (provided your system and network are connected to other networks). Mail System Concepts Mail systems consist of the following components: User agent - The user agent provides the interface through which you interact with the mail system. Generally, the user interface enables you to create, send, receive, read, save, and manage your mail messages. Tru64 UNIX provides the following user agents: CDE's Mailer - For further information, see the Common Desktop Environment: User's Guide . Mail or mailx - For further information, see the Command and Shell User's Guide . The Rand Message Handling program (MH) - For further information, see the mh(1) and xmh(1X) reference pages. Transport agent - The transport agent provides an interface between the user agents and the delivery agents. The sendmail command is a transfer agent. Delivery agent - The delivery agent provides the mechanism for delivering the mail messages to end users, systems, and networks. The binmail and deliver commands are delivery agents for standard mail and IMAP mail, respectively. In Tru64 UNIX, the sendmail program acts as both the transport and delivery agent. It does so by implementing the Simple Mail Transfer Pro- tocol (SMTP), which is the specification for the Internet's delivery agent. Initially standards did not exist for mail addresses and computer networks. Many different address formats and network protocols exist. Mail programs must interact with different network protocols, as well as recognize and reformat different mail address formats. Fortu- nately, these difficulties were recognized and standards, such as the Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages (RFC 822) and The Domain Naming Convention for Internet User Applications (RFC 819), emerged. A mail program still must recognize addresses in various formats and communicate with different network protocols. The sendmail program addresses these issues through the use of the sendmail.cf configuration file. The Sendmail Configuration File The sendmail.cf configuration file provides the sendmail program with the information to perform the following tasks: Choose delivery agents Use address rewriting rules Define mail header information Perform some routing When it starts, the sendmail program reads the sendmail.cf configuration file. The information in the sendmail.cf configuration file enables sendmail to rewrite the addresses of mail it receives into the address form expected by the mail delivery agent. It also enables sendmail to set parameters and arguments to the mail delivery program. The configuration file contains information that is used for the following functions: Define message precedence for mail delivery Define administrative IDs to override the sender's address Define message headings Define the mail program to use Set options used by the sendmail command The default Tru64 UNIX configuration file (located in /var/adm/sendmail/sendmail.cf) is adequate for most standalone systems. However, if you plan to connect your system to a network, you will have to modify the sendmail.cf file. Tru64 UNIX provides the mailconfig and mailsetup utilities, which you can use to create mail configuration files. If you prefer to manipu- late the configuration file manually, you should use the m4 macros provided for this purpose. (See the sendmail.m4 reference page.) For more information on configuring mail, see the Network Administration manual. RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: binmail(1), mailconfig(8), mailsetup(8), mailx(1), sendmail(8), sendmail.m4(8) Files: sendmail.cf(4) Network Administration Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages (RFC 822) The Domain Naming Convention for Internet User Applications (RFC 819) UNIX System Administration Handbook, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, Inc., 1989. delim off mail_intro(7)
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