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mount
Commandproc
檔案系統proc
檔案系統中的最上層檔案/proc/apm
/proc/buddyinfo
/proc/cmdline
/proc/cpuinfo
/proc/crypto
/proc/devices
/proc/dma
/proc/execdomains
/proc/fb
/proc/filesystems
/proc/interrupts
/proc/iomem
/proc/ioports
/proc/kcore
/proc/kmsg
/proc/loadavg
/proc/locks
/proc/mdstat
/proc/meminfo
/proc/misc
/proc/modules
/proc/mounts
/proc/mtrr
/proc/partitions
/proc/pci
/proc/slabinfo
/proc/stat
/proc/swaps
/proc/sysrq-trigger
/proc/uptime
/proc/version
/proc/
中的目錄sysctl
指令smb.conf
Filehttpd
httpd.conf
/etc/openldap/schema/
Directorysysconfig
Directory/etc/sysconfig/
Directory/etc/sysconfig/amd
/etc/sysconfig/apmd
/etc/sysconfig/arpwatch
/etc/sysconfig/authconfig
/etc/sysconfig/autofs
/etc/sysconfig/clock
/etc/sysconfig/desktop
/etc/sysconfig/dhcpd
/etc/sysconfig/exim
/etc/sysconfig/firstboot
/etc/sysconfig/gpm
/etc/sysconfig/hwconf
/etc/sysconfig/i18n
/etc/sysconfig/init
/etc/sysconfig/ip6tables-config
/etc/sysconfig/iptables-config
/etc/sysconfig/irda
/etc/sysconfig/keyboard
/etc/sysconfig/kudzu
/etc/sysconfig/named
/etc/sysconfig/network
/etc/sysconfig/nfs
/etc/sysconfig/ntpd
/etc/sysconfig/radvd
/etc/sysconfig/samba
/etc/sysconfig/selinux
/etc/sysconfig/sendmail
/etc/sysconfig/spamassassin
/etc/sysconfig/squid
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-securitylevel
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-selinux
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-users
/etc/sysconfig/system-logviewer
/etc/sysconfig/tux
/etc/sysconfig/vncservers
/etc/sysconfig/xinetd
/etc/sysconfig/
Directorycommand
cat testfile
command to view the contents of a file, named testfile
, in the current working directory.
file name
.bashrc
file in your home directory contains bash shell definitions and aliases for your own use.
/etc/fstab
file contains information about different system devices and file systems.
webalizer
RPM if you want to use a Web server log file analysis program.
ls
, then a character, and finally the Tab key. Your terminal displays the list of files in the working directory that begin with that character.
computer output
ls
command displays the contents of a directory. For example:
Desktop about.html logs paulwesterberg.png Mail backupfiles mail reports
prompt
$
#
[stephen@maturin stephen]$
leopard login:
user input
text
is displayed in this style:
text
command at the boot:
prompt.
<replaceable>
<version-number>
is displayed in this style:
/usr/src/kernels/<version-number>
/
, where <version-number>
is the version and type of kernel installed on this system.
/usr/share/doc/
contains additional documentation for packages installed on your system.
http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/
) against the component Deployment_Guide
.
parted
utility to manage partitions and access control lists (ACLs) to customize file permissions.
內容目錄
mount
Commandproc
檔案系統proc
檔案系統中的最上層檔案/proc/apm
/proc/buddyinfo
/proc/cmdline
/proc/cpuinfo
/proc/crypto
/proc/devices
/proc/dma
/proc/execdomains
/proc/fb
/proc/filesystems
/proc/interrupts
/proc/iomem
/proc/ioports
/proc/kcore
/proc/kmsg
/proc/loadavg
/proc/locks
/proc/mdstat
/proc/meminfo
/proc/misc
/proc/modules
/proc/mounts
/proc/mtrr
/proc/partitions
/proc/pci
/proc/slabinfo
/proc/stat
/proc/swaps
/proc/sysrq-trigger
/proc/uptime
/proc/version
/proc/
中的目錄sysctl
指令/usr/
partition as read-only. This second point is important because the directory contains common executables and should not be changed by users. Also, since the /usr/
directory is mounted as read-only, it can be mounted from the CD-ROM or from another machine via a read-only NFS mount.
/boot/
Directory/boot/
directory contains static files required to boot the system, such as the Linux kernel. These files are essential for the system to boot properly.
/boot/
directory. Doing so renders the system unbootable.
/dev/
Directory/dev/
directory contains device nodes that either represent devices that are attached to the system or virtual devices that are provided by the kernel. These device nodes are essential for the system to function properly. The udev
daemon takes care of creating and removing all these device nodes in /dev/
.
/dev
directory and subdirectories are either character (providing only a serial stream of input/output) or block (accessible randomly). Character devices include mouse, keyboard, modem while block devices include hard disk, floppy drive etc. If you have GNOME or KDE installed in your system, devices such as external drives or cds are automatically detected when connected (e.g via usb) or inserted (e.g via CD or DVD drive) and a popup window displaying the contents is automatically displayed. Files in the /dev
directory are essential for the system to function properly.
/dev
File | Description |
---|---|
/dev/hda | The master device on primary IDE channel. |
/dev/hdb | The slave device on primary IDE channel. |
/dev/tty0 | The first virtual console. |
/dev/tty1 | The second virtual console. |
/dev/sda | The first device on primary SCSI or SATA channel. |
/dev/lp0 | The first parallel port. |
/etc/
Directory/etc/
directory is reserved for configuration files that are local to the machine. No binaries are to be placed in /etc/
. Any binaries that were once located in /etc/
should be placed into /sbin/
or /bin/
.
/etc
are the X11/
and skel/
:
/etc |- X11/ |- skel/
/etc/X11/
directory is for X Window System configuration files, such as xorg.conf
. The /etc/skel/
directory is for "skeleton" user files, which are used to populate a home directory when a user is first created. Applications also store their configuration files in this directory and may reference them when they are executed.
/lib/
Directory/lib/
directory should contain only those libraries needed to execute the binaries in /bin/
and /sbin/
. These shared library images are particularly important for booting the system and executing commands within the root file system.
/media/
Directory/media/
directory contains subdirectories used as mount points for removable media such as usb storage media, DVDs, CD-ROMs, and Zip disks.
/mnt/
Directory/mnt/
directory is reserved for temporarily mounted file systems, such as NFS file system mounts. For all removable media, please use the /media/
directory. Automatically detected removable media will be mounted in the /media
directory.
/mnt/
目錄不應該拿來安裝程式。
/opt/
Directory/opt/
directory provides storage for most application software packages.
/opt/
directory creates a directory bearing the same name as the package. This directory, in turn, holds files that otherwise would be scattered throughout the file system, giving the system administrator an easy way to determine the role of each file within a particular package.
sample
is the name of a particular software package located within the /opt/
directory, then all of its files are placed in directories inside the /opt/sample/
directory, such as /opt/sample/bin/
for binaries and /opt/sample/man/
for manual pages.
/opt/
directory, giving that large package a way to organize itself. In this way, our sample
package may have different tools that each go in their own sub-directories, such as /opt/sample/tool1/
and /opt/sample/tool2/
, each of which can have their own bin/
, man/
, and other similar directories.
/proc/
Directory/proc/
directory contains special files that either extract information from or send information to the kernel. Examples include system memory, cpu information, hardware configuration etc.
/proc/
and the many ways this directory can be used to communicate with the kernel, an entire chapter has been devoted to the subject. For more information, refer to 章 4, proc
檔案系統.
/sbin/
Directory/sbin/
directory stores executables used by the root user. The executables in /sbin/
are used at boot time, for system administration and to perform system recovery operations. Of this directory, the FHS says:
/sbin
contains binaries essential for booting, restoring, recovering, and/or repairing the system in addition to the binaries in/bin
. Programs executed after/usr/
is known to be mounted (when there are no problems) are generally placed into/usr/sbin
. Locally-installed system administration programs should be placed into/usr/local/sbin
.
/sbin/
:
arp
,clock
,halt
,init
,fsck.*
,grub
,ifconfig
,mingetty
,mkfs.*
,mkswap
,reboot
,route
,shutdown
,swapoff
,swapon
/srv/
Directory/srv/
directory contains site-specific data served by your system running Red Hat Enterprise Linux. This directory gives users the location of data files for a particular service, such as FTP, WWW, or CVS. Data that only pertains to a specific user should go in the /home/
directory.
/sys/
Directory/sys/
directory utilizes the new sysfs
virtual file system specific to the 2.6 kernel. With the increased support for hot plug hardware devices in the 2.6 kernel, the /sys/
directory contains information similarly held in /proc/
, but displays a hierarchical view of specific device information in regards to hot plug devices.
/usr/
Directory/usr/
目錄是用來存放多台機器共同存取的檔案之處。/usr/
目錄通常有自己的分割區,而且是以唯讀形式掛載。/usr/
至少會有以下子目錄:
/usr |- bin/ |- etc/ |- games/ |- include/ |- kerberos/ |- lib/ |- libexec/ |- local/ |- sbin/ |- share/ |- src/ |- tmp -> ../var/tmp/
/usr/
directory, the bin/
subdirectory contains executables, etc/
contains system-wide configuration files, games
is for games, include/
contains C header files, kerberos/
contains binaries and other Kerberos-related files, and lib/
contains object files and libraries that are not designed to be directly utilized by users or shell scripts. The libexec/
directory contains small helper programs called by other programs, sbin/
is for system administration binaries (those that do not belong in the /sbin/
directory), share/
contains files that are not architecture-specific, src/
is for source code.
/usr/local/
DirectoryThe/usr/local
hierarchy is for use by the system administrator when installing software locally. It needs to be safe from being overwritten when the system software is updated. It may be used for programs and data that are shareable among a group of hosts, but not found in/usr
.
/usr/local/
directory is similar in structure to the /usr/
directory. It has the following subdirectories, which are similar in purpose to those in the /usr/
directory:
/usr/local |- bin/ |- etc/ |- games/ |- include/ |- lib/ |- libexec/ |- sbin/ |- share/ |- src/
/usr/local/
directory is slightly different from that specified by the FHS. The FHS says that /usr/local/
should be where software that is to remain safe from system software upgrades is stored. Since software upgrades can be performed safely with RPM Package Manager (RPM), it is not necessary to protect files by putting them in /usr/local/
. Instead, the /usr/local/
directory is used for software that is local to the machine.
/usr/
directory is mounted as a read-only NFS share from a remote host, it is still possible to install a package or program under the /usr/local/
directory.
/var/
Directory/usr/
as read-only, any programs that write log files or need spool/
or lock/
directories should write them to the /var/
directory. The FHS states /var/
is for:
...variable data files. This includes spool directories and files, administrative and logging data, and transient and temporary files.
/var/
directory:
/var |- account/ |- arpwatch/ |- cache/ |- crash/ |- db/ |- empty/ |- ftp/ |- gdm/ |- kerberos/ |- lib/ |- local/ |- lock/ |- log/ |- mail -> spool/mail/ |- mailman/ |- named/ |- nis/ |- opt/ |- preserve/ |- run/ +- spool/ |- at/ |- clientmqueue/ |- cron/ |- cups/ |- exim/ |- lpd/ |- mail/ |- mailman/ |- mqueue/ |- news/ |- postfix/ |- repackage/ |- rwho/ |- samba/ |- squid/ |- squirrelmail/ |- up2date/ |- uucp |- uucppublic/ |- vbox/ |- tmp/ |- tux/ |- www/ |- yp/
messages
and lastlog
, go in the /var/log/
directory. The /var/lib/rpm/
directory contains RPM system databases. Lock files go in the /var/lock/
directory, usually in directories for the program using the file. The /var/spool/
directory has subdirectories for programs in which data files are stored.
/var/lib/rpm/
directory. For more information on RPM, refer to the chapter 章 11, 使用 RPM 做套件管理.
/var/cache/yum/
directory contains files used by the Package Updater, including RPM header information for the system. This location may also be used to temporarily store RPMs downloaded while updating the system. For more information about Red Hat Network, refer to 章 14, Product Subscriptions and Entitlements.
/etc/sysconfig/
directory. This directory stores a variety of configuration information. Many scripts that run at boot time use the files in this directory. Refer to 章 30, The sysconfig
Directory for more information about what is within this directory and the role these files play in the boot process.
mount
Commandmount
or umount
command respectively. This chapter describes the basic usage of these commands, and covers some advanced topics such as moving a mount point or creating shared subtrees.
mount
command with no additional arguments:
mount
device
ondirectory
typetype
(options
)
sysfs
, tmpfs
, and others. To display only the devices with a certain file system type, supply the -t
option on the command line:
mount
-t
type
mount
command to list the mounted file systems, see 範例 2.1, “Listing Currently Mounted ext3
File Systems”.
ext3
File Systems/
and /boot
partitions are formatted to use ext3
. To display only the mount points that use this file system, type the following at a shell prompt:
~]$ mount -t ext3
/dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 on / type ext3 (rw)
/dev/vda1 on /boot type ext3 (rw)
mount
command in the following form:
mount
[option
…]device
directory
mount
command is run, it reads the content of the /etc/fstab
configuration file to see if the given file system is listed. This file contains a list of device names and the directory in which the selected file systems should be mounted, as well as the file system type and mount options. Because of this, when you are mounting a file system that is specified in this file, you can use one of the following variants of the command:
mount
[option
…]directory
mount
[option
…]device
root
, you must have permissions to mount the file system (see 節 2.2.2, “Specifying the Mount Options”).
mount
detects the file system automatically. However, there are certain file systems, such as NFS
(Network File System) or CIFS
(Common Internet File System), that are not recognized, and need to be specified manually. To specify the file system type, use the mount
command in the following form:
mount
-t
type
device
directory
mount
command. For a complete list of all available file system types, consult the relevant manual page as referred to in 節 2.4.1, “Installed Documentation”.
Type | Description |
---|---|
ext2
|
The ext2 file system.
|
ext3
|
The ext3 file system.
|
iso9660
|
The ISO 9660 file system. It is commonly used by optical media, typically CDs.
|
jfs
|
The JFS file system created by IBM.
|
nfs
|
The NFS file system. It is commonly used to access files over the network.
|
nfs4
|
The NFSv4 file system. It is commonly used to access files over the network.
|
ntfs
|
The NTFS file system. It is commonly used on machines that are running the Windows operating system.
|
udf
|
The UDF file system. It is commonly used by optical media, typically DVDs.
|
vfat
|
The FAT file system. It is commonly used on machines that are running the Windows operating system, and on certain digital media such as USB flash drives or floppy disks.
|
/dev/sdc1
device and that the /media/flashdisk/
directory exists, you can mount it to this directory by typing the following at a shell prompt as root
:
~]# mount -t vfat /dev/sdc1 /media/flashdisk
mount
-o
options
mount
will incorrectly interpret the values following spaces as additional parameters.
Option | Description |
---|---|
async
| Allows the asynchronous input/output operations on the file system. |
auto
|
Allows the file system to be mounted automatically using the mount -a command.
|
defaults
|
Provides an alias for async,auto,dev,exec,nouser,rw,suid .
|
exec
| Allows the execution of binary files on the particular file system. |
loop
| Mounts an image as a loop device. |
noauto
|
Disallows the automatic mount of the file system using the mount -a command.
|
noexec
| Disallows the execution of binary files on the particular file system. |
nouser
|
Disallows an ordinary user (that is, other than root ) to mount and unmount the file system.
|
remount
| Remounts the file system in case it is already mounted. |
ro
| Mounts the file system for reading only. |
rw
| Mounts the file system for both reading and writing. |
user
|
Allows an ordinary user (that is, other than root ) to mount and unmount the file system.
|
/media/cdrom/
directory exists, you can mount the image to this directory by running the following command as root
:
~]# mount -o ro,loop Fedora-14-x86_64-Live-Desktop.iso /media/cdrom
mount
command implements the --bind
option that provides a means for duplicating certain mounts. Its usage is as follows:
mount
--bind
old_directory
new_directory
mount
--rbind
old_directory
new_directory
mount
--make-shared
mount_point
mount
--make-rshared
mount_point
mount
--make-slave
mount_point
mount
--make-rslave
mount_point
/media
directory to appear in /mnt
as well, but you do not want any mounts in the /mnt
directory to be reflected in /media
. To do so, as root
, first mark the /media
directory as “shared”:
~]#mount --bind /media /media
~]#mount --make-shared /media
/mnt
, but mark it as “slave”:
~]#mount --bind /media /mnt
~]#mount --make-slave /mnt
/media
also appears in /mnt
. For example, if you have non-empty media in your CD-ROM drive and the /media/cdrom/
directory exists, run the following commands:
~]#mount /dev/cdrom /media/cdrom
~]#ls /media/cdrom
EFI GPL isolinux LiveOS ~]#ls /mnt/cdrom
EFI GPL isolinux LiveOS
/mnt
directory are not reflected in /media
. For instance, if you have a non-empty USB flash drive that uses the /dev/sdc1
device plugged in and the /mnt/flashdisk/
directory is present, type: :
~]#mount /dev/sdc1 /mnt/flashdisk
~]#ls /media/flashdisk
~]#ls /mnt/flashdisk
en-US publican.cfg
mount
--make-private
mount_point
mount
--make-rprivate
mount_point
root
:
~]#mount --bind /media /media
~]#mount --make-shared /media
~]#mount --bind /media /mnt
/mnt
directory as “private”, type:
~]# mount --make-private /mnt
/media
appears in /mnt
. For example, if you have non-empty media in your CD-ROM drive and the /media/cdrom/
directory exists, run the following commands:
~]#mount /dev/cdrom /media/cdrom
~]#ls /media/cdrom
EFI GPL isolinux LiveOS ~]#ls /mnt/cdrom
~]#
/mnt
directory are not reflected in /media
. For instance, if you have a non-empty USB flash drive that uses the /dev/sdc1
device plugged in and the /mnt/flashdisk/
directory is present, type:
~]#mount /dev/sdc1 /mnt/flashdisk
~]#ls /media/flashdisk
~]#ls /mnt/flashdisk
en-US publican.cfg
mount
--make-unbindable
mount_point
mount
--make-runbindable
mount_point
/media
directory from being shared, as root
, type the following at a shell prompt:
~]#mount --bind /media /media
~]#mount --make-unbindable /media
~]# mount --bind /media /mnt
mount: wrong fs type, bad option, bad superblock on /media/,
missing code page or other error
In some cases useful info is found in syslog - try
dmesg | tail or so
mount
--move
old_directory
new_directory
/mnt/userdirs/
, as root
, you can move this mount point to /home
by using the following command:
~]# mount --move /mnt/userdirs /home
~]#ls /mnt/userdirs
~]#ls /home
jill joe
umount
command:
umount
directory
umount
device
root
, you must have permissions to unmount the file system (see 節 2.2.2, “Specifying the Mount Options”). See 範例 2.9, “Unmounting a CD” for an example usage.
umount
command will fail with an error. To determine which processes are accessing the file system, use the fuser
command in the following form:
fuser
-m
directory
/media/cdrom/
directory, type:
~]$ fuser -m /media/cdrom
/media/cdrom: 1793 2013 2022 2435 10532c 10672c
/media/cdrom/
directory, type the following at a shell prompt:
~]$ umount /media/cdrom
man 8 mount
— The manual page for the mount
command that provides a full documentation on its usage.
man 8 umount
— The manual page for the umount
command that provides a full documentation on its usage.
man 5 fstab
— The manual page providing a thorough description of the /etc/fstab
file format.
e2fsck
program. This is a time-consuming process that can delay system boot time significantly, especially with large volumes containing a large number of files. During this time, any data on the volumes is unreachable.
mkfs
.
e2label
.
tune2fs
allows you to convert an ext2
filesystem to ext3
.
tune2fs
指令之前與之後,請使用 e2fsck
工具程式檢查檔案系統。Red Hat Enterprise Linux 使用 ext3 作為預設的檔案系統格式。
ext2
檔案系統轉換為 ext3
,請在終端機中,以 root 身份輸入以下指令:
tune2fs -j <block_device>
<block_device>
contains the ext2 filesystem you wish to convert.
/dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol02
.
/dev/hdb
X
, where hdb
is a storage device name and X
is the partition number.
df
command to display mounted file systems.
/dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol02
mkinitrd
program. For information on using the mkinitrd
command, type man mkinitrd
. Also, make sure your GRUB configuration loads the initrd
.
umount /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol02
tune2fs -O ^has_journal /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol02
e2fsck -y /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol02
mount -t ext2 /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol02
/mount/point
/mount/point
。
.journal
file at the root level of the partition by changing to the directory where it is mounted and typing:
rm -f .journal
/etc/fstab
file.
proc
檔案系統proc
檔案系統中的最上層檔案/proc/apm
/proc/buddyinfo
/proc/cmdline
/proc/cpuinfo
/proc/crypto
/proc/devices
/proc/dma
/proc/execdomains
/proc/fb
/proc/filesystems
/proc/interrupts
/proc/iomem
/proc/ioports
/proc/kcore
/proc/kmsg
/proc/loadavg
/proc/locks
/proc/mdstat
/proc/meminfo
/proc/misc
/proc/modules
/proc/mounts
/proc/mtrr
/proc/partitions
/proc/pci
/proc/slabinfo
/proc/stat
/proc/swaps
/proc/sysrq-trigger
/proc/uptime
/proc/version
/proc/
中的目錄sysctl
指令/proc/
directory — also called the proc
file system — contains a hierarchy of special files which represent the current state of the kernel — allowing applications and users to peer into the kernel's view of the system.
/proc/
目錄裡,使用者可以找到豐富、詳盡的系統硬體與目前執行中的程序之資訊。除此之外,/proc/
目錄樹裡的一些檔案可以由使用者與應用程式來控制,與核心溝通並改變設定。
/proc/
目錄中包含了另一種檔案類型,稱作虛擬檔案。這也是 /proc/
常常被稱為虛擬檔案系統的原因。
/proc/interrupts
, /proc/meminfo
, /proc/mounts
, and /proc/partitions
provide an up-to-the-moment glimpse of the system's hardware. Others, like the /proc/filesystems
file and the /proc/sys/
directory provide system configuration information and interfaces.
/proc/ide/
包含了所有 IDE 裝置的資訊。同樣地,各程序目錄包含了系統中每個正在執行的程序之訊息。
cat
、more
或 less
指令,使用者可以檢視 /proc/
目錄中的檔案,得知系統的大量即時資訊。例如,要顯示處理器的類型,輸入 cat /proc/cpuinfo
會顯示如下的範例資訊:
processor : 0 vendor_id : AuthenticAMD cpu family : 5 model : 9 model name : AMD-K6(tm) 3D+ Processor stepping : 1 cpu MHz : 400.919 cache size : 256 KB fdiv_bug : no hlt_bug : no f00f_bug : no coma_bug : no fpu : yes fpu_exception : yes cpuid level : 1 wp : yes flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr mce cx8 pge mmx syscall 3dnow k6_mtrr bogomips : 799.53
/proc/
檔案系統中的不同虛擬檔案時,有些資訊一目了然,但有些就如同天書一樣。這是工具程式存在的原因,它們能幫助使用者將資料從虛擬檔案中擷取出來,以有用的方式呈現出來。這些工具程式包括 lspci
、apm
、free
與與 top
。
/proc/
目錄中的部份檔案只能由 root 使用者讀取。
/proc/
目錄中的檔案都是唯讀的,這是通則。然而,有些檔案可以用來改變核心的設定,尤其是 /proc/sys/
子目錄中的檔案。
echo
command and a greater than symbol (>
) to redirect the new value to the file. For example, to change the hostname on the fly, type:
echo www.example.com
> /proc/sys/kernel/hostname
cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
會傳回 0
或 1
。0
表示核心不會轉送網路封包。使用 echo
指令將 ip_forward
檔案改為 1
可以立即開啟封包轉送功能。
/proc/sys/
subdirectory is /sbin/sysctl
. For more information on this command, refer to 節 4.4, “使用 sysctl
指令”
/proc/sys/
subdirectory, refer to 節 4.3.9, “ /proc/sys/
”.
proc
檔案系統中的最上層檔案/proc/
目錄的最上層結構中,最常用虛擬檔案的一些有用資訊。
/proc/apm
apm
指令來取用。如果一台沒有裝電池的電腦連上交流電源,那麼虛擬檔案看起來會像是以下的樣子:
1.16 1.2 0x07 0x01 0xff 0x80 -1% -1 ?
apm -v
指令會產生下列輸出:
APM BIOS 1.2 (kernel driver 1.16ac) AC on-line, no system battery
apm
能做的大概就是把電腦切換到待命模式。apm
指令在筆記型電腦上的功能較為強大。舉例來說,在一台插了電的筆記型電腦上執行 cat /proc/apm
會看到以下結果:
1.16 1.2 0x03 0x01 0x03 0x09 100% -1 ?
apm
檔案看起來會像:
1.16 1.2 0x03 0x00 0x00 0x01 99% 1792 min
apm -v
指令現在可以顯示更多有用的資料,例如:
APM BIOS 1.2 (kernel driver 1.16) AC off-line, battery status high: 99% (1 day, 5:52)
/proc/buddyinfo
DMA
一行是系統的前 16 MB;HighMem
一行是電腦上超過 4 GB 的所有記憶體;而 Normal
則是兩者之間的記憶體。
/proc/buddyinfo
的範例:
Node 0, zone DMA 90 6 2 1 1 ... Node 0, zone Normal 1650 310 5 0 0 ... Node 0, zone HighMem 2 0 0 1 1 ...
/proc/cmdline
/proc/cmdline
檔案看起來像是:
ro root=/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00 rhgb quiet 3
ro
on the kernel boot line overrides any instances of rw
.
/proc/cmdline
output, the root filesystem image is located on the first logical volume (LogVol00
) of the first LVM volume group (VolGroup00
). On a system not using Logical Volume Management, the root file system might be located on /dev/sda1
or /dev/sda2
, meaning on either the first or second partition of the first SCSI or SATA disk drive, depending on whether we have a separate (preceding) boot or swap partition on that drive.
/etc/inittab
shows that the default runlevel is set to 5 with a line like this:
id:5:initdefault:
/proc/cpuinfo
/proc/cpuinfo
的範例:
processor : 0 vendor_id : GenuineIntel cpu family : 15 model : 2 model name : Intel(R) Xeon(TM) CPU 2.40GHz stepping : 7 cpu MHz : 2392.371 cache size : 512 KB physical id : 0 siblings : 2 runqueue : 0 fdiv_bug : no hlt_bug : no f00f_bug : no coma_bug : no fpu : yes fpu_exception : yes cpuid level : 2 wp : yes flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 clflush dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm bogomips : 4771.02
processor
— 每個處理器都有一個 ID 號碼。只有一顆處理器的電腦上,您只會看到 0
。
cpu family
— Authoritatively identifies the type of processor in the system. For an Intel-based system, place the number in front of "86" to determine the value. This is particularly helpful for those attempting to identify the architecture of an older system such as a 586, 486, or 386. Because some RPM packages are compiled for each of these particular architectures, this value also helps users determine which packages to install.
model name
— 顯示處理器的一般名稱,包括其專案名稱。
cpu MHz
— 顯示處理器的精確速度,單位是百萬赫茲(MHz),精確度到小數點後三位。
cache size
— 顯示處理器裡,第二階記憶體的數量。
siblings
— 顯示使用同樣實體處理器架構,且支援超執行續的同儕處理器數目。
flags
— 定義關於處理器的多種不同特質,例如浮點運算單元(FPU)以及處理 MMX 指令集的能力。
/proc/crypto
/proc/crypto
看起來會像:
name : sha1 module : kernel type : digest blocksize : 64 digestsize : 20 name : md5 module : md5 type : digest blocksize : 64 digestsize : 16
/proc/devices
Character devices: 1 mem 4 /dev/vc/0 4 tty 4 ttyS 5 /dev/tty 5 /dev/console 5 /dev/ptmx 7 vcs 10 misc 13 input 29 fb 36 netlink 128 ptm 136 pts 180 usb Block devices: 1 ramdisk 3 ide0 9 md 22 ide1 253 device-mapper 254 mdp
/proc/devices
的輸出包括裝置的主要編號與名稱,同時分成兩個主要類別:Character devices
(字元裝置)與 Block devices
(區塊裝置)。
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/devices.txt
/proc/execdomains
0-0 Linux [kernel]
PER_LINUX
execution domain, different personalities can be implemented as dynamically loadable modules.
/proc/fb
/proc/fb
看起來會像是:
0 VESA VGA
/proc/filesystems
/proc/filesystems
檔案通常看起來像是:
nodev sysfs nodev rootfs nodev bdev nodev proc nodev sockfs nodev binfmt_misc nodev usbfs nodev usbdevfs nodev futexfs nodev tmpfs nodev pipefs nodev eventpollfs nodev devpts ext2 nodev ramfs nodev hugetlbfs iso9660 nodev mqueue ext3 nodev rpc_pipefs nodev autofs
nodev
的表示並未掛載到裝置上。第二欄顯示了支援的檔案系統名稱。
mount
指令時如果沒有指定任何參數,這指令會列舉本處列出的檔案系統。
/proc/interrupts
/proc/interrupts
看起來與以下類似:
CPU0 0: 80448940 XT-PIC timer 1: 174412 XT-PIC keyboard 2: 0 XT-PIC cascade 8: 1 XT-PIC rtc 10: 410964 XT-PIC eth0 12: 60330 XT-PIC PS/2 Mouse 14: 1314121 XT-PIC ide0 15: 5195422 XT-PIC ide1 NMI: 0 ERR: 0
CPU0 CPU1 0: 1366814704 0 XT-PIC timer 1: 128 340 IO-APIC-edge keyboard 2: 0 0 XT-PIC cascade 8: 0 1 IO-APIC-edge rtc 12: 5323 5793 IO-APIC-edge PS/2 Mouse 13: 1 0 XT-PIC fpu 16: 11184294 15940594 IO-APIC-level Intel EtherExpress Pro 10/100 Ethernet 20: 8450043 11120093 IO-APIC-level megaraid 30: 10432 10722 IO-APIC-level aic7xxx 31: 23 22 IO-APIC-level aic7xxx NMI: 0 ERR: 0
XT-PIC
— 這是舊型 AT 電腦的中斷。
IO-APIC-dege
— 這個中斷從低到高的電壓訊號,這會建立起一個邊(edge),這是發生中斷的地方,會發出一次訊號。這種中斷也稱作 IO-APIC-level
中斷,只有在 586 以上的處理器才有。
IO-APIC-level
— 當電壓訊號已經夠高時會產生訊號,直到訊號降低為止。
/proc/iomem
00000000-0009fbff : System RAM 0009fc00-0009ffff : reserved 000a0000-000bffff : Video RAM area 000c0000-000c7fff : Video ROM 000f0000-000fffff : System ROM 00100000-07ffffff : System RAM 00100000-00291ba8 : Kernel code 00291ba9-002e09cb : Kernel data e0000000-e3ffffff : VIA Technologies, Inc. VT82C597 [Apollo VP3] e4000000-e7ffffff : PCI Bus #01 e4000000-e4003fff : Matrox Graphics, Inc. MGA G200 AGP e5000000-e57fffff : Matrox Graphics, Inc. MGA G200 AGP e8000000-e8ffffff : PCI Bus #01 e8000000-e8ffffff : Matrox Graphics, Inc. MGA G200 AGP ea000000-ea00007f : Digital Equipment Corporation DECchip 21140 [FasterNet] ea000000-ea00007f : tulip ffff0000-ffffffff : reserved
/proc/ioports
/proc/ioports
的內容提供了目前已註冊的連接埠區域,用來溝通與裝置間的輸入與輸出。這檔案可能會很長。以下是部份內容:
0000-001f : dma1 0020-003f : pic1 0040-005f : timer 0060-006f : keyboard 0070-007f : rtc 0080-008f : dma page reg 00a0-00bf : pic2 00c0-00df : dma2 00f0-00ff : fpu 0170-0177 : ide1 01f0-01f7 : ide0 02f8-02ff : serial(auto) 0376-0376 : ide1 03c0-03df : vga+ 03f6-03f6 : ide0 03f8-03ff : serial(auto) 0cf8-0cff : PCI conf1 d000-dfff : PCI Bus #01 e000-e00f : VIA Technologies, Inc. Bus Master IDE e000-e007 : ide0 e008-e00f : ide1 e800-e87f : Digital Equipment Corporation DECchip 21140 [FasterNet] e800-e87f : tulip
/proc/kcore
/proc/
檔案不同,kcore
顯示的是大小。這個值是以位元組為單位,相當於實體記憶體加上 4 KB。
gdb
使用,一般人是看不懂的。
/proc/kcore
virtual file. The contents of the file scramble text output on the terminal. If this file is accidentally viewed, press Ctrl+C to stop the process and then type reset
to bring back the command line prompt.
/proc/kmsg
/sbin/klogd
或 /bin/dmesg
。
/proc/loadavg
uptime
及其他程式所需的額外資訊。/proc/loadavg
的檔案看起來跟以下類似:
0.20 0.18 0.12 1/80 11206
/proc/locks
/proc/locks
檔案的範例如下:
1: POSIX ADVISORY WRITE 3568 fd:00:2531452 0 EOF 2: FLOCK ADVISORY WRITE 3517 fd:00:2531448 0 EOF 3: POSIX ADVISORY WRITE 3452 fd:00:2531442 0 EOF 4: POSIX ADVISORY WRITE 3443 fd:00:2531440 0 EOF 5: POSIX ADVISORY WRITE 3326 fd:00:2531430 0 EOF 6: POSIX ADVISORY WRITE 3175 fd:00:2531425 0 EOF 7: POSIX ADVISORY WRITE 3056 fd:00:2548663 0 EOF
FLOCK
是來自 flock
系統呼叫的老式 UNIX 檔案鎖定;POSIX
代表的是來自 lockf
系統呼叫的新 POSIX 鎖定。
ADVISORY
or MANDATORY
. ADVISORY
means that the lock does not prevent other people from accessing the data; it only prevents other attempts to lock it. MANDATORY
means that no other access to the data is permitted while the lock is held. The fourth column reveals whether the lock is allowing the holder READ
or WRITE
access to the file. The fifth column shows the ID of the process holding the lock. The sixth column shows the ID of the file being locked, in the format of MAJOR-DEVICE
:MINOR-DEVICE
:INODE-NUMBER
. The seventh and eighth column shows the start and end of the file's locked region.
/proc/mdstat
/proc/mdstat
看起來會像:
Personalities : read_ahead not set unused devices: <none>
md
device is present. In that case, view /proc/mdstat
to find the current status of mdX
RAID devices.
