nanog mailing list archives

Re: Is it time to block all Microsoft protocols in the core?


From: David Charlap <David.Charlap () marconi com>
Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2003 15:43:08 -0500


Joe Abley wrote:

You're using mixed tense in these sentences, so I can't tell whether you think that syslog's network port is open by default on operating systems today.

On FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD and Darwin/Mac OS X (the only xterms I happen to have open right now) this is not the case, and has not been for some time. I presume, perhaps naïvely, that other operating systems have done something similar.

Current versions of Linux appear to be safe. This is from the syslog package that ships with RedHat version 8 (sysklogd package version 1.4.1-10).

        NAME
            sysklogd - Linux system logging utilities.

        ...

        OPTIONS
        ...
            -r    This option will enable the facility to receive
                  message from the network using an internet domain
                  socket with the syslog service (see  services(5)).
                  The default is to not receive any messages from
                  the network.

                  This option is introduced in version 1.3 of the
                  sysklogd package.   Please note that the default
                  behavior is the opposite of how older versions
                  behave, so you might have to turn this on.

The default RedHat installation does not turn on this option.

Looking through RedHat's FTP server, their 4.2 distribution (the oldest on on their server) is at version 1.3-15, and therefore incorporates this feature. This release has a README dated 1997, and the sysklogd package on their server is dated December 1996.

I would assume that other Linux distributions from the same era (1997 through the present) would also have sysklogd version 1.3 or later, and therefore have this feature.

-- David


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