Provided by: uftp_4.10.1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       uftpproxyd - Encrypted UDP based ftp with multicast - proxy daemon

SYNOPSIS

       uftpproxyd { -s { dest | fp=fingerprint } | -c | -r }
           [ -d ] [ -p port ] [ -t ttl ] [ -Q dscp ]
           [ -N priority ] [ -O out_multi_interface ]
           [ -U UID ] [ -q dest_port ] [ -m ] [ -x log_level ]
           [ -H hb_server[:port][,hb_server[:port]...] ]
           [ -g max_log_size ] [ -n max_log_count ]
           [ -h hb_interval ] [ -B udp_buf_size ] [ -L logfile ]
           [ -P pidfile ] [ -C clientlist_file ]
           [ -S serverlist_file ] [ -k keyfile[,keyfile...] ]
           [ -K rsa:key_len | ec:curve[,rsa:key_len | ec:curve...]]
           [ -e ecdh_curve ] [ -I interface[,interface...] ]
           [ -M pub_mcast_addr[,pub_mcast_addr...] ]

DESCRIPTION

       uftpproxyd  is  the  proxy daemon of the UFTP suite.  It performs multicast tunneling, NAT traversal, and
       client response aggregation.  It is used in one of two scenarios.  The first is when the server  and  one
       or more clients are on separate networks and cannot be reached directly via multicast, and/or one or both
       sides are behind a firewall or NAT'ed.  This allows applications to function when there is little  to  no
       access  to routers.  The second is when the server can contact clients directly but there are too many of
       them to directly handle the responses.  This allows greater scalability.

       The proxy can run in one of three modes: a server proxy, a client proxy, or response proxy.

       A server proxy is typically local to a server and acts as the upstream end of  a  multicast  tunnel.   It
       listens  on  the  public  multicast  address  (and private multicast address when specified) and forwards
       downstream packets to a specific address downstream.  Upstream  packets  are  forwarded  back  where  the
       announcement originated from.

       A  client  proxy  is  typically  local to one or more clients and forms the downstream end of a multicast
       tunnel.  It receives unicast data from one or more server proxies and forwards downstream traffic to  the
       multicast  address  specified  in  the  packet  header.   Upstream  traffic  from clients is gathered and
       forwarded back where the announcement came from as an aggregated response.

       If a client proxy is behind a firewall, the proxy can send a heartbeat message to the upstream  proxy  to
       make  a  pinhole  in  the firewall that the upstream server proxy can connect to.  If the client proxy is
       also NATed, the upstream server proxy may not know the IP/port of the client proxy, so the  server  proxy
       can  be  configured  to  wait for a heartbeat message, and use the IP/port the heartbeat came from as its
       downstream address.  If the server proxy is also behind a firewall or NAT, a second  server  proxy  on  a
       machine  with  a  publicly  accessible  IP  can be inserted between the first server proxy and the client
       proxy.  In this case, the first server proxy is set up to use the second as its downstream  address,  and
       the  second  server  proxy  is  set  up to use the first heartbeat it receives from a client proxy as its
       downstream address.

       A response proxy functions as a response aggregator in situations where the server has  direct  multicast
       accessibility  to  clients  but  the  number of clients are too high for the server to handle itself.  It
       listens on the public multicast address (and private multicast address  when  specified),  but  does  not
       forward  packets  from  the server since those packets reach clients directly.  It does however send some
       messages directly to clients in the process of  establishing  encryption  keys.   Upstream  traffic  from
       clients  is  gathered  and  forwarded  back  where  the announcement came from as an aggregated response.
       Clients in this environment are configured to send all responses to a specific response proxy.   Messages
       sent  directly  from response proxies to clients use multicast (either the primary public address, or the
       private address, depending on the message).