/proc/mdstat
檔案顯示 RAID 1 裝置設定了 md0
,目前正在重新同步磁碟:
Personalities : [linear] [raid1] read_ahead 1024 sectors md0: active raid1 sda2[1] sdb2[0] 9940 blocks [2/2] [UU] resync=1% finish=12.3min algorithm 2 [3/3] [UUU] unused devices: <none>
/proc/meminfo
/proc/
目錄裡最常用的檔案之一,它包含了系統記憶體使用量的大量有用資訊。
/proc/meminfo
範例是從一台有著 256 MB 實體記憶體與 512 MB swap 空間的電腦上取出的:
MemTotal: 255908 kB MemFree: 69936 kB Buffers: 15812 kB Cached: 115124 kB SwapCached: 0 kB Active: 92700 kB Inactive: 63792 kB HighTotal: 0 kB HighFree: 0 kB LowTotal: 255908 kB LowFree: 69936 kB SwapTotal: 524280 kB SwapFree: 524280 kB Dirty: 4 kB Writeback: 0 kB Mapped: 42236 kB Slab: 25912 kB Committed_AS: 118680 kB PageTables: 1236 kB VmallocTotal: 3874808 kB VmallocUsed: 1416 kB VmallocChunk: 3872908 kB HugePages_Total: 0 HugePages_Free: 0 Hugepagesize: 4096 kB
free
、top
以及 ps
所使用。事實上,free
指令的結果跟 /proc/meminfo
的內容與架構很像。但直接檢視 /proc/meminfo
會看到更多詳細資料:
MemTotal
— 實際記憶體的總數,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
MemFree
— 系統並未使用的實體記憶體,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
Buffers
— 檔案緩衝所使用的實體記憶體,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
Cached
— 快取記憶體所使用的實體記憶體,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
SwapCached
— 給快取記憶體用的 swap 空間,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
Active
— 使用中的緩衝區或分頁快取記憶體,單位為 KB(千位元組)。這是最近被使用、同時通常不會被拿去作其他用途的記憶體。
Inactive
— 非使用中、可以被其他程式所用的緩衝區或分頁快取記憶體,單位為 KB(千位元組)。這是最近沒被使用、同時可以被拿去作其他用途的記憶體。
HighTotal
與 HighFree
— 沒有直接對應到核心空間的總記憶體與可用記憶體數量,單位為 KB(千位元組)。HighTotal
的值會根據所使用的核心,而有所不同。
LowTotal
與 LowFree
— 直接對應到核心空間的總記憶體與可用記憶體,單位為 KB(千位元組)。LowTotal
的值會根據所使用的核心,而有所不同。
SwapTotal
— swap 空間的總量,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
SwapFree
— 可用 swap 空間的總量,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
Dirty
— 等著被寫回磁碟的記憶體總數,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
Writeback
— 正被寫回磁碟的記憶體總數,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
Mapped
— 已經藉由 mmap
指令,對應到裝置、檔案或函式庫的記憶體,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
Slab
— 核心用來快取資料結構給自己用的記憶體總數,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
Committed_AS
— 完成工作負載所需的記憶體總數,單位為 KB(千位元組)。這個值表示了最壞情況,也包括 swap 記憶體。
PageTables
— 分頁表最少需要的記憶體量,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
VMallocTotal
— 已分配的虛擬位址空間之記憶體總數,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
VMallocUsed
— 虛擬位址空間所使用的記憶體總數,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
VMallocChunk
— 可用虛擬位址空間的最大連續記憶體區塊,單位為 KB(千位元組)。
HugePages_Total
— hugepages 的總數。這個值是從 /proc/sys/vm/hugetlb_pool
的 Hugepagesize
除以 MB(百萬位元組)而來。這個統計資料只會在 x86、Itanium 與 AMD64 的架構上出現。
HugePages_Free
— 系統上可用的 hugepages 總數。這個統計資料只會在 x86、Itanium 與 AMD64 的架構上出現。
Hugepagesize
— 每個 hugepage 單位的大小,單位為 KB(千位元組)。在卅二位元、單處理器的電腦上,預設值是 4,096 KB。在多處理器、hugemem 核心、以及 AMD64 的機器上,這個值是 2,048 KB。這個統計資料只會在 x86、Itanium 與 AMD64 的架構上出現。
/proc/misc
63 device-mapper 175 agpgart 135 rtc 134 apm_bios
/proc/modules
/proc/modules/
範例的組織方式相仿:
/sbin/lsmod
指令來檢視。
nfs 170109 0 - Live 0x129b0000 lockd 51593 1 nfs, Live 0x128b0000 nls_utf8 1729 0 - Live 0x12830000 vfat 12097 0 - Live 0x12823000 fat 38881 1 vfat, Live 0x1287b000 autofs4 20293 2 - Live 0x1284f000 sunrpc 140453 3 nfs,lockd, Live 0x12954000 3c59x 33257 0 - Live 0x12871000 uhci_hcd 28377 0 - Live 0x12869000 md5 3777 1 - Live 0x1282c000 ipv6 211845 16 - Live 0x128de000 ext3 92585 2 - Live 0x12886000 jbd 65625 1 ext3, Live 0x12857000 dm_mod 46677 3 - Live 0x12833000
Live
、Loading
或 Unloading
三種可能。
oprofile
之類的程式非常有用。
/proc/mounts
rootfs / rootfs rw 0 0 /proc /proc proc rw,nodiratime 0 0 none /dev ramfs rw 0 0 /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 / ext3 rw 0 0 none /dev ramfs rw 0 0 /proc /proc proc rw,nodiratime 0 0 /sys /sys sysfs rw 0 0 none /dev/pts devpts rw 0 0 usbdevfs /proc/bus/usb usbdevfs rw 0 0 /dev/hda1 /boot ext3 rw 0 0 none /dev/shm tmpfs rw 0 0 none /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc binfmt_misc rw 0 0 sunrpc /var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs rpc_pipefs rw 0 0
/etc/mtab
的類似,只是 /proc/mount
的內容更新。
ro
)或可讀寫(rw
)方式來掛載。第五與第六欄是隨便填入的值,以符合 /etc/mtab
的格式。
/proc/mtrr
/proc/mtrr
看起來會像:
reg00: base=0x00000000 ( 0MB), size= 256MB: write-back, count=1 reg01: base=0xe8000000 (3712MB), size= 32MB: write-combining, count=1
/proc/mtrr
可以增加超過 150% 的效能。
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/mtrr.txt
/proc/partitions
major minor #blocks name 3 0 19531250 hda 3 1 104391 hda1 3 2 19422585 hda2 253 0 22708224 dm-0 253 1 524288 dm-1
majot
— 這個分割區的主要裝置編號。/proc/partitions
裡的主要編號(3
)對應到位於 /proc/devices
檔案裡的區塊裝置 ide0
。
minor
— 分割區上這個裝置的次要編號。這是用來將分割區分成多個不同的實體裝置,並將這號碼加到分割區的名稱後面。
#blocks
— 列出特定分割區所包含的實體磁區數量。
name
— 分割區名稱。
/proc/pci
/proc/pci
可能會很長。以下是這個檔案的範例:
Bus 0, device 0, function 0: Host bridge: Intel Corporation 440BX/ZX - 82443BX/ZX Host bridge (rev 3). Master Capable. Latency=64. Prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xe4000000 [0xe7ffffff]. Bus 0, device 1, function 0: PCI bridge: Intel Corporation 440BX/ZX - 82443BX/ZX AGP bridge (rev 3). Master Capable. Latency=64. Min Gnt=128. Bus 0, device 4, function 0: ISA bridge: Intel Corporation 82371AB PIIX4 ISA (rev 2). Bus 0, device 4, function 1: IDE interface: Intel Corporation 82371AB PIIX4 IDE (rev 1). Master Capable. Latency=32. I/O at 0xd800 [0xd80f]. Bus 0, device 4, function 2: USB Controller: Intel Corporation 82371AB PIIX4 USB (rev 1). IRQ 5. Master Capable. Latency=32. I/O at 0xd400 [0xd41f]. Bus 0, device 4, function 3: Bridge: Intel Corporation 82371AB PIIX4 ACPI (rev 2). IRQ 9. Bus 0, device 9, function 0: Ethernet controller: Lite-On Communications Inc LNE100TX (rev 33). IRQ 5. Master Capable. Latency=32. I/O at 0xd000 [0xd0ff]. Bus 0, device 12, function 0: VGA compatible controller: S3 Inc. ViRGE/DX or /GX (rev 1). IRQ 11. Master Capable. Latency=32. Min Gnt=4.Max Lat=255.
lspci -vb
/proc/slabinfo
/usr/bin/slabtop
程式並不詳盡地解析 /proc/slabinfo
檔案,而是即時顯示核心的 slab 快取資訊。這程式也允許自訂設定,包括依照欄來排序,以及畫面更新等。
/usr/bin/slabtop
的範例通常看起來如下:
Active / Total Objects (% used) : 133629 / 147300 (90.7%) Active / Total Slabs (% used) : 11492 / 11493 (100.0%) Active / Total Caches (% used) : 77 / 121 (63.6%) Active / Total Size (% used) : 41739.83K / 44081.89K (94.7%) Minimum / Average / Maximum Object : 0.01K / 0.30K / 128.00K OBJS ACTIVE USE OBJ SIZE SLABS OBJ/SLAB CACHE SIZE NAME 44814 43159 96% 0.62K 7469 6 29876K ext3_inode_cache 36900 34614 93% 0.05K 492 75 1968K buffer_head 35213 33124 94% 0.16K 1531 23 6124K dentry_cache 7364 6463 87% 0.27K 526 14 2104K radix_tree_node 2585 1781 68% 0.08K 55 47 220K vm_area_struct 2263 2116 93% 0.12K 73 31 292K size-128 1904 1125 59% 0.03K 16 119 64K size-32 1666 768 46% 0.03K 14 119 56K anon_vma 1512 1482 98% 0.44K 168 9 672K inode_cache 1464 1040 71% 0.06K 24 61 96K size-64 1320 820 62% 0.19K 66 20 264K filp 678 587 86% 0.02K 3 226 12K dm_io 678 587 86% 0.02K 3 226 12K dm_tio 576 574 99% 0.47K 72 8 288K proc_inode_cache 528 514 97% 0.50K 66 8 264K size-512 492 372 75% 0.09K 12 41 48K bio 465 314 67% 0.25K 31 15 124K size-256 452 331 73% 0.02K 2 226 8K biovec-1 420 420 100% 0.19K 21 20 84K skbuff_head_cache 305 256 83% 0.06K 5 61 20K biovec-4 290 4 1% 0.01K 1 290 4K revoke_table 264 264 100% 4.00K 264 1 1056K size-4096 260 256 98% 0.19K 13 20 52K biovec-16 260 256 98% 0.75K 52 5 208K biovec-64
/proc/slabinfo
裡面找到,這檔案已經整合到了 /usr/bin/slabtop
檔案中。這些資訊包括:
OBJS
— 物件(記憶體區塊)的總數,包括使用中的(已分配的)以及非使用中的。
ACTIVE
— 使用中的(已分配的)物件(記憶體區塊)數量。
USE
— 所有物件裡,已啟用的所有物件百分比((ACTIVE/OBJS)(100))。
OBJ SIZE
— 物件的大小。
SLABS
— slab 的總數。
OBJ/SLAB
— 一個 slab 中的物件數量。
CACHE SIZE
— slab 的快取大小。
NAME
— slab 的名稱。
/usr/bin/slabtop
程式的詳情,請參閱 slabtop
的 man page。
/proc/stat
/proc/stat
的內容可能會很長,開頭多半像這樣:
cpu 259246 7001 60190 34250993 137517 772 0 cpu0 259246 7001 60190 34250993 137517 772 0 intr 354133732 347209999 2272 0 4 4 0 0 3 1 1249247 0 0 80143 0 422626 5169433 ctxt 12547729 btime 1093631447 processes 130523 procs_running 1 procs_blocked 0 preempt 5651840 cpu 209841 1554 21720 118519346 72939 154 27168 cpu0 42536 798 4841 14790880 14778 124 3117 cpu1 24184 569 3875 14794524 30209 29 3130 cpu2 28616 11 2182 14818198 4020 1 3493 cpu3 35350 6 2942 14811519 3045 0 3659 cpu4 18209 135 2263 14820076 12465 0 3373 cpu5 20795 35 1866 14825701 4508 0 3615 cpu6 21607 0 2201 14827053 2325 0 3334 cpu7 18544 0 1550 14831395 1589 0 3447 intr 15239682 14857833 6 0 6 6 0 5 0 1 0 0 0 29 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 94982 0 286812 ctxt 4209609 btime 1078711415 processes 21905 procs_running 1 procs_blocked 0
cpu
— Measures the number of jiffies (1/100 of a second for x86 systems) that the system has been in user mode, user mode with low priority (nice), system mode, idle task, I/O wait, IRQ (hardirq), and softirq respectively. The IRQ (hardirq) is the direct response to a hardware event. The IRQ takes minimal work for queuing the "heavy" work up for the softirq to execute. The softirq runs at a lower priority than the IRQ and therefore may be interrupted more frequently. The total for all CPUs is given at the top, while each individual CPU is listed below with its own statistics. The following example is a 4-way Intel Pentium Xeon configuration with multi-threading enabled, therefore showing four physical processors and four virtual processors totaling eight processors.
page
— 系統裡,已經被寫入與讀出磁碟的記憶體分頁總數。
swap
— 系統置換的 swap 分頁數目。
intr
— 系統所經歷的中斷數目。
btime
— 開機起訖時間,這數字是 1970 年一月一日(epoch,電腦的紀元年)迄今的秒數。
/proc/swaps
/proc/swaps
看起來會像是:
Filename Type Size Used Priority /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol01 partition 524280 0 -1
/proc/
directory, /proc/swaps
provides a snapshot of every swap file name, the type of swap space, the total size, and the amount of space in use (in kilobytes). The priority column is useful when multiple swap files are in use. The lower the priority, the more likely the swap file is to be used.
/proc/sysrq-trigger
echo
command to write to this file, a remote root user can execute most System Request Key commands remotely as if at the local terminal. To echo
values to this file, the /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq
must be set to a value other than 0
. For more information about the System Request Key, refer to 節 4.3.9.3, “ /proc/sys/kernel/
”.
/proc/uptime
/proc/uptime
的輸出並不長:
350735.47 234388.90
/proc/version
gcc
編譯器,以及電腦上 Red Hat Enterprise Linux 的版本:
Linux version 2.6.8-1.523 (user@foo.redhat.com) (gcc version 3.4.1 20040714 \ (Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3.4.1-7)) #1 Mon Aug 16 13:27:03 EDT 2004
/proc/
中的目錄/proc/
directory.
/proc/
目錄都包含了數個以數字組成的子目錄,這些目錄看起來像:
dr-xr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Feb 13 01:28 1 dr-xr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Feb 13 01:28 1010 dr-xr-xr-x 3 xfs xfs 0 Feb 13 01:28 1087 dr-xr-xr-x 3 daemon daemon 0 Feb 13 01:28 1123 dr-xr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Feb 13 01:28 11307 dr-xr-xr-x 3 apache apache 0 Feb 13 01:28 13660 dr-xr-xr-x 3 rpc rpc 0 Feb 13 01:28 637 dr-xr-xr-x 3 rpcuser rpcuser 0 Feb 13 01:28 666
/proc/
process directory vanishes.
cmdline
— 開始這個程序時所發出的指令。
cwd
— 程序的工作目錄之符號連結。
environ
— 程序的環境變數之清單。環境變數都是大寫,數值都是小寫。
exe
— 這個程序的執行檔之符號連結。
fd
— 這個目錄包含了特定程序的所有檔案描述。這些描述都是數字:
total 0 lrwx------ 1 root root 64 May 8 11:31 0 -> /dev/null lrwx------ 1 root root 64 May 8 11:31 1 -> /dev/null lrwx------ 1 root root 64 May 8 11:31 2 -> /dev/null lrwx------ 1 root root 64 May 8 11:31 3 -> /dev/ptmx lrwx------ 1 root root 64 May 8 11:31 4 -> socket:[7774817] lrwx------ 1 root root 64 May 8 11:31 5 -> /dev/ptmx lrwx------ 1 root root 64 May 8 11:31 6 -> socket:[7774829] lrwx------ 1 root root 64 May 8 11:31 7 -> /dev/ptmx
maps
— 跟這程序有關的可執行檔與函式庫的記憶體分佈圖清單。這檔案可能會很長,端視程序的複雜度而定。已 sshd
來說,可能會像:
08048000-08086000 r-xp 00000000 03:03 391479 /usr/sbin/sshd 08086000-08088000 rw-p 0003e000 03:03 391479 /usr/sbin/sshd 08088000-08095000 rwxp 00000000 00:00 0 40000000-40013000 r-xp 0000000 03:03 293205 /lib/ld-2.2.5.so 40013000-40014000 rw-p 00013000 03:03 293205 /lib/ld-2.2.5.so 40031000-40038000 r-xp 00000000 03:03 293282 /lib/libpam.so.0.75 40038000-40039000 rw-p 00006000 03:03 293282 /lib/libpam.so.0.75 40039000-4003a000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 4003a000-4003c000 r-xp 00000000 03:03 293218 /lib/libdl-2.2.5.so 4003c000-4003d000 rw-p 00001000 03:03 293218 /lib/libdl-2.2.5.so
mem
— 程序所佔據的記憶體。這檔案無法被讀取。
root
— 程序的 root 目錄之連結。
stat
— 程序的狀態。
statm
— 程序正在使用的記憶體狀態。以下是 /proc/statm
檔案的範例:
263 210 210 5 0 205 0
status
— 程序的狀態,其可讀性比 stat
或 statm
要高。sshd
的狀態看起來像:
Name: sshd State: S (sleeping) Tgid: 797 Pid: 797 PPid: 1 TracerPid: 0 Uid: 0 0 0 0 Gid: 0 0 0 0 FDSize: 32 Groups: VmSize: 3072 kB VmLck: 0 kB VmRSS: 840 kB VmData: 104 kB VmStk: 12 kB VmExe: 300 kB VmLib: 2528 kB SigPnd: 0000000000000000 SigBlk: 0000000000000000 SigIgn: 8000000000001000 SigCgt: 0000000000014005 CapInh: 0000000000000000 CapPrm: 00000000fffffeff CapEff: 00000000fffffeff
S(sleeping)
(睡眠中)或 R(running)
(執行中))、執行這程式的使用者 / 群組 ID、以及詳細的記憶體使用量資料。
/proc/bus/
/proc/bus/
同名的子目錄中找到,例如 /proc/bus/pci
。
/proc/bus/
裡面的子目錄與檔案會根據連到這台電腦的裝置而有所不同。然而,每種匯流排至少會有一個目錄。這些匯流排目錄裡,正常的話,至少會有一個數字名稱的目錄,例如 001
,包含了二進位檔。
/proc/bus/usb/
子目錄包含的檔案可以追蹤到 USB 匯流排上得多個裝置,以及這些裝置所需的驅動程式。以下是 /proc/bus/usb/
目錄的範例:
total 0 dr-xr-xr-x 1 root root 0 May 3 16:25 001 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 May 3 16:25 devices -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 May 3 16:25 drivers
/proc/bus/usb/001/
目錄包含了第一個 USB 匯流排的所有裝置,同時 devices
檔案表示主機板上的 USB root hub。
/proc/bus/usb/devices
檔案的範例:
T: Bus=01 Lev=00 Prnt=00 Port=00 Cnt=00 Dev#= 1 Spd=12 MxCh= 2 B: Alloc= 0/900 us ( 0%), #Int= 0, #Iso= 0 D: Ver= 1.00 Cls=09(hub ) Sub=00 Prot=00 MxPS= 8 #Cfgs= 1 P: Vendor=0000 ProdID=0000 Rev= 0.00 S: Product=USB UHCI Root Hub S: SerialNumber=d400 C:* #Ifs= 1 Cfg#= 1 Atr=40 MxPwr= 0mA I: If#= 0 Alt= 0 #EPs= 1 Cls=09(hub ) Sub=00 Prot=00 Driver=hub E: Ad=81(I) Atr=03(Int.) MxPS= 8 Ivl=255ms
/proc/driver/
rtc
which provides output from the driver for the system's Real Time Clock (RTC), the device that keeps the time while the system is switched off. Sample output from /proc/driver/rtc
looks like the following:
rtc_time : 16:21:00 rtc_date : 2004-08-31 rtc_epoch : 1900 alarm : 21:16:27 DST_enable : no BCD : yes 24hr : yes square_wave : no alarm_IRQ : no update_IRQ : no periodic_IRQ : no periodic_freq : 1024 batt_status : okay
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/rtc.txt
.
/proc/fs
cat /proc/fs/nfsd/exports
displays the file systems being shared and the permissions granted for those file systems. For more on file system sharing with NFS, refer to 章 20, 網路檔案系統 (NFS).
/proc/ide/
/proc/ide/ide0
與 /proc/ide/ide1
。除此之外,drivers
檔案提供了 IDE 通道所使用的驅動程式之版本號碼:
ide-floppy version 0.99. newide ide-cdrom version 4.61 ide-disk version 1.18
/proc/ide/piix
檔案,顯示 DMA 或 UDMA 是否已經啟用給 IDE 通道上的裝置使用:
Intel PIIX4 Ultra 33 Chipset. ------------- Primary Channel ---------------- Secondary Channel ------------- enabled enabled ------------- drive0 --------- drive1 -------- drive0 ---------- drive1 ------ DMA enabled: yes no yes no UDMA enabled: yes no no no UDMA enabled: 2 X X X UDMA DMA PIO
ide0
,裡面有更多的資訊。channel
檔案提供了頻道編號,而 model
指出這個頻道的匯流排種類(例如 pci
)。
/dev/
目錄的磁碟代號。舉例來說,ide0
的第一個 IDE 裝置會是 hda
。
/proc/ide/
目錄裡,每個裝置目錄都有個符號連結。
cache
— 裝置的快取。
capacity
— 裝置的容量,單位為 512 位元組的區塊。
driver
— 控制該裝置的驅動程式及其版本。
geometry
— 裝置的實際與邏輯幾何位置。
media
— 裝置的類型,例如 disk
。
model
— 裝置的型號或序號。
settings
— 目前裝置參數的集合。這檔案通常包括不少有用的技術性訊息。標準的 IDE 硬碟之 setting
檔案看起來如下:
name value min max mode ---- ----- --- --- ---- acoustic 0 0 254 rw address 0 0 2 rw bios_cyl 38752 0 65535 rw bios_head 16 0 255 rw bios_sect 63 0 63 rw bswap 0 0 1 r current_speed 68 0 70 rw failures 0 0 65535 rw init_speed 68 0 70 rw io_32bit 0 0 3 rw keepsettings 0 0 1 rw lun 0 0 7 rw max_failures 1 0 65535 rw multcount 16 0 16 rw nice1 1 0 1 rw nowerr 0 0 1 rw number 0 0 3 rw pio_mode write-only 0 255 w unmaskirq 0 0 1 rw using_dma 1 0 1 rw wcache 1 0 1 rw
/proc/irq/
/proc/irq/prof_cpu_mask
檔案是個位元遮罩,包含了 IRQ 目錄中 smp_affinity
的預設值。smp_affinity
的值定義了哪個處理器要處理哪個 IRQ。
/proc/irq
目錄的詳細資料,請參閱以下文件:
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt
/proc/net/
/proc/net/
directory:
arp
— Lists the kernel's ARP table. This file is particularly useful for connecting a hardware address to an IP address on a system.
atm/
目錄 — 這目錄中的檔案包含了 Asynchronous Transfer Mode(ATM,非同步傳輸模式)的設定與統計資料。這目錄主要是給 ATM 網路與 ADSL 卡使用。
dev
— 列出電腦上已設定的網路裝置,以及這些裝置的網路傳輸統計資料。這檔案顯示了每個介面卡的傳入、傳出的資料量(單位為位元組)、封包數、錯誤的數量、丟棄的封包數等等。
dev_mcast
— 每個列出裝置的 Layer2 多點廣播群組。
igmp
— 列出本系統所加入的 IP 多點廣播位址。
ip_conntrack
— 列出轉送 IP 連線的機器之已追蹤網路連線。
ip_tables_names
— 列出使用中的 iptables
類型。這檔案只有在 iptables
啟用,並包含以下值:filter
、mangle
或 nat
時才會存在。
ip_mr_cache
— 列出多點廣播的路由快取。
ip_mr_vif
— 列出多點廣播的虛擬介面。
netstat
— 包含廣泛但詳盡的網路統計資料,包括 TCP 逾時、已發送或收到的 SYN cookie 等等。
psched
— 列出全域的封包排程參數。
raw
— 顯示 raw 裝置的統計資料。
route
— Lists the kernel's routing table.
rt_cache
— 包含目前的路由快取。
snmp
— 列出使用中的通訊協定之 SNMP(List of Simple Network Management Protocol)資料。
sockstat
— 提供 socket 的統計資料。
tcp
— 包含了詳盡的 TCP socket 資訊。
tr_rif
— 列出環狀網路 RIF 的路由表。
udp
— 包含詳盡的 UDP socket 資訊。
unix
— 列出使用中的 UNIX domain socket。
wireless
— 列出無線介面的資料。
/proc/scsi/
/proc/ide/
,但連接的是 SCSI 裝置。
/proc/scsi/scsi
,其中包括了每個可辨識的 SCSI 裝置的清單。這清單包括了裝置類型、型號、製造商、SCSI 頻道與 ID 資料。
Attached devices: Host: scsi1 Channel: 00 Id: 05 Lun: 00 Vendor: NEC Model: CD-ROM DRIVE:466 Rev: 1.06 Type: CD-ROM ANSI SCSI revision: 02 Host: scsi1 Channel: 00 Id: 06 Lun: 00 Vendor: ARCHIVE Model: Python 04106-XXX Rev: 7350 Type: Sequential-Access ANSI SCSI revision: 02 Host: scsi2 Channel: 00 Id: 06 Lun: 00 Vendor: DELL Model: 1x6 U2W SCSI BP Rev: 5.35 Type: Processor ANSI SCSI revision: 02 Host: scsi2 Channel: 02 Id: 00 Lun: 00 Vendor: MegaRAID Model: LD0 RAID5 34556R Rev: 1.01 Type: Direct-Access ANSI SCSI revision: 02
/proc/scsi/
, which contains files specific to each SCSI controller using that driver. From the previous example, aic7xxx/
and megaraid/
directories are present, since two drivers are in use. The files in each of the directories typically contain an I/O address range, IRQ information, and statistics for the SCSI controller using that driver. Each controller can report a different type and amount of information. The Adaptec AIC-7880 Ultra SCSI host adapter's file in this example system produces the following output:
Adaptec AIC7xxx driver version: 5.1.20/3.2.4 Compile Options: TCQ Enabled By Default : Disabled AIC7XXX_PROC_STATS : Enabled AIC7XXX_RESET_DELAY : 5 Adapter Configuration: SCSI Adapter: Adaptec AIC-7880 Ultra SCSI host adapter Ultra Narrow Controller PCI MMAPed I/O Base: 0xfcffe000 Adapter SEEPROM Config: SEEPROM found and used. Adaptec SCSI BIOS: Enabled IRQ: 30 SCBs: Active 0, Max Active 1, Allocated 15, HW 16, Page 255 Interrupts: 33726 BIOS Control Word: 0x18a6 Adapter Control Word: 0x1c5f Extended Translation: Enabled Disconnect Enable Flags: 0x00ff Ultra Enable Flags: 0x0020 Tag Queue Enable Flags: 0x0000 Ordered Queue Tag Flags: 0x0000 Default Tag Queue Depth: 8 Tagged Queue By Device array for aic7xxx host instance 1: {255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255,255} Actual queue depth per device for aic7xxx host instance 1: {1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1} Statistics: (scsi1:0:5:0) Device using Narrow/Sync transfers at 20.0 MByte/sec, offset 15 Transinfo settings: current(12/15/0/0), goal(12/15/0/0), user(12/15/0/0) Total transfers 0 (0 reads and 0 writes) < 2K 2K+ 4K+ 8K+ 16K+ 32K+ 64K+ 128K+ Reads: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Writes: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (scsi1:0:6:0) Device using Narrow/Sync transfers at 10.0 MByte/sec, offset 15 Transinfo settings: current(25/15/0/0), goal(12/15/0/0), user(12/15/0/0) Total transfers 132 (0 reads and 132 writes) < 2K 2K+ 4K+ 8K+ 16K+ 32K+ 64K+ 128K+ Reads: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Writes: 0 0 0 1 131 0 0 0
/proc/sys/
/proc/sys/
目錄跟 /proc/
目錄中的其他子目錄不同,因為它不但提供了關於電腦的資訊,也允許系統管理者立即啟用或停用核心功能。
/proc/sys/
directory. Changing the wrong setting may render the kernel unstable, requiring a system reboot.
/proc/sys/
目錄中的任何值以前,請先確認可用的選項為何。
ls -l
。如果檔案可以被寫入,那也許就可以用來設定核心。舉例來說,/proc/sys/fs
的部份資料看起來會像:
-r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 May 10 16:14 dentry-state -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 May 10 16:14 dir-notify-enable -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 May 10 16:14 dquot-nr -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 May 10 16:14 file-max -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 May 10 16:14 file-nr
dir-notify-enable
與 file-max
這兩個檔案都可以被寫入,因此可以用來設定核心。其他檔案只提供了目前設定的資訊。
/proc/sys/
檔案的值是由 echo
指令將新的值傳入檔案去。舉例來說,要啟用 System Request Key 的核心功能,請輸入:
echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq
sysrq
的值從 0
(關)改為 1
(開)。
/proc/sys/
中的設定檔包括超過一個值。要正確地傳送新的值,請在 echo
指令的每個值之間加上空白符號,例如以下範例:
echo 4 2 45 > /proc/sys/kernel/acct
echo
command disappear when the system is restarted. To make configuration changes take effect after the system is rebooted, refer to 節 4.4, “使用 sysctl
指令”.
/proc/sys/
目錄包含了幾個子目錄,用來控制執行中的核心之幾個面向。
/proc/sys/dev/
cdrom/
and raid/
. Customized kernels can have other directories, such as parport/
, which provides the ability to share one parallel port between multiple device drivers.
cdrom/
directory contains a file called info
, which reveals a number of important CD-ROM parameters:
CD-ROM information, Id: cdrom.c 3.20 2003/12/17 drive name: hdc drive speed: 48 drive # of slots: 1 Can close tray: 1 Can open tray: 1 Can lock tray: 1 Can change speed: 1 Can select disk: 0 Can read multisession: 1 Can read MCN: 1 Reports media changed: 1 Can play audio: 1 Can write CD-R: 0 Can write CD-RW: 0 Can read DVD: 0 Can write DVD-R: 0 Can write DVD-RAM: 0 Can read MRW: 0 Can write MRW: 0 Can write RAM: 0
/proc/sys/dev/cdrom
, such as autoclose
and checkmedia
, can be used to control the system's CD-ROM. Use the echo
command to enable or disable these features.
/proc/sys/dev/raid/
目錄,裡面至少有兩個檔案:speed_limit_min
與 speed_limit_max
。這兩個設定可以決定 RAID 裝置對於 I/O 索求甚需的工作是否提供加速功能,例如重新同步磁碟。
/proc/sys/fs/
binfmt_misc/
目錄是用來提供核心對於雜項二進位格式的支援。
/proc/sys/fs/
include:
dentry-state
— 提供目錄快取的狀態。這檔案看起來像:
57411 52939 45 0 0 0
dquot-nr
— 列出已進入快取的磁碟配額條目之最大數目。
file-max
— 列出核心所配置的檔案處理最大數目。提高這檔案裡面的值可以解決因檔案處理數量不足所造成的問題。
file-nr
— 列出檔案處理、已使用的檔案處理、以及檔案處理最大值的數目。
overflowgid
與 overflowuid
— 分別定義固定的群組 ID 與使用者 ID,給僅支援 16 位元的群組與使用者 ID 之檔案系統使用。
super-max
— 控制可用 superblock 的最大數量。
super-nr
— 顯示使用中的 superblock 數目。
/proc/sys/kernel/
acct
— 根據包含紀錄檔的檔案系統之剩餘空間的比例,控制如何暫停程序稽核系統。預設上,這檔案看起來像:
4 2 30
cap-bound
— 控制 capability bounding 設定,提供系統上任何程序的能力之清單。如果一項能力沒有在此列出,那麼不管一個程序的權限為何,都不能被執行。透過一些事情不發生,至少在開機程序時,可以讓系統更安全。
/lib/modules/<kernel-version>
/build/include/linux/capability.h
.
ctrl-alt-del
— Controls whether Ctrl+Alt+Delete gracefully restarts the computer using init
(0
) or forces an immediate reboot without syncing the dirty buffers to disk (1
).
domainname
— 設定系統的網域名稱,例如 example.com
。
exec-shield
— 設定核心的 Exec Shield 功能。針對某些型態的緩衝區溢位攻擊,Exec Shield 提供了保護。
0
— 停用 Exec Shield。
1
— 啟用 Exec Shield。這是預設值。
exec-shield-randomize
— 啟用將記憶體中的程式之位置亂數化的功能。這能減低潛在的攻擊者找到程式或系統程式在記憶體中的位置的可能性。每次程式或系統程式啟動時,都會被放在記憶體的不同位置,絕不會使用靜態或絕對的記憶體位址。
0
— 停用 Exec Shield 的亂數化功能。在對應用程式進行偵錯時,這可能會很有用。
1
— Enables randomization of Exec Shield. This is the default value. Note: The exec-shield
file must also be set to 1
for exec-shield-randomize
to be effective.
hostname
— 設定系統的主機名稱,例如 www.example.com
。
hotplug
— 當系統偵測到設定改變時,要執行的工具程式。這通常用於 USB 與 Cardbus PCI。除非您打算測試符合這功能的新程式,否則請不要修改預設值 /sbin/hotplug
。
modprobe
— 設定程式用來載入核心模組的位置。預設值是 /sbin/modprobe
,表示核心執行續呼叫 kmod
時,kmod
會呼叫這個檔案載入模組。
msgmax
— 設定從一個程序送到另一個程序的任何訊息之最大大小,預設值為 8192
。提高這個值的時候請小心,程序間已排程的訊息是儲存在非置換的核心記憶體裡。增加 msgmax
會提高系統所需的記憶體數量。
msgmnb
— Sets the maximum number of bytes in a single message queue. The default is 16384
.
msgmni
— 設定訊息佇列識別子的最大數目。預設值是 16
。
osrelease
— 列出 Linux 核心的版本號。這檔案可以藉由修改核心的原始碼並重新編譯來改變。
ostype
— 顯示作業系統的類型。這個檔案的預設值是 Linux
,這個值只能藉由改變核心的原始碼並重新編譯來修改。
overflowgid
與 overflowuid
— 分別定義固定的群組 ID 與使用者 ID,讓只支援十六位元的群組與使用者 ID 之架構進行系統呼叫用。
panic
— 定義系統遭遇 kernel panic 時,核心重新開機前的秒數。這預設值為 0
,表示在 panic 後,停用重新開機的功能。
printk
— 這檔案控制了多種關於列印或紀錄錯誤訊息的設定。每個由核心回報的錯誤訊息都有一個 loglevel,它定義了訊息的重要性。這個 loglevel 依情節輕重,可分為:
0
— Kernel emergency. The system is unusable.
1
— Kernel alert. Action must be taken immediately.
2
— Condition of the kernel is considered critical.
3
— General kernel error condition.
4
— General kernel warning condition.
5
— Kernel notice of a normal but significant condition.
6
— Kernel informational message.
7
— Kernel debug-level messages.
printk
檔案中有四種值:
6 4 1 7
random/
目錄 — 列出一連串為核心產生亂數的值。
rtsig-max
— 設定某個時間系統佇列的 POSIX 即時訊號的最大數量。預設值是 1024
。
rtsig-nr
— 列出目前核心所佇列的 POSIX 即時訊號。
sem
— 設定核心的 semaphore(號誌)。Semaphore 是 System V IPC 的物件,用來控制一個特定程序的使用率。
shmall
— Sets the total amount of shared memory pages that can be used at one time, system-wide. By default, this value is 2097152
.
shmmax
— Sets the largest shared memory segment size allowed by the kernel. By default, this value is 33554432
. However, the kernel supports much larger values than this.
shmmni
— Sets the maximum number of shared memory segments for the whole system. By default, this value is 4096
.
sysrq
— 如果這個值設為零(0
)以外的值,啟動 System Request Key。
<system request code>
. Replace <system request code>
with one of the following system request codes:
r
— Disables raw mode for the keyboard and sets it to XLATE (a limited keyboard mode which does not recognize modifiers such as Alt, Ctrl, or Shift for all keys).
k
— Kills all processes active in a virtual console. Also called Secure Access Key (SAK), it is often used to verify that the login prompt is spawned from init
and not a Trojan copy designed to capture usernames and passwords.
b
— 不事先卸載檔案系統或同步連到系統上的磁碟,就重新啟動核心。
c
— 不事先卸載檔案系統或同步連到系統上的磁碟,就讓系統當機。
o
— 關機。
s
— 試圖同步連到系統上的磁碟。
u
— 試圖卸載檔案系統並以唯讀模式,重新掛載所有檔案系統。
p
— 將所有旗標與註冊碼輸出至主控台。
t
— 將程序清單輸出至主控台。
m
— 將記憶體的統計資料輸出至主控台。
0
到 9
— 設定主控台的紀錄等級。
e
— Kills all processes except init
using SIGTERM.
i
— Kills all processes except init
using SIGKILL.
l
— 用 SIGKILL 終止所有程序(包括 init
)。發出這項 System Request Key 之後,系統會變得不穩定。
h
— 顯示求助訊息。
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/sysrq.txt
for more information about the System Request Key.
sysrq-key
— 定義 System Request Key 的代碼(預設值為 84
)。
sysrq-sticky
— 定義 System Request Key 是否為組合鍵。可接受的值如下:
0
— Alt+SysRq and the system request code must be pressed simultaneously. This is the default value.
1
— Alt+SysRq must be pressed simultaneously, but the system request code can be pressed anytime before the number of seconds specified in /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq-timer
elapses.
sysrq-timer
— 定義在 system request 代碼必須被按下前的秒數。預設值為 10
。
tainted
— 指出是否載入了非 GPL 的模組。
0
— No non-GPL modules are loaded.
1
— At least one module without a GPL license (including modules with no license) is loaded.
2
— 至少有一個模組被 insmod -f
指令強制載入。
threads-max
— 設定核心所使用的最大執行續數量,預設值為 2048
。
version
— 顯示核心上一次編譯時的日期與時間。這檔案中的第一欄,例如 #3
,與核心自原始碼的次數有關。
/proc/sys/net/
ethernet/
, ipv4/
, ipx/
, and ipv6/
. By altering the files within these directories, system administrators are able to adjust the network configuration on a running system.
/proc/sys/net/
directories are discussed.
