Diskless and templating configuration examples

This commit is contained in:
dillon 1999-01-26 19:04:15 +00:00
parent 9905cd8cb0
commit 83481af95e
19 changed files with 722 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
kernel, rc.local, and xdm-config are typically softlinks. Plus other
files, of course, depending on how you setup your system.
rc.local and xdm-config might be softlinks into HT.DISKLESS, allowing
you to ease system administration when managing many diskless
workstations. You can also play other tricks, such as I play in
rc.conf.local by having it source ../HT.DISKLESS/rc.conf.local to get
class-based defaults.
total 6
drwxr-xr-x 3 root wheel 512 Jan 26 10:56 .
drwxr-xr-x 7 root wheel 512 Jan 26 10:58 ..
drwxr-xr-x 2 root wheel 512 Jan 26 10:56 CVS
lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 17 Jan 25 10:26 kernel -> /kernel.diskless2
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 146 Jan 25 01:21 rc.conf.local
lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 23 Jan 25 10:26 rc.local -> ../HT.DISKLESS/rc.local
-rw------- 1 root wheel 539 Jan 17 15:29 ssh_host_key
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 343 Jan 17 15:29 ssh_host_key.pub
lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 25 Jan 25 10:26 xdm-config -> ../HT.DISKLESS/xdm-config

View File

@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
# DISKLESS RC.CONF.LOCAL
#
# Override system standard /etc/rc.conf
. /conf/HT.DISKLESS/rc.conf.local
hostname=test2.backplane.com
start_xdm=NO

Binary file not shown.

View File

@ -0,0 +1 @@
1024 33 131532587310298436102876167134780549224884868848048954510241288010381123823834489593599651234236801895942903979896941799980786675282403650831462626987993609590967535749256449810953893747928248417183421903403076895749793372279190481189373438759742396152779236777836204647146078686957945395785442097357022574693 root@apollo.backplane.com

View File

@ -0,0 +1,85 @@
# DISKLESS RC.CONF.LOCAL
#
# Override system standard /etc/rc.conf
ldconfig_paths="$ldconfig_paths /usr/krb5/lib"
ldconfig_paths_aout="$ldconfig_paths_aout /usr/krb5/lib/aout"
syslogd_flags="-f /etc/syslog.diskless.conf"
inetd_enable="NO"
portmap_enable="NO"
router_enable="NO"
cron_enable="NO"
sendmail_enable="NO"
# Enable additional services
#
lpd_enable="YES"
nfs_client_enable="YES"
ntpdate_enable="YES"
ntpdate_flags="apollo.backplane.com"
xntpd_enable="YES"
if [ -f /etc/ipfw.conf ]; then
firewall_enable="YES"
firewall_type="/etc/ipfw.conf"
firewall_quiet="NO"
fi
# Add customizations to the diskless mount function
#
old_func=$diskless_mount_func
diskless_mount_func=diskless_mount_user
diskless_mount_user() {
$old_func
# Copy of ssh_host_key* files to where sshd
# expects them, assuming you add to /usr/local/etc/sshd_config:
#
# HostKey /var/db/ssh_host_key
#
if [ -f $conf_dir/ssh_host_key ]; then
cp $conf_dir/ssh_host_key* /var/db
else
(cd /var/db; ssh-keygen -f ssh_host_key -P "")
fi
chmod 400 /var/db/ssh_host_key
chmod 644 /var/db/ssh_host_key.pub
# Copy home directory so you can login
#
#
mount_mfs -s 65536 -T qp120at dummy /home
if [ -d /home.diskless ]; then
cd /home.diskless
for i in *; do
if [ -f $i/home.tgz ]; then
mkdir /home/$i
chown $i /home/$i
chmod 700 /home/$i
(cd /home/$i; tar xvzpf /home.diskless/$i/home.tgz)
homeok=1
fi
done
fi
if [ "$homeok" = "0" ]; then
echo "ERROR, NO /home.diskless DIRECTORY TO COPY TO /HOME"
homeok=0
sleep 10
fi
# Firewall helper - if we configure the firewall to let through
# ports > 4000, we need to configure the machines as such.
#
sysctl -w net.inet.ip.portrange.first=4000
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
#!/bin/sh
. /etc/rc.conf
cat >> /var/spool/lpd/ljet4.ps << EOF
#!/bin/sh
#
gs -q -dSAFER -dNOPAUSE -sDEVICE=ljet4 -r600x600 -dBitsPerPixel=1 \
-sOutputFile=- -
EOF
chmod 755 /var/spool/lpd/ljet4.ps
mkdir /var/spool/ljet4
chown daemon /var/spool/ljet4
if [ "X$start_xdm" = "XYES" ]; then
( sleep 10; xdm -config $conf_dir/xdm-config ) > /dev/null 2>&1 &
fi