EXAMPLES

   Server / Client Proxies
       Figure 1

       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
       x                                              Network A   x
       x   ----------                                             x
       x   | Server |                                             x
       x   ----------                                             x
       x        |                                                 x
       x        |  multicast                                      x
       x        |                                                 x
       x        |-----------------------------------------        x
       x        |                   |                    |        x
       x        v                   v                    v        x
       x   ----------------    ----------------      ----------   x
       x   | Server Proxy |    | Server Proxy |      | Client |   x
       x   ----------------    ----------------      ----------   x
       x        |                   |                             x
       x        |  unicast          |  unicast                    x
       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
                |                   |
                |                   ------------
                |                              |
       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx   xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
       x        |       Network B  x   x       |       Network C  x
       x        v                  x   x       v                  x
       x  ----------------         x   x  ----------------        x
       x  | Client Proxy |         x   x  | Client Proxy |        x
       x  ----------------         x   x  ----------------        x
       x       |                   x   x       |                  x
       x       |  multicast        x   x       |  multicast       x
       x       |                   x   x       |                  x
       x       |-------------      x   x       |------------      x
       x       |            |      x   x       |           |      x
       x       v            v      x   x       v           v      x
       x  ----------   ----------  x   x  ----------  ----------  x
       x  | Client |   | Client |  x   x  | Client |  | Client |  x
       x  ----------   ----------  x   x  ----------  ----------  x
       x                           x   x                          x
       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx   xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

       In Figure 1 above there are a server and five clients.  The server and one client are on network  A,  two
       clients  are  on network B, and two clients are on network C.  There is one client proxy on network B and
       one on network C.  On network A are two server proxies, one configured to send to  the  client  proxy  on
       network B and the other configured to send to the client proxy on network C.

       Client  proxies  normally  should  NOT  run  on the same machine as a client.  Doing so can result in the
       server getting confused when it sees messages coming from a proxy and a  client  with  the  same  IP  and
       therefore  cannot tell the difference.  This can only work if the machine has multiple IPs and the client
       proxy and client listen on different IPs.

       NOTE: When using proxies in environments where private IP addresses are in use (10.x.x.x,  172.16-31.x.x,
       192.168.x.x),  it  is strongly recommended to assign a unique ID to each client and client proxy, and for
       servers to call out clients by unique ID instead of name/IP.  This prevents IP address collisions at  the
       server between two clients with the same local IP.

   Response Proxies
       Figure 2

            ----------
        |-->| Server |
        |   ----------
        |      |
        |      |  multicast
        |      |
        |      |--------------------------------------
        |      |          |               |          |
        |      |          v               |          v
        |      |   ------------------     |   ------------------
        |      |   | Response Proxy |     |   | Response Proxy |
        |      v   ------------------     v   ------------------
        |  ----------    ^      |     ----------    ^       |
        |  | Client |    |      |     | Client |    |       |
        |  ----------    |      |     ----------    |       |
        |      |         |      |         |         |       |
        |      |         |      |         |         |       |
        |      -----------      |         ------------      |
        |    client response    |       client response     |
        |                       |                           |
        |     proxy response    |                           |
        -----------------------------------------------------

       Figure  2  shows a simplified setup involving a server, two clients, and two response proxies, all on the
       same network segment.  In this environment, multicast messages from each proxy reaches both clients,  not
       just the client it serves.

       Figure 3

       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
       x                                               Network A  x
       x   ----------                                             x
       x ->| Server |<----------------------------------          x
       x | ----------                                  |          x
       x |      |                                      |          x
       x |      |  multicast                           |          x
       x |      |                                      |          x
       x |      |                                      |          x
       x | ------------------------------------------  |          x
       x | |        |                     |         |  |          x
       x | |        v                     |         v  |          x
       x | |  ------------------          |   ------------------  x
       x | |  | Response Proxy |          |   | Response Proxy |  x
       x | |  ------------------          |   ------------------  x
       x | |    |       ^                 |           ^           x
       x |/|\----       |                 |           |           x
       x   |            |            ----/|\-----------           x
       x   |            |            |    |                       x
       x   |            |            |    |                       x
       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx|xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
          |             |            |    |
          |             ------------||    |
       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx || xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
       x  |           Network B   x || x  |           Network C   x
       x  |                       x || x  |                       x
       x  |                       x || x  |                       x
       x  ------------------      x || x  ------------------      x
       x       |           |      x || x       |           |      x
       x       v           v      x || x       v           v      x
       x  ----------  ----------  x || x  ----------  ----------  x
       x  | Client |  | Client |  x || x  | Client |  | Client |  x
       x  ----------  ----------  x || x  ----------  ----------  x
       x       |           |      x || x       |           |      x
       x       -------------------x-||-x--------------------      x
       x                          x    x                          x
       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx    xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

       In  Figure 3, there are two response proxies local to the server and four clients in two remote networks,
       with each response proxy handling the clients from one network.  Multicast messages from each proxy would
       reach  all clients, not just the clients it serves.  Even though the proxies are offloading work from the
       server in handling client responses, the server's network still has to handle responses from all  clients
       since the proxies are on the server's network.  As a result, this setup has limited scalability.