/proc/sys/net/core/
directory contains a variety of settings that control the interaction between the kernel and networking layers. The most important of these files are:
message_burst
— 設定撰寫新的警告訊息所需的時間,單位為十分之一秒。這個設定可以用來防止阻斷服務式(DoS)的攻擊。預設設定為 50
。
message_cost
— 設定每個警告訊息的「成本」。這個檔案的值越高(預設值為 5
),那麼警告訊息就越有可能被忽略。這個設定可以用來防止 DoS 攻擊。
message_burst
and message_cost
are designed to be modified based on the system's acceptable risk versus the need for comprehensive logging.
netdev_max_backlog
— Sets the maximum number of packets allowed to queue when a particular interface receives packets faster than the kernel can process them. The default value for this file is 300
.
optmem_max
— 設定每個 socket 所允許的最大輔助緩衝區大小。
rmem_default
— 設定接收 socket 的緩衝區預設大小,單位是位元組。
rmem_max
— 設定接收 socket 的緩衝區最大大小,單位是位元組。
wmem_default
— 設定發送 socket 的緩衝區預設大小,單位是位元組。
wmem_max
— 設定發送 socket 的緩衝區最大大小,單位是位元組。
/proc/sys/net/ipv4/
directory contains additional networking settings. Many of these settings, used in conjunction with one another, are useful in preventing attacks on the system or when using the system to act as a router.
/proc/sys/net/ipv4/
directory:
icmp_destunreach_rate
、icmp_echoreply_rate
、icmp_paramprob_rate
與 icmp_timeexeed_rate
— 設定 ICMP 發送封包速率的最大值,適用於某些環境下。這些值的單位為百分之一秒。設為 0
會移除任何延遲時間,不建議這樣做。
icmp_echo_ignore_all
與 icmp_echo_ignore_broadcasts
— 分別允許核心忽略來自每一台主機或來自廣播位址的 ICMP ECHO 封包。設為 0
表示核心會回應,1
表示忽略封包。
ip_default_ttl
— 設定預設的 TTL(Time To Live,存活時間),用來限制封包在到達目的地之前,可以經過多少的節點。增加這個值會降低系統效能。
ip_forward
— 允許系統上的介面卡轉送封包。這個檔案的預設值為 0
。將這檔案設定為 1
會啟用網路封包的轉送功能。
ip_local_port_range
— 指定需要本地連接埠時,TCP 或 UDP 的連接埠範圍。第一個值是下限,第二個值是上限。要使用超過預設的 1024 到 4999 之系統,應該使用 32768 到 61000。
tcp_syn_retries
— 設定系統重新發送 SYN 封包以嘗試連線的次數上限。
tcp_retries1
— 設定回應外部連線的重新傳輸次數。預設值為 3
。
tcp_retries2
— 設定 TCP 封包所允許的重新傳輸次數。預設值為 15
。
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/networking/ ip-sysctl.txt
/proc/sys/net/ipv4/
directory.
/proc/sys/net/ipv4/
directory and each covers a different aspect of the network stack. The /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/
directory allows each system interface to be configured in different ways, including the use of default settings for unconfigured devices (in the /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/default/
subdirectory) and settings that override all special configurations (in the /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/all/
subdirectory).
/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/
directory contains settings for communicating with a host directly connected to the system (called a network neighbor) and also contains different settings for systems more than one hop away.
/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/
. Unlike conf/
and neigh/
, the /proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/
directory contains specifications that apply to routing with any interfaces on the system. Many of these settings, such as max_size
, max_delay
, and min_delay
, relate to controlling the size of the routing cache. To clear the routing cache, write any value to the flush
file.
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt
/proc/sys/vm/
/proc/sys/vm/
目錄:
block_dump
— 設定區塊 I/O 偵錯(如果啟用的話)。所有讀 / 寫與區塊對檔案的非正常運作,都會被記錄下來。這對節省筆記型電腦的電池電源時,診斷磁碟啟用 / 停用時非常有用。block_dump
啟用時,所有輸出都可以藉由 dmesg
指令來存取。預設值是 0
。
block_dump
,同時核心偵錯功能正在執行,請一定要停止 klogd
系統程式,因為它會產生 block_dump
所造成的磁碟活動。
dirty_background_ratio
— 在該寫而未寫入磁碟的資料達到總記憶體的這個比例時,開始透過 pdflush
系統程式背景寫入。預設值為 10
。
dirty_expire_centisecs
— 定義記憶體中未寫入磁碟的資料是不是太舊,需要寫入。超過這個值未寫入的資料會在下一次 pdflush
系統資料啟動時寫入。預設值是 3000
,單位為千分之一秒。
dirty_ratio
— 當產生該寫入而未寫入的資料達到總記憶體的這個百分比時,開始透過 pdflush
寫入。預設值是 40
。
dirty_writeback_centisecs
— 定義 pdflush
系統程式啟動的間隔,用以定期將記憶體內未寫入的資料寫入磁碟。預設值是 500
,單位為百分之一秒。
laptop_mode
— 盡可能保持低硬碟轉速,降低硬碟加速的次數,以節省電池的電力。結合所有之後的 I/O 處理,這會增加使用效率,降低提昇轉速的頻率。預設值為 0
,但如果筆記型電腦上有電池,就會自動啟用。
acpid
系統程式控制,使用者會看到電池已啟用的通知。如果筆記型電腦支援 ACPI 規格,使用者就不需要修改這個值。
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/laptop-mode.txt
lower_zone_protection
— 決定核心會以何種方式保護較低記憶體的分配區域。當系統啟用了 highmem
選項時,這功能就會啟用。這功能的預設值為 0
,表示不啟用任何保護功能。所有其他的正整數值都是以 MB(百萬位元組)為單位,lowmem
記憶體就會因此而受到保護。
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt
max_map_count
— 設定一個程序可以用有的最大記憶體對應區。就大部分情況來說,預設值 65536
就很夠用。
min_free_kbytes
— 強迫 Linux VM(虛擬記憶體管理員)最少保留可用的記憶體數量,單位為千位元組。這個 VM 會使用這個值來計算系統上每個 lowmem
區域的 pages_min
值。預設值系統上的總記憶體。
nr_hugepages
— 顯示目前核心裡,已設定的 hugetlb
分頁。
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/vm/hugetlbpage.txt
nr_pdflush_threads
— 顯示目前正在執行的 pdflush 系統程式之數目。這檔案是唯讀的,使用者不應該修改它。在 I/O 負載重時,核心會提高預設值 2
。
overcommit_memory
— 設定是否接受大型記憶體的情形。您可以使用以下三個值:
0
— 核心會預測可用記憶體、失敗的請求,進行探索記憶體與請求的關係。可惜的是,因為記憶體是以啟發式的方法來分配,而不是精確的精確法則,所以這個設定有時候會讓系統上的可用記憶體超載。這是預設值。
1
— 核心不會在有資料送進記憶體時進行處理。這項設定會增加記憶體負載過重的機會,但也會增加倚賴記憶體的工作之效能(例如一些科學運算軟體)。
2
— 如果程式要求的大小超過所有置換空間加上 /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_ratio
所指定的實體記憶體百分比,核心就會拒絕。這個設定對於想要降低記憶體過度使用的人來說,這個設定非常有用。
overcommit_ratio
— 定義在 /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory
設為 2
時,實體記憶體的百分比。預設值是 50
。
page-cluster
— 設定單次讀取記憶體時的分頁數目。預設值為 3
,相當於 16 個分頁,這對大部份系統來說已經夠用。
swappiness
— 決定要置換多少機器。這個值越高,置換發生的機率就越高。這個預設值是百分之 60
。
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/
, which contains additional information.
/proc/sysvipc/
msg
)、號誌(sem
)與共享記憶體(shm
)有關。
/proc/tty/
drivers
file is a list of the current tty devices in use, as in the following example:
serial /dev/cua 5 64-127 serial:callout serial /dev/ttyS 4 64-127 serial pty_slave /dev/pts 136 0-255 pty:slave pty_master /dev/ptm 128 0-255 pty:master pty_slave /dev/ttyp 3 0-255 pty:slave pty_master /dev/pty 2 0-255 pty:master /dev/vc/0 /dev/vc/0 4 0 system:vtmaster /dev/ptmx /dev/ptmx 5 2 system /dev/console /dev/console 5 1 system:console /dev/tty /dev/tty 5 0 system:/dev/tty unknown /dev/vc/%d 4 1-63 console
/proc/tty/driver/serial
檔案列出每個序列 tty 的使用資料與狀態。
ldiscs
檔案裡,更詳盡的資料都儲存在 ldisc/
目錄裡。
/proc/<PID>/
/proc/sys/vm/panic_on_oom
. When set to 1
the kernel will panic on OOM. A setting of 0
instructs the kernel to call a function named oom_killer
on an OOM. Usually, oom_killer
can kill rogue processes and the system will survive.
/proc/sys/vm/panic_on_oom
.
~]#cat /proc/sys/vm/panic_on_oom
1 ~]#echo 0 > /proc/sys/vm/panic_on_oom
~]#cat /proc/sys/vm/panic_on_oom
0
oom_killer
score. In /proc/<PID>/
there are two tools labelled oom_adj
and oom_score
. Valid scores for oom_adj
are in the range -16 to +15. To see the current oom_killer
score, view the oom_score
for the process. oom_killer
will kill processes with the highest scores first.
oom_killer
will kill it.
~]#cat /proc/12465/oom_score
79872 ~]#echo -5 > /proc/12465/oom_adj
~]#cat /proc/12465/oom_score
78
oom_killer
for that process. In the example below, oom_score
returns a value of 0, indicating that this process would not be killed.
~]#cat /proc/12465/oom_score
78 ~]#echo -17 > /proc/12465/oom_adj
~]#cat /proc/12465/oom_score
0
badness()
is used to determine the actual score for each process. This is done by adding up 'points' for each examined process. The process scoring is done in the following way:
CAP_SYS_ADMIN
and CAP_SYS_RAWIO
capabilities have their scores reduced.
oom_adj
file.
oom_score
value will most probably be a non-privileged, recently started process that, along with its children, uses a large amount of memory, has been 'niced', and handles no raw I/O.
sysctl
指令/sbin/sysctl
指令可以用來檢視、設定、並自動化 /proc/sys/
目錄中的核心設定。
/proc/sys/
目錄裡的設定,請以 root 身份輸入 /sbin/sysctl -a
指令。這可以建立很長、很完整的清單,其中一部份看起來如下:
net.ipv4.route.min_delay = 2 kernel.sysrq = 0 kernel.sem = 250 32000 32 128
/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/min_delay
檔案檔案看起來是 net.ipv4.route.min_delay
,目錄中的斜線都用點來代替,而 proc.sys
部份則省略。
sysctl
指令可以用來取代 echo
,用以把值寫入 /proc/sys/
目錄的可寫入檔案。舉例來說,
echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq
sysctl
指令的用法如下:
~]# sysctl -w kernel.sysrq="1"
kernel.sysrq = 1
/proc/sys/
裡面的值,對於測試非常有幫助。但這方法並不適用於投入生產的機器,因為重新開機之後 /proc/sys/
裡的設定並不會被保留下來。要保留設定,請將這些設定加入 /etc/sysctl.conf
檔案。
init
程式會執行 /etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit
程序檔。這程序檔包含的指令會執行 sysctl
,配合設定檔 /etc/sysctl.conf
來決定要傳到核心的值。任何加到 /etc/sysctl.conf
的值在下次系統重新開機時,還會發生作用。
proc
檔案系統的額外資訊。
proc
檔案系統的絕佳文件都已經安裝在系統上。
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt
— Contains assorted, but limited, information about all aspects of the /proc/
directory.
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/sysrq.txt
— An overview of System Request Key options.
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/sysctl/
— A directory containing a variety of sysctl
tips, including modifying values that concern the kernel (kernel.txt
), accessing file systems (fs.txt
), and virtual memory use (vm.txt
).
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/networking/ip-sysctl.txt
— A detailed overview of IP networking options.
/
) partition exists on two 40G drives, you have 80G total but are only able to access 40G of that 80G. The other 40G acts like a mirror of the first 40G.
/dev/hda
and /dev/hdb
) to illustrate the creation of simple RAID 1 and RAID 0 configurations, and detail how to create a simple RAID configuration by implementing multiple RAID devices.
/boot
partition as a software RAID device, leaving the root partition (/
), /home
, and swap
as regular file systems. 圖形 5.4, “RAID 1 Partitions Ready, Pre-Device and Mount Point Creation” shows successfully allocated space for the RAID 1 configuration (for /boot
), which is now ready for RAID device and mount point creation:
/boot
, you must choose RAID level 1, and it must use one of the first two drives (IDE first, SCSI second). If you are not creating a separate RAID partition of /boot
, and you are making a RAID partition for the root file system (that is, /
), it must be RAID level 1 and must use one of the first two drives (IDE first, SCSI second).
/
), home partition (/home
), or swap
.
/proc/mdstat
special file. To list these devices, display the content of this file by typing the following at a shell prompt:
cat
/proc/mdstat
root
:
mdadm
--query
device
…
mdadm
--detail
raid_device
…
mdadm
--examine
component_device
…
mdadm --detail
command displays information about a RAID device, mdadm --examine
only relays information about a RAID device as it relates to a given component device. This distinction is particularly important when working with a RAID device that itself is a component of another RAID device.
mdadm --query
command, as well as both mdadm --detail
and mdadm --examine
commands allow you to specify multiple devices at once.
/dev/md0
is a RAID device by typing the following at a shell prompt:
~]# mdadm --query /dev/md0
/dev/md0: 125.38MiB raid1 2 devices, 0 spares. Use mdadm --detail for more detail.
/dev/md0: No md super block found, not an md component.
~]# mdadm --detail /dev/md0
/dev/md0:
Version : 0.90
Creation Time : Tue Jun 28 16:05:49 2011
Raid Level : raid1
Array Size : 128384 (125.40 MiB 131.47 MB)
Used Dev Size : 128384 (125.40 MiB 131.47 MB)
Raid Devices : 2
Total Devices : 2
Preferred Minor : 0
Persistence : Superblock is persistent
Update Time : Thu Jun 30 17:06:34 2011
State : clean
Active Devices : 2
Working Devices : 2
Failed Devices : 0
Spare Devices : 0
UUID : 49c5ac74:c2b79501:5c28cb9c:16a6dd9f
Events : 0.6
Number Major Minor RaidDevice State
0 3 1 0 active sync /dev/hda1
1 3 65 1 active sync /dev/hdb1
~]$ cat /proc/mdstat
Personalities : [raid0] [raid1]
md0 : active raid1 hdb1[1] hda1[0]
128384 blocks [2/2] [UU]
md1 : active raid0 hdb2[1] hda2[0]
1573888 blocks 256k chunks
md2 : active raid0 hdb3[1] hda3[0]
19132928 blocks 256k chunks
unused devices: <none>
root
:
mdadm
--create
raid_device
--level
=level
--raid-devices
=number
component_device
…
mdadm
(8) manual page.
~]# ls /dev/sd*
/dev/sda /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb /dev/sdb1
/dev/md3
as a new RAID level 1 array from /dev/sda1
and /dev/sdb1
, run the following command:
~]# mdadm --create /dev/md3 --level=1 --raid-devices=2 /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1
mdadm: array /dev/md3 started.
root
:
mdadm
raid_device
--fail
component_device
mdadm
raid_device
--remove
component_device
mdadm
raid_device
--add
component_device
/dev/md3
, with the following layout (that is, the RAID device created in 範例 5.2, “Creating a new RAID device”):
~]# mdadm --detail /dev/md3 | tail -n 3
Number Major Minor RaidDevice State
0 8 1 0 active sync /dev/sda1
1 8 17 1 active sync /dev/sdb1
/dev/sdb1
device as faulty:
~]# mdadm /dev/md3 --fail /dev/sdb1
mdadm: set /dev/sdb1 faulty in /dev/md3
~]# mdadm /dev/md3 --remove /dev/sdb1
mdadm: hot removed /dev/sdb1
~]# mdadm /dev/md3 --add /dev/sdb1
mdadm: added /dev/sdb1
root
:
mdadm
raid_device
--add
component_device
mdadm
--grow
raid_device
--raid-devices
=number
/dev/md3
, with the following layout (that is, the RAID device created in 範例 5.2, “Creating a new RAID device”):
~]# mdadm --detail /dev/md3 | tail -n 3
Number Major Minor RaidDevice State
0 8 1 0 active sync /dev/sda1
1 8 17 1 active sync /dev/sdb1
/dev/sdc
, has been added and has exactly one partition. To add it to the /dev/md3
array, type the following at a shell prompt:
~]# mdadm /dev/md3 --add /dev/sdc1
mdadm: added /dev/sdc1
/dev/sdc1
as a spare device. To change the size of the array to actually use it, type:
~]# mdadm --grow /dev/md3 --raid-devices=3
root
:
mdadm
--stop
raid_device
mdadm
--remove
raid_device
mdadm
--zero-superblock
component_device
…
/dev/md3
, with the following layout (that is, the RAID device created in 範例 5.4, “Extending a RAID device”):
~]# mdadm --detail /dev/md3 | tail -n 4
Number Major Minor RaidDevice State
0 8 1 0 active sync /dev/sda1
1 8 17 1 active sync /dev/sdb1
2 8 33 2 active sync /dev/sdc1
~]# mdadm --stop /dev/md3
mdadm: stopped /dev/md3
/dev/md3
device by running the following command:
~]# mdadm --remove /dev/md3
~]# mdadm --zero-superblock /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1
mdadm
command only apply to the current session, and will not survive a system restart. At boot time, the mdmonitor
service reads the content of the /etc/mdadm.conf
configuration file to see which RAID devices to start. If the software RAID was configured during the graphical installation process, this file contains directives listed in 表格 5.1, “Common mdadm.conf directives” by default.
Option | Description |
---|---|
ARRAY
|
Allows you to identify a particular array.
|
DEVICE
|
Allows you to specify a list of devices to scan for a RAID component (for example, “/dev/hda1”). You can also use the keyword
partitions to use all partitions listed in /proc/partitions , or containers to specify an array container.
|
MAILADDR
| Allows you to specify an email address to use in case of an alert. |
ARRAY
lines are presently in use regardless of the configuration, run the following command as root
:
mdadm
--detail
--scan
/etc/mdadm.conf
file. You can also display the ARRAY
line for a particular device:
mdadm
--detail
--brief
raid_device
mdadm
--detail
--brief
raid_device
>>/etc/mdadm.conf
/etc/mdadm.conf
contains the software RAID configuration created during the system installation:
# mdadm.conf written out by anaconda DEVICE partitions MAILADDR root ARRAY /dev/md0 level=raid1 num-devices=2 UUID=49c5ac74:c2b79501:5c28cb9c:16a6dd9f ARRAY /dev/md1 level=raid0 num-devices=2 UUID=76914c11:5bfa2c00:dc6097d1:a1f4506d ARRAY /dev/md2 level=raid0 num-devices=2 UUID=2b5d38d0:aea898bf:92be20e2:f9d893c5
/dev/md3
device as shown in 範例 5.2, “Creating a new RAID device”, you can make it persistent by running the following command:
~]# mdadm --detail --brief /dev/md3 >> /etc/mdadm.conf
mdadm
man page — A manual page for the mdadm
utility.
mdadm.conf
man page — A manual page that provides a comprehensive list of available /etc/mdadm.conf
configuration options.
Amount of RAM in the System | Recommended Amount of Swap Space |
---|---|
4GB of RAM or less | a minimum of 2GB of swap space |
4GB to 16GB of RAM | a minimum of 4GB of swap space |
16GB to 64GB of RAM | a minimum of 8GB of swap space |
64GB to 256GB of RAM | a minimum of 16GB of swap space |
256GB to 512GB of RAM | a minimum of 32GB of swap space |
free
and cat /proc/swaps
commands to verify how much and where swap is in use.
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01
is the volume you want to extend):
swapoff -v /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01
lvm lvresize /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01 -L +256M
mkswap /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01
swapon -va
cat /proc/swaps
free
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02
is the swap volume you want to add):
lvm lvcreate VolGroup00 -n LogVol02 -L 256M
mkswap /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02
/etc/fstab
file:
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02 swap swap defaults 0 0
swapon -va
cat /proc/swaps
free
count
being equal to the desired block size:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile bs=1024 count=65536
mkswap /swapfile
swapon /swapfile
/etc/fstab
to include the following entry:
/swapfile swap swap defaults 0 0
cat /proc/swaps
or free
.
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01
is the volume you want to reduce):
swapoff -v /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01
lvm lvreduce /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01 -L -512M
mkswap /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01
swapon -va
cat /proc/swaps
free
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02
is the swap volume you want to remove):
swapoff -v /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02
lvm lvremove /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02
/etc/fstab
file:
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02 swap swap defaults 0 0
cat /proc/swaps
free
parted
parted
這個工具能讓使用者:
parted
首先套件必須被包含在內。如要啟動 parted
,請以 root 身份在 shell 提示符號下輸入 parted /dev/sda
指令(這裡的 /dev/sda
代表您想要設定的磁碟機的裝置名稱)。
umount
command and turn off all the swap space on the hard drive with the swapoff
command.
parted
commands” contains a list of commonly used parted
commands. The sections that follow explain some of these commands and arguments in more detail.
parted
commandsCommand | Description |
---|---|
check
| 執行檔案系統的一般性檢查 |
cp
|
複製一個分割區的檔案系統到另一個分割區,from 與 to 為分割區的次碼(minor number)
|
help
| 顯示可使用的指令清單 |
mklabel
| 建立磁碟分割區表中的一個磁碟標籤 |
mkfs
|
建立一個類型為 file-system-type 的檔案系統
|
mkpart
| 建立一個分割區,而不建立新的檔案系統 |
mkpartfs
| 建立一個分割區,並且建立所指定的檔案系統 |
move
| 移動分割區 |
name
| 只命名 Mac 與 PC98 磁碟標籤的分割區 |
print
| 顯示磁碟分割區表 |
quit
|
Quit parted
|
rescue start-mb end-mb
|
救援一個遺失的分割區(從 start-mb 到 end-mb )
|
resize
|
重新調整分割區大小從 start-mb 到 end-mb
|
rm
| 移除分割區 |
select
| 選擇另一個裝置來設定 |
set
|
設定一個分割區的旗標; state 可以是 on 或 off
|
toggle [
|
調整分割區 NUMBER 上的 FLAG 狀態
|
unit
|
將預設單位設為 單位
|
parted
, use the command print
to view the partition table. A table similar to the following appears:
Model: ATA ST3160812AS (scsi) Disk /dev/sda: 160GB Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B Partition Table: msdos Number Start End Size Type File system Flags 1 32.3kB 107MB 107MB primary ext3 boot 2 107MB 105GB 105GB primary ext3 3 105GB 107GB 2147MB primary linux-swap 4 107GB 160GB 52.9GB extended root 5 107GB 133GB 26.2GB logical ext3 6 133GB 133GB 107MB logical ext3 7 133GB 160GB 26.6GB logical lvm
number
. For example, the partition with minor number 1 corresponds to /dev/sda1
. The Start
and End
values are in megabytes. Valid Type
are metadata, free, primary, extended, or logical. The Filesystem
is the file system type, which can be any of the following:
Filesystem
沒有任何值的話,這就代表它的檔案系統類型是未知的。
parted
, where /dev/sda
is the device on which to create the partition:
parted /dev/sda
print
mkpart primary ext3 1024 2048
mkpartfs
command instead, the file system is created after the partition is created. However, parted
does not support creating an ext3 file system. Thus, if you wish to create an ext3 file system, use mkpart
and create the file system with the mkfs
command as described later.
print
command to confirm that it is in the partition table with the correct partition type, file system type, and size. Also remember the minor number of the new partition so that you can label it. You should also view the output of
cat /proc/partitions
mkfs -t ext3 /dev/sda6
/dev/sda6
and you want to label it /work
:
e2label /dev/sda6 /work
mkdir /work
/etc/fstab
/etc/fstab
file to include the new partition. The new line should look similar to the following:
LABEL=/work /work ext3 defaults 1 2
LABEL=
followed by the label you gave the partition. The second column should contain the mount point for the new partition, and the next column should be the file system type (for example, ext3 or swap). If you need more information about the format, read the man page with the command man fstab
.
defaults
, the partition is mounted at boot time. To mount the partition without rebooting, as root, type the command:
mount /work
parted
, where /dev/sda
is the device on which to remove the partition:
parted /dev/sda
print
rm
. For example, to remove the partition with minor number 3:
rm 3
print
command to confirm that it is removed from the partition table. You should also view the output of
cat /proc/partitions
/etc/fstab
file. Find the line that declares the removed partition, and remove it from the file.
parted
, where /dev/sda
is the device on which to resize the partition:
parted /dev/sda
print
resize
command followed by the minor number for the partition, the starting place in megabytes, and the end place in megabytes. For example:
resize 3 1024 2048
print
command to confirm that the partition has been resized correctly, is the correct partition type, and is the correct file system type.
df
to make sure the partition was mounted and is recognized with the new size.
lvm help
at a command prompt.
LVM
commandsCommand | Description |
---|---|
dumpconfig
| 傾印啟用的配置 |
formats
| 列出可用的 metadata 格式 |
help
| 顯示協助用的指令 |
lvchange
| 更改邏輯卷冊的屬性 |
lvcreate
| 建立邏輯卷冊 |
lvdisplay
| 顯示有關於某個邏輯卷冊的相關資訊 |
lvextend
| 新增空間至邏輯卷冊 |
lvmchange
| Due to use of the device mapper, this command has been deprecated |
lvmdiskscan
| 列出可被用來作為實體卷冊的裝置 |
lvmsadc
| 蒐集作業資料 |
lvmsar
| 建立作業報告 |
lvreduce
| 減少邏輯卷冊的大小 |
lvremove
| 將邏輯卷冊由系統上移除 |
lvrename
| 為邏輯卷冊重新命名 |
lvresize
| 為邏輯卷冊重設大小 |
lvs
| 顯示邏輯卷冊的相關資訊 |
lvscan
| 列出所有卷冊群組中的所有邏輯卷冊 |
pvchange
| 更改實體卷冊的屬性 |
pvcreate
| 初始化實體卷冊以便使用於 LVM |
pvdata
| 顯示磁碟上的實體卷冊的 metadata |
pvdisplay
| 顯示實體卷冊的各種屬性 |
pvmove
| 將扇區由一個實體卷冊上移至另一個 |
pvremove
| 將 LVM 標籤由實體卷冊上移除 |
pvresize
| 重設一個正由卷冊群組所使用實體卷冊的大小 |
pvs
| 顯示有關於實體卷冊的相關資訊 |
pvscan
| 列出所有實體卷冊 |
segtypes
| 列出可用的區段類型 |
vgcfgbackup
| 備份卷冊群組配置 |
vgcfgrestore
| 復原卷冊群組配置 |
vgchange
| 更改卷冊群組的屬性 |
vgck
| 檢查卷冊群組的一致性 |
vgconvert
| 更敢卷冊群組的 metadata 格式 |
vgcreate
| 建立一個卷冊群組 |
vgdisplay
| 顯示卷冊群組資訊 |
vgexport
| 將某個卷冊群組由系統上反註冊 |
vgextend
| 將實體卷冊新增至某個卷冊群組中 |
vgimport
| 將匯出的卷冊群組註冊至系統 |
vgmerge
| 合併卷冊群組 |
vgmknodes
| 為位於 /dev/ 中的卷冊群組裝置建立特殊檔案 |
vgreduce
| 將一個實體卷冊由卷冊群組中移除 |
vgremove
| 將卷冊群組移除 |
vgrename
| 為卷冊群組重新命名 |
vgs
| 顯示有關於卷冊群組的相關資訊 |
vgscan
| 搜尋所有的卷冊群組 |
vgsplit
| 將實體卷冊移至一個新的卷冊群組中 |
version
| 顯示軟體和驅動程式的版本資訊 |
quota
RPM must be installed to implement disk quotas. /etc/fstab
file.
/etc/fstab
file. Add the usrquota
and/or grpquota
options to the file systems that require quotas:
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00 / ext3 defaults 1 1 LABEL=/boot /boot ext3 defaults 1 2 none /dev/pts devpts gid=5,mode=620 0 0 none /dev/shm tmpfs defaults 0 0 none /proc proc defaults 0 0 none /sys sysfs defaults 0 0 /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02 /home ext3 defaults,usrquota,grpquota 1 2 /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01 swap swap defaults 0 0 . . .
/home
file system has both user and group quotas enabled.
/home
partition was created during the installation of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. The root (/
) partition can be used for setting quota policies in the /etc/fstab
file.
usrquota
and/or grpquota
options, remount each file system whose fstab
entry has been modified. If the file system is not in use by any process, use one of the following methods:
umount
command followed by the mount
command to remount the file system.(See the man
page for both umount
and mount
for the specific syntax for mounting and unmounting various filesystem types.)
mount -o remount <file-system>
command (where <file-system>
is the name of the file system) to remount the file system. For example, to remount the /home
file system, the command to issue is mount -o remount /home
.
quotacheck
command.
quotacheck
command examines quota-enabled file systems and builds a table of the current disk usage per file system. The table is then used to update the operating system's copy of disk usage. In addition, the file system's disk quota files are updated.
aquota.user
and aquota.group
) on the file system, use the -c
option of the quotacheck
command. For example, if user and group quotas are enabled for the /home
file system, create the files in the /home
directory:
quotacheck -cug /home
-c
選項代表每一個已啟用磁碟配額的檔案系統都應該建立配額檔案,-u
則表示要檢查使用者的磁碟配額,而 -g
選項表示檢查群組的磁碟配額。
-u
或 -g
選項,將只會建立使用者的配額檔案。 假如只有指定 -g
選項,則只會建立群組配額檔案。
quotacheck -avug
a
— 檢查所有啟用配額之本機掛載的檔案系統
v
— 顯示配額檢查過程的詳細狀態資訊
u
— 檢查使用者磁碟配額資訊
g
— 檢查群組磁碟配額資訊
quotacheck
has finished running, the quota files corresponding to the enabled quotas (user and/or group) are populated with data for each quota-enabled locally-mounted file system such as /home
.
edquota
command.
edquota username
/etc/fstab
for the /home
partition (/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02
in the example below) and the command edquota testuser
is executed, the following is shown in the editor configured as the default for the system:
Disk quotas for user testuser (uid 501): Filesystem blocks soft hard inodes soft hard /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02 440436 0 0 37418 0 0
EDITOR
environment variable is used by edquota
. To change the editor, set the EDITOR
environment variable in your ~/.bash_profile
file to the full path of the editor of your choice.
inodes
column shows how many inodes the user is currently using. The last two columns are used to set the soft and hard inode limits for the user on the file system.
Disk quotas for user testuser (uid 501): Filesystem blocks soft hard inodes soft hard /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02 440436 500000 550000 37418 0 0
quota testuser
devel
group (the group must exist prior to setting the group quota), use the command:
edquota -g devel
Disk quotas for group devel (gid 505): Filesystem blocks soft hard inodes soft hard /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02 440400 0 0 37418 0 0
quota -g devel
edquota -t
edquota
commands operate on a particular user's or group's quota, the -t
option operates on every filesystem with quotas enabled.
quotaoff -vaug
-u
或 -g
選項都沒有指定,將只會停用使用者的磁碟配額。假如只指定 -g
,將只會停用群組的磁碟配額。-v
則可以在指令執行時,顯示狀態資訊。
quotaon
command with the same options.
quotaon -vaug
/home
, use the following command:
quotaon -vug /home
-u
或 -g
選項都沒有指定,將只會啟用使用者的磁碟配額。 假如只指定 -g
,將只會啟用群組的磁碟配額。
repquota
utility. For example, the command repquota /home
produces this output:
*** Report for user quotas on device /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol02 Block grace time: 7days; Inode grace time: 7days Block limits File limits User used soft hard grace used soft hard grace ---------------------------------------------------------------------- root -- 36 0 0 4 0 0 kristin -- 540 0 0 125 0 0 testuser -- 440400 500000 550000 37418 0 0
-a
選項)啟用配額之檔案系統的磁碟用量報告,請使用以下指令:
repquota -a
--
displayed after each user is a quick way to determine whether the block or inode limits have been exceeded. If either soft limit is exceeded, a +
appears in place of the corresponding -
; the first -
represents the block limit, and the second represents the inode limit.
grace
columns are normally blank. If a soft limit has been exceeded, the column contains a time specification equal to the amount of time remaining on the grace period. If the grace period has expired, none
appears in its place.
quotacheck
include:
/etc/cron.daily/
or /etc/cron.weekly/
directory—or schedule one using the crontab -e
command—that contains the touch /forcequotacheck
command. This creates an empty forcequotacheck
file in the root directory, which the system init script looks for at boot time. If it is found, the init script runs quotacheck
. Afterward, the init script removes the /forcequotacheck
file; thus, scheduling this file to be created periodically with cron
ensures that quotacheck
is run during the next reboot.
cron
.
quotacheck
is to (re-)boot the system into single-user mode to prevent the possibility of data corruption in quota files and run:
~]# quotaoff -vaug /<file_system>
~]# quotacheck -vaug /<file_system>
~]# quotaon -vaug /<file_system>
quotacheck
on a machine during a time when no users are logged in, and thus have no open files on the file system being checked. Run the command quotacheck -vaug <file_system>
; this command will fail if quotacheck
cannot remount the given <file_system>
as read-only. Note that, following the check, the file system will be remounted read-write.
quotacheck
on a live file system mounted read-write is not recommended due to the possibility of quota file corruption.
cron
.
acl
package is required to implement ACLs. It contains the utilities used to add, modify, remove, and retrieve ACL information.
cp
and mv
commands copy or move any ACLs associated with files and directories.
mount -t ext3 -o acl <device-name>
<partition>
mount -t ext3 -o acl /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02 /work
/etc/fstab
file, the entry for the partition can include the acl
option:
LABEL=/work /work ext3 acl 1 2
--with-acl-support
選項,所以 ACL 將可以被 辨識。 當您存取或掛載一個 samba 共享時,不需要任何特殊的旗號(flag)。
no_acl
option in the /etc/exports
file. To disable ACLs on an NFS share when mounting it on a client, mount it with the no_acl
option via the command line or the /etc/fstab
file.
setfacl
utility sets ACLs for files and directories. Use the -m
option to add or modify the ACL of a file or directory:
setfacl -m <rules>
<files>
<rules>
) must be specified in the following formats. Multiple rules can be specified in the same command if they are separated by commas.
u:<uid>
:<perms>
g:<gid>
:<perms>
m:<perms>
o:<perms>
<perms>
) must be a combination of the characters r
, w
, and x
for read, write, and execute.
setfacl
command is used, the additional rules are added to the existing ACL or the existing rule is modified.
setfacl -m u:andrius:rw /project/somefile
-x
option and do not specify any permissions:
setfacl -x <rules>
<files>
setfacl -x u:500 /project/somefile
d:
before the rule and specify a directory instead of a file name.
/share/
directory to read and execute for users not in the user group (an access ACL for an individual file can override it):
setfacl -m d:o:rx /share
getfacl
command. In the example below, the getfacl
is used to determine the existing ACLs for a file.
getfacl home/john/picture.png
# file: home/john/picture.png # owner: john # group: john user::rw- group::r-- other::r--
[john@main /]$ getfacl home/sales/
# file: home/sales/
# owner: john
# group: john
user::rw-
user:barryg:r--
group::r--
mask::r--
other::r--
default:user::rwx
default:user:john:rwx
default:group::r-x
default:mask::rwx
default:other::r-x
tar
and dump
commands do not backup ACLs.
star
utility is similar to the tar
utility in that it can be used to generate archives of files; however, some of its options are different. Refer to 表格 9.1, “Command Line Options for star
” for a listing of more commonly used options. For all available options, refer to the star
man page. The star
package is required to use this utility.
star
選項 | 說明 |
---|---|
-c
| 建立一個歸檔檔案。 |
-n
|
不解開檔案,如果與 -x 選項一起使用的話,將可顯示出此指令將做的事情。
|
-r
| 取代歸檔中的檔案,檔案將會被寫入到歸檔檔案的最後,而且將會取代含有相同路徑與相同檔名的任何檔案。 |
-t
| 顯示出歸檔檔案的內容。 |
-u
| 更新歸檔檔案,假如檔案不存在歸檔中或檔案比歸檔中相同檔名的檔案還要新,它們將會被寫入到歸檔的最後。 這個選項只適用於當歸檔是一個檔案時或者是一個可以再度寫入的未關閉磁帶時。 |
-x
|
從歸檔解開檔案,假如使用 -U 選項而且歸檔中的一個檔案比檔案系統上所對應的檔案還要舊, 將不會解開該檔案。
|
-help
| 顯示出最重要的選項。 |
-xhelp
| 顯示出最不重要的選項。 |
-/
| 從歸檔解開檔案時,不去除檔名前面的斜線。 預設情況下,當解開檔案時它們將會被除去。 |
-acl
| 當建立或解開時,歸檔或回復與檔案與目錄關聯的任何 ACL。 |
ext_attr
attribute. This attribute can be seen using the following command:
tune2fs -l <filesystem-device>
ext_attr
attribute can be mounted with older kernels, but those kernels do not enforce any ACLs which have been set.
e2fsck
utility included in version 1.22 and higher of the e2fsprogs
package (including the versions in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 2.1 and 4) can check a file system with the ext_attr
attribute. Older versions refuse to check it.
acl
man page — Description of ACLs
getfacl
man page — Discusses how to get file access control lists
setfacl
man page — Explains how to set file access control lists
star
man page — Explains more about the star
utility and its many options
/boot
partition. The /boot
partition cannot be on a logical volume group because the boot loader cannot read it. If the root (/
) partition is on a logical volume, create a separate /boot
partition which is not a part of a volume group.
