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Operating Systems Solaris Where can I find details of what various Solaris packages do? Post 88176 by muleheadjoe on Tuesday 1st of November 2005 07:12:57 PM
Old 11-01-2005
Thanks for the link to SF ... I'm aware that it is now common practice to turn off "unused" or "unnecessary" services in inetd for security purposes ... what I'm not aware of is any actual usefulness to this practice.

[SOAPBOX]As I like to tell anybody who listens, there is a difference between 'risk' and 'threat' and any so-called security professional that can't explain that difference in plain english is incompetent. I still don't know what the Authentication Management Infrastructure on Solaris actually does, so I'm in absolutely no position to weigh in on its potential risk in the environment. But nobody in our sysadmin dept. has been able to explain it to me either ... so why would a supposedly professional sysadmin turn stuff off if they don't know what it does? If this behavior is the result of a "security audit", why wouldn't the sysadmins require an explanation from the auditor before blindly flipping bits in the system configs?

Serously tho ... I'm no fan of IT security folk ... in the corporate world in which I live, breathe and work, they tend to be obstrunctionist and counter-productive ... they refuse to validate their actual utility to the company while doing much of their work in secret (they can't tell me 'why' they do anything because of security, get it?), meanwhile my productivity goes down because of the worthless hurdles they throw in my path. Cost to the company goes up, my ROI goes down. And I think that it is safe to say that the company is not any better off by the disablement of AMI on this server.[\SOAPBOX]

Back to the main thrust of my OP ... could somebody indicate WHERE can I find explanations of these services & packages? All I know is that overnight a dozen or so services in inetd.conf were commented out and the next day one of my tools was broken. I would really prefer to find out which service is the needed one without having to go through the brute-force 'turn them on one at a time' method of experimentation.

tia
 

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DebianNet(3pm)						     Linux Programmer's Manual						    DebianNet(3pm)

NAME
DebianNet.pm - create, remove, enable or disable entry in /etc/inetd.conf SYNOPSIS
require DebianNet; DebianNet::add_service($newentry, $group); DebianNet::remove_service($entry); DebianNet::enable_service($service, $pattern); DebianNet::disable_service($service, $pattern); DESCRIPTION
You can use the functions in DebianNet.pm to to add, remove, enable or disable entries in the /etc/inetd.conf file. After the /etc/inetd.conf file has been changed, a SIGHUP signal will be sent to the inetd process to make sure that inetd will use the new /etc/inetd.conf file. The functions can also be used to add entries that are commented out by default. They will be treated like normal entries. That also means that if you already have an entry that is commented out you can't add an entry for the same service without remov- ing the old one first. The DebianNet functions treat entries that are commented out by a single '#' character as entries that have been commented out by a user. It won't change such entries. For shell scripts you can also use the update-inetd command. See update-inetd(8) for further information. VARIABLES
$DebianNet::inetdcf = "FILENAME"; Use FILENAME instead of /etc/inetd.conf (e.g. for testing purposes). $DebianNet::sep = "#<off># "; "#<off># " will be used as the default comment characters. You can use this option to specify different comment characters. This is only necessary if you have to deal with two (or more) services of the same name. $DebianNet::multi = "true"; If you want to disable/remove more than one entry at a time you should use this option. If you try to remove more than one entry at a time without using this option the program will show a warning and asks the user if he want to continue. $DebianNet::verbose = "true"; Explain what is being done. FUNCTIONS
DebianNet::add_service($newentry, $group); Add $newentry to the group $group of the /etc/inetd.conf file. If the entry already exist it will be enabled (it will also detect entries with different program options). Using $group is optional (the default group is the group OTHER). If the group does not exist the entry will be placed at the end of the file. DebianNet::remove_service($entry); Remove $entry from /etc/inetd.conf . You can use a regular expression to remove the entry. DebianNet::enable_service($service, $pattern); Enable $service (e.g. "ftp") in /etc/inetd.conf . Using $pattern is optional. It can be used to select a service. You only need this option if you have two (or more) services of the same name. An example: you have three ftp entries in the /etc/inetd.conf file (all disabled by default) and you want to enable the entry which uses the wu-ftpd daemon. To do this, use the pattern "wu-ftpd" (or any other regular expression that matches this entry). DebianNet::disable_service($service, $pattern); Disable SERVICE (e.g. "ftp") in /etc/inetd.conf . Using $pattern is optional (see above). AUTHORS
Peter Tobias, <tobias@et-inf.fho-emden.de> Ian Jackson <iwj10@cus.cam.ac.uk> Linux 21 September 1995 DebianNet(3pm)
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