       Figure 4

       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
       x                Network A   x
       x   ----------               x
       x ->| Server |<--------------x----------------
       x | ----------               x               |
       x |      |                   x               |
       x |      |  multicast        x               |
       x |      |                   x               |
       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx               |
         |      |                                   |
         |      |--------------------------         |
         |      |                         |         |
       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx    xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
       x |      |     Network B1  x    x  |         | Network C1  x
       x | -------                x    x  |-------  |             x
       x | |     |                x    x  |      |  |             x
       x | |     v                x    x  |      v  |             x
       x | |  ------------------  x    x  |   ------------------  x
       x | |  | Response Proxy |  x    x  |   | Response Proxy |  x
       x | |  ------------------  x    x  |   ------------------  x
       x | |    |       ^         x    x  |           ^           x
       x |/|\----       |         x    x  |           |           x
       x   |            |         x  --x-/|\-----------           x
       x   |            |         x  | x  |                       x
       x   |            |         x  | x  |                       x
       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx  | xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
          |             |            |    |
          |             ------------||    |
       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx || xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
       x  |           Network B2  x || x  |           Network C2  x
       x  |                       x || x  |                       x
       x  |                       x || x  |                       x
       x  ------------------      x || x  ------------------      x
       x       |           |      x || x       |           |      x
       x       v           v      x || x       v           v      x
       x  ----------  ----------  x || x  ----------  ----------  x
       x  | Client |  | Client |  x || x  | Client |  | Client |  x
       x  ----------  ----------  x || x  ----------  ----------  x
       x       |           |      x || x       |           |      x
       x       -------------------x-||-x--------------------      x
       x                          x    x                          x
       xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx    xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

       In  Figure  4,  each proxy is at least one hop away from the clients it serves, and at least one hop away
       from the server.  In this case, multicast messages from each proxy only go  to  the  clients  it  serves.
       Also,  since the proxies are not on the same network as the server, messages coming from the client don't
       have any effect on the server's local network.  A setup like this is the most scalabile, and is the  most
       flexible since another server on a different network can utilize the response proxies in the same way.

OPTIONS

       The following options are supported:

       -s { dest | fp=fingerprint }
              Sets  up the proxy as a server proxy.  If dest is specified, this is the name/IP of the downstream
              client proxy.  If fingerprint is specified, this  designates  the  public  key  signature  of  the
              downstream  proxy.  When this proxy gets a heartbeat message signed with the matching key, it will
              use the source IP:port of the heartbeat for its downstream address.  Exactly one of -s, -c, or  -r
              must be specified.

       -c     Sets up the proxy as a client proxy.  Exactly one of -s, -c, or -r must be specified.

       -r[:curve]
              Sets  up  the  proxy  as a response proxy.  If "curve" is given, specifies the EC curve to use for
              ECDH key exchange (see -k and -K for details), otherwise no ECDH key is generated.  Exactly one of
              -s, -c, or -r must be specified.

       -d     Enable  debug  mode.  The process will run in the foreground and all output will go to stderr.  If
              specified, the -L option is ignored.

       -p port
              The UDP port number to listen on.  Default is 1044.

       -t ttl Specifies the time-to-live for multicast packets.  Default is 1.

       -N priority
              Sets the process priority.  On Windows systems, valid values are from -2 to 2, with a  default  of
              0.  These correspond to the following priorities:

              -2 High
              -1 Above Normal
               0 Normal
               1 Below Normal
               2 Low

              On all other systems, this is the "nice" value.  Valid values are from -20 to 19p where -20 is the
              highest priority and 19 is the lowest priority.  Default is 0.

       -O out_multi_interface
              The interface to send the data from.  Can be specified either by interface name, by  hostname,  or
              by IP.  If not specified, the default system interface is used.  Applies only to client proxies.

       -U UID The  unique  ID  for  this  proxy,  specified  as an 8 digit hexadecimal number (0xnnnnnnnn).  The
              default value is based on the IP address of the first listed multicast capable  interface  on  the
              system.   If  this  address is IPv4, the UID is the address.  If it is IPv6, the UID is the last 4
              bytes of the address.

       -q dest_port
              The port number of the downstream proxy (for server proxies) or clients (for client proxies).

       -m     For Windows systems using CryptoAPI or CNG, private keys are normally stored in the key  container
              of the running user.  Specifying this option stores keys in the system key container.  Useful when
              running as a service.  On non-Windows systems, this option has no effect.