/home
and /
and file system types, such as ext2 or ext3. When "partitions" reach their full capacity, free space from the volume group can be added to the logical volume to increase the size of the partition. When a new hard drive is added to the system, it can be added to the volume group, and partitions that are logical volumes can be increased in size.
system-config-lvm
utility to create your own LVM configuration post-installation. The next two sections focus on using Disk Druid during installation to complete this task. The third section introduces the LVM utility (system-config-lvm
) which allows you to manage your LVM volumes in X windows or graphically.
/dev/sda
and /dev/sdb
) are used in the following examples. They detail how to create a simple configuration using a single LVM volume group with associated logical volumes during installation.
/boot
partition resides on its own non-LVM partition. In the following example, it is the first partition on the first drive (/dev/sda1
). Bootable partitions cannot reside on LVM logical volumes.
VolGroup00
) is created, which spans all selected drives and all remaining space available. In the following example, the remainder of the first drive (/dev/sda2
), and the entire second drive (/dev/sdb1
) are allocated to the volume group.
LogVol00
and LogVol01
) are created from the newly created spanned volume group. In the following example, the recommended swap space is automatically calculated and assigned to LogVol01
, and the remainder is allocated to the root file system, LogVol00
.
/home
or /var
, so that each file system has its own independent quota configuration limits.
/boot
Partition/boot
partition cannot reside on an LVM volume because the GRUB boot loader cannot read it.
/boot
Partition Displayed
/boot
Partition Displayed/
, /home
, and swap space. Remember that /boot
cannot be a logical volume. To add a logical volume, click the button in the Logical Volumes section. A dialog window as shown in 圖形 10.10, “Creating a Logical Volume” appears.
system-config-lvm
system-config-lvm
from a terminal.
/boot - (Ext3) file system. Displayed under 'Uninitialized Entities'. (DO NOT initialize this partition). LogVol00 - (LVM) contains the (/) directory (312 extents). LogVol02 - (LVM) contains the (/home) directory (128 extents). LogVol03 - (LVM) swap (28 extents).
/dev/hda2
while /boot
was created in /dev/hda1
. The system also consists of 'Uninitialized Entities' which are illustrated in 圖形 10.17, “Uninitialized Entities”. The figure below illustrates the main window in the LVM utility. The logical and the physical views of the above configuration are illustrated below. The three logical volumes exist on the same physical volume (hda2).
/
(root) directory, this task will not be successful as the volume cannot be unmounted.
/boot
. Uninitialized entities are illustrated below.
/dev/hda6
was selected as illustrated below.
/mnt/backups
. This is illustrated in the figure below.
rpm -qd lvm2
— This command shows all the documentation available from the lvm
package, including man pages.
lvm help
— This command shows all LVM commands available.
內容目錄
rpm
package. For the end user, RPM makes system updates easy. Installing, uninstalling, and upgrading RPM packages can be accomplished with short commands. RPM maintains a database of installed packages and their files, so you can invoke powerful queries and verifications on your system. If you prefer a graphical interface, you can use the Package Management Tool to perform many RPM commands. Refer to 章 12, Package Management Tool for details.
.tar.gz
files.
rpm --help
or man rpm
. You can also refer to 節 11.5, “其他的資源” for more information on RPM.
foo-1.0-1.i386.rpm
. The file name includes the package name (foo
), version (1.0
), release (1
), and architecture (i386
). To install a package, log in as root and type the following command at a shell prompt:
rpm -ivh foo-1.0-1.i386.rpm
rpm -Uvh foo-1.0-1.i386.rpm
Preparing... ########################################### [100%] 1:foo ########################################### [100%]
error: V3 DSA signature: BAD, key ID 0352860f
error: Header V3 DSA signature: BAD, key ID 0352860f
NOKEY
such as:
warning: V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID 0352860f
rpm -ivh
instead. Refer to 章 42, Manually Upgrading the Kernel for details.
Preparing... ########################################### [100%] package foo-1.0-1 is already installed
--replacepkgs
option, which tells RPM to ignore the error:
rpm -ivh --replacepkgs foo-1.0-1.i386.rpm
Preparing... ########################################### [100%] file /usr/bin/foo from install of foo-1.0-1 conflicts with file from package bar-2.0.20
--replacefiles
option:
rpm -ivh --replacefiles foo-1.0-1.i386.rpm
error: Failed dependencies: bar.so.2 is needed by foo-1.0-1 Suggested resolutions: bar-2.0.20-3.i386.rpm
rpm -ivh foo-1.0-1.i386.rpm bar-2.0.20-3.i386.rpm
Preparing... ########################################### [100%] 1:foo ########################################### [ 50%] 2:bar ########################################### [100%]
-q --whatprovides
option combination to determine which package contains the required file.
rpm -q --whatprovides bar.so.2
--nodeps
option.
rpm -e foo
foo
, not the name of the original package file foo-1.0-1.i386.rpm
. To uninstall a package, replace foo
with the actual package name of the original package.
error: Failed dependencies: foo is needed by (installed) bar-2.0.20-3.i386.rpm
--nodeps
option.
rpm -Uvh foo-2.0-1.i386.rpm
foo
package. Note that -U
will also install a package even when there are no previous versions of the package installed.
-U
option for installing kernel packages, because RPM replaces the previous kernel package. This does not affect a running system, but if the new kernel is unable to boot during your next restart, there would be no other kernel to boot instead.
-i
option adds the kernel to your GRUB boot menu (/etc/grub.conf
). Similarly, removing an old, unneeded kernel removes the kernel from GRUB.
saving /etc/foo.conf as /etc/foo.conf.rpmsave
package foo-2.0-1 (which is newer than foo-1.0-1) is already installed
--oldpackage
option:
rpm -Uvh --oldpackage foo-1.0-1.i386.rpm
rpm -Fvh foo-1.2-1.i386.rpm
rpm -Fvh *.rpm
/var/lib/rpm/
, and is used to query what packages are installed, what versions each package is, and any changes to any files in the package since installation, among others.
-q
option. The rpm -q package name
command displays the package name, version, and release number of the installed package package name
. For example, using rpm -q foo
to query installed package foo
might generate the following output:
foo-2.0-1
-q
to further refine or qualify your query:
-a
— queries all currently installed packages.
-f <filename>
— queries the RPM database for which package owns f<filename>
. When specifying a file, specify the absolute path of the file (for example, rpm -qf /bin/ls
).
-p <packagefile>
— queries the uninstalled package <packagefile>
.
-i
displays package information including name, description, release, size, build date, install date, vendor, and other miscellaneous information.
-l
displays the list of files that the package contains.
-s
displays the state of all the files in the package.
-d
displays a list of files marked as documentation (man pages, info pages, READMEs, etc.).
-c
displays a list of files marked as configuration files. These are the files you edit after installation to adapt and customize the package to your system (for example, sendmail.cf
, passwd
, inittab
, etc.).
-v
to the command to display the lists in a familiar ls -l
format.
rpm -V
verifies a package. You can use any of the Verify Options listed for querying to specify the packages you wish to verify. A simple use of verifying is rpm -V foo
, which verifies that all the files in the foo
package are as they were when they were originally installed. For example:
rpm -Vf /usr/bin/foo
/usr/bin/foo
is the absolute path to the file used to query a package.
rpm -Va
rpm -Vp foo-1.0-1.i386.rpm
c
denotes a configuration file) and then the file name. Each of the eight characters denotes the result of a comparison of one attribute of the file to the value of that attribute recorded in the RPM database. A single period (.
) means the test passed. The following characters denote specific discrepancies:
5
— MD5 checksum
S
— file size
L
— symbolic link
T
— file modification time
D
— device
U
— user
G
— group
M
— mode (includes permissions and file type)
?
— unreadable file
<rpm-file>
is the file name of the RPM package):
rpm -K --nosignature <rpm-file>
<rpm-file>
: md5 OK
is displayed. This brief message means that the file was not corrupted by the download. To see a more verbose message, replace -K
with -Kvv
in the command.
x
files as well.
rpm --import /etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-redhat-release
rpm -qa gpg-pubkey*
gpg-pubkey-37017186-45761324
rpm -qi
followed by the output from the previous command:
rpm -qi gpg-pubkey-37017186-45761324
<rpm-file>
with the filename of the RPM package):
rpm -K <rpm-file>
md5 gpg OK
. This means that the signature of the package has been verified, and that it is not corrupt.
rpm -Va
rpm -qf /usr/bin/ggv
ggv-2.6.0-2
/usr/bin/paste
. You would like to verify the package that owns that program, but you do not know which package owns paste
. Enter the following command,
rpm -Vf /usr/bin/paste
rpm -qdf /usr/bin/free
/usr/share/doc/procps-3.2.3/BUGS /usr/share/doc/procps-3.2.3/FAQ /usr/share/doc/procps-3.2.3/NEWS /usr/share/doc/procps-3.2.3/TODO /usr/share/man/man1/free.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/pgrep.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/pkill.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/pmap.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/ps.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/skill.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/slabtop.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/snice.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/tload.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/top.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/uptime.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/w.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/watch.1.gz /usr/share/man/man5/sysctl.conf.5.gz /usr/share/man/man8/sysctl.8.gz /usr/share/man/man8/vmstat.8.gz
rpm -qip crontabs-1.10-7.noarch.rpm
Name : crontabs Relocations: (not relocatable) Version : 1.10 Vendor: Red Hat, Inc. Release : 7 Build Date: Mon 20 Sep 2004 05:58:10 PM EDT Install Date: (not installed) Build Host: tweety.build.redhat.com Group : System Environment/Base Source RPM: crontabs-1.10-7.src.rpm Size : 1004 License: Public Domain Signature : DSA/SHA1, Wed 05 Jan 2005 06:05:25 PM EST, Key ID 219180cddb42a60e Packager : Red Hat, Inc. <http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla> Summary : Root crontab files used to schedule the execution of programs. Description : The crontabs package contains root crontab files. Crontab is the program used to install, uninstall, or list the tables used to drive the cron daemon. The cron daemon checks the crontab files to see when particular commands are scheduled to be executed. If commands are scheduled, then it executes them.
crontabs
RPM installs. You would enter the following:
rpm -qlp crontabs-1.10-5.noarch.rpm
/etc/cron.daily /etc/cron.hourly /etc/cron.monthly /etc/cron.weekly /etc/crontab /usr/bin/run-parts
rpm --help
— This command displays a quick reference of RPM parameters.
man rpm
— The RPM man page gives more detail about RPM parameters than the rpm --help
command.
rpm
command does.
rpm -e --nodeps
or rpm -U --nodeps
can.
system-config-packages
or pirut
at shell prompt.
yum
searches numerous repositories for packages and their dependencies so they may be installed together in an effort to alleviate dependency issues. Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.8 uses yum
to fetch packages and install RPMs.
up2date
is now deprecated in favor of yum
(Yellowdog Updater Modified). The entire stack of tools which installs and updates software in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.8 is now based on yum
. This includes everything, from the initial installation via Anaconda to host software management tools like pirut
.
yum
also allows system administrators to configure a local (i.e. available over a local network) repository to supplement packages provided by Red Hat. This is useful for user groups that use applications and packages that are not officially supported by Red Hat.
yum
repository also saves bandwidth for the entire network. Further, clients that use local yum
repositories do not need to be registered individually to install or update the latest packages from Red Hat Network.
createrepo
package:
~]# yum install createrepo
/mnt/local_repo
for example).
createrepo
on that directory (for example, createrepo /mnt/local_repo
). This will create the necessary metadata for your Yum repository.
yum
Commandsyum
commands are typically run as yum <command> <package name/s>
. By default, yum
will automatically attempt to check all configured repositories to resolve all package dependencies during an installation/upgrade.
yum
commands. For a complete list of available yum
commands, refer to man yum
.
yum install <package name/s>
yum update <package name/s>
yum
will attempt to update all installed packages.
--obsoletes
option is used (i.e. yum --obsoletes <package name/s>
, yum
will process obsolete packages. As such, packages that are obsoleted across updates will be removed and replaced accordingly.
yum check-update
yum
returns a list of all package updates from all repositories if any are available.
yum remove <package name/s>
yum provides <file name>
yum search <keyword>
yum localinstall <absolute path to package name/s>
yum
to install a package located locally in the machine.
yum
Optionsyum
options are typically stated before specific yum
commands; i.e. yum <options> <command> <package name/s>
. Most of these options can be set as default using the configuration file.
yum
options. For a complete list of available yum
options, refer to man yum
.
-y
-t
yum
to be "tolerant" of errors with regard to packages specified in the transaction. For example, if you run yum update package1 package2
and package2
is already installed, yum
will continue to install package1
.
--exclude=<package name>
yum
yum
is configured through /etc/yum.conf
. The following is an example of a typical /etc/yum.conf
file:
[main] cachedir=/var/cache/yum keepcache=0 debuglevel=2 logfile=/var/log/yum.log distroverpkg=redhat-release tolerant=1 exactarch=1 obsoletes=1 gpgcheck=1 plugins=1 metadata_expire=1800 [myrepo] name=RHEL 5 $releasever - $basearch baseurl=http://local/path/to/yum/repository/ enabled=1
/etc/yum.conf
file is made up of two types of sections: a [main]
section, and a repository section. There can only be one [main]
section, but you can specify multiple repositories in a single /etc/yum.conf
.
[main]
Options[main]
section is mandatory, and there must only be one. For a complete list of options you can use in the [main]
section, refer to man yum.conf
.
[main]
section.
cachedir
yum
should store its cache and database files. By default, the cache directory of yum
is /var/cache/yum
.
keepcache=<1 or 0>
keepcache=1
instructs yum
to keep the cache of headers and packages after a successful installation. keepcache=1
is the default.
reposdir=<absolute path to directory of .repo files>
.repo
files are located. .repo
files contain repository information (similar to the [repository
]
section of /etc/yum.conf
).
yum
collects all repository information from .repo
files and the [repository
]
section of the /etc/yum.conf
file to create a master list of repositories to use for each transaction. Refer to 節 13.4.2, “ [repository
]
Options” for more information about options you can use for both the [repository
]
section and .repo
files.
reposdir
is not set, yum
uses the default directory /etc/yum.repos.d
.
gpgcheck=<1 or 0>
gpgcheck=0
, which disables GPG checking.
[main]
section of the /etc/yum.conf
file, it sets the GPG checking rule for all repositories. However, you can also set this on individual repositories instead; i.e., you can enable GPG checking on one repository while disabling it on another.
assumeyes=<1 or 0>
yum
should prompt for confirmation of critical actions. The default if assumeyes=0
, which means yum
will prompt you for confirmation.
assumeyes=1
is set, yum
behaves in the same way that the command line option -y
does.
tolerant=<1 or 0>
tolerant=1
), yum
will be tolerant of errors on the command line with regard to packages. This is similar to the yum
command line option -t
.
tolerant=0
(not tolerant).
exclude=<package name/s>
retries=<number of retries>
yum
should attempt to retrieve a file before returning an error. Setting this to 0 makes yum
retry forever. The default value is 6.
[repository
]
Options[repository
]
section of the /etc/yum.conf
file contains information about a repository yum
can use to find packages during package installation, updating and dependency resolution. A repository entry takes the following form:
[repository ID
] name=repository name
baseurl=url, file or ftp
://path to repository
.repo
files (for example, rhel5.repo
). The format of repository information placed in .repo
files is identical with the [repository
]
of /etc/yum.conf
.
.repo
files are typically placed in /etc/yum.repos.d
, unless you specify a different repository path in the [main]
section of /etc/yum.conf
with reposdir=
. .repo
files and the /etc/yum.conf
file can contain multiple repository entries.
repository ID
]name=repository name
baseurl=http, file or ftp
://path
repodata
directory of a repository is located. If the repository is local to the machine, use baseurl=file://path to local repository
. If the repository is located online using HTTP, use baseurl=http://link
. If the repository is online and uses FTP, use baseurl=ftp://link
.
baseurl
line by prepending it as username
:password
@link
. For example, if a repository on http://www.example.com/repo/ requires a username of "user" and a password os "password", then the baseurl
link can be specified as baseurl=http://user:password@www.example.com/repo/
.
man yum.conf
.
gpgcheck=<1 or 0>
gpgcheck=0
, which disables GPG checking.
gpgkey=URL
yum
needs a public key to verify a package and the required key was not imported into the RPM database.
yum
will automatically import the key from the specified URL. You will be prompted before the key is installed unless you set assumeyes=1
(in the [main]
section of /etc/yum.conf
) or -y
(in a yum
transaction).
exclude=<package name/s>
exclude
option in the [main]
section of /etc/yum.conf
. However, it only applies to the repository in which it is specified.
includepkgs=<package name/s>
exclude
. When this option is set on a repository, yum
will only be able to see the specified packages in that repository. By default, all packages in a repository are visible to yum
.
yum
Variablesyum
commands and yum
configuration files (i.e. /etc/yum.conf
and .repo
files).
$releasever
distroverpkg
. This defaults to the version of the redhat-release
package.
$arch
os.uname()
in Python.
$basearch
$arch
=i686 then $basearch
=i386.
$YUM0-9
yum
to unit content delivery with subscription management. The Subscription Manager handles only the subscription-system associations. yum
or other package management tools handle the actual content delivery. 章 13, YUM (Yellowdog Updater Modified) describes how to use yum
.
yum
plug-ins that come with the Subscription Manager tools.
root
because of the nature of the changes to the system. However, Red Hat Subscription Manager connects to the subscription service as a user account for the Customer Service Portal.
firstboot
process for configuring content and updates, but the system can be registered at any time through the Red Hat Subscription Manager GUI or CLI. New subscriptions, new products, and updates can be viewed and applied to a system through the Red Hat Subscription Manager tools.
yum
service through the Red Hat Subscription Manager yum plug-in.
yum
.
root
.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager-gui
subscription-manager
tool. This tools has the following format:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager command [options]
subscription-manager
help and manpage have more information.
Command | Description |
---|---|
register | Registers or identifies a new system to the subscription service. |
unregister | Unregisters a machine, which strips its subscriptions and removes the machine from the subscription service. |
subscribe | Allocates a specific subscription to the machine. |
redeem | Autosubscribes a machine to a pre-specified subscription that was purchased from a vendor, based on its hardware and BIOS information. |
refresh |
Pulls the latest entitlement data from the server. Normally, the system polls the entitlement server at a set interval (4 hours by default) to check for any changes in the available subscriptions. The refresh command checks with the entitlement server right then, outside the normal interval.
|
unsubscribe | Removes a specific subscription or all subscriptions from the machine. |
list | Lists all of the subscriptions that are compatible with a machine, either subscriptions that are actually consumed by the machine or unused subscriptions that are available to the machine. |
identity | Handles the identity certificate and registration ID for a system. This command can be used to return the current UUID or generate a new identity certificate. |
facts | Lists the system information, like the release version, number of CPUs, and other architecture information. |
clean |
Removes all of the subscription and identity data from the local system, without affecting the consumer information in the subscription service. Any of the subscriptions consumed by the system are still consumed and are not available for other systems to use. The clean command is useful in cases where the local entitlement information is corrupted or lost somehow, and the system will be reregistered using the register --consumerid=EXISTING_ID command.
|
orgs, repos, environments | Lists all of the configured organizations, environments, and content repositories that are available to the given user account or system. These commands are used to view information in a multi-org infrastructure. They are not used to configure the local machine or multi-org infrastructure. |
libvirt-rhsm
, checks VMWare, KVM, and Xen processes and then relays that information to Subscription Manager and any configured subscription service (Certificate-based Red Hat Network or a local Subscription Asset Manager). Each guest machine on a host is assigned a guest ID, and that guest ID is both associated with the host and used to generate the identity certificate for the guest when it is registered.
system
type of consumer.
system
, meaning that each individual server subscribes to its own entitlements for its own use. There is another type of consumer, though, which is available for server groups, the domain
type. domain
-based entitlements are not allocated to a single system; they are distributed across the group of servers to govern the behavior of that group of servers. (That server group is called a domain.)
system
consumer and added to the inventory individually.
domain
entitlements apply to the behavior of the entire server group, not to any one system.
domain
entitlements using the Red Hat Subscription Manager tools, and the entitlement certificate is replicated between the domain servers.
subscription-manager-gui
rhsm.conf
configuration file points to the local subscription service (in the hostname
parameter) and the local content server (in the baseurl
parameter). The Subscription Manager configuration is described in 節 14.14, “Configuring the Subscription Service”.
subscription-manager-gui
.zip
file. Save the file to some kind of portable media, like a flash drive.
certificates.zip
file. Unzip the directories until the PEM files for the entitlement certificates are available.
import
command. For example:
# subscription-manager import --certificate=/tmp/export/entitlement_certificates/596576341785244687.pem --certificate=/tmp/export/entitlement_certificates/3195996649750311162.pem Successfully imported certificate 596576341785244687.pem Successfully imported certificate 3195996649750311162.pem
cert.pem
file directly into the /etc/pki/consumer
directory. For example:
cp /tmp/downloads/cert.pem /etc/pki/consumer
register
command with the user account information required to authenticate to the Certificate-Based Red Hat Network (the credentials used to access subscription service or the Customer Portal). When the system is successfully authenticated, it echoes back the newly-assigned consumer ID and the user account name which registered it.
register
options are listed in 表格 14.2, “register Options”.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager register --username admin-example --password secret
7d133d55-876f-4f47-83eb-0ee931cb0a97 admin-example (the new consumer UUID and the account used for registration)
--org
option in addition to the username and password. The given user must also have the access permissions to add systems to that organization. (See 節 14.12, “Working with Subscription Asset Manager” for information about organizations and Subscription Asset Manager.)
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager register --username admin-example --password secret--org="IT Department"
7d133d55-876f-4f47-83eb-0ee931cb0a97 admin-example(the new consumer UUID and the account used for registration)
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager register --username admin-example --password secret --org="IT Department" --environment=Dev1,ITall
register
command returns a Remote Server error.
register
command has an option, --autosubscribe
, which allows the system to be registered to the subscription service and immediately subscribed to the subscription which best matches its architecture in a single step.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager register --username admin-example --password secret --autosubscribe
--activationkey
option.
--org
option, but in multi-org environments, the --org
option is required. The organization is not defined as part of the activation key. See 節 14.12, “Working with Subscription Asset Manager” for information about activation keys and Subscription Asset Manager.
# subscription-manager register --activationkey=1234abcd --org="IT Dept"
Options | Description | Required |
---|---|---|
--username=name | Gives the content server user account name. | Required |
--password=password | Gives the password for the user account. | Required |
--org=name | Gives the organization to which to join the system. | Required, except for hosted environments |
--environment=name | Registers the consumer to an environment within an organization. | Optional |
--name=machine_name | Sets the name of the consumer (machine) to register. This defaults to be the same as the hostname. | Optional |
--autosubscribe | Automatically subscribes this system to the best-matched compatible subscription. This is good for automated setup operations, since the system can be configured in a single step. | Optional |
--activation_key | Applies existing subscriptions as part of the registration process. The subscriptions are pre-assigned by a vendor or by a systems administrator using Subscription Asset Manager. | Optional |
--force | Registers the system even if it is already registered. Normally, any register operations will fail if the machine is already registered. | Optional |
unregister
command. This removes the system's entry from the subscription service, unsubscribes it from any subscriptions, and, locally, deletes its identity and entitlement certificates.
unregister
.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager unregister
register
command. This command passes the original UUID for a system to issue a request to the subscription service to receive a new certificate using the same UUID. This essentially renews its previous registration.
register
command uses the original ID to identify itself to the subscription service and restore its previous subscriptions.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager register --username admin-example --password secret --consumerid=7d133d55-876f-4f47-83eb-0ee931cb0a97
Options | Description | Required |
---|---|---|
--consumerid | Gives the consumer UUID used by an existing consumer. The system's consumer entry must exist in the Red Hat subscription service for the reregister operation to succeed. | Required |
--username=name | Gives the content server user account name. | Optional |
--password=password | Gives the password for the user account. | Optional |
rhn-migrate-classic-to-rhsm
install-num-migrate-to-rhsm
[root@server ~]# yum install subscription-manager-migration subscription-manager-migration-data
rhn-migrate-classic-to-rhsm
script.
rhn-migrate-classic-to-rhsm
script has this syntax:
rhn-migrate-classic-to-rhsm [--force|--cli-only|--help|--no-auto]
[root@server ~]# subscription-manager facts --list | grep migr migration.classic_system_id: 09876 migration.migrated_from: rhn_hosted_classic
rhn-migrate-classic-to-rhsm
tool migrates the system profile and then opens the Subscription Manager GUI so that administrators can assign subscriptions to the system.
[root@server ~]# rhn-migrate-classic-to-rhsm RHN Username: jsmith@example.com Password:
Retrieving existing RHN classic subscription information ... +----------------------------------+ System is currently subscribed to: +----------------------------------+ rhel-i386-client-5
/etc/pki/product
directory.
List of channels for which certs are being copied rhel-i386-client-5 Product Certificates copied successfully to /etc/pki/product !!
Preparing to unregister system from RHN classic ... System successfully unregistered from RHN Classic.
Attempting to register system to Certificate-based RHN ... The system has been registered with id: abcd1234 System server.example.com successfully registered to Certificate-based RHN. Launching the GUI tool to manually subscribe the system ...
rhn-migrate-classic-to-rhsm
can automatically subscribe the system to matching subscriptions.
--cli-only
option tells the rhn-migrate-classic-to-rhsm
to register the system with the autosubscribe option, so all of the migration process occurs in the command line.
[root@server ~]# rhn-migrate-classic-to-rhsm --cli-only RHN Username: jsmith@example.com Password: .... Attempting to auto-subscribe to appropriate subscriptions ... Installed Product Current Status: ProductName: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Desktop Status: Subscribed Please visit https://access.redhat.com/management/consumers/abcd1234 to view the details, and to make changes if necessary.
rhn-migrate-classic-to-rhsm
tool can be used simply to unregister a system from RHN Classic. This still copies over the product certificates for the classic channels to configure the system in the style of certificate-based subscriptions, but it does not register the machine with subscription service.
--no-auto
option.
[root@server ~]# rhn-migrate-classic-to-rhsm --no-auto RHN Username: jsmith@example.com Password: Retrieving existing RHN classic subscription information ... +----------------------------------+ System is currently subscribed to: +----------------------------------+ rhel-i386-client-5 List of channels for which certs are being copied rhel-i386-client-5 Product Certificates copied successfully to /etc/pki/product !! Preparing to unregister system from RHN classic ... System successfully unregistered from RHN Classic.
rhn-migrate-classic-to-rhsm
uses the information in /etc/sysconfig/rhn/systemid
to get the previous registration information and map channels to certificates. If a system is disconnected, it may not have a systemid
file.
/etc/sysconfig/rhn/install-num file
.
[root@server ~]# python /usr/lib/python2.4/site-packages/instnum.py da3122afdb7edd23 Product: RHEL Client Type: Installer Only Options: Eval FullProd Workstation Allowed CPU Sockets: Unlimited Allowed Virtual Instances: Unlimited Package Repositories: Client Workstation key: 14299426 "da3122" checksum: 175 "af" options: 4416 "Eval FullProd Workstation" socklimit: -1 "Unlimited" virtlimit: -1 "Unlimited" type: 2 "Installer Only" product: 1 "client" {"Workstation": "Workstation", "Base": "Client"}
install-num-migrate-to-rhsm
script identifies the channels that a disconnected system is subscribed to and then copies in the appropriate product certificates. Simply run the command:
[root@server ~]# install-num-migrate-to-rhsm
/etc/pki/product
directory.
[root@server ~]# subscription-manager facts --list | grep migr migration.migrated_from: install_number
/usr/share/rhsm/product/RHEL-5/channel-cert-mapping.txt
) uses simple keys to map the values:
channel_name
:product_name-hash-product_cert
.pem
rhel-i386-client-workstation-5: Client-Workstation-i386-b0d4c042-6e31-45a9-bd94-ff0b82e43b1a-71.pem
.pem
and the product certificate is copied into the /etc/pki/product
directory. For the rhel-i386-client-workstation-5
, this migrates to the 71.pem
product certificate (the last two digits of the mapping).
jbappplatform-4.3.0-fp-i386-server-5-rpm: none
subscription-manager-gui
subscription-manager-gui
--pool
option.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager subscribe --pool=XYZ01234567
subscribe
command are listed in 表格 14.4, “subscribe Options”.
list
command:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager list --available
+-------------------------------------------+
Available Subscriptions
+-------------------------------------------+
ProductName: RHEL for Physical Servers
ProductId: MKT-rhel-server
PoolId: ff8080812bc382e3012bc3845ca000cb
Quantity: 10
Expires: 2011-09-20
--auto
option (which is analogous to the --autosubscribe
option with the register
command).
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager subscribe --auto
Options | Description | Required |
---|---|---|
--pool=pool-id | Gives the ID for the subscription to subscribe the machine to. |
Required, unless --auto is used
|
--auto | Automatically subscribes the system to the best-match subscription or subscriptions. | Optional |
--quantity | Subscribes multiple counts of an entitlement to the system. This is used to cover subscriptions that define a count limit, like using two 2-socket server subscriptions to cover a 4-socket machine. | Optional |
unsubscribe
command with the --all
unsubscribes the system from every product and subscription pool it is currently subscribed to.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager unsubscribe --all
unsubscribe
command to remove only that product subscription.
cert.pem
file or by using the list
command. For example:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager list --consumed +-------------------------------------------+ Consumed Product Subscriptions +-------------------------------------------+ ProductName: High availability (cluster suite) ContractNumber: 0 SerialNumber: 11287514358600162 Active: True Begins: 2010-09-18 Expires: 2011-11-18
--serial
option to specify the certificate.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager unsubscribe --serial=11287514358600162
--quantity
option. The quantity taken applies to the product in the --pool
option:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager subscribe --pool=XYZ01234567 --quantity=2
.zip
file. Save the file to some kind of portable media, like a flash drive.
certificates.zip
file. Unzip the directories until the PEM files for the subscription certificates are available.
import
command:
# subscription-manager import --certificate=/tmp/export/entitlement_certificates/596576341785244687.pem --certificate=/tmp/export/entitlement_certificates/3195996649750311162.pem Successfully imported certificate 596576341785244687.pem Successfully imported certificate 3195996649750311162.pem
subscription-manager-gui
.pem
file of the product certificate.
subscription-manager-gui
redeem
command, with an email address to send the redemption email to when the process is complete.
# subscription-manager redeem --email=jsmith@example.com
# subscription-manager redeem --email=jsmith@example.com --org="IT Dept"
list
command to display different areas of the subscriptions and products on the system.
Option | Description |
---|---|
--installed (or nothing) |
Lists all of the installed and subscribed product on the system. If no option is given with list , it is the same as using the --installed argument.
|
--consumed | Lists all of the subscriptions allocated to the system. |
--available [--all] |
Using --available alone lists all of the compatible, active subscriptions for the system. Using --available --all lists all options, even ones not compatible with the system or with no more available quantities.
|
--ondate=YYYY-MM-DD |
Shows subscriptions which are active and available on the specified date. This is only used with the --available option. If this is not used, then the command uses the current date.
|
--installed | Lists all of the products that are installed on the system (and whether they have a subscription) and it lists all of the product subscriptions which are assigned to the system (and whether those products are installed). |
list
command shows all of the subscriptions that are currently allocated to the system by using the --consumed
option.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager list --consumed +-------------------------------------------+ Consumed Product Subscriptions +-------------------------------------------+ ProductName: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server ContractNumber: 1458961 SerialNumber: 171286550006020205 Active: True Begins: 2009-01-01 Expires: 2011-12-31
list
command shows all of the subscriptions that are compatible with and available to the system using the --available
option. To include every subscription the organization has — both the ones that are compatible with the system and others for other platforms — use the --all
option with the --available
. The --ondate
option shows only subscriptions which are active on that date, based on their activation and expiry dates.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager list --available --all
+-------------------------------------------+
Available Subscriptions
+-------------------------------------------+
ProductName: RHEL for Physical Servers
ProductId: MKT-rhel-server
PoolId: ff8080812bc382e3012bc3845ca000cb
Quantity: 10
Expires: 2011-09-20
ProductName: RHEL Workstation
ProductId: MKT-rhel-workstation-mkt
PoolId: 5e09a31f95885cc4
Quantity: 10
Expires: 2011-09-20
[snip]
--installed
option correlates the products that are actually installed on the system (and their subscription status) and the products which could be installed on the system based on the assigned subscriptions (and whether those products are installed).
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager list --installed
+-------------------------------------------+
Installed Product Status
+-------------------------------------------+
ProductName: Red Hat Enterprise Linux
Status: Not Subscribed
Expires:
Subscription:
ContractNumber:
AccountNumber:
ProductName: Awesome OS Server
Status: Not Installed
Expires: 2012-02-20
Subscription: 54129829316535230
ContractNumber: 39
AccountNumber: 12331131231
yum
. Subscription Manager has its own yum
plug-ins: product-id
for subscription-related information for products and subscription-manager
which is used for the content repositories.
baseurl
parameter of the rhsm.conf
file.
[root@server ~]# yum repolist all repo id repo name status rhel-5-server Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5Server - enabled: 1,749 rhel-5-server-beta Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5Server Be enabled: 869 rhel-5-server-optional-rpms Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5Server Op disabled rhel-5-server-supplementary Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5Server Su disabled
rhel-5-server-optional-rpms
and rhel-5-server-supplementary
, respectively.
yum-config-manager
command:
[root@server ~]# yum-config-manager --enable rhel-5-server-optional-rpms
yum
. This uses the --enablerepo
repo_name option. For example:
# yum install rubygems --enablerepo=rhel-5-server-optional-rpms Loaded plugins:product-id
, refresh-packagekit,subscription-manager
Updating Red Hat repositories. ....
yum
is described in 章 13, YUM (Yellowdog Updater Modified).
[root@server ~]# subscription-manager list
+-------------------------------------------+
Installed Product Status
+-------------------------------------------+
ProductName: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server
Status: Not Subscribed
Expires:
SerialNumber:
ContractNumber:
AccountNumber:
rhsmcertd
. This daemon checks the certificate validity dates daily. If a subscription is within 24 hours of expiring, then Subscription Manager will check for any available compatible subscriptions and automatically re-subscribes the system, much like auto-subscribing during registration.
autoheal
parameter to the Subscription Manager configuration.
vim /etc/rhsm/rhsm.conf
[rhsmcertd]
area, add the autoheal
line, and set the value to true.
[rhsmcertd]
certFrequency = 240
healFrequency = 1440
autoheal = true
config
command:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager config --rhsmcertd.autoheal=true
healFrequency
parameter to zero means that Subscription Manager simply uses the default time setting.
# vim /etc/rhsm/rhsm.conf
[rhsmcertd]
section, set the healFrequency
parameter to the time, in minutes, to check for changed subscriptions.
[rhsmcertd] certFrequency = 240 healFrequency = 1440
rhsmcertd
daemon to reload the configuration.
# service rhsmcertd start
hostname
parameter in the [server]
area in the rhsm.conf
configuration file. The content delivery network URL is configured in the baseurl
parameter in the [rhsm]
area. These values can be reset using the config
command. For example:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager config --server.hostname=sam.example.com --rhsm.baseurl=sam.example.com
config
command is covered in 節 14.14.2, “Using the config Command”.
orgs
, environments
, and repos
commands list the organization, environment, and repository information for the system, depending on the organization and environments it belongs to.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager orgs --username=jsmith --password=secret +-------------------------------------------+ admin Organizations +-------------------------------------------+ OrgName: Admin Owner OrgKey: admin OrgName: Dev East OrgKey: deveast OrgName: Dev West OrgKey: devwest [root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager environments --username=jsmith --password=secret --org=admin +-------------------------------------------+ Environments +-------------------------------------------+ Name: Locker Description: None Name: Dev Description: Name: Prod Description: [root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager repos --list +----------------------------------------------------------+ Entitled Repositories in /etc/yum.repos.d/redhat.repo +----------------------------------------------------------+ RepoName: never-enabled-content RepoId: never-enabled-content RepoUrl: https://content.example.com/repos/optional Enabled: 0 RepoName: always-enabled-content RepoId: always-enabled-content RepoUrl: https://content.example.com/repos/dev Enabled: 1 RepoName: content RepoId: content-label RepoUrl: https://content.example.com/repos/prod Enabled: 1
.pem
file.
https://access.redhat.com/
certificates.zip
file. Unzip the directories until the PEM files for the entitlement certificates are available.
import
command:
# subscription-manager import --certificate=/tmp/export/entitlement_certificates/596576341785244687.pem --certificate=/tmp/export/entitlement_certificates/3195996649750311162.pem Successfully imported certificate 596576341785244687.pem Successfully imported certificate 3195996649750311162.pem
refresh
command updates all of the subscription information that is available to the consumer. This removes expired subscriptions and adds new subscriptions to the list. This does not subscribe the machine, but it does pull in the newest data for administrators to use.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager refresh
rhsm.conf
configuration file. There are other support files that either influence the Red Hat Subscription Manager service or can help administrators better use the Subscription Manager.