View File

@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
! $XConsortium: xdm-conf.cpp,v 1.2 93/09/28 14:30:32 gildea Exp $
DisplayManager.errorLogFile: /var/run/xdm-errors
DisplayManager.pidFile: /var/run/xdm-pid
DisplayManager.servers: /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/Xservers-1
DisplayManager.keyFile: /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/xdm-keys
DisplayManager.servers: /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/Xservers
DisplayManager.accessFile: /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/Xaccess
DisplayManager._0.authorize: true
DisplayManager._0.setup: /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/Xsetup_0
DisplayManager._0.startup: /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/GiveConsole
DisplayManager._0.reset: /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/TakeConsole
DisplayManager*resources: /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/Xresources
DisplayManager*session: /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/Xsession
DisplayManager*authComplain: false

View File

@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
#
# @(#)aliases 5.3 (Berkeley) 5/24/90
#
# Aliases in this file will NOT be expanded in the header from
# Mail, but WILL be visible over networks or from /bin/mail.
#
# >>>>>>>>>> The program "newaliases" must be run after
# >> NOTE >> this file is updated for any changes to
# >>>>>>>>>> show through to sendmail.
#
# Basic system aliases -- these MUST be present
MAILER-DAEMON: postmaster
postmaster: root
# General redirections for pseudo accounts
bin: root
daemon: root
games: root
ingres: root
nobody: root
system: root
toor: root
uucp: root
usenet: root
root: root@backplane.com
diablo: dillon
diablo-bugs: dillon

View File

@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
# @(#)forward.map 1.1 1/17/95
#
# Put addresses to be forwarded here. Example:
#
# garyw@mojosoft.com charliex@best.com
#

View File

@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
#
# example:
# fofs.com markl@shellx.best.com
#
# NOTE: FORWARD.MAP can be used to override NDOMAIN.MAP for specific
# users. NDOMAIN.MAP would then act as a catch-all
#
# NOTE: NDOMAIN.MAP only works to two levels. I.E. if you have an
# entry for fubar.com, then user@fubar.com will work and
# user@host.fubar.com will work, but NOT user@host.dom.fubar.com
#

View File

@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
( When templating, ME is typically a softlink to the appropriate host
subdirectory )