       -x log_level
              Specifies current logging level.  Valid values are 0-5, with 0 being the least verbose and 5 being
              the most verbose.  Default is 2, which is consistent with logging prior to version 3.5.

       -H hb_server[:port][,hb_server[:port]...]
              Lists one or more proxies to send heartbeat messages to.  When sending a signed heartbeat message,
              the first key listed under -k is used to sign the message.  If port is not specified for  a  given
              proxy, the default port of 1044 is assumed.

       -h hb_interval
              The time in seconds between sending heartbeat messages.  Ignored if -H is not specified.

       -g max_log_size
              Specifies  the  maximum  log  file  size  in MB.  Once the log file reaches this size, the file is
              renamed with a .1 extension and a new log file is  opened.   For  example,  if  the  log  file  is
              /tmp/uftpproxyd.log,  it  will be renamed /tmp/uftpproxyd.log.1 and a new /tmp/uftpproxyd.log will
              be created.  Ignored if -d is specified.  Valid values are 1-1024.  Default is no log rolling.

       -n max_log_count
              Specifies the maximum number of archive log files to keep when log rolling is  active.   When  the
              log file rolls, archive logs are renamed with an incrementing numerical extension until the max is
              reached.  Archive log files beyond the maximum are deleted.   Ignored  if  -g  is  not  specified.
              Valid values are 1-1000.  Default is 5.

       -B buf_size
              The  size  in  bytes  of  the  UDP  send  buffer  and  receive  buffer  to  use.  Valid values are
              65536-104857600 (64KB-100MB).  Defaults to 262144.

       -L logfile
              Specifies  the  log  file.   Default  is  /tmp/uftpproxyd.log  for  UNIX-like   systems   systems,
              C:\uftpproxyd_log.txt for Windows.

       -Q dscp
              Specifies the Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP), formerly Type of Service (TOS), in the IP
              header for all outgoing packets.  Valid values are 0-63 and may be specified in either decimal  or
              hexadecimal.  Default is 0.

              On  Windows  XP  systems, the OS doesn't allow this parameter to be changed by default.  To change
              this, add/modify the following DWORD registry value, set to 0, and reboot:

              HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Tcpip\Parameters\DisableUserTOSSetting

              Not currently supported on Windows Vista or later.

       -P pidfile
              The pidfile to write the daemon's pid to on startup.  Default is no pidfile.

       -C clientlist_file
              A file containing a list of clients the proxy will allow to receive files from.  The  file  should
              contain  the name/IP of a client followed by the client's public key fingerprint, with one on each
              line.  The key specified by the client  must  match  the  fingerprint.   Applies  only  to  client
              proxies.

              Example contents:
              0x00001111|66:1E:C9:1D:FC:99:DB:60:B0:1A:F0:8F:CA:F4:28:27:A6:BE:94:BC
              0x00002222

       -S serverlist_file
              A file containing a list of servers.  The file should contain the ID of the server, the IP address
              the proxy expects the server's request to come  from,  and  optionally  the  server's  public  key
              fingerprint,  with  one  entry for a server on each line.  For client proxies, this is the list of
              servers the proxy will allow to connect, and the key  specified  by  the  server  must  match  the
              fingerprint.   For  server  proxies,  if your system supports source specific multicast (SSM), the
              proxy will subscribe to all public and private multicast  addresses  using  SSM  for  all  servers
              listed.  Response proxies perform both of the above functions

              When  this  option  is specified, the public and private addresses specified by the server must be
              valid SSM addresses.  Any ANNOUNCE that specifies a private IP that is not  a  valid  SSM  address
              will be rejected.  Valid SSM addresses are in the 232/8 range for IPv4 and the ff30::/96 range for
              IPv6.

              Example contents:
              0x11112222|192.168.1.101|66:1E:C9:1D:FC:99:DB:60:B0:1A:F0:8F:CA:F4:28:27:A6:BE:94:BC
              0x11113333|fe80::213:72ff:fed6:69ca

       -k keyfile[,keyfile...]

       -K "{ rsa:key_len | ec:curve }[,...]"
              These two options are used to read and/or write the proxy's RSA/ECDSA private keys.

              The -K option creates one or more RSA or ECDSA private keys.  New keys  are  specified  as  either
              rsa:key_length,  which  creates  an  RSA  private  key key_length bits wide, or as ec:curve, which
              creates an EC key using the curve "curve".