File or Directory | Description |
---|---|
/etc/rhsm | The primary Red Hat Subscription Manager configuration directory. |
/etc/rhsm/rhsm.conf | The Red Hat Subscription Manager configuration file. This is used by both the GUI and the CLI. |
/etc/rhsm/facts |
Any user-defined JSON files that override or add system facts to determine entitlement compatibility. Any facts files must end in .facts .
|
/var/lib/rhsm/cache/installed_products.json | A master list of installed products, which is sent by Subscription Manager to a hosted content service, such as Subscription Asset Manager. |
/var/lib/rhsm/facts/facts.facts | The default system facts filed, gathered by the Subscription Manager. |
/var/lib/rhsm/packages/ | The package profile cache (a list of installed products) which is gathered and periodically updated by the Subscription Manager. |
/var/log/rhsm | The Red Hat Subscription Manager log directory. |
/var/log/rhsm/rhsm.log | The log for the Red Hat Subscription Manager tools. |
/var/log/rhsm/rhsmcertd.log |
The log for the Red Hat Subscription Manager daemon, rhsmcertd .
|
/etc/pki/consumer | The directory which contains the identity certificates used by the system to identify itself to the subscription service. |
/etc/pki/consumer/cert.pem | The base-64 consumer identity certificate file. |
/etc/pki/consumer/key.pem | The base-64 consumer identity key file. |
/etc/pki/entitlement | The directory which contains the entitlement certificates for the available subscriptions. |
/etc/pki/product/product_serial# .pem
| The product certificates for installed software products. |
/var/run/subsys/rhsm | Runtime files for Red Hat Subscription Manager |
/etc/init.d/rhsmcertd | The subscription certificate daemon. |
/etc/cron.daily/rhsm-complianced and /usr/libexec/rhsm-complianced | Files to run daily checks and notifications for subscription validity. |
/etc/yum/pluginconf.d/rhsmplugin.conf |
The configuration file to include the Red Hat Subscription Manager plug-in in the yum configuration.
|
/usr/share/rhsm | All of the Python and script files used by both Red Hat Subscription Manager tool to perform subscription tasks. |
/usr/share/rhsm/gui | All of the Python script and image files used to render the Red Hat Subscription Manager GUI. |
rhsm.conf
. This file configures several important aspects of how Red Hat Subscription Manager interacts with both entitlements and content services:
rhsm.conf
file is divided into three sections. Two major sections defined the subscription service ([server]
) and content and product delivery ([rhsm]
). The third section relates to the rhsmcertd
daemon. Each assertion is a simple attribute= value pair. Any of the default values can be edited; all possible attributes are present and active in the default rhsm.conf
file.
# Red Hat Subscription Manager Configuration File: # Unified Entitlement Platform Configuration [server] # Server hostname: hostname = subscription.rhn.redhat.com # Server prefix: prefix = /subscription # Server port: port = 443 # Set to 1 to disable certificate validation: insecure = 0 # Set the depth of certs which should be checked # when validating a certificate ssl_verify_depth = 3 # Server CA certificate location: ca_cert_dir = /etc/rhsm/ca/ # an http proxy server to use proxy_hostname = # port for http proxy server proxy_port = # user name for authenticating to an http proxy, if needed proxy_user = # password for basic http proxy auth, if needed proxy_password = [rhsm] # Content base URL: baseurl= https://cdn.redhat.com # Default CA cert to use when generating yum repo configs: repo_ca_cert = %(ca_cert_dir)sredhat-uep.pem # Where the certificates should be stored productCertDir = /etc/pki/product entitlementCertDir = /etc/pki/entitlement consumerCertDir = /etc/pki/consumer [rhsmcertd] # Frequency of certificate refresh (in minutes): certFrequency = 240 # Frequency of autoheal check (1440 min = 1 day): healFrequency = 1440
Parameter | Description | Default Value |
---|---|---|
[server] Parameters | ||
hostname | Gives the IP address or fully-qualified domain name of the subscription service. | subscription.rhn.redhat.com |
prefix | Gives the directory, in the URL, to use to connect to the subscription service. | /subscription |
port | Gives the port to use to connect to the subscription service. | 443 |
insecure | Sets whether to use a secure (0) or insecure (1) connection for connections between the Subscription Manager clients and the subscription service. | 0 |
ssl_verify_depth | Sets how far back in the certificate chain to verify the certificate. | 3 |
proxy_hostname | Gives the hostname of the proxy server. This is required. | |
proxy_port | Gives the port of the proxy server. This is required. | |
proxy_user | Gives the user account to use to access the proxy server. This may not be required, depending on the proxy server configuration. | |
proxy_password | Gives the password credentials to access the proxy server. This may not be required, depending on the proxy server configuration. | |
ca_cert_dir | Gives the location for the CA certificate for the CA which issued the subscription service's certificates. This allows the client to identify and trust the subscription service for authentication for establishing an SSL connection. | /etc/rhsm/ca |
[rhsm] Parameters | ||
baseurl | Gives the full URL to access the content delivery system. | https://cdn.redhat.com |
repo_ca_cert | Identifies the default CA certificate to use to set the yum repo configuration. | %(ca_cert_dir)sredhat-uep.pem |
showIncompatiblePools |
Sets whether to display subscription pools which are not compatible with the system's architecture but which have been purchased by an organization. By default, Subscription Manager only displays subscriptions which are compatible with, and therefore available to, the system.
This parameter only applies to the Subscription Manager GUI. Incompatible subscriptions can be displayed in the CLI by using the
--all option with the list command.
| 0 |
productCertDir | Sets the root directory where the product certificates are stored and can be accessed by Subscription Manager. | /etc/pki/product |
consumerCertDir | Sets the directory where the identity certificate for the system is stored and can be accessed by Subscription Manager. | /etc/pki/consumer |
entitlementCertDir | Sets the directory where the entitlement certificates for the system are stored and can be accessed by Subscription Manager. Each subscription has its own entitlement certificate. | /etc/pki/entitlement |
[rhsmcertd] Parameters | ||
certFrequency | Sets the interval, in minutes, to check and update entitlement certificates used by Subscription Manager. | 240 |
healFrequency | Sets the interval, in minutes, to check for change subscriptions and installed products and to allocate subscriptions, as necessary, to maintain subscription status for all products. | 240 |
subscription-manager
has a subcommand that can change the rhsm.conf
configuration file. Almost all of the connection information used by Subscription Manager to access the subscription server, content server, and any proxies is set in the configuration file, as well as general configuration parameters like the frequency Subscription Manager checks for entitlements updates. There are major divisions in the rhsm.conf
file, such as [server]
which is used to configure the subscription server. When changing the Subscription Manager configuration, the settings are identified with the format section.parameter and then the new value. For example:
server.hostname=newsubscription.example.com
config
command:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager config --section.parameter
=newValue
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager config --server.hostname=subscription.example.com
rhsm.conf
file parameters are listed in 表格 14.7, “rhsm.conf Parameters”. This is most commonly used to change connection settings:
config
command also has a --remove
option. This deletes the the current value for the parameter without supplying a new parameter. A blank value tells Subscription Manager to use any default values that are set for that parameter rather than a user-defined value. For example:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager config --remove=rhsm.certFrequency The default value for rhsm.certFrequency will now be used.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager config --remove=server.proxy You have removed the value in section server for parameter proxy.
subscription-manager-gui
rhsm.conf
file; this is the same as configuring it in the Subscription Manager GUI. The proxy configuration is stored and used for every connection between the subscription service and the local system.
vim /etc/rhsm/rhsm.conf
[server]
section that relate to the HTTP proxy. All parameters are described in 表格 14.7, “rhsm.conf Parameters”. There are four parameters directly related to the proxy:
proxy_hostname
for the IP address or fully-qualified domain name of the proxy server; this is required.
proxy_hostname
argument blank means that no HTTP proxy is used.
proxy_port
for the proxy server port.
proxy_user
for the user account to connect to the proxy; this may not be required, depending on the proxy server's configuration.
proxy_password
for the password for the user account to connect to the proxy; this may not be required, depending on the proxy server's configuration.
[server] # an http proxy server to use proxy_hostname = proxy.example.com # port for http proxy server proxy_port = 443 # user name for authenticating to an http proxy, if needed proxy_user = # password for basic http proxy auth, if needed proxy_password =
subscription-manager
.
Argument | Description | Required for a Proxy Connection? |
---|---|---|
--proxy | Gives the proxy server to connect to, in the format hostname:port. | Yes |
--proxyuser | Gives the username to use to authenticate. This is only required if user authentication is required. | No |
--proxypass | Gives the password to use with the user account. This is only required if user authentication is required. | No |
subscription-manager
operation. For example:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager subscribe --pool=ff8080812bc382e3012bc3845ca000cb --proxy=proxy.example.com:8443 --proxyuser=jsmith --proxypass=secret
rhsm.conf
file. The subscription service connection settings are in the [server]
section of the configuration file.
vim /etc/rhsm/rhsm.conf
[server]
section that relate to the subscription service connection. All parameters are described in 表格 14.7, “rhsm.conf Parameters”. There are three parameters directly related to the connection:
hostname
for the IP address or fully-qualified domain name of the machine
prefix
for the subscription service directory
port
for the subscription service port
[server] hostname=entitlements.server.example.com prefix=/candlepin port=8443
vim /etc/rhsm/rhsm.conf
baseurl
directive in the [rhsm]
section. This is the full URL to the service.
[rhsm] # Content base URL: baseurl= http://content.example.com/content
vim /etc/rhsm/rhsm.conf
[server]
section that relate to a secure connection. All parameters are described in 表格 14.7, “rhsm.conf Parameters”. There are three parameters directly related to the connection:
insecure
to set whether to use a secure (0) or insecure (1) connection
ca_cert_dir
for the directory location for the CA certificate for authentication and verification
port
for the subscription service port; this should be an SSL port if a secure connection is required
[server]
port=8443
insecure = 1
ca_cert = /etc/rhsm/ca
rhsmcertd
, runs as a service on the system. The daemon, by default, starts with the system, and it can be started, stopped, or checked with the service
command.
service rhsmcertd status rhsmcertd (pid 13084) is running...
chkconfig
”. When a system reboots, some services can be automatically restarted. chkconfig
also defines startup settings for different run levels of the server.
chkconfig
. By default, the Red Hat Subscription Manager daemon, rhsmcertd
, is configured to run at levels 3, 4, and 5, so that the service is started automatically when the server reboots.
chkconfig
. For example, to enable run level 2:
chkconfig --level 2345 rhsmcertd on
rhsmcertd
from the start list, change the run level settings off:
chkconfig --level 2345 rhsmcertd off
service
and chkconfig
settings.
system-config-services
package must be installed for the wizard to be available.
rhsmcertd
item in the list of services on the left, and then edit the service as desired.
/var/log/rhsm
directory:
rhsm.log
shows every invocation and result of running the Subscription Manager GUI or CLI
rhsmcertd.log
shows every time a new certificate is generated, which happens on a schedule defined by the certFrequency
parameter in the rhsm.conf
file.
rhsm.log
log contains the sequence of every Python call for every operation invoked through the Subscription Manager tools. Each entry has this format:
YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS,process_id [MESSAGE_TYPE] call python_script response
rhsm.log
relates to the Python script or function that was called, there can be multiple log entries for a single operation.
2010-10-01 17:27:57,874 [INFO] _request() @connection.py:97 - status code: 200 2010-10-01 17:27:57,875 [INFO] perform() @certlib.py:132 - updated: Total updates: 0 Found (local) serial# [] Expected (UEP) serial# [] Added (new) <NONE> Deleted (rogue): <NONE> Expired (not deleted): <NONE> Expired (deleted): <NONE> 2010-10-01 17:27:57,878 [INFO] __init__() @connection.py:193 - Using certificate authentication: key = /etc/pki/consumer/key.pem, cert = /etc/pki/consumer/cert.pem, ca = /etc/pki/CA/candlepin.pem, insecure = True 2010-10-01 17:27:57,878 [INFO] __init__() @connection.py:196 - Connection Established: host: candlepin1.devlab.phx1.redhat.com, port: 443, handler: /candlepin
rhsmcertd.log
file are much simpler. The log only records when the rhsmcertd
daemon starts or stops and every time a certificate is updated.
Fri Oct 1 13:27:44 2010: started: interval = 240 minutes Fri Oct 1 13:27:50 2010: certificates updated
--all
option:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager list --available --all
rhsm.conf
configuration file.
vim /etc/rhsm/rhsm.conf
showIncompatiblePools
directive in the [rhsm]
section. A value of 0
shows only compatible entitlements.
[rhsm]
# Content base URL:
showIncompatiblePools = 1
/etc/redhat-release
or /etc/sysconfig
. In both the Red Hat Subscription Manager GUI and CLI, the facts are represented as simple attribute: value pairs.
subscription-manager-gui
facts
with the --list
option.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager facts --list cpu.architecture: i686 cpu.core(s)_per_socket: 4 cpu.cpu(s): 4 cpu.cpu_family: 6 cpu.cpu_mhz: 2000.010 cpu.cpu_op-mode(s): 32-bit, 64-bit cpu.cpu_socket(s): 1 cpu.l1d_cache: 32K cpu.l1i_cache: 32K cpu.l2_cache: 6144K cpu.model: 23 cpu.stepping: 6 cpu.thread(s)_per_core: 1 cpu.vendor_id: GenuineIntel cpu.virtualization: VT-x distribution.id: Santiago distribution.name: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Workstation distribution.version: 5 dmi.baseboard.manufacturer: IBM dmi.baseboard.product_name: Server Blade ... [snip] ...
--update
option with the facts
command.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager facts --update
/var/lib/rhsm/facts/facts.facts
. These facts are stored as attribute: value pairs, in a comma-separated list.
{"fact1": "value1","fact2": "value2"}
/etc/rhsm/facts
directory. These JSON files can override existing facts or even add new facts to be used by the subscription service.
vim /etc/rhsm/facts/my-example.facts {"uname.machine": "x86","kernel_version": "2.6.32","physical_location": "MTV colo rack 5"}
identity
command. Although not required, using the --force
option will require the username and password and will cause the Subscription Manager to prompt for the credentials if they are not passed in the command:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager identity --regenerate --force Username: jsmith@example.com Password: Identity certificate has been regenerated.
identity
command to return the current UUID. The UUID is the Current identity is value.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager identity Current identity is: 63701087-f625-4519-8ab2-633bb50cb261 name: server1.example.com org name: 6340056 org id: 8a85f981302cbaf201302d89931e059a
list --installed
command with the command-line tools.
rhsmcertd
, checks the system periodically — once when it is first registered and then when it runs a refresh operation every four hours — to get the most current list of installed products. When the system is registered and then whenever there is a change to the package list, Subscription Manager sends an updated package profile to the subscription service.
/var/lib/rhsm/packages/
.
subscription-manager
script. Information like the consumer ID or subscription pool ID is pulled up and referenced automatically in the Red Hat Subscription Manager UI, but it has to be entered manually in the command line.
Information | Description | Operations Used In | Find It In ... |
---|---|---|---|
Consumer ID | A unique identifier for each system that is registered to the subscription service. | identity |
The simplest method is to use the identity command to return the current UUID.
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager identity Current identity is: 63701087-f625-4519-8ab2-633bb50cb261 name: consumer-1.example.com org name: 6340056 org id: 8a85f981302cbaf201302d89931e059aThe Subject CN element of the identity certificate for the system, /etc/pki/consumer/cert.pem . The UUID can also be returned by using openssl to pretty-print the certificate.
openssl x509 -text -in /etc/pki/consumer/cert.pem Certificate: ... snip ... Subject: CN=7d133d55 876f 4f47 83eb 0ee931cb0a97 |
Pool ID | An identifier for a specific set of subscriptions. This set is created when subscriptions are purchased. Whenever a system needs to subscribe to a product, it references a pool ID to identify which purchased set of subscriptions to use. | subscribe |
The PoolID value given for a product when listing available subscriptions. For example:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager list --available +----------------------+ Available Subscriptions +----------------------+ ProductName: Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Standard (up to 2 sockets) 3 year ProductId: MCT0346F3 PoolId: ff8080812bc382e3012bc3845ca000cb Quantity: 2 Expires: 2011-02-28 |
Product certificate serial number | The identification used for a specific, installed product. A certificate with a unique serial number is generated when a product is installed; this serial number is used to identify that specific product installation when managing subscriptions. | unsubscribe |
The SerialNumber line in the product subscription information. This can be returned by running list --consumed .
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager list --consumed +-----------------------------+ Consumed Product Subscriptions +-----------------------------+ ProductName: High availability (cluster suite) ContractNumber: 0 SerialNumber: 11287514358600162 .... |
Product ID | The internal identifier used to identify a type of product. |
The ProductID value given for a product when listing available subscriptions. For example:
[root@server1 ~]# subscription-manager list --available +----------------------+ Available Subscriptions +----------------------+ ProductName: RHEL for Physical Servers ProductId: MKT-rhel-server ... snip ... |
.pem
formatted file. This file format stores both keys and certificates in a base-64 blob. For example:
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- MIIDaTCCAtKgAwIBAgICBZYwDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEFBQAwSzEqMCgGA1UEAxMhY2Fu ZGxlcGluMS5kZXZsYWIucGh4MS5yZWRoYXQuY29tMQswCQYDVQQGEwJVUzEQMA4G A1UEBxMHUmFsZWlnaDAeFw0xMDEwMDYxNjMyMDVaFw0xMTEwMDYyMzU5NTlaMC8x LTArBgNVBAMMJDQ4ODFiZDJmLTg2OGItNDM4Yy1hZjk2LThiMWQyODNkYWZmYzCC ASIwDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEBBQADggEPADCCAQoCggEBAKNyLw6+IMtjY03F7Otxj2GL GTz5VKx1kfWY7q4OD4w+XlBHTkt+2tQV9S+4TFkUZ7XoI80LDL/BONpy/gq5c5cw yKvjv2gjSS/pihgYNXc5zUOIfSj1vb3fHGHOkzdCcZMyWq1z0N/zaLClp/zP/pcM og4NTAg2niNPjFYvkQ+oIl16WmQpefM0y0SY7N7oJd2T8dZjOiuLV2cVZLfwjrwG 9UpkT2J03g+n1ZA9q95ibLD5NVOdTy9+2lfRhdDViZaVoFiQXvg86qBHQ0ieENuF a6bCvGgpTxcBuVXmsnl2+9dnMiwoDqPZp1HB6G2uNmyNe/IvkTOPFJ/ZVbtBTYUC AwEAAaOB8zCB8DARBglghkgBhvhCAQEEBAMCBaAwCwYDVR0PBAQDAgSwMHsGA1Ud IwR0MHKAFGiY1N2UtulxcMFy0j6gQGLTyo6CoU+kTTBLMSowKAYDVQQDEyFjYW5k bGVwaW4xLmRldmxhYi5waHgxLnJlZGhhdC5jb20xCzAJBgNVBAYTAlVTMRAwDgYD VQQHEwdSYWxlaWdoggkA1s54sVacN0EwHQYDVR0OBBYEFGbB5fqOzh32g4Wqrwhc /96IupIgMBMGA1UdJQQMMAoGCCsGAQUFBwMCMB0GA1UdEQQWMBSkEjAQMQ4wDAYD VQQDDAV4ZW9wczANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQUFAAOBgQANxHRsev4fYfnHO9kYcHo4UeK7 owN+fq92gl76iRHRnhzkPlhWL+uV2tyqGG9zJASOX+qEDOqN5sVAB4iNQTDGiUbK z757igD2hsQ4ewv9Vq3QtnajWnfdaUZH919GgWs09Etg6ucsKwgfx1fqjSRLBbOo lZuvBTYROOX6W2vKXw== -----END CERTIFICATE-----
openssl
or pk12util
can be used to extract and view information from these certificates, in a pretty-print format. The product- and subscription-related information is extracted and viewable in the Red Hat Subscription Manager GUI or command-line tools.
Certificate Type | Description | Default Location |
---|---|---|
Consumer Identity Certificate | Used to identify the system (consumer) to the subscription service. This contains a unique ID which is assigned to the system when it is registered to the system. The identity certificate itself is generated by the subscription service when the system is registered and then sent to the consumer. | /etc/pki/consumer |
Entitlement Certificate | Contains a list of products that are available to a system to install, based on the subscriptions that the system has been subscribed to. The entitlement certificate defines the software products, the content delivery location, and validity dates. The presence of an entitlement certificate means that the system has consumed one of the quantities from the subscription. | /etc/pki/entitlement |
Product Certificate | Contains the information about a product after it has been installed. |
/etc/pki/product/product_serial# .pem
|
CA Certificate | A certificate for the certificate authority which issued the SSL server certificate used by the subscription service. This must be installed on a system for the system to use SSl to connect to the subscription service. | /etc/rhsm/ca/candlepin-ca.pem |
Satellite Certificate | An XML-formatted certificate which contains a product list. This is used by local Satellite 5.x systems, not the newer subscription service. |
Certificate: Data: Version: 3 (0x2) Serial Number: 1430 (0x596) Signature Algorithm: sha1WithRSAEncryptionIssuer: CN=entitlement.server.example.com, C=US, L=Raleigh
Validity Not Before: Oct 6 16:32:05 2010 GMT Not After : Oct 6 23:59:59 2011 GMTSubject: CN=4881bd2f-868b-438c-af96-8b1d283daffc
Subject Public Key Info: Public Key Algorithm: rsaEncryption Public-Key: (2048 bit) Modulus: 00:a3:72:2f:0e:be:20:cb:63:63:4d:c5:ec:eb:71: 8f:61:8b:19:3c:f9:54:ac:75:91:f5:98:ee:ae:0e: 0f:8c:3e:5e:50:47:4e:4b:7e:da:d4:15:f5:2f:b8: 4c:59:14:67:b5:e8:23:cd:0b:0c:bf:c1:38:da:72: fe:0a:b9:73:97:30:c8:ab:e3:bf:68:23:49:2f:e9: 8a:18:18:35:77:39:cd:43:88:7d:28:f5:bd:bd:df: 1c:61:ce:93:37:42:71:93:32:5a:ad:73:d0:df:f3: 68:b0:a5:a7:fc:cf:fe:97:0c:a2:0e:0d:4c:08:36: 9e:23:4f:8c:56:2f:91:0f:a8:22:5d:7a:5a:64:29: 79:f3:34:cb:44:98:ec:de:e8:25:dd:93:f1:d6:63: 3a:2b:8b:57:67:15:64:b7:f0:8e:bc:06:f5:4a:64: 4f:62:74:de:0f:a7:d5:90:3d:ab:de:62:6c:b0:f9: 35:53:9d:4f:2f:7e:da:57:d1:85:d0:d5:89:96:95: a0:58:90:5e:f8:3c:ea:a0:47:43:48:9e:10:db:85: 6b:a6:c2:bc:68:29:4f:17:01:b9:55:e6:b2:79:76: fb:d7:67:32:2c:28:0e:a3:d9:a7:51:c1:e8:6d:ae: 36:6c:8d:7b:f2:2f:91:33:8f:14:9f:d9:55:bb:41: 4d:85 Exponent: 65537 (0x10001) X509v3 extensions: Netscape Cert Type: SSL Client, S/MIME X509v3 Key Usage: Digital Signature, Key Encipherment, Data Encipherment X509v3 Authority Key Identifier: keyid:68:98:D4:DD:94:B6:E9:71:70:C1:72:D2:3E:A0:40:62:D3:CA:8E:82 DirName:/CN=entitlement.server.example.com/C=US/L=Raleigh serial:D6:CE:78:B1:56:9C:37:41 X509v3 Subject Key Identifier: 66:C1:E5:FA:8E:CE:1D:F6:83:85:AA:AF:08:5C:FF:DE:88:BA:92:20 X509v3 Extended Key Usage: TLS Web Client AuthenticationX509v3 Subject Alternative Name:
DirName:/CN=admin-example
Signature Algorithm: sha1WithRSAEncryption 0d:c4:74:6c:7a:fe:1f:61:f9:c7:3b:d9:18:70:7a:38:51:e2: bb:a3:03:7e:7e:af:76:82:5e:fa:89:11:d1:9e:1c:e4:3e:58: 56:2f:eb:95:da:dc:aa:18:6f:73:24:04:8e:5f:ea:84:0c:ea: 8d:e6:c5:40:07:88:8d:41:30:c6:89:46:ca:cf:be:7b:8a:00: f6:86:c4:38:7b:0b:fd:56:ad:d0:b6:76:a3:5a:77:dd:69:46: 47:f7:5f:46:81:6b:34:f4:4b:60:ea:e7:2c:2b:08:1f:c7:57: ea:8d:24:4b:05:b3:a8:95:9b:af:05:36:11:38:e5:fa:5b:6b: ca:5f
*.pem
file stored in the entitlement certificates directory, /etc/pki/entitlement
. The name of the *.pem
file is a generated numeric identifier that is generated by the subscription service. This ID is an inventory number that is used to associate a subscription quantity with the system in the software inventory.
Certificate: Data: Version: 3 (0x2) Serial Number: 3c:da:6c:06:90:7f:ff Signature Algorithm: sha1WithRSAEncryption Issuer: CN=candlepin1.devlab.phx1.redhat.com, C=US, L=Raleigh Validity Not Before: Oct 8 17:55:28 2010 GMT Not After : Oct 2 23:59:59 2011 GMT Subject: CN=8a878c912b875189012b8cfbc3f2264a ... [snip] ...
1.3.6.1.4.1.2312.9.2
.product_#
.config_#
: ..config_value
2
indicates that it is a product entry. product_# is a unique ID which identifies the specific product or variant. config_# relates to the installation information for that product, like its content server or the quantity available.
1.3.6.1.4.1.2312.9
. The subsequent numbers identify different subscription areas:
.2.
is the product-specific information
.1.
is the subscription information
.4.
contains the contract information, like its ID number and start and end dates
.5.
contains the consumer information, like the consumer ID which installed a product
content repository type
1.3.6.1.4.1.2312.9.2.30393.1: ..yumproduct
1.3.6.1.4.1.2312.9.2.30393.1.1: .HRed Hat Enterprise Linux High Availability (for RHEL Entitlement) (RPMs)channel name
1.3.6.1.4.1.2312.9.2.30393.1.2: .Dred-hat-enterprise-linux-high-availability-for-rhel-entitlement-rpmsvendor
1.3.6.1.4.1.2312.9.2.30393.1.5: ..Red Hatdownload URL
1.3.6.1.4.1.2312.9.2.30393.1.6: .Q/content/dist/rhel/entitlement/releases/$releasever/$basearch/highavailability/oskey download URL
1.3.6.1.4.1.2312.9.2.30393.1.7: .2file:///etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-redhat-releaseflex quantity
1.3.6.1.4.1.2312.9.2.30393.1.4: ..0quantity
1.3.6.1.4.1.2312.9.2.30393.1.3: ..25repo enabled setting
1.3.6.1.4.1.2312.9.2.30393.1.8: ..1
*.pem
file stored in the entitlement certificates directory, /etc/pki/product/product_serial#
.pem
. The name of the *.pem
file is a generated numeric identifier that is generated by the subscription service. As with entitlement tracking, the generated ID is an inventory number, used to track installed products and associate them with systems within the subscription service.
<rhn-cert-field name="configuration_area">value</rhn-cert-field>
name
argument identifies what entity is being configured. This can be the organization which ordered the subscription (name="owner"
), the start and end dates for the entitlement (name="issued"
and name="expires"
), or the entitlement itself. A system entitlement uses the name
argument to set the service being entitled; every content entitlement is set as a name="channel-family"
type, with the specific product identified in an additional family
argument.
name
argument, while the value is between the tags. The last lines of the certificate also set metadata for the subscription, including the version of the Satellite and the signature that signs the XML document (and allows the XML file to be used as a certificate).
<rhn-cert-field name="product">RHN-SATELLITE-001</rhn-cert-field> <rhn-cert-field name="owner">Example Corp</rhn-cert-field> <rhn-cert-field name="issued">2009-04-07 10:18:33</rhn-cert-field> <rhn-cert-field name="expires">2009-11-25 00:00:00</rhn-cert-field> ... [snip] ... <rhn-cert-field name="satellite-version">5.3</rhn-cert-field> <rhn-cert-field name="generation">2</rhn-cert-field> <rhn-cert-signature> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: Crypt::OpenPGP 1.03 iQBGBAARAwAGBQJJ22C+AAoJEJ5ynaAAAAkyyZ0An18+4hK5Ozt4HWieFvahsTnF aPcaAJ0e5neOfdDZRLOgDE+Tp/Im3Hc3Rg== =gqP7 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- </rhn-cert-signature>
name="slot"
field lists how many total systems are allowed to use this Satellite certificate to receive content. It is a global quantity.
<rhn-cert-field name="slots">119</rhn-cert-field>
name
argument and then setting the quantity as the value within the tags.
<rhn-cert-field name="provisioning-slots">117</rhn-cert-field> <rhn-cert-field name="monitoring-slots">20</rhn-cert-field> <rhn-cert-field name="virtualization_host">67</rhn-cert-field>
rhel-server
family, while a specific Virtualization Server subscription provides an additional rhel-server-vt
family..
<rhn-cert-field name="channel-families" quantity="95" family="rhel-server"/> <rhn-cert-field name="channel-families" quantity="67" family="rhel-server-vt"/>
rhel-*
family, because that refers to the platform the product is supported on. In this example, Red Hat Directory Server is in the rhel-rhdirserv
family.
<rhn-cert-field name="channel-families" quantity="3" family="rhel-rhdirserv"/>
<rhn-cert-field name="channel-families" quantity="212" family="rhn-tools"/>
內容目錄
sysconfig
Directory/etc/sysconfig/
Directory/etc/sysconfig/amd
/etc/sysconfig/apmd
/etc/sysconfig/arpwatch
/etc/sysconfig/authconfig
/etc/sysconfig/autofs
/etc/sysconfig/clock
/etc/sysconfig/desktop
/etc/sysconfig/dhcpd
/etc/sysconfig/exim
/etc/sysconfig/firstboot
/etc/sysconfig/gpm
/etc/sysconfig/hwconf
/etc/sysconfig/i18n
/etc/sysconfig/init
/etc/sysconfig/ip6tables-config
/etc/sysconfig/iptables-config
/etc/sysconfig/irda
/etc/sysconfig/keyboard
/etc/sysconfig/kudzu
/etc/sysconfig/named
/etc/sysconfig/network
/etc/sysconfig/nfs
/etc/sysconfig/ntpd
/etc/sysconfig/radvd
/etc/sysconfig/samba
/etc/sysconfig/selinux
/etc/sysconfig/sendmail
/etc/sysconfig/spamassassin
/etc/sysconfig/squid
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-securitylevel
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-selinux
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-users
/etc/sysconfig/system-logviewer
/etc/sysconfig/tux
/etc/sysconfig/vncservers
/etc/sysconfig/xinetd
/etc/sysconfig/
Directoryhalt
, poweroff
, and reboot
.
/etc/inittab
specifies that your system is set to shutdown and reboot in response to a Ctrl+Alt+Del key combination used at the console. To completely disable this ability, comment out the following line in /etc/inittab
by putting a hash mark (#
) in front of it:
ca::ctrlaltdel:/sbin/shutdown -t3 -r now
-a
option to the /etc/inittab
line shown above, so that it reads:
ca::ctrlaltdel:/sbin/shutdown -a -t3 -r now
-a
flag tells shutdown
to look for the /etc/shutdown.allow
file.
shutdown.allow
in /etc
. The shutdown.allow
file should list the usernames of any users who are allowed to shutdown the system using Ctrl+Alt+Del . The format of the shutdown.allow
file is a list of usernames, one per line, like the following:
stephen jack sophie
shutdown.allow
file, the users stephen
, jack
, and sophie
are allowed to shutdown the system from the console using Ctrl+Alt+Del . When that key combination is used, the shutdown -a
command in /etc/inittab
checks to see if any of the users in /etc/shutdown.allow
(or root) are logged in on a virtual console. If one of them is, the shutdown of the system continues; if not, an error message is written to the system console instead.
shutdown.allow
, refer to the shutdown
man page.
rm -f /etc/security/console.apps/*
poweroff
, halt
, and reboot
, which are accessible from the console by default.
rm -f /etc/security/console.apps/poweroff
rm -f /etc/security/console.apps/halt
rm -f /etc/security/console.apps/reboot
pam_console.so
module uses the /etc/security/console.perms
file to determine the permissions for users at the system console. The syntax of the file is very flexible; you can edit the file so that these instructions no longer apply. However, the default file has a line that looks like this:
<console>=tty[0-9][0-9]* vc/[0-9][0-9]* :[0-9]\.[0-9] :[0-9]
:0
or mymachine.example.com:1.0
, or a device like /dev/ttyS0
or /dev/pts/2
. The default is to define that local virtual consoles and local X servers are considered local, but if you want to consider the serial terminal next to you on port /dev/ttyS1
to also be local, you can change that line to read:
<console>=tty[0-9][0-9]* vc/[0-9][0-9]* :[0-9]\.[0-9] :[0-9] /dev/ttyS1
/etc/security/console.perms.d/50-default.perms
. To edit file and device permissions, it is advisable to create a new default file in /etc/security/console.perms.d/
containing your preferred settings for a specified set of files or devices. The name of the new default file must begin with a number higher than 50 (for example, 51-default.perms
) in order to override 50-default.perms
.
51-default.perms
in /etc/security/console.perms.d/
:
touch /etc/security/console.perms.d/51-default.perms
perms
file, 50-default.perms
. The first section defines device classes, with lines similar to the following:
<floppy>=/dev/fd[0-1]* \ /dev/floppy/* /mnt/floppy* <sound>=/dev/dsp* /dev/audio* /dev/midi* \ /dev/mixer* /dev/sequencer \ /dev/sound/* /dev/beep \ /dev/snd/* <cdrom>=/dev/cdrom* /dev/cdroms/* /dev/cdwriter* /mnt/cdrom*
<cdrom>
refers to the CD-ROM drive. To add a new device, do not define it in the default 50-default.perms
file; instead, define it in 51-default.perms
. For example, to define a scanner, add the following line to 51-default.perms
:
<scanner>=/dev/scanner /dev/usb/scanner*
/dev/scanner
is really your scanner and not some other device, such as your hard drive.
/etc/security/console.perms.d/50-default.perms
defines this, with lines similar to the following:
<console> 0660 <floppy> 0660 root.floppy <console> 0600 <sound> 0640 root <console> 0600 <cdrom> 0600 root.disk
51-default.perms
:
<console> 0600 <scanner> 0600 root
/dev/scanner
device with the permissions of 0600 (readable and writable by you only). When you log out, the device is owned by root, and still has the permissions 0600 (now readable and writable by root only).
50-default.perms
file. To edit permissions for a device already defined in 50-default.perms
, add the desired permission definition for that device in 51-default.perms
. This will override whatever permissions are defined in 50-default.perms
.
