bionic (5) socks.conf.5.gz

Provided by: socks4-clients_4.3.beta2-20_amd64 bug

NAME

       socks.conf - SOCKS clients configuration file

SYNOPSIS

       /etc/socks.conf

DESCRIPTION

       All SOCKS client programs use this file to determine whether to use direct or proxy connection to a given
       destination host, and to exert access control based on the destination host, the requested service  (port
       number  on the destination host), and the effective user-id of the requesting local user. If this file is
       absent, SOCKS  clients  will  only  try  direct  connections,  making  them  behave  like  their  regular
       counterparts.

       Each  line  in  the  file  may be up to 1024 characters long.  Lines starting with a # are comments. Non-
       comment lines must be of one of the three forms:

       deny [*=userlist]   dst_addr  dst_mask  [op dst_port]  [: shell_cmd]
       direct    [*=userlist]   dst_addr  dst_mask  [op dst_port]  [: shell_cmd]
       sockd     [@=serverlist] [*=userlist]  dst_addr  dst_mask  [op dst_port]  [: shell_cmd]

       A deny line tells the SOCKS clients when to reject a request.  A direct lines tells when to use a  direct
       connection.  A  sockd  line  indicates  when to use a proxy connection and, optionally, which SOCKS proxy
       server or servers it should try.

       Spaces and tabs separate the fields. Fields enclosed in square brackets are optional.

       The userlist field, when present, consists of one or more user-ids or filenames, with comma as separator.
       No  spaces  or  tabs  are allowed in the list. The user-ids should be ids of users on the local host, not
       those on the destination host or the SOCKS server host.  The filenames must be full  pathnames  with  the
       leading  /.  Inside  the  specified  files,  user-ids  may  be  listed  one or several per line, with any
       combination of blanks, tabs, and commas as separators. The appearance of # marks  the  remainder  of  the
       line  as  comment.  Each line in the files may be up to 1023 characters long.  If the *=userlist field is
       omitted, the line applies to all user-ids.

       The dst_addr field specifies either the IP address of a host, a network, or a subnet in the usual  dotted
       form, e.g., 129.201.4.0, or a doamin name, e.g., internic.net. dst_mask specifies mask for the IP address
       used in dst_addr.  Bits in dst_mask that are set to 0 indicate the bit positions  to  be  ignored  during
       comparison  of  IP  addresses.  So,  specifying  255.255.255.255  in dst_mask demands an exact match with
       dst_addr, whereas 0.0.0.0 in dst_mask causes a matching with any given destination address regardless  of
       what  is  specified  for  dst_addr.  If  a domain name is used for dst_addr, the contents of dst_mask are
       ignored, though it must still be supplied (simply use 0.0.0.0).  If the domain name starts with a period,
       it  specifies  a zone and matches all domain names within that zone, otherwise it matches only the domain
       name itself. For example, xyz.com matches only xyz.comP, while .xyz.com macthes  not  only  xyz.com,  but
       also abc.xyz.com and this.and.that.xyz.com, among others.  The special symbol ALL (which must be entirely
       in uppercase) matches everything. Domain names are otherwise case-insentive.

       When using a domain name in dst_addr, you have be very careful in maintaining your  DNS  setup.  See  the
       last few paragraphs in sockd.conf(5).

       The  op  field  must  be  eq,  neq,  lt, gt, le, or ge, for the condition of equal, not equal, less than,
       greater than, less than or equal, and greater than or equal, respectively.  The  dst_port  field  can  be
       either  a port number, e.g., 23, or the equivalent service name as specified in file /etc/services, e.g.,
       telnet for port number 23. If this pair is omitted, the line applies to all services.

       The serverlist, which may only be used in a sockd line, consists of one  or  more  SOCKS  proxy  servers,
       which  the client program should try to use (in the indicated order) for establishing a proxy connection.
       Only commas can be used as separator, no spaces or tabs are allowed in the  list.  Domain  names  of  the
       servers  may  be  used  in the list, though it is probably more prudent to specify IP addresses.  If this
       field is omitted, the client program will use the default SOCKS proxy server, which is determined by  the
       environment  variable  SOCKS_SERVER  if  it  exists,  or  the name compiled into the SOCKS client program
       otherwise.

       Consider

       sockd  @=1.2.3.4  *=boss,root 11.12.13.14 255.255.255.255 eq telnet

       To match the condition indicated in this line, a request must come from a local user whose  effective  id
       is either boss or root, the destination IP address must be 11.12.13.14 exactly, and the service requested
       must be telnet. In that case, connection to host 11.12.13.14 should be done via a SOCKS proxy  server  on
       host 1.2.3.4.

       Every  time  a  SOCKS  client has to make a network connection, it checks the pending request against the
       file /etc/socks.conf, one line at a time. Once it finds a line with conditions that are  matched  by  the
       request,  the  action  specified  on  that line is taken. The remaining lines of file /etc/socks.conf are
       skipped. So the order of the lines in the file is extremely important; switch two lines and you may  have
       entirely different results.  If no matching line is found throughout the file, the request is denied.

       The  shell_cmd  field  specifies  a  command string that is executed when the conditions on that line are
       satisfied. The following substitutions occur before the string  is  presented  to  the  Borne  shell  for
       execution:

        %A -- replaced by the client host's domainname if known, by its IP address otherwise
        %a -- replaced by the client host's IP address
        %c -- replaced by "connect" or "bind"
        %p -- replaced by the process id of the client program
        %S -- replaced by the service name (e.g., ftp) if known, by the destination port number otherwise
        %s -- replaced by the destination port number
        %U -- replaced by the user-id at login
        %u -- replaced by the effective user-id
        %Z -- replaced by the destination host's domainname if known, by its IP address otherwise
        %z -- replaced by the destination host's IP address
        %% -- replaced by a single %

       Several shell commands can be strung together in the usual way with `|', `;', etc.

       Although  there is an implied 'deny all' at the end of the control file, you may supply one explicitly so
       as to take some specific action when requests are so rejected, e.g.,

        deny 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 : /usr/ucb/mail -s 'SOCKS: rejected %S from %u to %Z' root

       Unlike the previous version, connection to address 127.0.0.1  or  0.0.0.0  is  always  done  directly  to
       localhost, so there is no need to specify either of them in /etc/socks.conf.

       You have the option of using the frozen file /etc/socks.fc instead of /etc/socks.conf. The frozen file is
       produced by make_socksfc and is essentially the memory image of the parsed configuration file.  using  it
       can  reduced  the  start-up  delay of SOCKS client applications since no parsing is needed. Because SOCKS
       client applications always look for /etc/socks.fc first, be sure that you always run  make_socksfc  every
       time after you modify /etc/socks.conf.

ENVIRONMENT

       SOCKS_SERVER,  if  defined,  specifies  the  name  or  IP  address of the SOCKS proxy server host to use,
       overriding the default server compiled into the programs.

SEE ALSO

       dump_socksfc(8), make_socksfc(8), sockd(8), sockd.conf(5), socks_clients(1), socks.fc(5)

                                                   May 6, 1996                                     SOCKS.CONF(5)