View File

@ -0,0 +1,151 @@
BOOTP configuration mechanism
Matthew Dillon
dillon@backplane.com
BOOTP kernels automatically configure the machine's IP address, netmask,
optional NFS based swap, and NFS based root mount. The NFS server will
typically export a shared read-only /, /usr, and /var to any number of
workstations. The shared read-only root is typically either the server's
own root or, if you are more security concious, a contrived root.
The key issue with starting up a BOOTP kernel is that you typically want
to export read-only NFS partitions from the server, yet still be able to
customize each workstation ( or not ).
The current /etc/rc.diskless file takes over the function of mounting
'disks' and retargets rc.conf.local and rc.local from /etc
to /conf/$IP_OF_WORKSTATION. The typical automatic configuration and
mounting of disks in /etc/rc is bypassed, but most if not all rc.conf
style options are left intact.
In the BOOTP workstation /conf/$IP/rc.conf.local, you must typically
turn *OFF* most of the system option defaults in /etc/rc.conf as well
as do additional custom configuration of your environment
The /usr/src/share/examples/diskless directory contains a typical
X session / sshd based workstation configuration. The directories
involved are HT.DISKLESS/ and 192.157.86.12/.
Essentially, the $IP/ directory ( which rc.diskless looks for in
/conf/$IP/ ) contains all the junk. The HT.DISKLESS directory exists
to hold common elements of your custom configuration so you do not have
to repeat those elements for each workstation. The example /conf
structure included here shows how to create a working sshd setup ( so
you can sshd into the diskless workstation ), retarget xdm's pid and error
files to R+W directories if /usr is mounted read-only, and retarget
syslogd and other programs. This example is not designed to run out of
the box and some modifications are required.
Typically you should start with a clean slate by tar-copying this example
directory to /conf and then hack on it in /conf rather then in
/usr/share/examples/diskless.
BOOTP CLIENT SETUP
Here is a typical kernel configuration. If you have only one ethernet
interface you do not need to wire BOOTP to a specific interface name.
BOOTP requires NFS and NFS_ROOT, and our boot scripts require MFS. If
your /tmp is *not* a softlink to /var/tmp, the scripts also require NULLFS
# BootP
#
options BOOTP # Use BOOTP to obtain IP address/hostname
options BOOTP_NFSROOT # NFS mount root filesystem using BOOTP info
options "BOOTP_NFSV3" # Use NFS v3 to NFS mount rootoptions
options BOOTP_COMPAT # Workaround for broken bootp daemons.
#options "BOOTP_WIRED_TO=de0"
options MFS # Memory File System
options NFS # Network Filesystem
options NFS_ROOT # Nfs can be root
options NULLFS # nullfs to map /var/tmp to /tmp
BOOTP SERVER SETUP
The BOOTP server must be running on the same logical LAN as the the
BOOTP client(s). You need to setup two things:
(1) You need to NFS-export /, /usr, and /var.
(2) You need to run a BOOTP server. DHCPD can do this.
NFS Export:
Here is an example "/etc/exports" file.
/ -ro -maproot=root: -network 192.157.86.0 -mask 255.255.255.192
/usr -ro -maproot=root: -network 192.157.86.0 -mask 255.255.255.192
/var -ro -maproot=root: -network 192.157.86.0 -mask 255.255.255.192
In order to be an NFS server, the server must run portmap, mountd,
nfsd, and rpc.statd. The standard NFS server options in /etc/rc.conf
will work ( you should put your overrides in /etc/rc.conf.local on the
server and not edit the distribution /etc/rc.conf, though ).
BOOTP Server:
This configuration file "/etc/dhcpd.conf" example is for
the '/usr/ports/net/isc-dhcp' dhcpd port.
subnet 192.157.86.0 netmask 255.255.255.192 {
# range if you want to run the core dhcpd service of
# dynamic IP assignment, but it is not used with BOOTP
# workstations
range 192.157.86.32 192.157.86.62;
# misc configuration.
#
option routers 192.157.86.2;
option domain-name-servers 192.157.86.2;
server-name "apollo.fubar.com";
option subnet-mask 255.255.255.192;
option domain-name-servers 192.157.86.2;
option domain-name "fubar.com";
option broadcast-address 192.157.86.63;
option routers 192.157.86.2;
}
host test1 {
hardware ethernet 00:a0:c9:d3:38:25;
fixed-address 192.157.86.11;
option root-path "192.157.86.2:/";
option option-128 "192.157.86.2:/images/swap";
}
host test2 {
# hardware ethernet 00:e0:29:1d:16:09;
hardware ethernet 00:10:5a:a8:94:0e;
fixed-address 192.157.86.12;
option root-path "192.157.86.2:/";
option option-128 "192.157.86.2:/images/swap";
}
SWAP. This example includes options to automatically BOOTP configure
NFS swap on each workstation. In order to use this capabilities you
need to NFS-export a swap directory READ+WRITE to the workstations.
You must then create a swap directory for each workstation you wish to
assign swap to. In this example I created a dummy user 'lander' and
did an NFS export of /images/swap enforcing a UID of 'lander' for
all accesses.
apollo:/usr/ports/net# ls -la /images/swap
total 491786
drwxr-xr-x 2 root wheel 512 Dec 28 07:00 .
drwxr-xr-x 8 root wheel 512 Jan 20 10:54 ..
-rw-r--r-- 1 lander wheel 33554432 Dec 23 14:35 swap.192.157.86.11
-rw-r--r-- 1 lander wheel 335544320 Jan 24 16:55 swap.192.157.86.12