/sbin/
or /usr/sbin/
, so the application that you wish to run must be there. After verifying that, perform the following steps:
foo
program, to the /usr/bin/consolehelper
application:
cd /usr/bin
ln -s consolehelper foo
/etc/security/console.apps/foo
:
touch /etc/security/console.apps/foo
foo
service in /etc/pam.d/
. An easy way to do this is to copy the PAM configuration file of the halt
service, and then modify the copy if you want to change the behavior:
cp /etc/pam.d/halt /etc/pam.d/foo
/usr/bin/foo
is executed, consolehelper
is called, which authenticates the user with the help of /usr/sbin/userhelper
. To authenticate the user, consolehelper
asks for the user's password if /etc/pam.d/foo
is a copy of /etc/pam.d/halt
(otherwise, it does precisely what is specified in /etc/pam.d/foo
) and then runs /usr/sbin/foo
with root permissions.
pam_timestamp
and run from the same session is automatically authenticated for the user — the user does not have to enter the root password again.
pam
package. To enable this feature, add the following lines to your PAM configuration file in etc/pam.d/
:
auth include config-util account include config-util session include config-util
/etc/pam.d/system-config-*
configuration files. Note that these lines must be added below any other auth sufficient
session optional
lines in your PAM configuration file.
pam_timestamp
is successfully authenticated from the Applications (the main menu on the panel), the
floppy
Groupfloppy
group. Add the user(s) to the floppy
group using the tool of your choice. For example, the gpasswd
command can be used to add user fred
to the floppy
group:
gpasswd -a fred floppy
fred
is able to access the system's diskette drive from the console.
sysconfig
Directory/etc/sysconfig/
Directory/etc/sysconfig/amd
/etc/sysconfig/apmd
/etc/sysconfig/arpwatch
/etc/sysconfig/authconfig
/etc/sysconfig/autofs
/etc/sysconfig/clock
/etc/sysconfig/desktop
/etc/sysconfig/dhcpd
/etc/sysconfig/exim
/etc/sysconfig/firstboot
/etc/sysconfig/gpm
/etc/sysconfig/hwconf
/etc/sysconfig/i18n
/etc/sysconfig/init
/etc/sysconfig/ip6tables-config
/etc/sysconfig/iptables-config
/etc/sysconfig/irda
/etc/sysconfig/keyboard
/etc/sysconfig/kudzu
/etc/sysconfig/named
/etc/sysconfig/network
/etc/sysconfig/nfs
/etc/sysconfig/ntpd
/etc/sysconfig/radvd
/etc/sysconfig/samba
/etc/sysconfig/selinux
/etc/sysconfig/sendmail
/etc/sysconfig/spamassassin
/etc/sysconfig/squid
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-securitylevel
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-selinux
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-users
/etc/sysconfig/system-logviewer
/etc/sysconfig/tux
/etc/sysconfig/vncservers
/etc/sysconfig/xinetd
/etc/sysconfig/
Directory/etc/sysconfig/
directory contains a variety of system configuration files for Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
/etc/sysconfig/
directory, their function, and their contents. The information in this chapter is not intended to be complete, as many of these files have a variety of options that are only used in very specific or rare circumstances.
/etc/sysconfig/
Directory/etc/sysconfig/
directory. Files not listed here, as well as extra file options, are found in the /usr/share/doc/initscripts-<version-number>
/sysconfig.txt
file (replace <version-number>
with the version of the initscripts
package). Alternatively, looking through the initscripts in the /etc/rc.d/
directory can prove helpful.
/etc/sysconfig/
directory, then the corresponding program may not be installed.
/etc/sysconfig/amd
/etc/sysconfig/amd
file contains various parameters used by amd
; these parameters allow for the automatic mounting and unmounting of file systems.
/etc/sysconfig/apmd
/etc/sysconfig/apmd
file is used by apmd
to configure what power settings to start/stop/change on suspend or resume. This file configures how apmd
functions at boot time, depending on whether the hardware supports Advanced Power Management (APM) or whether the user has configured the system to use it. The apm
daemon is a monitoring program that works with power management code within the Linux kernel. It is capable of alerting users to low battery power on laptops and other power-related settings.
/etc/sysconfig/arpwatch
/etc/sysconfig/arpwatch
file is used to pass arguments to the arpwatch
daemon at boot time. The arpwatch
daemon maintains a table of Ethernet MAC addresses and their IP address pairings. By default, this file sets the owner of the arpwatch
process to the user pcap
and sends any messages to the root
mail queue. For more information regarding available parameters for this file, refer to the arpwatch
man page.
/etc/sysconfig/authconfig
/etc/sysconfig/authconfig
file sets the authorization to be used on the host. It contains one or more of the following lines:
USEMD5=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following:
yes
— MD5 is used for authentication.
no
— MD5 is not used for authentication.
USEKERBEROS=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following:
yes
— Kerberos is used for authentication.
no
— Kerberos is not used for authentication.
USELDAPAUTH=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following:
yes
— LDAP is used for authentication.
no
— LDAP is not used for authentication.
/etc/sysconfig/autofs
/etc/sysconfig/autofs
file defines custom options for the automatic mounting of devices. This file controls the operation of the automount daemons, which automatically mount file systems when you use them and unmount them after a period of inactivity. File systems can include network file systems, CD-ROMs, diskettes, and other media.
/etc/sysconfig/autofs
file may contain the following:
LOCALOPTIONS="<value>
"
, where <value>
is a string for defining machine-specific automount rules. The default value is an empty string (""
).
DAEMONOPTIONS="<value>
"
, where <value>
is the timeout length in seconds before unmounting the device. The default value is 60 seconds ("--timeout=60"
).
UNDERSCORETODOT=<value>
, where <value>
is a binary value that controls whether to convert underscores in file names into dots. For example, auto_home
to auto.home
and auto_mnt
to auto.mnt
. The default value is 1 (true).
DISABLE_DIRECT=<value>
, where <value>
is a binary value that controls whether to disable direct mount support, as the Linux implementation does not conform to the Sun Microsystems' automounter behavior. The default value is 1 (true), and allows for compatibility with the Sun automounter options specification syntax.
/etc/sysconfig/clock
/etc/sysconfig/clock
file controls the interpretation of values read from the system hardware clock.
UTC=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following boolean values:
true
or yes
— The hardware clock is set to Universal Time.
false
or no
— The hardware clock is set to local time.
ARC=<value>
, where <value>
is the following:
false
or no
— This value indicates that the normal UNIX epoch is in use. Other values are used by systems not supported by Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
SRM=<value>
, where <value>
is the following:
false
or no
— This value indicates that the normal UNIX epoch is in use. Other values are used by systems not supported by Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
ZONE=<filename>
— The time zone file under /usr/share/zoneinfo
that /etc/localtime
is a copy of. The file contains information such as:
ZONE="America/New York"
ZONE
parameter is read by the Time and Date Properties Tool (system-config-date
), and manually editing it does not change the system timezone.
CLOCKMODE=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following:
GMT
— The clock is set to Universal Time (Greenwich Mean Time).
ARC
— The ARC console's 42-year time offset is in effect (for Alpha-based systems only).
/etc/sysconfig/desktop
/etc/sysconfig/desktop
file specifies the desktop for new users and the display manager to run when entering runlevel 5.
DESKTOP="<value>
"
, where "<value>
"
is one of the following:
GNOME
— Selects the GNOME desktop environment.
KDE
— Selects the KDE desktop environment.
DISPLAYMANAGER="<value>
"
, where "<value>
"
is one of the following:
GNOME
— Selects the GNOME Display Manager.
KDE
— Selects the KDE Display Manager.
XDM
— Selects the X Display Manager.
/etc/sysconfig/dhcpd
/etc/sysconfig/dhcpd
file is used to pass arguments to the dhcpd
daemon at boot time. The dhcpd
daemon implements the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) and the Internet Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP). DHCP and BOOTP assign hostnames to machines on the network. For more information about what parameters are available in this file, refer to the dhcpd
man page.
/etc/sysconfig/exim
/etc/sysconfig/exim
file allows messages to be sent to one or more clients, routing the messages over whatever networks are necessary. The file sets the default values for exim to run. Its default values are set to run as a background daemon and to check its queue each hour in case something has backed up.
DAEMON=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following:
yes
— exim
should be configured to listen to port 25 for incoming mail. yes
implies the use of the Exim's -bd
options.
no
— exim
should not be configured to listen to port 25 for incoming mail.
QUEUE=1h
which is given to exim
as -q$QUEUE
. The -q
option is not given to exim
if /etc/sysconfig/exim
exists and QUEUE
is empty or undefined.
/etc/sysconfig/firstboot
/sbin/init
program calls the etc/rc.d/init.d/firstboot
script, which in turn launches the Setup Agent. This application allows the user to install the latest updates as well as additional applications and documentation.
/etc/sysconfig/firstboot
file tells the Setup Agent application not to run on subsequent reboots. To run it the next time the system boots, remove /etc/sysconfig/firstboot
and execute chkconfig --level 5 firstboot on
.
/etc/sysconfig/gpm
/etc/sysconfig/gpm
file is used to pass arguments to the gpm
daemon at boot time. The gpm
daemon is the mouse server which allows mouse acceleration and middle-click pasting. For more information about what parameters are available for this file, refer to the gpm
man page. By default, the DEVICE
directive is set to /dev/input/mice
.
/etc/sysconfig/hwconf
/etc/sysconfig/hwconf
file lists all the hardware that kudzu
detected on the system, as well as the drivers used, vendor ID, and device ID information. The kudzu
program detects and configures new and/or changed hardware on a system. The /etc/sysconfig/hwconf
file is not meant to be manually edited. If edited, devices could suddenly show up as being added or removed.
/etc/sysconfig/i18n
/etc/sysconfig/i18n
file sets the default language, any supported languages, and the default system font. For example:
LANG="en_US.UTF-8" SUPPORTED="en_US.UTF-8:en_US:en" SYSFONT="latarcyrheb-sun16"
/etc/sysconfig/init
/etc/sysconfig/init
file controls how the system appears and functions during the boot process.
BOOTUP=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following:
color
— The standard color boot display, where the success or failure of devices and services starting up is shown in different colors.
verbose
— An old style display which provides more information than purely a message of success or failure.
RES_COL=<value>
, where <value>
is the number of the column of the screen to start status labels. The default is set to 60.
MOVE_TO_COL=<value>
, where <value>
moves the cursor to the value in the RES_COL
line via the echo -en
command.
SETCOLOR_SUCCESS=<value>
, where <value>
sets the success color via the echo -en
command. The default color is set to green.
SETCOLOR_FAILURE=<value>
, where <value>
sets the failure color via the echo -en
command. The default color is set to red.
SETCOLOR_WARNING=<value>
, where <value>
sets the warning color via the echo -en
command. The default color is set to yellow.
SETCOLOR_NORMAL=<value>
, where <value>
resets the color to "normal" via the echo -en
.
LOGLEVEL=<value>
, where <value>
sets the initial console logging level for the kernel. The default is 3; 8 means everything (including debugging), while 1 means only kernel panics. The syslogd
daemon overrides this setting once started.
PROMPT=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following boolean values:
yes
— Enables the key check for interactive mode.
no
— Disables the key check for interactive mode.
/etc/sysconfig/ip6tables-config
/etc/sysconfig/ip6tables-config
file stores information used by the kernel to set up IPv6 packet filtering at boot time or whenever the ip6tables
service is started.
ip6tables
rules. Rules also can be created manually using the /sbin/ip6tables
command. Once created, add the rules to the /etc/sysconfig/ip6tables
file by typing the following command:
service ip6tables save
ip6tables
, refer to 節 46.9, “IPTables”.
/etc/sysconfig/iptables-config
/etc/sysconfig/iptables-config
file stores information used by the kernel to set up packet filtering services at boot time or whenever the service is started.
iptables
rules. The easiest way to add rules is to use the Security Level Configuration Tool (system-config-securitylevel
) application to create a firewall. These applications automatically edit this file at the end of the process.
/sbin/iptables
command. Once created, add the rule(s) to the /etc/sysconfig/iptables
file by typing the following command:
service iptables save
iptables
, refer to 節 46.9, “IPTables”.
/etc/sysconfig/irda
/etc/sysconfig/irda
file controls how infrared devices on the system are configured at startup.
IRDA=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following boolean values:
yes
— irattach
runs and periodically checks to see if anything is trying to connect to the infrared port, such as another notebook computer trying to make a network connection. For infrared devices to work on the system, this line must be set to yes
.
no
— irattach
does not run, preventing infrared device communication.
DEVICE=<value>
, where <value>
is the device (usually a serial port) that handles infrared connections. A sample serial device entry could be /dev/ttyS2
.
DONGLE=<value>
, where <value>
specifies the type of dongle being used for infrared communication. This setting exists for people who use serial dongles rather than real infrared ports. A dongle is a device that is attached to a traditional serial port to communicate via infrared. This line is commented out by default because notebooks with real infrared ports are far more common than computers with add-on dongles. A sample dongle entry could be actisys+
.
DISCOVERY=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following boolean values:
yes
— Starts irattach
in discovery mode, meaning it actively checks for other infrared devices. This must be turned on for the machine to actively look for an infrared connection (meaning the peer that does not initiate the connection).
no
— Does not start irattach
in discovery mode.
/etc/sysconfig/keyboard
/etc/sysconfig/keyboard
file controls the behavior of the keyboard. The following values may be used:
KEYBOARDTYPE="sun|pc"
where sun
means a Sun keyboard is attached on /dev/kbd
, or pc
means a PS/2 keyboard connected to a PS/2 port.
KEYTABLE="<file>
"
, where <file>
is the name of a keytable file.
KEYTABLE="us"
. The files that can be used as keytables start in /lib/kbd/keymaps/i386
and branch into different keyboard layouts from there, all labeled <file>
.kmap.gz
. The first file found beneath /lib/kbd/keymaps/i386
that matches the KEYTABLE
setting is used.
/etc/sysconfig/kudzu
/etc/sysconfig/kuzdu
file triggers a safe probe of the system hardware by kudzu
at boot time. A safe probe is one that disables serial port probing.
SAFE=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following:
yes
— kuzdu
does a safe probe.
no
— kuzdu
does a normal probe.
/etc/sysconfig/named
/etc/sysconfig/named
file is used to pass arguments to the named
daemon at boot time. The named
daemon is a Domain Name System (DNS) server which implements the Berkeley Internet Name Domain (BIND) version 9 distribution. This server maintains a table of which hostnames are associated with IP addresses on the network.
ROOTDIR="</some/where>"
, where </some/where>
refers to the full directory path of a configured chroot environment under which named
runs. This chroot environment must first be configured. Type info chroot
for more information.
OPTIONS="<value>"
, where <value>
is any option listed in the man page for named
except -t
. In place of -t
, use the ROOTDIR
line above.
named
man page. For detailed information on how to configure a BIND DNS server, refer to 章 18, Berkeley Internet Name Domain (BIND). By default, the file contains no parameters.
/etc/sysconfig/network
/etc/sysconfig/network
file is used to specify information about the desired network configuration. The following values may be used:
NETWORKING=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following boolean values:
yes
— Networking should be configured.
no
— Networking should not be configured.
HOSTNAME=<value>
, where <value>
should be the Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN), such as hostname.expample.com
, but can be whatever hostname is necessary.
GATEWAY=<value>
, where <value>
is the IP address of the network's gateway.
GATEWAYDEV=<value>
, where <value>
is the gateway device, such as eth0
. Configure this option if you have multiple interfaces on the same subnet, and require one of those interfaces to be the preferred route to the default gateway.
NISDOMAIN=<value>
, where <value>
is the NIS domain name.
NOZEROCONF=<value>
, where setting <value>
to true
disables the zeroconf route.
/etc/sysconfig/nfs
/etc/sysconfig/nfs
file to control which ports the required RPC services run on.
/etc/sysconfig/nfs
may not exist by default on all systems. If it does not exist, create it and add the following variables (alternatively, if the file exists, un-comment and change the default entries as required):
MOUNTD_PORT=x
x
with an unused port number.
STATD_PORT=x
x
with an unused port number.
LOCKD_TCPPORT=x
x
with an unused port number.
LOCKD_UDPPORT=x
x
with an unused port number.
/var/log/messages
. Normally, NFS will fail to start if you specify a port number that is already in use. After editing /etc/sysconfig/nfs
restart the NFS service by running the service nfs restart
command. Run the rpcinfo -p
command to confirm the changes.
MOUNTD_PORT="x
"
STATD_PORT="x
"
LOCKD_TCPPORT="x
"
LOCKD_UDPPORT="x
"
/etc/sysconfig/ntpd
/etc/sysconfig/ntpd
file is used to pass arguments to the ntpd
daemon at boot time. The ntpd
daemon sets and maintains the system clock to synchronize with an Internet standard time server. It implements version 4 of the Network Time Protocol (NTP). For more information about what parameters are available for this file, use a Web browser to view the following file: /usr/share/doc/ntp-<version>
/ntpd.htm
(where <version>
is the version number of ntpd
). By default, this file sets the owner of the ntpd
process to the user ntp
.
/etc/sysconfig/radvd
/etc/sysconfig/radvd
file is used to pass arguments to the radvd
daemon at boot time. The radvd
daemon listens for router requests and sends router advertisements for the IP version 6 protocol. This service allows hosts on a network to dynamically change their default routers based on these router advertisements. For more information about available parameters for this file, refer to the radvd
man page. By default, this file sets the owner of the radvd
process to the user radvd
.
/etc/sysconfig/samba
/etc/sysconfig/samba
file is used to pass arguments to the smbd
and the nmbd
daemons at boot time. The smbd
daemon offers file sharing connectivity for Windows clients on the network. The nmbd
daemon offers NetBIOS over IP naming services. For more information about what parameters are available for this file, refer to the smbd
man page. By default, this file sets smbd
and nmbd
to run in daemon mode.
/etc/sysconfig/selinux
/etc/sysconfig/selinux
file contains the basic configuration options for SELinux. This file is a symbolic link to /etc/selinux/config
.
/etc/sysconfig/sendmail
/etc/sysconfig/sendmail
file allows messages to be sent to one or more clients, routing the messages over whatever networks are necessary. The file sets the default values for the Sendmail application to run. Its default values are set to run as a background daemon and to check its queue each hour in case something has backed up.
DAEMON=<value>
, where <value>
is one of the following:
yes
— Sendmail should be configured to listen to port 25 for incoming mail. yes
implies the use of Sendmail's -bd
options.
no
— Sendmail should not be configured to listen to port 25 for incoming mail.
QUEUE=1h
which is given to Sendmail as -q$QUEUE
. The -q
option is not given to Sendmail if /etc/sysconfig/sendmail
exists and QUEUE
is empty or undefined.
/etc/sysconfig/spamassassin
/etc/sysconfig/spamassassin
file is used to pass arguments to the spamd
daemon (a daemonized version of Spamassassin) at boot time. Spamassassin is an email spam filter application. For a list of available options, refer to the spamd
man page. By default, it configures spamd
to run in daemon mode, create user preferences, and auto-create whitelists (allowed bulk senders).
/etc/sysconfig/squid
/etc/sysconfig/squid
file is used to pass arguments to the squid
daemon at boot time. The squid
daemon is a proxy caching server for Web client applications. For more information on configuring a squid
proxy server, use a Web browser to open the /usr/share/doc/squid-<version>
/
directory (replace <version>
with the squid
version number installed on the system). By default, this file sets squid
to start in daemon mode and sets the amount of time before it shuts itself down.
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-securitylevel
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-securitylevel
file contains all options chosen by the user the last time the Security Level Configuration Tool (system-config-securitylevel
) was run. Users should not modify this file by hand. For more information about the Security Level Configuration Tool, refer to 節 46.8.2, “Basic Firewall Configuration”.
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-selinux
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-selinux
file contains all options chosen by the user the last time the SELinux Administration Tool (system-config-selinux
) was run. Users should not modify this file by hand. For more information about the SELinux Administration Tool and SELinux in general, refer to 節 47.2, “Introduction to SELinux”.
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-users
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-users
file is the configuration file for the graphical application, User Manager. This file is used to filter out system users such as root
, daemon
, or lp
. This file is edited by the > pull-down menu in the User Manager application and should never be edited by hand. For more information on using this application, refer to 節 35.1, “User and Group Configuration”.
/etc/sysconfig/system-logviewer
/etc/sysconfig/system-logviewer
file is the configuration file for the graphical, interactive log viewing application, Log Viewer. This file is edited by the > pull-down menu in the Log Viewer application and should not be edited by hand. For more information on using this application, refer to 章 38, 紀錄檔案.
/etc/sysconfig/tux
/etc/sysconfig/tux
file is the configuration file for the Red Hat Content Accelerator (formerly known as TUX), the kernel-based Web server. For more information on configuring the Red Hat Content Accelerator, use a Web browser to open the /usr/share/doc/tux-<version>
/tux/index.html
file (replace <version>
with the version number of TUX installed on the system). The parameters available for this file are listed in /usr/share/doc/tux-<version>
/tux/parameters.html
.
/etc/sysconfig/vncservers
/etc/sysconfig/vncservers
file configures the way the Virtual Network Computing (VNC) server starts up.
VNCSERVERS=<value>
, where <value>
is set to something like "1:fred"
, to indicate that a VNC server should be started for user fred on display :1. User fred must have set a VNC password using the vncpasswd
command before attempting to connect to the remote VNC server.
/etc/sysconfig/xinetd
/etc/sysconfig/xinetd
file is used to pass arguments to the xinetd
daemon at boot time. The xinetd
daemon starts programs that provide Internet services when a request to the port for that service is received. For more information about available parameters for this file, refer to the xinetd
man page. For more information on the xinetd
service, refer to 節 46.5.3, “xinetd”.
/etc/sysconfig/
Directory/etc/sysconfig/
.
apm-scripts/
/etc/sysconfig/apm-scripts/apmcontinue
which is called at the end of the script. It is also possible to control the script by editing /etc/sysconfig/apmd
.
cbq/
networking/
system-config-network
), and its contents should not be edited manually. For more information about configuring network interfaces using the Network Administration Tool, refer to 章 16, 網路設定.
network-scripts/
ifcfg-eth0
for the eth0
Ethernet interface.
ifup
and ifdown
.
ifup-isdn
and ifdown-isdn
.
network-scripts
directory, refer to 章 15, 網路介面.
rhn/
/etc/sysconfig/
directory. The following source contains more comprehensive information.
/usr/share/doc/initscripts-<version-number>
/sysconfig.txt
— This file contains a more authoritative listing of the files found in the /etc/sysconfig/
directory and the configuration options available for them. The <version-number>
in the path to this file corresponds to the version of the initscripts
package installed.
system-config-date
, system-config-time
, or dateconfig
at a shell prompt (for example, in an XTerm or a GNOME terminal).
system-config-keyboard
at a shell prompt.
Xorg
binary) listens for connections from X client applications via a network or local loopback interface. The server communicates with the hardware, such as the video card, monitor, keyboard, and mouse. X client applications exist in the user-space, creating a graphical user interface (GUI) for the user and passing user requests to the X server.
/usr/
instead of /usr/X11R6
. The /etc/X11/
directory contains configuration files for X client and server applications. This includes configuration files for the X server itself, the xfs
font server, the X display managers, and many other base components.
/etc/fonts/fonts.conf
. For more on configuring and adding fonts, refer to 節 33.4, “Fonts”.
system-config-display
), particularly for devices that are not detected manually.
/etc/X11/xorg.conf
. For information about the structure of this file, refer to 節 33.3, “X Server Configuration Files”.
kwin
metacity
metacity
package.
mwm
mwm
) is a basic, stand-alone window manager. Since it is designed to be a stand-alone window manager, it should not be used in conjunction with GNOME or KDE. To run this window manager, you need to install the openmotif
package.
twm
twm
, which provides the most basic tool set of any of the window managers, can be used either as a stand-alone or with a desktop environment. It is installed as part of the X11R7.1 release.
xinit -e <path-to-window-manager>
at the prompt.
<path-to-window-manager>
is the location of the window manager binary file. The binary file can be located by typing which window-manager-name
, where window-manager-name
is the name of the window manager you want to run.
~]#which twm
/usr/bin/twm ~]#xinit -e /usr/bin/twm
twm
window manager, the second command starts twm
.
startx
at the prompt.
/usr/bin/Xorg
). Associated configuration files are stored in the /etc/X11/
directory (as is a symbolic link — X — which points to /usr/bin/Xorg
). The configuration file for the X server is /etc/X11/xorg.conf
.
/usr/lib/xorg/modules/
contains X server modules that can be loaded dynamically at runtime. By default, only some modules in /usr/lib/xorg/modules/
are automatically loaded by the X server.
/etc/X11/xorg.conf
. For more information about loading modules, refer to 節 33.3.1.5, “Module
”.
xorg.conf
/etc/X11/xorg.conf
file, it is useful to understand the various sections and optional parameters available, especially when troubleshooting.
/etc/X11/xorg.conf
file is comprised of many different sections which address specific aspects of the system hardware.
Section "<section-name>
"
line (where <section-name>
is the title for the section) and ends with an EndSection
line. Each section contains lines that include option names and one or more option values. These are sometimes enclosed in double quotes ("
).
#
) are not read by the X server and are used for human-readable comments.
/etc/X11/xorg.conf
file accept a boolean switch which turns the feature on or off. Acceptable boolean values are:
1
, on
, true
, or yes
— Turns the option on.
0
, off
, false
, or no
— Turns the option off.
/etc/X11/xorg.conf
file. More detailed information about the X server configuration file can be found in the xorg.conf
man page.
ServerFlags
ServerFlags
section contains miscellaneous global X server settings. Any settings in this section may be overridden by options placed in the ServerLayout
section (refer to 節 33.3.1.3, “ServerLayout
” for details).
ServerFlags
section is on its own line and begins with the term Option
followed by an option enclosed in double quotation marks ("
).
ServerFlags
section:
Section "ServerFlags" Option "DontZap" "true" EndSection
"DontZap" "<boolean>
"
— When the value of <boolean>
is set to true, this setting prevents the use of the Ctrl+Alt+Backspace key combination to immediately terminate the X server.
"DontZoom" "<boolean>
"
— When the value of <boolean>
is set to true, this setting prevents cycling through configured video resolutions using the Ctrl+Alt+Keypad-Plus and Ctrl+Alt+Keypad-Minus key combinations.
ServerLayout
ServerLayout
section binds together the input and output devices controlled by the X server. At a minimum, this section must specify one output device and one input device. By default, a monitor (output device) and keyboard (input device) are specified.
ServerLayout
section:
Section "ServerLayout" Identifier "Default Layout" Screen 0 "Screen0" 0 0 InputDevice "Mouse0" "CorePointer" InputDevice "Keyboard0" "CoreKeyboard" EndSection
ServerLayout
section:
Identifier
— Specifies a unique name for this ServerLayout
section.
Screen
— Specifies the name of a Screen
section to be used with the X server. More than one Screen
option may be present.
Screen
entry:
Screen 0 "Screen0" 0 0
Screen
entry (0
) indicates that the first monitor connector or head on the video card uses the configuration specified in the Screen
section with the identifier "Screen0"
.
Screen
entry with a different number and a different Screen
section identifier is necessary .
"Screen0"
give the absolute X and Y coordinates for the upper-left corner of the screen (0 0
by default).
InputDevice
— Specifies the name of an InputDevice
section to be used with the X server.
InputDevice
entries: one for the default mouse and one for the default keyboard. The options CorePointer
and CoreKeyboard
indicate that these are the primary mouse and keyboard.
Option "<option-name>
"
— An optional entry which specifies extra parameters for the section. Any options listed here override those listed in the ServerFlags
section.
<option-name>
with a valid option listed for this section in the xorg.conf
man page.
ServerLayout
section in the /etc/X11/xorg.conf
file. By default, the server only reads the first one it encounters, however.
ServerLayout
section, it can be specified as a command line argument when starting an X session.
Files
Files
section sets paths for services vital to the X server, such as the font path. This is an optional section, these paths are normally detected automatically. This section may be used to override any automatically detected defaults.
Files
section:
Section "Files" RgbPath "/usr/share/X11/rgb.txt" FontPath "unix/:7100" EndSection
Files
section:
RgbPath
— Specifies the location of the RGB color database. This database defines all valid color names in X and ties them to specific RGB values.
FontPath
— Specifies where the X server must connect to obtain fonts from the xfs
font server.
FontPath
is unix/:7100
. This tells the X server to obtain font information using UNIX-domain sockets for inter-process communication (IPC) on port 7100.
ModulePath
— An optional parameter which specifies alternate directories which store X server modules.
Module
/usr/lib/xorg/modules/
directory:
extmod
dbe
glx
freetype
type1
record
dri
ModulePath
parameter in the Files
section. Refer to 節 33.3.1.4, “Files
” for more information on this section.
Module
section to /etc/X11/xorg.conf
instructs the X server to load the modules listed in this section instead of the default modules.
Module
section:
Section "Module" Load "fbdevhw" EndSectioninstructs the X server to load the
fbdevhw
instead of the default modules.
Module
section to /etc/X11/xorg.conf
, you will need to specify any default modules you want to load as well as any extra modules.
InputDevice
InputDevice
section configures one input device for the X server. Systems typically have at least one InputDevice
section for the keyboard. It is perfectly normal to have no entry for a mouse, as most mouse settings are automatically detected.
InputDevice
section for a keyboard:
Section "InputDevice" Identifier "Keyboard0" Driver "kbd" Option "XkbModel" "pc105" Option "XkbLayout" "us" EndSection
InputDevice
section:
Identifier
— Specifies a unique name for this InputDevice
section. This is a required entry.
Driver
— Specifies the name of the device driver X must load for the device.
Option
— Specifies necessary options pertaining to the device.
xorg.conf
:
Protocol
— Specifies the protocol used by the mouse, such as IMPS/2
.
Device
— Specifies the location of the physical device.
Emulate3Buttons
— Specifies whether to allow a two-button mouse to act like a three-button mouse when both mouse buttons are pressed simultaneously.
xorg.conf
man page for a list of valid options for this section.
Monitor
Monitor
section configures one type of monitor used by the system. This is an optional entry as well, as most monitors are now automatically detected.
Monitor
section for a monitor:
Section "Monitor" Identifier "Monitor0" VendorName "Monitor Vendor" ModelName "DDC Probed Monitor - ViewSonic G773-2" DisplaySize 320 240 HorizSync 30.0 - 70.0 VertRefresh 50.0 - 180.0 EndSection
Monitor
section of /etc/X11/xorg.conf
. Inappropriate values can damage or destroy a monitor. Consult the monitor's documentation for a listing of safe operating parameters.
Monitor
section:
Identifier
— Specifies a unique name for this Monitor
section. This is a required entry.
VendorName
— An optional parameter which specifies the vendor of the monitor.
ModelName
— An optional parameter which specifies the monitor's model name.
DisplaySize
— An optional parameter which specifies, in millimeters, the physical size of the monitor's picture area.
HorizSync
— Specifies the range of horizontal sync frequencies compatible with the monitor in kHz. These values help the X server determine the validity of built-in or specified Modeline
entries for the monitor.
VertRefresh
— Specifies the range of vertical refresh frequencies supported by the monitor, in kHz. These values help the X server determine the validity of built in or specified Modeline
entries for the monitor.
Modeline
— An optional parameter which specifies additional video modes for the monitor at particular resolutions, with certain horizontal sync and vertical refresh resolutions. Refer to the xorg.conf
man page for a more detailed explanation of Modeline
entries.
Option "<option-name>
"
— An optional entry which specifies extra parameters for the section. Replace <option-name>
with a valid option listed for this section in the xorg.conf
man page.
Device
Device
section configures one video card on the system. While one Device
section is the minimum, additional instances may occur for each video card installed on the machine.
Device
section for a video card:
Section "Device" Identifier "Videocard0" Driver "mga" VendorName "Videocard vendor" BoardName "Matrox Millennium G200" VideoRam 8192 Option "dpms" EndSection
Device
section:
Identifier
— Specifies a unique name for this Device
section. This is a required entry.
Driver
— Specifies which driver the X server must load to utilize the video card. A list of drivers can be found in /usr/share/hwdata/videodrivers
, which is installed with the hwdata
package.
VendorName
— An optional parameter which specifies the vendor of the video card.
BoardName
— An optional parameter which specifies the name of the video card.
VideoRam
— An optional parameter which specifies the amount of RAM available on the video card in kilobytes. This setting is only necessary for video cards the X server cannot probe to detect the amount of video RAM.
BusID
— An entry which specifies the bus location of the video card. On systems with only one video card a BusID
entry is optional and may not even be present in the default /etc/X11/xorg.conf
file. On systems with more than one video card, however, a BusID
entry must be present.
Screen
— An optional entry which specifies which monitor connector or head on the video card the Device
section configures. This option is only useful for video cards with multiple heads.
Device
sections must exist and each of these sections must have a different Screen
value.
Screen
entry must be an integer. The first head on the video card has a value of 0
. The value for each additional head increments this value by one.
Option "<option-name>
"
— An optional entry which specifies extra parameters for the section. Replace <option-name>
with a valid option listed for this section in the xorg.conf
man page.
"dpms"
(for Display Power Management Signaling, a VESA standard), which activates the Service Star energy compliance setting for the monitor.
Screen
Screen
section binds one video card (or video card head) to one monitor by referencing the Device
section and the Monitor
section for each. While one Screen
section is the minimum, additional instances may occur for each video card and monitor combination present on the machine.
Screen
section:
Section "Screen" Identifier "Screen0" Device "Videocard0" Monitor "Monitor0" DefaultDepth 16 SubSection "Display" Depth 24 Modes "1280x1024" "1280x960" "1152x864" "1024x768" "800x600" "640x480" EndSubSection SubSection "Display" Depth 16 Modes "1152x864" "1024x768" "800x600" "640x480" EndSubSection EndSection
Screen
section:
Identifier
— Specifies a unique name for this Screen
section. This is a required entry.
Device
— Specifies the unique name of a Device
section. This is a required entry.
Monitor
— Specifies the unique name of a Monitor
section. This is only required if a specific Monitor
section is defined in the xorg.conf
file. Normally, monitors are automatically detected.
DefaultDepth
— Specifies the default color depth in bits. In the previous example, 16
(which provides thousands of colors) is the default. Only one DefaultDepth
is permitted, although this can be overridden with the Xorg command line option -depth <n>
,where <n>
is any additional depth specified.
SubSection "Display"
— Specifies the screen modes available at a particular color depth. The Screen
section can have multiple Display
subsections, which are entirely optional since screen modes are automatically detected.
Option "<option-name>
"
— An optional entry which specifies extra parameters for the section. Replace <option-name>
with a valid option listed for this section in the xorg.conf
man page.
DRI
DRI
section specifies parameters for the Direct Rendering Infrastructure (DRI). DRI is an interface which allows 3D software applications to take advantage of 3D hardware acceleration capabilities built into most modern video hardware. In addition, DRI can improve 2D performance via hardware acceleration, if supported by the video card driver.
xorg.conf
file will override those defaults.
DRI
section:
Section "DRI" Group 0 Mode 0666 EndSection
xfs
.
/etc/fonts/fonts.conf
configuration file, which should not be edited by hand.
~/.gtkrc.mine
:
style "user-font" {
fontset = "<font-specification>
"
}
widget_class "*" style "user-font"
<font-specification>
with a font specification in the style used by traditional X applications, such as -adobe-helvetica-medium-r-normal--*-120-*-*-*-*-*-*
. A full list of core fonts can be obtained by running xlsfonts
or created interactively using the xfontsel
command.
/usr/share/fonts/
directory. It is a good idea to create a new subdirectory, such as local/
or similar, to help distinguish between user-installed and default fonts.
.fonts/
directory in the user's home directory.
fc-cache
command to update the font information cache, as in the following example:
fc-cache <path-to-font-directory>
<path-to-font-directory>
with the directory containing the new fonts (either /usr/share/fonts/local/
or /home/<user>
/.fonts/
).
fonts:///
into the Nautilus address bar, and dragging the new font files there.
.gz
extension, it is compressed and cannot be used until uncompressed. To do this, use the gunzip
command or double-click the file and drag the font to a directory in Nautilus.
xfs
) to provide fonts to X client applications.
FontPath
directive within the Files
section of the /etc/X11/xorg.conf
configuration file. Refer to 節 33.3.1.4, “Files
” for more information about the FontPath
entry.
xfs
server on a specified port to acquire font information. For this reason, the xfs
service must be running for X to start. For more about configuring services for a particular runlevel, refer to 章 17, 控制服務的存取.
xfs
Configuration/etc/rc.d/init.d/xfs
script starts the xfs
server. Several options can be configured within its configuration file, /etc/X11/fs/config
.
alternate-servers
— Specifies a list of alternate font servers to be used if this font server is not available. A comma must separate each font server in a list.
catalogue
— Specifies an ordered list of font paths to use. A comma must separate each font path in a list.
