Robert Watson 0c09bcb0e8 Compensate for default disabling of network services in inetd.conf(5)
by providing the opportunity to edit inetd.conf during the system
installation process.  The following modifications were made:

(1) Expand the Anonymous FTP description dialog to indicate that inetd
    and ftpd must be enabled before it can be used.

(2) Introduce a new configInetd() pair of dialogs, the first describing
    inetd, giving a couple of examples of services that require it, and
    hinting at potential risk, then asking the user if they wish to
    enable it.  The second indicates that inetd.conf must be configured
    to enabled specific services, and asks if the user would like to
    load inetd.conf into the editor to modify it.  Add this
    configuration action to the index.

There are some further improvements that might be considered:

(1) Provide a more inetd.conf-specific configuration tool that speaks
    inetd.conf(5).  However, this is made difficult by the "yet another
    configuration format" nature of inetd.conf, as well as its use of
    commenting to disable services, rather than an in-syntax way to
    disable a service without commenting it out.  Submissions here
    would probably be welcome.

(2) There's some overlap between settings in the somewhat obtuse
    Security Profile mechanism and other settings, including the inetd
    setting, and NFS server configuration.  As features become
    individually tunable, they should probably be removed from the
    security profile mechanism.  Otherwise, somewhat counter-intuitively,
    sysinstall (in practice) queries multiple times whether inetd, nfsd,
    etc, should be enabled/disabled.  A possible future direction might
    be to drive profiles not by degree of paranoia, rather, the set
    of services desired.  Or simply to remove the Security Profile
    mechanism and resort to feature-driven configuration.

Reviewed by:	imp, chris, jake, nate, -arch, -stable
2001-08-02 03:25:16 +00:00
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2001-04-18 20:26:28 +00:00
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2001-07-15 08:06:20 +00:00