-rw-r--r-- 1 lander wheel 134217728 Jan 21 17:19 swap.192.157.86.6
A swap file is best created with dd:
# create a 32MB swap file for a BOOTP workstation
dd if=/dev/zero of=swap.IPADDRESS bs=1m count=32
It is generally a good idea to give your workstations some swap space,
but not a requirement if they have a lot of memory.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,281 @@
TEMPLATING machine configurations
Matthew Dillon
dillon@backplane.com
This document describes a general mechanism by which you can template
/ and /usr. That is, to keep a 'master template' of / and /usr on a
separate machine which is then used to update the rest of your machines.
Generally speaking, you can't simply mirror /. You might be able to
get away with mirroring /usr. There are two main problems involved with
templating:
(1) Avoiding overwriting run-time generated files
By default, the system maintains a number of files in the root
partition. For example, sendmail will dbm /etc/aliases into
/etc/aliases.db. vipw or chpass or other password related routines
will regenerate the password dbm's /etc/spwd.db, /etc/pwd.db, and
passwd. /etc/namedb/s might contain generated secondaries. And
so forth.
The templating mechanism must avoid copying over such files.
(2) Customizing machines.
Customizing machines is actually considerably simpler. You create
a configuration hierarchy and convert the configuration files that
have to be customized into softlinks that run through a special
softlink in the configuration directory. This will work for every
configuration file except possibly /etc/master.passwd
For example, /etc/resolv.conf would be turned into a softlink to
/conf/ME/resolv.conf, and /conf/ME itself would be a softlink to
/conf/<HOSTNAME>. The actual resolv.conf configuration file
would reside in /conf/<HOSTNAME>.
If you have a lot of hosts, some configuration files may be commonly
classified. For example, all your shell machines might have the
same /etc/resolv.conf. The solution is to make
/conf/<HOSTNAME>/resolv.conf a softlink to a common directory, say
/conf/HT.SHELL/resolv.conf. It may sound a little messy, but this
sort of categorization actually makes the sysadmins job much, much
easier.
The /conf/ directory hierarchy is stored on the template and
distributed to all the machines along with the rest of the root
partition.
This type of customization is taken from my direct experience
instituting such a system at BEST. At the time, BEST had over 45
machines managed from a single template.
RUN-TIME GENERATED OR MODIFIED FILES IN / or /USR
/etc/aliases.db
/etc/master.passwd
/etc/spwd.db
/etc/pwd.db
/etc/passwd
/etc/namedb/s
/root/.history
/root/.ssh/identity
/root/.ssh/identity.pub
/root/.ssh/random_seed
/root/.ssh/known_hosts
/conf/ME
/kernel* ( note 2 )
/dev ( note 3 )
/var ( note 4 )
/home ( note 4 )
/lost+found
/usr/lost+found
/usr/home ( note 4 )
/usr/crash ( note 5 )
/usr/obj ( note 5 )
/usr/ports ( note 5 )
/usr/src ( note 5 )
/usr/local/crack ( note 5 )
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/xdm-errors ( note 6 )
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xdm/xdm-pid ( note 6 )
/usr/local/etc/ssh_host_key ( note 6 )
/usr/local/etc/ssh_host_key.pub ( note 6 )
/usr/local/etc/ssh_random_seed ( note 6 )
/conf/ME ( note 7 )
note 2: You typically want to update kernels manually and *NOT*
template them as a safety measure. This also allows you to run
different kernels on different machines or.
note 3: /dev must be updated manually. Some devices, such as tty's and
pty's, use the access and/or modify time and/or user/group
operationally and regenerating the devices on the fly would be
bad.
note 4: /var and /home are usually separately mounted partitions and
thus would not fall under the template, but as a safety measure
the template copier refuse to copy directories named 'home'.
note 5: These are directories that are as often created directly on
/usr as they are separately-mounted partitions. You typically
do not want to template such directories.
note 6: Note that you can solve the problem of xdm and sshd creating
files in /usr. With xdm, edit /usr/X11R6/lib/xdm/xdm-config
and change the errorLogFile and pidFile config lines.
With sshd, add 'HostKey' and 'RandomSeed' directives to specify
/var/db for the location of the host key and run-time sshd
random seed:
HostKey /var/db/ssh_host_key
RandomSeed /var/db/ssh_random_seed
note 7: In this example, /conf/ME is the machine customizer and must
be pointed to the /conf/<full-host-name>/ directory, which is
different for each machine. Thus, the /conf/ME softlink
should never be overwritten by the templating copy.
TYPICAL CUSTOMIZED CONFIGRATION SOFTLINKS
The following files typically need to be turned into softlinks
to /conf/ME/<filename>:
/etc/ccd.conf -> /conf/ME/ccd.conf
/etc/ipfw.conf ...
/etc/fstab
/etc/motd
/etc/resolv.conf
/etc/aliases
/etc/sendmail.cw
/etc/organization
/etc/named.conf
/etc/rc.conf.local
/etc/printcap
/etc/inetd.conf
/etc/login.conf
/etc/gettytab
/etc/ntp.conf
/etc/exports
/root/.k5login -> /conf/ME/root/.k5login
And, of course, /conf/ME is usually a softlink to the appropriate
/conf/<full-host-name>/. Depending on your system configuration,
there may be other files not listed above that you have to worry about.