:unscaled
immediately after the font path to make the unscaled fonts in that path load first. Then specify the entire path again, so that other scaled fonts are also loaded.
client-limit
— Specifies the maximum number of clients the font server services. The default is 10
.
clone-self
— Allows the font server to clone a new version of itself when the client-limit
is hit. By default, this option is on
.
default-point-size
— Specifies the default point size for any font that does not specify this value. The value for this option is set in decipoints. The default of 120
corresponds to a 12 point font.
default-resolutions
— Specifies a list of resolutions supported by the X server. Each resolution in the list must be separated by a comma.
deferglyphs
— Specifies whether to defer loading glyphs (the graphic used to visually represent a font). To disable this feature use none
, to enable this feature for all fonts use all
, or to turn this feature on only for 16-bit fonts use 16
.
error-file
— Specifies the path and file name of a location where xfs
errors are logged.
no-listen
— Prevents xfs
from listening to particular protocols. By default, this option is set to tcp
to prevent xfs
from listening on TCP ports for security reasons.
xfs
is used to serve fonts over the network, remove this line.
port
— Specifies the TCP port that xfs
listens on if no-listen
does not exist or is commented out.
use-syslog
— Specifies whether to use the system error log.
xfs
xfs
), follow these steps:
/usr/share/fonts/local/
using the following command as root:
mkdir /usr/share/fonts/local/
/usr/share/fonts/local/
directory is necessary, it must be added to the xfs
path using the following command as root:
chkfontpath --add /usr/share/fonts/local/
/usr/share/fonts/local/
directory
ttmkfdir -d /usr/share/fonts/local/ -o /usr/share/fonts/local/fonts.scale
xfs
font server configuration file by issuing the following command as root:
service xfs reload
startx
. The startx
command is a front-end to the xinit
command, which launches the X server (Xorg
) and connects X client applications to it. Because the user is already logged into the system at runlevel 3, startx
does not launch a display manager or authenticate users. Refer to 節 33.5.2, “Runlevel 5” for more information about display managers.
startx
command is executed, it searches for the .xinitrc
file in the user's home directory to define the desktop environment and possibly other X client applications to run. If no .xinitrc
file is present, it uses the system default /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc
file instead.
xinitrc
script then searches for user-defined files and default system files, including .Xresources
, .Xmodmap
, and .Xkbmap
in the user's home directory, and Xresources
, Xmodmap
, and Xkbmap
in the /etc/X11/
directory. The Xmodmap
and Xkbmap
files, if they exist, are used by the xmodmap
utility to configure the keyboard. The Xresources
file is read to assign specific preference values to applications.
xinitrc
script executes all scripts located in the /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc.d/
directory. One important script in this directory is xinput.sh
, which configures settings such as the default language.
xinitrc
script attempts to execute .Xclients
in the user's home directory and turns to /etc/X11/xinit/Xclients
if it cannot be found. The purpose of the Xclients
file is to start the desktop environment or, possibly, just a basic window manager. The .Xclients
script in the user's home directory starts the user-specified desktop environment in the .Xclients-default
file. If .Xclients
does not exist in the user's home directory, the standard /etc/X11/xinit/Xclients
script attempts to start another desktop environment, trying GNOME first and then KDE followed by twm
.
GNOME
— The default display manager for Red Hat Enterprise Linux, GNOME
allows the user to configure language settings, shutdown, restart or log in to the system.
KDE
— KDE's display manager which allows the user to shutdown, restart or log in to the system.
xdm
— A very basic display manager which only lets the user log in to the system.
prefdm
script determines the preferred display manager by referencing the /etc/sysconfig/desktop
file. A list of options for this file is available in this file:
/usr/share/doc/initscripts-<version-number>
/sysconfig.txt
<version-number>
is the version number of the initscripts
package.
/etc/X11/xdm/Xsetup_0
file to set up the login screen. Once the user logs into the system, the /etc/X11/xdm/GiveConsole
script runs to assign ownership of the console to the user. Then, the /etc/X11/xdm/Xsession
script runs to accomplish many of the tasks normally performed by the xinitrc
script when starting X from runlevel 3, including setting system and user resources, as well as running the scripts in the /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc.d/
directory.
GNOME
or KDE
display managers by selecting it from the menu item (accessed by selecting System (on the panel) > > > ). If the desktop environment is not specified in the display manager, the /etc/X11/xdm/Xsession
script checks the .xsession
and .Xclients
files in the user's home directory to decide which desktop environment to load. As a last resort, the /etc/X11/xinit/Xclients
file is used to select a desktop environment or window manager to use in the same way as runlevel 3.
:0
) and logs out, the /etc/X11/xdm/TakeConsole
script runs and reassigns ownership of the console to the root user. The original display manager, which continues running after the user logged in, takes control by spawning a new display manager. This restarts the X server, displays a new login window, and starts the entire process over again.
/usr/share/doc/gdm-<version-number>
/README
(where <version-number>
is the version number for the gdm
package installed) and the xdm
man page.
/usr/share/X11/doc/
— contains detailed documentation on the X Window System architecture, as well as how to get additional information about the Xorg project as a new user.
man xorg.conf
— Contains information about the xorg.conf
configuration files, including the meaning and syntax for the different sections within the files.
man Xorg
— Describes the Xorg
display server.
system-config-display
at a shell prompt (for example, in an XTerm or GNOME terminal). If the X Window System is not running, a small version of X is started to run the program.
system-config-users
RPM package installed. To start the User Manager from the desktop, go to System (on the panel) > > . You can also type the command system-config-users
at a shell prompt (for example, in an XTerm or a GNOME terminal).
/bin/bash
. The default home directory is /home/<username>
/
. You can change the home directory that is created for the user, or you can choose not to create the home directory by unselecting Create home directory.
/etc/skel/
directory into the new home directory.
system-config-users
). For more information on User Manager, refer to 節 35.1, “User and Group Configuration”.
useradd
, usermod
, and userdel
— Industry-standard methods of adding, deleting and modifying user accounts
groupadd
, groupmod
, and groupdel
— Industry-standard methods of adding, deleting, and modifying user groups
gpasswd
— Industry-standard method of administering the /etc/group
file
pwck
, grpck
— Tools used for the verification of the password, group, and associated shadow files
pwconv
, pwunconv
— Tools used for the conversion of passwords to shadow passwords and back to standard passwords
useradd
are detailed in 表格 35.1, “useradd
Command Line Options”.
useradd
Command Line OptionsOption | Description |
---|---|
-c '<comment> '
|
<comment> can be replaced with any string. This option is generally used to specify the full name of a user.
|
-d <home-dir>
|
Home directory to be used instead of default /home/
|
-e <date>
| Date for the account to be disabled in the format YYYY-MM-DD |
-f <days>
|
Number of days after the password expires until the account is disabled. If 0 is specified, the account is disabled immediately after the password expires. If -1 is specified, the account is not be disabled after the password expires.
|
-g <group-name>
| Group name or group number for the user's default group. The group must exist prior to being specified here. |
-G <group-list>
| List of additional (other than default) group names or group numbers, separated by commas, of which the user is a member. The groups must exist prior to being specified here. |
-m
| Create the home directory if it does not exist. |
-M
| Do not create the home directory. |
-n
| Do not create a user private group for the user. |
-r
| Create a system account with a UID less than 500 and without a home directory |
-p <password>
|
The password encrypted with crypt
|
-s
|
User's login shell, which defaults to /bin/bash
|
-u <uid>
| User ID for the user, which must be unique and greater than 499 |
groupadd
:
groupadd <group-name>
groupadd
are detailed in 表格 35.2, “groupadd
Command Line Options”.
groupadd
Command Line OptionsOption | Description |
---|---|
-g <gid>
| Group ID for the group, which must be unique and greater than 499 |
-r
| Create a system group with a GID less than 500 |
-f
|
When used with -g <gid> and <gid> already exists, groupadd will choose another unique <gid> for the group.
|
chage
command with an option from 表格 35.3, “chage
Command Line Options”, followed by the username.
chage
command. For more information, see 節 35.6, “Shadow Passwords”.
chage
Command Line OptionsOption | Description |
---|---|
-m <days>
| Specifies the minimum number of days between which the user must change passwords. If the value is 0, the password does not expire. |
-M <days>
|
Specifies the maximum number of days for which the password is valid. When the number of days specified by this option plus the number of days specified with the -d option is less than the current day, the user must change passwords before using the account.
|
-d <days>
| Specifies the number of days since January 1, 1970 the password was changed |
-I <days>
| Specifies the number of inactive days after the password expiration before locking the account. If the value is 0, the account is not locked after the password expires. |
-E <date>
| Specifies the date on which the account is locked, in the format YYYY-MM-DD. Instead of the date, the number of days since January 1, 1970 can also be used. |
-W <days>
| Specifies the number of days before the password expiration date to warn the user. |
-l
| Lists current account aging settings. |
chage
command is followed directly by a username (with no options), it displays the current password aging values and allows them to be changed interactively.
python
command. It displays the following:
Python 2.4.3 (#1, Jul 21 2006, 08:46:09) [GCC 4.1.1 20060718 (Red Hat 4.1.1-9)] on linux2 Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>>
<password>
with the password to encrypt and <salt>
with a random combination of at least 2 of the following: any alphanumeric character, the slash (/) character or a dot (.):
import crypt
print crypt.crypt("
<password>
","<salt>
")
'12CsGd8FRcMSM'
.
<encrypted-password>
with the encrypted output of the Python interpreter):
usermod -p "<encrypted-password>
" <username>
usermod -p "" username
chage -d 0 username
useradd juan
is issued on a system that has shadow passwords enabled:
juan
is created in /etc/passwd
. The line has the following characteristics:
juan
.
x
for the password field indicating that the system is using shadow passwords.
juan
is set to /home/juan/
.
/bin/bash
.
juan
is created in /etc/shadow
. The line has the following characteristics:
juan
.
!!
) appear in the password field of the /etc/shadow
file, which locks the account.
-p
flag, it is placed in the /etc/shadow
file on the new line for the user.
juan
is created in /etc/group
. A group with the same name as a user is called a user private group. For more information on user private groups, refer to 節 35.1.1, “Adding a New User”.
/etc/group
has the following characteristics:
juan
.
x
appears in the password field indicating that the system is using shadow group passwords.
juan
in /etc/passwd
.
juan
is created in /etc/gshadow
. The line has the following characteristics:
juan
.
!
) appears in the password field of the /etc/gshadow
file, which locks the group.
juan
is created in the /home/
directory. This directory is owned by user juan
and group juan
. However, it has read, write, and execute privileges only for the user juan
. All other permissions are denied.
/etc/skel/
directory (which contain default user settings) are copied into the new /home/juan/
directory.
juan
exists on the system. To activate it, the administrator must next assign a password to the account using the passwd
command and, optionally, set password aging guidelines.
/etc/passwd
file by an Everything installation. The groupid (GID) in this table is the primary group for the user. See 節 35.4, “Standard Groups” for a listing of standard groups.
User | UID | GID | Home Directory | Shell |
---|---|---|---|---|
root | 0 | 0 |
/root
|
/bin/bash
|
bin | 1 | 1 |
/bin
|
/sbin/nologin
|
daemon | 2 | 2 |
/sbin
|
/sbin/nologin
|
adm | 3 | 4 |
/var/adm
|
/sbin/nologin
|
lp | 4 | 7 |
/var/spool/lpd
|
/sbin/nologin
|
sync | 5 | 0 |
/sbin
|
/bin/sync
|
shutdown | 6 | 0 |
/sbin
|
/sbin/shutdown
|
halt | 7 | 0 |
/sbin
|
/sbin/halt
|
8 | 12 |
/var/spool/mail
|
/sbin/nologin
| |
news | 9 | 13 |
/etc/news
| |
uucp | 10 | 14 |
/var/spool/uucp
|
/sbin/nologin
|
operator | 11 | 0 |
/root
|
/sbin/nologin
|
games | 12 | 100 |
/usr/games
|
/sbin/nologin
|
gopher | 13 | 30 |
/var/gopher
|
/sbin/nologin
|
ftp | 14 | 50 |
/var/ftp
|
/sbin/nologin
|
nobody | 99 | 99 |
/
|
/sbin/nologin
|
rpm | 37 | 37 |
/var/lib/rpm
|
/sbin/nologin
|
vcsa | 69 | 69 |
/dev
|
/sbin/nologin
|
dbus | 81 | 81 |
/
|
/sbin/nologin
|
ntp | 38 | 38 |
/etc/ntp
|
/sbin/nologin
|
canna | 39 | 39 |
/var/lib/canna
|
/sbin/nologin
|
nscd | 28 | 28 |
/
|
/sbin/nologin
|
rpc | 32 | 32 |
/
|
/sbin/nologin
|
postfix | 89 | 89 |
/var/spool/postfix
|
/sbin/nologin
|
mailman | 41 | 41 |
/var/mailman
|
/sbin/nologin
|
named | 25 | 25 |
/var/named
|
/bin/false
|
amanda | 33 | 6 |
var/lib/amanda/
|
/bin/bash
|
postgres | 26 | 26 |
/var/lib/pgsql
|
/bin/bash
|
exim | 93 | 93 |
/var/spool/exim
|
/sbin/nologin
|
sshd | 74 | 74 |
/var/empty/sshd
|
/sbin/nologin
|
rpcuser | 29 | 29 |
/var/lib/nfs
|
/sbin/nologin
|
nsfnobody | 65534 | 65534 |
/var/lib/nfs
|
/sbin/nologin
|
pvm | 24 | 24 |
/usr/share/pvm3
|
/bin/bash
|
apache | 48 | 48 |
/var/www
|
/sbin/nologin
|
xfs | 43 | 43 |
/etc/X11/fs
|
/sbin/nologin
|
gdm | 42 | 42 |
/var/gdm
|
/sbin/nologin
|
htt | 100 | 101 |
/usr/lib/im
|
/sbin/nologin
|
mysql | 27 | 27 |
/var/lib/mysql
|
/bin/bash
|
webalizer | 67 | 67 |
/var/www/usage
|
/sbin/nologin
|
mailnull | 47 | 47 |
/var/spool/mqueue
|
/sbin/nologin
|
smmsp | 51 | 51 |
/var/spool/mqueue
|
/sbin/nologin
|
squid | 23 | 23 |
/var/spool/squid
|
/sbin/nologin
|
ldap | 55 | 55 |
/var/lib/ldap
|
/bin/false
|
netdump | 34 | 34 |
/var/crash
|
/bin/bash
|
pcap | 77 | 77 |
/var/arpwatch
|
/sbin/nologin
|
radiusd | 95 | 95 |
/
|
/bin/false
|
radvd | 75 | 75 |
/
|
/sbin/nologin
|
quagga | 92 | 92 |
/var/run/quagga
|
/sbin/login
|
wnn | 49 | 49 |
/var/lib/wnn
|
/sbin/nologin
|
dovecot | 97 | 97 |
/usr/libexec/dovecot
|
/sbin/nologin
|
/etc/group
file.
Group | GID | Members |
---|---|---|
root | 0 | root |
bin | 1 | root, bin, daemon |
daemon | 2 | root, bin, daemon |
sys | 3 | root, bin, adm |
adm | 4 | root, adm, daemon |
tty | 5 | |
disk | 6 | root |
lp | 7 | daemon, lp |
mem | 8 | |
kmem | 9 | |
wheel | 10 | root |
12 | mail, postfix, exim | |
news | 13 | news |
uucp | 14 | uucp |
man | 15 | |
games | 20 | |
gopher | 30 | |
dip | 40 | |
ftp | 50 | |
lock | 54 | |
nobody | 99 | |
users | 100 | |
rpm | 37 | |
utmp | 22 | |
floppy | 19 | |
vcsa | 69 | |
dbus | 81 | |
ntp | 38 | |
canna | 39 | |
nscd | 28 | |
rpc | 32 | |
postdrop | 90 | |
postfix | 89 | |
mailman | 41 | |
exim | 93 | |
named | 25 | |
postgres | 26 | |
sshd | 74 | |
rpcuser | 29 | |
nfsnobody | 65534 | |
pvm | 24 | |
apache | 48 | |
xfs | 43 | |
gdm | 42 | |
htt | 101 | |
mysql | 27 | |
webalizer | 67 | |
mailnull | 47 | |
smmsp | 51 | |
squid | 23 | |
ldap | 55 | |
netdump | 34 | |
pcap | 77 | |
quaggavt | 102 | |
quagga | 92 | |
radvd | 75 | |
slocate | 21 | |
wnn | 49 | |
dovecot | 97 | |
radiusd | 95 |
/etc/bashrc
file. Traditionally on UNIX systems, the umask
is set to 022
, which allows only the user who created the file or directory to make modifications. Under this scheme, all other users, including members of the creator's group, are not allowed to make any modifications. However, under the UPG scheme, this "group protection" is not necessary since every user has their own private group.
/usr/share/emacs/site-lisp/
directory. Some people are trusted to modify the directory, but certainly not everyone is trusted. First create an emacs
group, as in the following command:
groupadd emacs
emacs
group, type:
chown -R root.emacs /usr/share/emacs/site-lisp
gpasswd
command:
gpasswd -a <username>
emacs
chmod 775 /usr/share/emacs/site-lisp
emacs
). Use the following command:
chmod 2775 /usr/share/emacs/site-lisp
emacs
group can create and edit files in the /usr/share/emacs/site-lisp/
directory without the administrator having to change file permissions every time users write new files.
shadow-utils
package). Doing so enhances the security of system authentication files. For this reason, the installation program enables shadow passwords by default.
/etc/passwd
file to /etc/shadow
, which is readable only by the root user.
/etc/login.defs
file to enforce security policies.
shadow-utils
package work properly whether or not shadow passwords are enabled. However, since password aging information is stored exclusively in the /etc/shadow
file, any commands which create or modify password aging information do not work.
chage
gpasswd
/usr/sbin/usermod
-e
or -f
options
/usr/sbin/useradd
-e
or -f
options
man chage
— A command to modify password aging policies and account expiration.
man gpasswd
— A command to administer the /etc/group
file.
man groupadd
— A command to add groups.
man grpck
— A command to verify the /etc/group
file.
man groupdel
— A command to remove groups.
man groupmod
— A command to modify group membership.
man pwck
— A command to verify the /etc/passwd
and /etc/shadow
files.
man pwconv
— A tool to convert standard passwords to shadow passwords.
man pwunconv
— A tool to convert shadow passwords to standard passwords.
man useradd
— A command to add users.
man userdel
— A command to remove users.
man usermod
— A command to modify users.
man 5 group
— The file containing group information for the system.
man 5 passwd
— The file containing user information for the system.
man 5 shadow
— The file containing passwords and account expiration information for the system.
system-config-printer
at a shell prompt.
computer name/printer share
. In 圖形 36.5, “Adding a SMB Printer”, the computer name
is dellbox
, while the printer share
is r2
.
guest
for Windows servers, or nobody
for Samba servers.
lpq
. The last few lines look similar to the following:
lpq
outputRank Owner/ID Class Job Files Size Time active user@localhost+902 A 902 sample.txt 2050 01:20:46
lpq
and then use the command lprm job number
. For example, lprm 902
would cancel the print job in 範例 36.1, “Example of lpq
output”. You must have proper permissions to cancel a print job. You can not cancel print jobs that were started by other users unless you are logged in as root on the machine to which the printer is attached.
lpr sample.txt
prints the text file sample.txt
. The print filter determines what type of file it is and converts it into a format the printer can understand.
map lpr
— The manual page for the lpr
command that allows you to print files from the command line.
man lprm
— The manual page for the command line utility to remove print jobs from the print queue.
man mpage
— The manual page for the command line utility to print multiple pages on one sheet of paper.
man cupsd
— The manual page for the CUPS printer daemon.
man cupsd.conf
— The manual page for the CUPS printer daemon configuration file.
man classes.conf
— The manual page for the class configuration file for CUPS.
locate
command is updated daily. A system administrator can use automated tasks to perform periodic backups, monitor the system, run custom scripts, and more.
cron
, at
, and batch
.
vixie-cron
RPM package must be installed and the crond
service must be running. To determine if the package is installed, use the rpm -q vixie-cron
command. To determine if the service is running, use the command /sbin/service crond status
.
/etc/crontab
, contains the following lines:
SHELL=/bin/bash PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin MAILTO=root HOME=/ # run-parts 01 * * * * root run-parts /etc/cron.hourly 02 4 * * * root run-parts /etc/cron.daily 22 4 * * 0 root run-parts /etc/cron.weekly 42 4 1 * * root run-parts /etc/cron.monthly
SHELL
variable tells the system which shell environment to use (in this example the bash shell), while the PATH
variable defines the path used to execute commands. The output of the cron tasks are emailed to the username defined with the MAILTO
variable. If the MAILTO
variable is defined as an empty string (MAILTO=""
), email is not sent. The HOME
variable can be used to set the home directory to use when executing commands or scripts.
/etc/crontab
file represents a task and has the following format:
minute hour day month dayofweek command
minute
— any integer from 0 to 59
hour
— any integer from 0 to 23
day
— any integer from 1 to 31 (must be a valid day if a month is specified)
month
— any integer from 1 to 12 (or the short name of the month such as jan or feb)
dayofweek
— any integer from 0 to 7, where 0 or 7 represents Sunday (or the short name of the week such as sun or mon)
command
— the command to execute (the command can either be a command such as ls /proc >> /tmp/proc
or the command to execute a custom script)
1-4
means the integers 1, 2, 3, and 4.
3, 4, 6, 8
indicates those four specific integers.
/<integer
>
. For example, 0-59/2
can be used to define every other minute in the minute field. Step values can also be used with an asterisk. For instance, the value */3
can be used in the month field to run the task every third month.
/etc/crontab
file, the run-parts
script executes the scripts in the /etc/cron.hourly/
, /etc/cron.daily/
, /etc/cron.weekly/
, and /etc/cron.monthly/
directories on an hourly, daily, weekly, or monthly basis respectively. The files in these directories should be shell scripts.
/etc/cron.d/
directory. All files in this directory use the same syntax as /etc/crontab
. Refer to 範例 37.1, “Crontab 的範例” for examples.
# record the memory usage of the system every monday # at 3:30AM in the file /tmp/meminfo 30 3 * * mon cat /proc/meminfo >> /tmp/meminfo # run custom script the first day of every month at 4:10AM 10 4 1 * * /root/scripts/backup.sh
crontab
utility. All user-defined crontabs are stored in the /var/spool/cron/
directory and are executed using the usernames of the users that created them. To create a crontab as a user, login as that user and type the command crontab -e
to edit the user's crontab using the editor specified by the VISUAL
or EDITOR
environment variable. The file uses the same format as /etc/crontab
. When the changes to the crontab are saved, the crontab is stored according to username and written to the file /var/spool/cron/username
.
/etc/crontab
file, the /etc/cron.d/
directory, and the /var/spool/cron/
directory every minute for any changes. If any changes are found, they are loaded into memory. Thus, the daemon does not need to be restarted if a crontab file is changed.
/etc/cron.allow
and /etc/cron.deny
files are used to restrict access to cron. The format of both access control files is one username on each line. Whitespace is not permitted in either file. The cron daemon (crond
) does not have to be restarted if the access control files are modified. The access control files are read each time a user tries to add or delete a cron task.
cron.allow
exists, only users listed in it are allowed to use cron, and the cron.deny
file is ignored.
cron.allow
does not exist, users listed in cron.deny
are not allowed to use cron.
/sbin/service crond start
. To stop the service, use the command /sbin/service crond stop
. It is recommended that you start the service at boot time. Refer to 章 17, 控制服務的存取 for details on starting the cron service automatically at boot time.
at
command is used to schedule a one-time task at a specific time and the batch
command is used to schedule a one-time task to be executed when the systems load average drops below 0.8.
at
or batch
, the at
RPM package must be installed, and the atd
service must be running. To determine if the package is installed, use the rpm -q at
command. To determine if the service is running, use the command /sbin/service atd status
.
at time
, where time
is the time to execute the command.
time
可以是下列的其中一種:
/usr/share/doc/at-<version>
/timespec
text file.
at
command with the time argument, the at>
prompt is displayed. Type the command to execute, press Enter, and type Ctrl+D . Multiple commands can be specified by typing each command followed by the Enter key. After typing all the commands, press Enter to go to a blank line and type Ctrl+D . Alternatively, a shell script can be entered at the prompt, pressing Enter after each line in the script, and typing Ctrl+D on a blank line to exit. If a script is entered, the shell used is the shell set in the user's SHELL
environment, the user's login shell, or /bin/sh
(whichever is found first).
atq
to view pending jobs. Refer to 節 37.2.3, “檢視等待中的工作” for more information.
at
command can be restricted. For more information, refer to 節 37.2.5, “At 與 Batch 的存取控制” for details.
batch
command.
batch
command, the at>
prompt is displayed. Type the command to execute, press Enter, and type Ctrl+D . Multiple commands can be specified by typing each command followed by the Enter key. After typing all the commands, press Enter to go to a blank line and type Ctrl+D . Alternatively, a shell script can be entered at the prompt, pressing Enter after each line in the script, and typing Ctrl+D on a blank line to exit. If a script is entered, the shell used is the shell set in the user's SHELL
environment, the user's login shell, or /bin/sh
(whichever is found first). As soon as the load average is below 0.8, the set of commands or script is executed.
atq
to view pending jobs. Refer to 節 37.2.3, “檢視等待中的工作” for more information.
batch
command can be restricted. For more information, refer to 節 37.2.5, “At 與 Batch 的存取控制” for details.
at
and batch
jobs, use the atq
command. The atq
command displays a list of pending jobs, with each job on a line. Each line follows the job number, date, hour, job class, and username format. Users can only view their own jobs. If the root user executes the atq
command, all jobs for all users are displayed.
at
and batch
include:
at
and batch
Command Line Options選項 | 說明 |
---|---|
-f
| 從一個檔案來讀取指令或 shell 程式碼,而不是在提示符號指定它們。 |
-m
| 當工作完成後,傳送電子郵件給使用者。 |
-v
| Display the time that the job is executed. |
/etc/at.allow
and /etc/at.deny
files can be used to restrict access to the at
and batch
commands. The format of both access control files is one username on each line. Whitespace is not permitted in either file. The at
daemon (atd
) does not have to be restarted if the access control files are modified. The access control files are read each time a user tries to execute the at
or batch
commands.
at
and batch
commands, regardless of the access control files.
at.allow
exists, only users listed in it are allowed to use at
or batch
, and the at.deny
file is ignored.
at.allow
does not exist, users listed in at.deny
are not allowed to use at
or batch
.
at
service, use the command /sbin/service atd start
. To stop the service, use the command /sbin/service atd stop
. It is recommended that you start the service at boot time. Refer to 章 17, 控制服務的存取 for details on starting the cron service automatically at boot time.
cron
man page — overview of cron.
crontab
man pages in sections 1 and 5 — The man page in section 1 contains an overview of the crontab
file. The man page in section 5 contains the format for the file and some example entries.
/usr/share/doc/at-<version>
/timespec
contains more detailed information about the times that can be specified for cron jobs.
at
man page — description of at
and batch
and their command line options.
syslogd
. A list of log messages maintained by syslogd
can be found in the /etc/syslog.conf
configuration file.
/var/log/
directory. Some applications such as httpd
and samba
have a directory within /var/log/
for their log files.
logrotate
package contains a cron task that automatically rotates log files according to the /etc/logrotate.conf
configuration file and the configuration files in the /etc/logrotate.d/
directory. By default, it is configured to rotate every week and keep four weeks worth of previous log files.
Vi
or Emacs. Some log files are readable by all users on the system; however, root privileges are required to read most log files.
gnome-system-log
at a shell prompt.
stap
.
stapprobes
man page for details. All these events are named using a unified syntax that looks like dot-separated parameterized identifiers:
Event | Description |
---|---|
begin
| The startup of the systemtap session. |
end
| The end of the systemtap session. |
kernel.function("sys_open")
| The entry to the function named sys_open in the kernel. |
syscall.close.return
| The return from the close system call.. |
module("ext3").statement(0xdeadbeef)
| The addressed instruction in the ext3 filesystem driver. |
timer.ms(200)
| A timer that fires every 200 milliseconds. |
net/socket.c
in the kernel. The kernel.function
probe point lets you express that easily, since systemtap examines the kernel's debugging information to relate object code to source code. It works like a debugger: if you can name or place it, you can probe it. Use kernel.function("*@net/socket.c")
for the function entries, and kernel.function("*@net/socket.c").return
for the exits. Note the use of wildcards in the function name part, and the subsequent @FILENAME
part. You can also put wildcards into the file name, and even add a colon (:) and a line number, if you want to restrict the search that precisely. Since systemtap will put a separate probe in every place that matches a probe point, a few wildcards can expand to hundreds or thousands of probes, so be careful what you ask for.
probe
keyword introduces a probe point, or a comma-separated list of them. The following { and } braces enclose the handler for all listed probe points.
stap -v FILE
. Terminate it any time with ^C
. (The -v
option tells systemtap to print more verbose messages during its processing. Try the -h
option to see more options.)
ps ax
command displays a list of current system processes, including processes owned by other users. To display the owner alongside each process, use the ps aux
command. This list is a static list; in other words, it is a snapshot of what was running when you invoked the command. If you want a constantly updated list of running processes, use top
as described below.
ps
output can be long. To prevent it from scrolling off the screen, you can pipe it through less:
ps aux | less
ps
command in combination with the grep
command to see if a process is running. For example, to determine if Emacs is running, use the following command:
ps ax | grep emacs
top
command displays currently running processes and important information about them including their memory and CPU usage. The list is both real-time and interactive. An example of output from the top
command is provided as follows:
top - 15:02:46 up 35 min, 4 users, load average: 0.17, 0.65, 1.00 Tasks: 110 total, 1 running, 107 sleeping, 0 stopped, 2 zombie Cpu(s): 41.1% us, 2.0% sy, 0.0% ni, 56.6% id, 0.0% wa, 0.3% hi, 0.0% si Mem: 775024k total, 772028k used, 2996k free, 68468k buffers Swap: 1048568k total, 176k used, 1048392k free, 441172k cached PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND 4624 root 15 0 40192 18m 7228 S 28.4 2.4 1:23.21 X 4926 mhideo 15 0 55564 33m 9784 S 13.5 4.4 0:25.96 gnome-terminal 6475 mhideo 16 0 3612 968 760 R 0.7 0.1 0:00.11 top 4920 mhideo 15 0 20872 10m 7808 S 0.3 1.4 0:01.61 wnck-applet 1 root 16 0 1732 548 472 S 0.0 0.1 0:00.23 init 2 root 34 19 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.00 ksoftirqd/0 3 root 5 -10 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.03 events/0 4 root 6 -10 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.02 khelper 5 root 5 -10 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.00 kacpid 29 root 5 -10 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.00 kblockd/0 47 root 16 0 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:01.74 pdflush 50 root 11 -10 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.00 aio/0 30 root 15 0 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.05 khubd 49 root 16 0 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:01.44 kswapd0
top
, press the q key.
top
commands” contains useful interactive commands that you can use with top
. For more information, refer to the top
(1) manual page.
top
commands指令 | 說明 |
---|---|
Space | 立即重新整理 |
h | 顯示說明畫面 |
k | 刪除(Kill)一個程序,您將會被提示輸入程序 ID 以及要傳送給它的訊號。 |
n | 變更所顯示的程序數目,您將會被提示輸入一個數目。 |
u | 以使用者排序。 |
M | 以記憶體用量排序。 |
P | 以 CPU 用量排序。 |
top
, you can use the GNOME System Monitor. To start it from the desktop, select > > or type gnome-system-monitor
at a shell prompt (such as an XTerm). Select the Process Listing tab.
free
command displays the total amount of physical memory and swap space for the system as well as the amount of memory that is used, free, shared, in kernel buffers, and cached.
total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 645712 549720 95992 0 176248 224452 -/+ buffers/cache: 149020 496692 Swap: 1310712 0 1310712
free -m
shows the same information in megabytes, which are easier to read.
total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 630 536 93 0 172 219 -/+ buffers/cache: 145 485 Swap: 1279 0 1279
free
, you can use the GNOME System Monitor. To start it from the desktop, go to > > or type gnome-system-monitor
at a shell prompt (such as an XTerm). Click on the Resources tab.
df
command reports the system's disk space usage. If you type the command df
at a shell prompt, the output looks similar to the following:
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 11675568 6272120 4810348 57% / /dev/sda1 100691 9281 86211 10% /boot none 322856 0 322856 0% /dev/shm
df -h
. The -h
argument stands for human-readable format. The output looks similar to the following:
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 12G 6.0G 4.6G 57% / /dev/sda1 99M 9.1M 85M 10% /boot none 316M 0 316M 0% /dev/shm
/dev/shm
. This entry represents the system's virtual memory file system.
du
command displays the estimated amount of space being used by files in a directory. If you type du
at a shell prompt, the disk usage for each of the subdirectories is displayed in a list. The grand total for the current directory and subdirectories are also shown as the last line in the list. If you do not want to see the totals for all the subdirectories, use the command du -hs
to see only the grand total for the directory in human-readable format. Use the du --help
command to see more options.
gnome-system-monitor
at a shell prompt (such as an XTerm). Select the File Systems tab to view the system's partitions. The figure below illustrates the File Systems tab.
hwbrowser
at a shell prompt. As shown in 圖形 40.4, “Hardware Browser”, it displays your CD-ROM devices, diskette drives, hard drives and their partitions, network devices, pointing devices, system devices, and video cards. Click on the category name in the left menu, and the information is displayed.
hal-device-manager
. Depending on your installation preferences, the graphical menu above may start this application or the Hardware Browser when clicked. The figure below illustrates the Device Manager window.
lspci
command to list all PCI devices. Use the command lspci -v
for more verbose information or lspci -vv
for very verbose output.
lspci
can be used to determine the manufacturer, model, and memory size of a system's video card:
00:00.0 Host bridge: ServerWorks CNB20LE Host Bridge (rev 06) 00:00.1 Host bridge: ServerWorks CNB20LE Host Bridge (rev 06) 00:01.0 VGA compatible controller: S3 Inc. Savage 4 (rev 04) 00:02.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corp. 82557/8/9 [Ethernet Pro 100] (rev 08) 00:0f.0 ISA bridge: ServerWorks OSB4 South Bridge (rev 50) 00:0f.1 IDE interface: ServerWorks OSB4 IDE Controller 00:0f.2 USB Controller: ServerWorks OSB4/CSB5 OHCI USB Controller (rev 04) 01:03.0 SCSI storage controller: Adaptec AIC-7892P U160/m (rev 02) 01:05.0 RAID bus controller: IBM ServeRAID Controller
lspci
is also useful to determine the network card in your system if you do not know the manufacturer or model number.
ps --help
— Displays a list of options that can be used with ps
.
top
manual page — Type man top
to learn more about top
and its many options.
free
manual page — type man free
to learn more about free
and its many options.
df
manual page — Type man df
to learn more about the df
command and its many options.
du
manual page — Type man du
to learn more about the du
command and its many options.
lspci
manual page — Type man lspci
to learn more about the lspci
command and its many options.
oprofile
RPM package must be installed to use this tool.
--separate=library
選項。
opreport
does not associate samples for inline functions' properly — opreport
uses a simple address range mechanism to determine which function an address is in. Inline function samples are not attributed to the inline function but rather to the function the inline function was inserted into.
opcontrol --reset
to clear out the samples from previous runs.
oprofile
package.
指令 | 說明 |
---|---|
ophelp
|
Displays available events for the system's processor along with a brief description of each.
|
opimport
|
從外來的二進制格式轉換樣本資料庫檔案為系統原生的格式,只當您要為不同主機架構的一個樣本資料庫 做分析時,才使用這個選項。
|
opannotate
|
Creates annotated source for an executable if the application was compiled with debugging symbols. Refer to 節 41.5.4, “Using opannotate ” for details.
|
opcontrol
|
Configures what data is collected. Refer to 節 41.2, “設定 OProfile” for details.
|
opreport
|
Retrieves profile data. Refer to 節 41.5.1, “Using
opreport ” for details.
|
oprofiled
|
以系統程式的方式執行以定期寫入樣本資料到磁碟中。
|
opcontrol
utility to configure OProfile. As the opcontrol
commands are executed, the setup options are saved to the /root/.oprofile/daemonrc
file.
opcontrol --setup --vmlinux=/usr/lib/debug/lib/modules/`uname -r`/vmlinux
debuginfo
package must be installed (which contains the uncompressed kernel) in order to monitor the kernel.
opcontrol --setup --no-vmlinux
oprofile
kernel module, if it is not already loaded, and creates the /dev/oprofile/
directory, if it does not already exist. Refer to 節 41.6, “Understanding /dev/oprofile/
” for details about this directory.
oprofile
module can be loaded from it.
處理器 |
cpu_type
| 記數器的數量 |
---|---|---|
Pentium Pro | i386/ppro | 2 |
Pentium II | i386/pii | 2 |
Pentium III | i386/piii | 2 |
Pentium 4 (不含超執行緒功能) | i386/p4 | 8 |
Pentium 4 (含超執行緒功能) | i386/p4-ht | 4 |
Athlon | i386/athlon | 4 |
AMD64 | x86-64/hammer | 4 |
Itanium | ia64/itanium | 4 |
Itanium 2 | ia64/itanium2 | 4 |
TIMER_INT | timer | 1 |
IBM eServer iSeries and pSeries | timer | 1 |
ppc64/power4 | 8 | |
ppc64/power5 | 6 | |
ppc64/970 | 8 | |
IBM eServer S/390 and S/390x | timer | 1 |
IBM eServer zSeries | timer | 1 |
timer
is used as the processor type if the processor does not have supported performance monitoring hardware.
timer
is used, events cannot be set for any processor because the hardware does not have support for hardware performance counters. Instead, the timer interrupt is used for profiling.
timer
is not used as the processor type, the events monitored can be changed, and counter 0 for the processor is set to a time-based event by default. If more than one counter exists on the processor, the counters other than counter 0 are not set to an event by default. The default events monitored are shown in 表格 41.3, “預設的系統事件”.