              The list of supported EC curves is as follows (availability may vary depending on system  settings
              and crypto library used):

              sect163k1   sect163r1  sect163r2  sect193r1  sect193r2  sect233k1  sect233r1  sect239k1  sect283k1
              sect283r1  sect409k1  sect409r1  sect571k1  sect571r1  secp160k1  secp160r1  secp160r2   secp192k1
              prime192v1 secp224k1 secp224r1 secp256k1 prime256v1 secp384r1 secp521r1

              If only -K is specified, the keys created are not persisted.

              If only -k is specified, this option reads RSA or ECDSA private keys from each keyfile.

              If  -k  and -K are specified, the keys created by -K are written to the keyfiles listed by -k.  In
              this case, -k and -K must give the same number of items.

              If neither -k nor -K are specified, an RSA private key 512 bytes in length is  generated  and  not
              persisted.

              If -k is specified but not -K, the RSA or ECDSA private keys are read from each keyfile.

              The definition of keyfile is dependent on the crypto library UFTP is compiled to use.

              On  Windows  systems,  UFTP can built to use either CNG, which is the new API supported by Windows
              Vista and Windows 7, or CryptoAPI, which is the legacy API and the only one available  to  Windows
              XP.

              Under  CryptoAPI,  all  RSA  private keys must be stored in a key container (technically only keys
              used to sign data, but for UFTP's purposes this is the case).   Key  containers  are  internal  to
              Windows, and each user (and the system) has its own set of key containers.  In this case, key_file
              is actually the name of the key container.  When -k is not specified, the  generated  key  is  not
              persisted. Elliptic Curve algorithms are not supported under CryptoAPI.

              Under  CNG,  RSA and ECDSA private keys are also stored in key containers, and RSA keys created by
              CrypoAPI may be read by CNG.  Like CryptoAPI, key_file also specifies the key container name,  and
              the  generated  key is not persisted if -k is not specified.  CNG only supports 3 named EC curves:
              prime256v1, secp384r1, and secp521r1.

              All other systems use OpenSSL for the crypto library (although under Windows UFTP can be  also  be
              built  to  use  it).   In  this  case, key_file specifies a file name where the RSA private key is
              stored unencrypted in PEM format (the OS is expected to protect this file).  When both -k  and  -K
              are  specified,  the  file  is  only  written to if it does not currently exist.  If the file does
              exist, an error message will be returned and the server will exit.  When -k is not specified,  the
              generated  key  is  not  persisted.   These  PEM  files may also be manipulated via the openssl(1)
              command line tool.

              Keys can also be generated and viewed via the uftp_keymgt(1) utility.

       -e ecdh_curve
              Specifies the EC curve type to use for a response proxy's ECDH private key.  This option  MUST  be
              specified  for  a  response proxy to use an ECDH key exchange scheme.  If unspecified, no ECDH key
              will be created.  Ignored if -r is not specified.

       -I interface[,interface...]
              For server proxies, lists one or more interfaces to listen to multicast traffic  on.   For  client
              proxies,  the  interface it reports itself as to servers and clients.  Interfaces can be specified
              either by interface name, by hostname, or  by  IP.   When  receiving  a  closed  group  membership
              request,  the  client  proxy  will  participate  if  any  of these interfaces matches an IP in the
              announcement.  The default is to listen  on  all  active  non-loopback  interfaces.   NOTE:  Since
              Windows doesn't have named interfaces (not in the sense that UNIX-like systems do), only hostnames
              or IP addresses are accepted on Windows.

       -M pub_mcast_addr[,pub_mcast_addr...]
              The list of public multicast addresses to listen on.  Used only by  server  proxies  and  response
              proxies.  Default is 230.4.4.1.

EXIT STATUS

       The following exit values are returned:

       0      The proxy started successfully and is running in the background.

       1      An invalid command line parameter was specified.

       2      An error occurred while attempting to initialize network connections.

       3      An error occurred while reading or generating cryptographic key data.

       4      An error occurred while opening or rolling the log file.

       5      A memory allocation error occurred.

       6      The proxy was interrupted by the user.

SEE ALSO

       uftp(1), uftpd(1), uftp_keymgt(1).

NOTES

       The latest version of UFTP can be found at http://uftp-multicast.sourceforge.net.  UFTP is covered by the
       GNU  General  Public  License.   Commercial  licenses  and  support  are  available  from   Dennis   Bush
       (bush@tcnj.edu).