DELETION OF FILES
Any file found on the template destination that does not exist in the
source and is not listed as an exception by the source should be deleted.
However, deletion can be dangerous and cpdup will ask for confirmation
by default. Once you know you aren't going to blow things up, you can
turn this feature off and update your systems automatically from cron.
By formalizing the delete operation, you can be 100% sure that it is
possible to recreate / and /usr on any machine with only the original
template and a backup of the ( relatively few ) explicitly-excepted
files. The most common mistake a sysop makes is to make a change to a
file in / or /usr on a target machine instead of the template machine.
If the target machine is updated once a night from cron, the sysop
quickly learns not to do this ( because his changes get overwritten
overnight ). With a manual update, these sorts of mistakes can propogate
for weeks or months before they are caught.
TEMPLATE COPYING AND SAFETY
THE CPDUP PROGRAM
The 'cpdup' program is a program which efficiently duplicates a directory
tree. The program copies source to destination, duplicating devices,
softlinks, hardlinks, files, modification times, uid, gid, flags, perms,
and so forth. The program incorporates several major features:
* The program refuses, absolutely, to cross partition boundries.
i.e. if you were copying the template /usr from an NFS mount to
your /usr, and you had a mount point called /usr/home, the
template copying program would *NOT* descend into /usr/home on
the destination.
This is a safety.
* The program accesses a file called .cpignore in each directory
it descending into on the source to obtain a list of exceptions
for that directory -- that is, files not to copy or mess with.
This is a templating function.
* The program refuses to delete a directory on the destination
being replaced by a softlink or file on the source.
This is a safety mechanism
* The program is capable of maintaing MD5 check cache files and
doing an MD5 check between source and destination during the
scan.
* The program is capable of deleting files/directories on the
destination that do not exist on the source, but asks for
confirmation by default.
This is a templating and a safety mechanism.
* The program uses a copy-to-tmp-and-rename methodology allowing
it to be used to update live filesystems.
This is a templating mechanism.
* The program, by default, tries to determine if a copy is required
by checking modify times, file size, perms, and other stat
elements. If the elements match, it does not bother to copy
( unless an MD5 check is being made, in which case it must read
the destination file ).
You typically run cpdup on the target machine. The target machine
temporarily mounts the template machine's / and /usr via NFS, read-only,
and runs cpdup to update / and /usr. If you use this methodology note
that THERE ARE SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS! See 'SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS WITH
NFS' below.
Whatever script you use that does the NFS mounts should ensure that the
mount succeeded before continuing with the cpdup.
You should create .cpignore files in the appropriate directories on the
template machine's / and /usr partitions so as not to overwrite active
files on the target. The most critical .cpignore files should be
protected with 'chflags schg .cpignore'. Specifically, the ones in /
and /etc, but possibly others as well. For example, the .cpignore
hierarchy for protect /root is:
# /root/.cpignore contains
.history
# /root/.ssh/.cpignore contains
random_seed
known_hosts
authorized_keys
identity
identity.pub
WHEN INITIALLY CONVERTING A TARGET MACHINE TO USE TEMPLATING, ALWAYS
MAKE A FULL BACKUP OF THE TARGET MACHINE FIRST! You may accidently delete
files on the target during the conversion due to forgetting to enter
items into appropriate .cpignore files on the source.
SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS WITH NFS ROOT EXPORT FROM TEMPLATE MACHINE
SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS WITH NFS USR EXPORT FROM TEMPLATE MACHINE
There are some serious security considerations that must be taken into
account when exporting / and /usr on the template machine.
* only export read-only
* the password file ( aka vipw ) may not contain any crypted passwords
at all. You MUST use ssh or kerberos to access the template machine.
You can get away with giving only root a crypted password, but only
if you disallow network root logins and only allow direct root
logins on the console.
* The machine's private ssh_host_key usually resides in /usr/local/etc.
You must move this key to /var/db. You can softlink link so no
modification of sshd_config is required.
* The machine's private ~root/.ssh/identity file is also exposed by
the NFS export, you should move this file to /var/db as well and
put a softlink in ~root/.ssh.
* DON'T EXPORT /var ! Either that, or don't put the private keys
in /var/db ... put them somewhere else.
* You may want to redirect the location of the random_seed file, which
can be done by editing ~root/.ssh/sshd_config and
/usr/local/etc/sshd_config so it is not exposed either.
-Matt
Matthew Dillon
dillon@backplane.com

View File

@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
aliases, forward.map, and ndomain.map are typically softlinks to some
other common directory such as HT.STD.
You can create machine classifications, which I call 'HT.XXX' directories,
to hold common files for a particular functional machine class.
total 8
drwxr-xr-x 3 root wheel 512 Jan 26 10:56 .
drwxr-xr-x 7 root wheel 512 Jan 26 10:58 ..
drwxr-xr-x 2 root wheel 512 Jan 26 10:56 CVS
lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 17 Jan 25 10:27 aliases -> ../HT.STD/aliases
lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 21 Jan 25 10:27 forward.map -> ../HT.STD/forward.map
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 263 Jan 24 18:27 fstab
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 750 Jan 24 18:29 ipfw.conf
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 100 Jan 24 18:35 motd
lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 21 Jan 25 10:27 ndomain.map -> ../HT.STD/ndomain.map
-rw------- 1 root wheel 464 Jan 25 13:53 rc.conf.local
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 283 Jan 24 18:33 resolv.conf

View File

@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
# Device Mountpoint FStype Options Dump Pass#
/dev/sd0a / ufs rw 1 1
/dev/sd0b none swap sw 0 0
/dev/sd0d /var ufs rw 1 1
/dev/sd0e /usr ufs rw 1 1
/dev/wd0d /cvs ufs rw 2 2
209.157.86.2:/FreeBSD /FreeBSD nfs ro 0 3
proc /proc procfs rw 0 0

View File

@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
# /etc/ipfw.conf
#
# allow local nets, dialup specials
#
add 00010 allow all from 127.0.0.1 to 127.0.0.1 via lo0
add 00020 allow ip from 209.157.86.0/26 to 209.157.86.0/26
#add 00030 allow ip from any to any via sl0
# Allow all outgoing
#
add 00040 allow all from 209.157.86.0/26 to any
# incoming TCP
#
add 01000 allow tcp from any to any established
add 01010 allow tcp from any to any ssh,smtp,domain,finger,ntalk,http,auth,kerberos
add 01020 reset log tcp from any to any
# incoming UDP
#
add 02000 allow udp from any to any 4000-65535,domain,ntp,kerberos,ntalk
add 02010 unreach filter-prohib log udp from any to any
# incoming ICMP
#
add 03000 allow icmp from any to any
# Deny the rest and log
#
add 65534 deny log all from any to any

View File

@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
FreeBSD 3.0-CURRENT (ARCHIVE) #54: Sat Jan 2 12:18:57 PST 1999
Welcome to archive.backplane.com!

View File

@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
#!/bin/sh
#
network_interfaces="lo0 ed1"
ifconfig_ed1="inet 192.157.86.7 netmask 255.255.255.192"
# use external resolver
#
named_enable="NO"
portmap_enable="NO"
##############################################################
### Miscellaneous administrative options ###################
##############################################################
sendmail_enable="YES"
sendmail_flags="-q5m"
dumpdev="/dev/sd0b" # Device name to crashdump to (if enabled).

View File

@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
search backplane.com best.com best.net
#search best.com. best.net. backplane.com.
# workstations use this file too, and do not run named themselves
#
# so lander can use this file too
nameserver 209.157.86.2
#nameserver 127.0.0.1
#nameserver 204.156.128.1
#nameserver 204.156.128.20