處理器 | Default Event for Counter | 說明 |
---|---|---|
Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III, Athlon, AMD64 | CPU_CLK_UNHALTED | The processor's clock is not halted |
Pentium 4 (HT and non-HT) | GLOBAL_POWER_EVENTS | 處理器未停止運轉的時間 |
Itanium 2 | CPU_CYCLES | CPU 週期 |
TIMER_INT | (none) | 每一個計時器中斷值的樣本 |
ppc64/power4 | CYCLES | Processor Cycles |
ppc64/power5 | CYCLES | Processor Cycles |
ppc64/970 | CYCLES | Processor Cycles |
ls -d /dev/oprofile/[0-9]*
ophelp
opcontrol
:
opcontrol --event=<event-name>
:<sample-rate>
<event-name>
with the exact name of the event from ophelp
, and replace <sample-rate>
with the number of events between samples.
cpu_type
is not timer
, each event can have a sampling rate set for it. The sampling rate is the number of events between each sample snapshot.
opcontrol --event=<event-name>
:<sample-rate>
<sample-rate>
with the number of events to wait before sampling again. The smaller the count, the more frequent the samples. For events that do not happen frequently, a lower count may be needed to capture the event instances.
ophelp
command. The values for each unit mask are listed in hexadecimal format. To specify more than one unit mask, the hexadecimal values must be combined using a bitwise or operation.
opcontrol --event=<event-name>
:<sample-rate>
:<unit-mask>
opcontrol --event=<event-name>
:<sample-rate>
:<unit-mask>
:0
opcontrol --event=<event-name>
:<sample-rate>
:<unit-mask>
:1
opcontrol --event=<event-name>
:<sample-rate>
:<unit-mask>
:<kernel>
:0
opcontrol --event=<event-name>
:<sample-rate>
:<unit-mask>
:<kernel>
:1
opcontrol --separate=<choice>
<choice>
can be one of the following:
none
— do not separate the profiles (default)
library
— generate per-application profiles for libraries
kernel
— generate per-application profiles for the kernel and kernel modules
all
— generate per-application profiles for libraries and per-application profiles for the kernel and kernel modules
--separate=library
,樣本檔案的名稱將會含有執行檔的名稱與函式庫的名稱。
oprofile
is restarted.
opcontrol --start
Using log file /var/lib/oprofile/oprofiled.log Daemon started. Profiler running.
/root/.oprofile/daemonrc
are used.
oprofiled
, is started; it periodically writes the sample data to the /var/lib/oprofile/samples/
directory. The log file for the daemon is located at /var/lib/oprofile/oprofiled.log
.
opcontrol --shutdown
<name>
with a unique descriptive name for the current session.
opcontrol --save=<name>
/var/lib/oprofile/samples/name
/
is created and the current sample files are copied to it.
oprofiled
, collects the samples and writes them to the /var/lib/oprofile/samples/
directory. Before reading the data, make sure all data has been written to this directory by executing the following command as root:
opcontrol --dump
/bin/bash
becomes:
\{root\}/bin/bash/\{dep\}/\{root\}/bin/bash/CPU_CLK_UNHALTED.100000
opreport
opannotate
oparchive
can be used to address this problem.
opreport
opreport
tool provides an overview of all the executables being profiled.
Profiling through timer interrupt TIMER:0| samples| %| ------------------ 25926 97.5212 no-vmlinux 359 1.3504 pi 65 0.2445 Xorg 62 0.2332 libvte.so.4.4.0 56 0.2106 libc-2.3.4.so 34 0.1279 libglib-2.0.so.0.400.7 19 0.0715 libXft.so.2.1.2 17 0.0639 bash 8 0.0301 ld-2.3.4.so 8 0.0301 libgdk-x11-2.0.so.0.400.13 6 0.0226 libgobject-2.0.so.0.400.7 5 0.0188 oprofiled 4 0.0150 libpthread-2.3.4.so 4 0.0150 libgtk-x11-2.0.so.0.400.13 3 0.0113 libXrender.so.1.2.2 3 0.0113 du 1 0.0038 libcrypto.so.0.9.7a 1 0.0038 libpam.so.0.77 1 0.0038 libtermcap.so.2.0.8 1 0.0038 libX11.so.6.2 1 0.0038 libgthread-2.0.so.0.400.7 1 0.0038 libwnck-1.so.4.9.0
opreport
man page for a list of available command line options, such as the -r
option used to sort the output from the executable with the smallest number of samples to the one with the largest number of samples.
opreport
on a Single Executableopreport
:
opreport <mode>
<executable>
<executable>
must be the full path to the executable to be analyzed. <mode>
must be one of the following:
-l
opreport -l /lib/tls/libc-<version>
.so
:
samples % symbol name 12 21.4286 __gconv_transform_utf8_internal 5 8.9286 _int_malloc 4 7.1429 malloc 3 5.3571 __i686.get_pc_thunk.bx 3 5.3571 _dl_mcount_wrapper_check 3 5.3571 mbrtowc 3 5.3571 memcpy 2 3.5714 _int_realloc 2 3.5714 _nl_intern_locale_data 2 3.5714 free 2 3.5714 strcmp 1 1.7857 __ctype_get_mb_cur_max 1 1.7857 __unregister_atfork 1 1.7857 __write_nocancel 1 1.7857 _dl_addr 1 1.7857 _int_free 1 1.7857 _itoa_word 1 1.7857 calc_eclosure_iter 1 1.7857 fopen@@GLIBC_2.1 1 1.7857 getpid 1 1.7857 memmove 1 1.7857 msort_with_tmp 1 1.7857 strcpy 1 1.7857 strlen 1 1.7857 vfprintf 1 1.7857 write
-r
選項與 -l
選項結合。
-i <symbol-name>
opreport -l -i __gconv_transform_utf8_internal /lib/tls/libc-<version>
.so
:
samples % symbol name 12 100.000 __gconv_transform_utf8_internal
-d
-l
. For example, the following output is from the command opreport -l -d __gconv_transform_utf8_internal /lib/tls/libc-<version>
.so
:
vma samples % symbol name 00a98640 12 100.000 __gconv_transform_utf8_internal 00a98640 1 8.3333 00a9868c 2 16.6667 00a9869a 1 8.3333 00a986c1 1 8.3333 00a98720 1 8.3333 00a98749 1 8.3333 00a98753 1 8.3333 00a98789 1 8.3333 00a98864 1 8.3333 00a98869 1 8.3333 00a98b08 1 8.3333
-l
選項所輸出的資料是相同的,除了它也顯示出使用到的每一個符號與每一個 虛擬記憶體位址。 對於每一個虛擬記憶體位址,會顯示出樣本的數量以及對應該符號樣本總數的百分比。
-x
<symbol-name>
session
:<name>
/var/lib/oprofile/samples/
directory.
~]$ opreport /ext3
CPU: AMD64 processors, speed 797.948 MHz (estimated)
Counted DATA_CACHE_ACCESSES events (Data cache accesses) with a unit mask of 0x00 (No unit mask) count 500000
Counted DATA_CACHE_MISSES events (Data cache misses) with a unit mask of 0x00 (No unit mask) count 500000
DATA_CACHE_ACC...|DATA_CACHE_MIS...|
samples| %| samples| %|
------------------------------------
148721 100.000 1493 100.000 ext3
~]# ln -s /lib/modules/`uname -r`/kernel/fs/ext3/ext3.ko /ext3
Then the detailed information can be obtained with:
~]# opreport image:/ext3 -l|more
warning: could not check that the binary file /ext3 has not been modified since the profile was taken. Results may be inaccurate.
CPU: AMD64 processors, speed 797.948 MHz (estimated)
Counted DATA_CACHE_ACCESSES events (Data cache accesses) with a unit mask of 0x00 (No unit mask) count 500000
Counted DATA_CACHE_MISSES events (Data cache misses) with a unit mask of 0x00 (No unit mask) count 500000
samples % samples % symbol name
16728 11.2479 7 0.4689 ext3_group_sparse
16454 11.0637 4 0.2679 ext3_count_free_blocks
14583 9.8056 51 3.4159 ext3_fill_super
8281 5.5681 129 8.6403 ext3_ioctl
7810 5.2514 62 4.1527 ext3_write_info
7286 4.8991 67 4.4876 ext3_ordered_writepage
6509 4.3767 130 8.7073 ext3_new_inode
6378 4.2886 156 10.4488 ext3_new_block
5932 3.9887 87 5.8272 ext3_xattr_block_list
...
opannotate
opannotate
tool tries to match the samples for particular instructions to the corresponding lines in the source code. The resulting files generated should have the samples for the lines at the left. It also puts in a comment at the beginning of each function listing the total samples for the function.
-g
option. By default, Red Hat Enterprise Linux packages are not compiled with this option.
opannotate
is as follows:
opannotate --search-dirs <src-dir>
--source <executable>
opannotate
man page for a list of additional command line options.
/dev/oprofile/
/dev/oprofile/
directory contains the file system for OProfile. Use the cat
command to display the values of the virtual files in this file system. For example, the following command displays the type of processor OProfile detected:
cat /dev/oprofile/cpu_type
/dev/oprofile/
for each counter. For example, if there are 2 counters, the directories /dev/oprofile/0/
and dev/oprofile/1/
exist.
count
— The interval between samples.
enabled
— If 0, the counter is off and no samples are collected for it; if 1, the counter is on and samples are being collected for it.
event
— The event to monitor.
kernel
— If 0, samples are not collected for this counter event when the processor is in kernel-space; if 1, samples are collected even if the processor is in kernel-space.
unit_mask
— Defines which unit masks are enabled for the counter.
user
— If 0, samples are not collected for the counter event when the processor is in user-space; if 1, samples are collected even if the processor is in user-space.
cat
command. For example:
cat /dev/oprofile/0/count
opreport
can be used to determine how much processor time an application or service uses. If the system is used for multiple services but is under performing, the services consuming the most processor time can be moved to dedicated systems.
CPU_CLK_UNHALTED
event can be monitored to determine the processor load over a given period of time. This data can then be used to determine if additional processors or a faster processor might improve system performance.
oprof_start
command as root at a shell prompt. To use the graphical interface, you will need to have the oprofile-gui
package installed.
/root/.oprofile/daemonrc
, and the application exits. Exiting the application does not stop OProfile from sampling.
oprof_start
interface
vmlinux
file for the kernel to monitor in the Kernel image file text field. To configure OProfile not to monitor the kernel, select No kernel image.
oprofiled
daemon log includes more information.
opcontrol --separate=kernel
command. If Per-application shared libs samples files is selected, OProfile generates per-application profiles for libraries. This is equivalent to the opcontrol --separate=library
command.
opcontrol --dump
command.
/usr/share/doc/oprofile-<version>
/oprofile.html
— OProfile Manual
oprofile
man page — Discusses opcontrol
, opreport
, opannotate
, and ophelp
yum
command. The Package Management Tool automatically queries the Red Hat Enterprise Linux servers and determines which packages need to be updated on your machine, including the kernel. This chapter is only useful for those individuals that require manual updating of kernel packages, without using the yum
command.
yum
is highly recommended by Red Hat for installing upgraded kernels.
yum
, refer to 章 14, Product Subscriptions and Entitlements.
kernel
— Contains the kernel for multi-processor systems. For x86 system, only the first 4GB of RAM is used. As such, x86 systems with over 4GB of RAM should use the kernel-PAE
.
kernel-devel
— Contains the kernel headers and makefiles sufficient to build modules against the kernel
package.
kernel-PAE
(only for i686 systems) — This package offers the following key configuration option (in addition to the options already enabled for the kernel
package):
kernel-hugemem
package) is able to reliably address all 64GB of memory. Additionally, the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 PAE variant does not allow 4GB of addressable memory per-process like the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 kernel-hugemem
variant does. However, the x86_64 kernel does not suffer from any of these limitations, and is the suggested Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 architecture to use with large-memory systems.
kernel-PAE-devel
— Contains the kernel headers and makefiles required to build modules against the kernel-PAE
package.
kernel-doc
— Contains documentation files from the kernel source. Various portions of the Linux kernel and the device drivers shipped with it are documented in these files. Installation of this package provides a reference to the options that can be passed to Linux kernel modules at load time.
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/
directory.
kernel-headers
— Includes the C header files that specify the interface between the Linux kernel and userspace libraries and programs. The header files define structures and constants that are needed for building most standard programs.
kernel-xen
— Includes a version of the Linux kernel which is needed to run Virtualization.
kernel-xen-devel
— Contains the kernel headers and makefiles required to build modules against the kernel-xen
package
kernel-source
package has been removed and replaced with an RPM that can only be retrieved from Red Hat Network. This *.src.rpm
package must then be rebuilt locally using the rpmbuild
command. For more information on obtaining and installing the kernel source package, refer to the latest updated Release Notes (including all updates) at http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/
/sbin/mkbootdisk `uname -r`
at a shell prompt.
mkbootdisk
man page for more options. You can create bootable media via CD-Rs, CD-RWs, and USB flash drives, provided that your system BIOS also supports it.
rpm -qa | grep kernel
at a shell prompt:
kernel-2.6.9-5.EL kernel-devel-2.6.9-5.EL kernel-utils-2.6.9-5.EL kernel-doc-2.6.9-5.EL kernel-smp-2.6.9-5.EL kernel-smp-devel-2.6.9-5.EL kernel-hugemem-devel-2.6.9-5.EL
kernel
package. Refer to 節 42.1, “核心套件的概要” for descriptions of the different packages.
<variant>
-<version>
.<arch>
.rpm, where <variant>
is one of either PAE
, xen
, and so forth. The <arch>
is one of the following:
x86_64
for the AMD64 and Intel EM64T architectures
ia64
for the Intel® Itanium™ architecture
ppc64
for the IBM® eServer™ pSeries™ architecture
s390
for the IBM® S/390® architecture
s390x
for the IBM® eServer™ System z® architecture
i686
for Intel® Pentium® II, Intel® Pentium® III, Intel® Pentium® 4, AMD Athlon®, and AMD Duron® systems
-i
argument with the rpm
command to keep the old kernel. Do not use the -U
option, since it overwrites the currently installed kernel, which creates boot loader problems. For example:
rpm -ivh kernel-<kernel version>
.<arch>
.rpm
/etc/fstab
, an initial RAM disk is needed. The initial RAM disk allows a modular kernel to have access to modules that it might need to boot from before the kernel has access to the device where the modules normally reside.
mkinitrd
command. However, this step is performed automatically if the kernel and its associated packages are installed or upgraded from the RPM packages distributed by Red Hat; in such cases, you do not need to create the initial RAM disk manually. To verify that an initial RAM disk already exists, use the command ls -l /boot
to make sure the initrd-<version>
.img
file was created (the version should match the version of the kernel just installed).
vmlinux
file are combined into one file, which is created with the addRamDisk
command. This step is performed automatically if the kernel and its associated packages are installed or upgraded from the RPM packages distributed by Red Hat, Inc.; thus, it does not need to be executed manually. To verify that it was created, use the command ls -l /boot
to make sure the /boot/vmlinitrd-<kernel-version>
file already exists (the <kernel-version>
should match the version of the kernel just installed).
kernel
RPM package configures the boot loader to boot the newly installed kernel (except for IBM eServer iSeries systems). However, it does not configure the boot loader to boot the new kernel by default.
/boot/grub/grub.conf
contains a title
section with the same version as the kernel
package just installed
# Note that you do not have to rerun grub after making changes to this file # NOTICE: You have a /boot partition. This means that # all kernel and initrd paths are relative to /boot/, eg. # root (hd0,0) # kernel /vmlinuz-version ro root=/dev/hda2 # initrd /initrd-version.img #boot=/dev/hda default=1 timeout=10 splashimage=(hd0,0)/grub/splash.xpm.gz title Red Hat Enterprise Linux (2.6.9-5.EL) root (hd0,0) kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.9-5.EL ro root=LABEL=/ initrd /initrd-2.6.9-5.EL.img title Red Hat Enterprise Linux (2.6.9-1.906_EL) root (hd0,0) kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.9-1.906_EL ro root=LABEL=/ initrd /initrd-2.6.9-1.906_EL.img
/boot/
partition was created, the paths to the kernel and initrd
image are relative to /boot/
.
default
variable to the title section number for the title section that contains the new kernel. The count starts with 0. For example, if the new kernel is the first title section, set default
to 0
.
/boot/efi/EFI/redhat/elilo.conf
as the configuration file. Confirm that this file contains an image
section with the same version as the kernel
package just installed:
prompt timeout=50 default=old image=vmlinuz-2.6.9-5.EL label=linux initrd=initrd-2.6.9-5.EL.img read-only append="root=LABEL=/" image=vmlinuz-2.6.9-1.906_EL label=old initrd=initrd-2.6.9-1.906.img read-only append="root=LABEL=/"
default
variable to the value of the label
for the image
section that contains the new kernel.
/etc/zipl.conf
as the configuration file. Confirm that the file contains a section with the same version as the kernel package just installed:
[defaultboot] default=old target=/boot/ [linux] image=/boot/vmlinuz-2.6.9-5.EL ramdisk=/boot/initrd-2.6.9-5.EL.img parameters="root=LABEL=/" [old] image=/boot/vmlinuz-2.6.9-1.906_EL ramdisk=/boot/initrd-2.6.9-1.906_EL.img parameters="root=LABEL=/"
default
variable to the name of the section that contains the new kernel. The first line of each section contains the name in brackets.
/sbin/zipl
as root to enable the changes.
/boot/vmlinitrd-<kernel-version>
file is installed when you upgrade the kernel. However, you must use the dd
command to configure the system to boot the new kernel:
cat /proc/iSeries/mf/side
to determine the default side (either A, B, or C).
<kernel-version>
is the version of the new kernel and <side>
is the side from the previous command:
dd if=/boot/vmlinitrd-<kernel-version>
of=/proc/iSeries/mf/<side>
/vmlinux bs=8k
/etc/aboot.conf
as the configuration file. Confirm that the file contains an image
section with the same version as the kernel
package just installed:
boot=/dev/sda1 init-message=Welcome to Red Hat Enterprise Linux! Hit <TAB> for boot options partition=2 timeout=30 install=/usr/lib/yaboot/yaboot delay=10 nonvram image=/vmlinux--2.6.9-5.EL label=old read-only initrd=/initrd--2.6.9-5.EL.img append="root=LABEL=/" image=/vmlinux-2.6.9-5.EL label=linux read-only initrd=/initrd-2.6.9-5.EL.img append="root=LABEL=/"
default
and set it to the label
of the image stanza that contains the new kernel.
kernel-smp-unsupported-<kernel-version>
and kernel-hugemem-unsupported-<kernel-version>
. Replace <kernel-version>
with the version of the kernel installed on the system. These packages are not installed by the Red Hat Enterprise Linux installation program, and the modules provided are not supported by Red Hat, Inc.
module-init-tools
package is installed. Use these commands to determine if a module has been loaded successfully or when trying different modules for a piece of new hardware.
/sbin/lsmod
displays a list of currently loaded modules. For example:
Module Size Used by tun 11585 1 autofs4 21573 1 hidp 16193 2 rfcomm 37849 0 l2cap 23873 10 hidp,rfcomm bluetooth 50085 5 hidp,rfcomm,l2cap sunrpc 153725 1 dm_mirror 29073 0 dm_mod 57433 1 dm_mirror video 17221 0 sbs 16257 0 i2c_ec 5569 1 sbs container 4801 0 button 7249 0 battery 10565 0 asus_acpi 16857 0 ac 5701 0 ipv6 246113 12 lp 13065 0 parport_pc 27493 1 parport 37001 2 lp,parport_pc uhci_hcd 23885 0 floppy 57317 1 sg 34653 0 snd_ens1371 26721 1 gameport 16073 1 snd_ens1371 snd_rawmidi 24897 1 snd_ens1371 snd_ac97_codec 91360 1 snd_ens1371 snd_ac97_bus 2753 1 snd_ac97_codec snd_seq_dummy 4293 0 snd_seq_oss 32705 0 serio_raw 7493 0 snd_seq_midi_event 8001 1 snd_seq_oss snd_seq 51633 5 snd_seq_dummy,snd_seq_oss,snd_seq_midi_event snd_seq_device 8781 4 snd_rawmidi,snd_seq_dummy,snd_seq_oss,snd_seq snd_pcm_oss 42849 0 snd_mixer_oss 16833 1 snd_pcm_oss snd_pcm 76485 3 snd_ens1371,snd_ac97_codec,snd_pcm_oss snd_timer 23237 2 snd_seq,snd_pcm snd 52933 12 snd_ens1371,snd_rawmidi,snd_ac97_codec,snd_seq_oss,snd_seq,snd_seq_device,snd_pcm_oss,snd_mixer_oss,snd_pcm,snd_timer soundcore 10145 1 snd i2c_piix4 8909 0 ide_cd 38625 3 snd_page_alloc 10569 1 snd_pcm i2c_core 21697 2 i2c_ec,i2c_piix4 pcnet32 34117 0 cdrom 34913 1 ide_cd mii 5825 1 pcnet32 pcspkr 3521 0 ext3 129737 2 jbd 58473 1 ext3 mptspi 17353 3 scsi_transport_spi 25025 1 mptspi mptscsih 23361 1 mptspi sd_mod 20929 16 scsi_mod 134121 5 sg,mptspi,scsi_transport_spi,mptscsih,sd_mod mptbase 52193 2 mptspi,mptscsih
/sbin/lsmod
output is less verbose and easier to read than the output from viewing /proc/modules
.
/sbin/modprobe
command followed by the kernel module name. By default, modprobe
attempts to load the module from the /lib/modules/<kernel-version>
/kernel/drivers/
subdirectories. There is a subdirectory for each type of module, such as the net/
subdirectory for network interface drivers. Some kernel modules have module dependencies, meaning that other modules must be loaded first for it to load. The /sbin/modprobe
command checks for these dependencies and loads the module dependencies before loading the specified module.
modprobe e100
e100
module.
/sbin/modprobe
executes them, use the -v
option. For example:
modprobe -v e100
insmod /lib/modules/2.6.9-5.EL/kernel/drivers/net/e100.ko Using /lib/modules/2.6.9-5.EL/kernel/drivers/net/e100.ko Symbol version prefix 'smp_'
/sbin/insmod
command also exists to load kernel modules; however, it does not resolve dependencies. Thus, it is recommended that the /sbin/modprobe
command be used.
/sbin/rmmod
command followed by the module name. The rmmod
utility only unloads modules that are not in use and that are not a dependency of other modules in use.
rmmod e100
e100
kernel module.
modinfo
. Use the command /sbin/modinfo
to display information about a kernel module. The general syntax is:
modinfo [options]
<module>
-d
, which displays a brief description of the module, and -p
, which lists the parameters the module supports. For a complete list of options, refer to the modinfo
man page (man modinfo
).
/etc/modprobe.conf
file. However, it is sometimes necessary to explicitly force the loading of a module at boot time.
/etc/rc.modules
file at boot time, which contains various commands to load modules. The rc.modules
should be used, and not rc.local
because rc.modules
is executed earlier in the boot process.
foo
module at boot time (as root):
echo modprobe foo >> /etc/rc.modules
chmod +x /etc/rc.modules
e100
driver with the e100_speed_duplex=4
option.
modinfo
command is also useful for listing various information about a kernel module, such as version, dependencies, parameter options, and aliases.
Hardware | Module | Parameters |
---|---|---|
3ware Storage Controller and 9000 series |
3w-xxxx.ko, 3w-9xxx.ko
| |
Adaptec Advanced Raid Products, Dell PERC2, 2/Si, 3/Si, 3/Di, HP NetRAID-4M, IBM ServeRAID, and ICP SCSI driver |
aacraid.ko
|
nondasd — Control scanning of hba for nondasd devices. 0=off, 1=on
dacmode — Control whether dma addressing is using 64 bit DAC. 0=off, 1=on
commit — Control whether a COMMIT_CONFIG is issued to the adapter for foreign arrays. This is typically needed in systems that do not have a BIOS. 0=off, 1=on
startup_timeout — The duration of time in seconds to wait for adapter to have it's kernel up and running. This is typically adjusted for large systems that do not have a BIOS
aif_timeout — The duration of time in seconds to wait for applications to pick up AIFs before deregistering them. This is typically adjusted for heavily burdened systems.
numacb — Request a limit to the number of adapter control blocks (FIB) allocated. Valid values are 512 and down. Default is to use suggestion from Firmware.
acbsize — Request a specific adapter control block (FIB) size. Valid values are 512, 2048, 4096 and 8192. Default is to use suggestion from Firmware.
|
Adaptec 28xx, R9xx, 39xx AHA-284x, AHA-29xx, AHA-394x, AHA-398x, AHA-274x, AHA-274xT, AHA-2842, AHA-2910B, AHA-2920C, AHA-2930/U/U2, AHA-2940/W/U/UW/AU/, U2W/U2/U2B/, U2BOEM, AHA-2944D/WD/UD/UWD, AHA-2950U2/W/B, AHA-3940/U/W/UW/, AUW/U2W/U2B, AHA-3950U2D, AHA-3985/U/W/UW, AIC-777x, AIC-785x, AIC-786x, AIC-787x, AIC-788x , AIC-789x, AIC-3860 |
aic7xxx.ko
|
verbose — Enable verbose/diagnostic logging
allow_memio — Allow device registers to be memory mapped
debug — Bitmask of debug values to enable
no_probe — Toggle EISA/VLB controller probing
probe_eisa_vl — Toggle EISA/VLB controller probing
no_reset — Supress initial bus resets
extended — Enable extended geometry on all controllers
periodic_otag — Send an ordered tagged transaction periodically to prevent tag starvation. This may be required by some older disk drives or RAID arrays.
tag_info:<tag_str> — Set per-target tag depth
global_tag_depth:<int> — Global tag depth for every target on every bus
seltime:<int> — Selection Timeout (0/256ms,1/128ms,2/64ms,3/32ms)
|
IBM ServeRAID |
ips.ko
| |
LSI Logic MegaRAID Mailbox Driver |
megaraid_mbox.ko
|
unconf_disks — Set to expose unconfigured disks to kernel (default=0)
busy_wait — Max wait for mailbox in microseconds if busy (default=10)
max_sectors — Maximum number of sectors per IO command (default=128)
cmd_per_lun — Maximum number of commands per logical unit (default=64)
fast_load — Faster loading of the driver, skips physical devices! (default=0)
debug_level — Debug level for driver (default=0)
|
Emulex LightPulse Fibre Channel SCSI driver |
lpfc.ko
|
lpfc_poll — FCP ring polling mode control: 0 - none, 1 - poll with interrupts enabled 3 - poll and disable FCP ring interrupts
lpfc_log_verbose — Verbose logging bit-mask
lpfc_lun_queue_depth — Max number of FCP commands we can queue to a specific LUN
lpfc_hba_queue_depth — Max number of FCP commands we can queue to a lpfc HBA
lpfc_scan_down — Start scanning for devices from highest ALPA to lowest
lpfc_nodev_tmo — Seconds driver will hold I/O waiting for a device to come back
lpfc_topology — Select Fibre Channel topology
lpfc_link_speed — Select link speed
lpfc_fcp_class — Select Fibre Channel class of service for FCP sequences
lpfc_use_adisc — Use ADISC on rediscovery to authenticate FCP devices
lpfc_ack0 — Enable ACK0 support
lpfc_cr_delay — A count of milliseconds after which an interrupt response is generated
lpfc_cr_count — A count of I/O completions after which an interrupt response is generated
lpfc_multi_ring_support — Determines number of primary SLI rings to spread IOCB entries across
lpfc_fdmi_on — Enable FDMI support
lpfc_discovery_threads — Maximum number of ELS commands during discovery
lpfc_max_luns — Maximum allowed LUN
lpfc_poll_tmo — Milliseconds driver will wait between polling FCP ring
|
HP Smart Array | cciss.ko | |
LSI Logic MPT Fusion | mptbase.ko mptctl.ko mptfc.ko mptlan.ko mptsas.ko mptscsih.ko mptspi.ko |
mpt_msi_enable — MSI Support Enable
mptfc_dev_loss_tmo — Initial time the driver programs the transport to wait for an rport to return following a device loss event.
mpt_pt_clear — Clear persistency table
mpt_saf_te — Force enabling SEP Processor
|
QLogic Fibre Channel Driver | qla2xxx.ko |
ql2xlogintimeout — Login timeout value in seconds.
qlport_down_retry — Maximum number of command retries to a port that returns a PORT-DOWN status
ql2xplogiabsentdevice — Option to enable PLOGI to devices that are not present after a Fabric scan.
ql2xloginretrycount — Specify an alternate value for the NVRAM login retry count.
ql2xallocfwdump — Option to enable allocation of memory for a firmware dump during HBA initialization. Default is 1 - allocate memory.
extended_error_logging — Option to enable extended error logging.
ql2xfdmienable — Enables FDMI registrations.
|
NCR, Symbios and LSI 8xx and 1010 | sym53c8xx |
cmd_per_lun — The maximum number of tags to use by default
tag_ctrl — More detailed control over tags per LUN
burst — Maximum burst. 0 to disable, 255 to read from registers
led — Set to 1 to enable LED support
diff — 0 for no differential mode, 1 for BIOS, 2 for always, 3 for not GPIO3
irqm — 0 for open drain, 1 to leave alone, 2 for totem pole
buschk — 0 to not check, 1 for detach on error, 2 for warn on error
hostid — The SCSI ID to use for the host adapters
verb — 0 for minimal verbosity, 1 for normal, 2 for excessive
debug — Set bits to enable debugging
settle — Settle delay in seconds. Default 3
nvram — Option currently not used
excl — List ioport addresses here to prevent controllers from being attached
safe — Set other settings to a "safe mode"
|
ethtool
or mii-tool
. Only after these tools fail to work should module parameters be adjusted. Module parameters can be viewed using the modinfo
command.
ethtool
, mii-tool
, and modinfo
.
Hardware | Module | Parameters |
---|---|---|
3Com EtherLink PCI III/XL Vortex (3c590, 3c592, 3c595, 3c597) Boomerang (3c900, 3c905, 3c595) |
3c59x.ko
|
debug — 3c59x debug level (0-6)
options — 3c59x: Bits 0-3: media type, bit 4: bus mastering, bit 9: full duplex
global_options — 3c59x: same as options, but applies to all NICs if options is unset
full_duplex — 3c59x full duplex setting(s) (1)
global_full_duplex — 3c59x: same as full_duplex, but applies to all NICs if full_duplex is unset
hw_checksums — 3c59x Hardware checksum checking by adapter(s) (0-1)
flow_ctrl — 3c59x 802.3x flow control usage (PAUSE only) (0-1)
enable_wol — 3c59x: Turn on Wake-on-LAN for adapter(s) (0-1)
global_enable_wol — 3c59x: same as enable_wol, but applies to all NICs if enable_wol is unset
rx_copybreak — 3c59x copy breakpoint for copy-only-tiny-frames
max_interrupt_work — 3c59x maximum events handled per interrupt
compaq_ioaddr — 3c59x PCI I/O base address (Compaq BIOS problem workaround)
compaq_irq — 3c59x PCI IRQ number (Compaq BIOS problem workaround)
compaq_device_id — 3c59x PCI device ID (Compaq BIOS problem workaround)
watchdog — 3c59x transmit timeout in milliseconds
global_use_mmio — 3c59x: same as use_mmio, but applies to all NICs if options is unset
use_mmio — 3c59x: use memory-mapped PCI I/O resource (0-1)
|
RTL8139, SMC EZ Card Fast Ethernet, RealTek cards using RTL8129, or RTL8139 Fast Ethernet chipsets |
8139too.ko
| |
Broadcom 4400 10/100 PCI ethernet driver |
b44.ko
|
b44_debug — B44 bitmapped debugging message enable value
|
Broadcom NetXtreme II BCM5706/5708 Driver |
bnx2.ko
|
disable_msi — Disable Message Signaled Interrupt (MSI)
|
Intel Ether Express/100 driver |
e100.ko
|
debug — Debug level (0=none,...,16=all)
eeprom_bad_csum_allow — Allow bad eeprom checksums
|
Intel EtherExpress/1000 Gigabit |
e1000.ko
|
TxDescriptors — Number of transmit descriptors
RxDescriptors — Number of receive descriptors
Speed — Speed setting
Duplex — Duplex setting
AutoNeg — Advertised auto-negotiation setting
FlowControl — Flow Control setting
XsumRX — Disable or enable Receive Checksum offload
TxIntDelay — Transmit Interrupt Delay
TxAbsIntDelay — Transmit Absolute Interrupt Delay
RxIntDelay — Receive Interrupt Delay
RxAbsIntDelay — Receive Absolute Interrupt Delay
InterruptThrottleRate — Interrupt Throttling Rate
SmartPowerDownEnable — Enable PHY smart power down
KumeranLockLoss — Enable Kumeran lock loss workaround
|
Myricom 10G driver (10GbE) |
myri10ge.ko
|
myri10ge_fw_name — Firmware image name
myri10ge_ecrc_enable — Enable Extended CRC on PCI-E
myri10ge_max_intr_slots — Interrupt queue slots
myri10ge_small_bytes — Threshold of small packets
myri10ge_msi — Enable Message Signalled Interrupts
myri10ge_intr_coal_delay — Interrupt coalescing delay
myri10ge_flow_control — Pause parameter
myri10ge_deassert_wait — Wait when deasserting legacy interrupts
myri10ge_force_firmware — Force firmware to assume aligned completions
myri10ge_skb_cross_4k — Can a small skb cross a 4KB boundary?
myri10ge_initial_mtu — Initial MTU
myri10ge_napi_weight — Set NAPI weight
myri10ge_watchdog_timeout — Set watchdog timeout
myri10ge_max_irq_loops — Set stuck legacy IRQ detection threshold
|
NatSemi DP83815 Fast Ethernet |
natsemi.ko
|
mtu — DP8381x MTU (all boards)
debug — DP8381x default debug level
rx_copybreak — DP8381x copy breakpoint for copy-only-tiny-frames
options — DP8381x: Bits 0-3: media type, bit 17: full duplex
full_duplex — DP8381x full duplex setting(s) (1)
|
AMD PCnet32 and AMD PCnetPCI |
pcnet32.ko
| |
PCnet32 and PCnetPCI |
pcnet32.ko
|
debug — pcnet32 debug level
max_interrupt_work — pcnet32 maximum events handled per interrupt
rx_copybreak — pcnet32 copy breakpoint for copy-only-tiny-frames
tx_start_pt — pcnet32 transmit start point (0-3)
pcnet32vlb — pcnet32 Vesa local bus (VLB) support (0/1)
options — pcnet32 initial option setting(s) (0-15)
full_duplex — pcnet32 full duplex setting(s) (1)
homepna — pcnet32 mode for 79C978 cards (1 for HomePNA, 0 for Ethernet, default Ethernet
|
RealTek RTL-8169 Gigabit Ethernet driver |
r8169.ko
|
media — force phy operation. Deprecated by ethtool (8).
rx_copybreak — Copy breakpoint for copy-only-tiny-frames
use_dac — Enable PCI DAC. Unsafe on 32 bit PCI slot.
debug — Debug verbosity level (0=none, ..., 16=all)
|
Neterion Xframe 10GbE Server Adapter |
s2io.ko
| |
SIS 900/701G PCI Fast Ethernet |
sis900.ko
|
multicast_filter_limit — SiS 900/7016 maximum number of filtered multicast addresses
max_interrupt_work — SiS 900/7016 maximum events handled per interrupt
sis900_debug — SiS 900/7016 bitmapped debugging message level
|
Adaptec Starfire Ethernet driver |
starfire.ko
|
max_interrupt_work — Maximum events handled per interrupt
mtu — MTU (all boards)
debug — Debug level (0-6)
rx_copybreak — Copy breakpoint for copy-only-tiny-frames
intr_latency — Maximum interrupt latency, in microseconds
small_frames — Maximum size of receive frames that bypass interrupt latency (0,64,128,256,512)
options — Deprecated: Bits 0-3: media type, bit 17: full duplex
full_duplex — Deprecated: Forced full-duplex setting (0/1)
enable_hw_cksum — Enable/disable hardware cksum support (0/1)
|
Broadcom Tigon3 |
tg3.ko
|
tg3_debug — Tigon3 bitmapped debugging message enable value
|
ThunderLAN PCI |
tlan.ko
|
aui — ThunderLAN use AUI port(s) (0-1)
duplex — ThunderLAN duplex setting(s) (0-default, 1-half, 2-full)
speed — ThunderLAN port speen setting(s) (0,10,100)
debug — ThunderLAN debug mask
bbuf — ThunderLAN use big buffer (0-1)
|
Digital 21x4x Tulip PCI Ethernet cards SMC EtherPower 10 PCI(8432T/8432BT) SMC EtherPower 10/100 PCI(9332DST) DEC EtherWorks 100/10 PCI(DE500-XA) DEC EtherWorks 10 PCI(DE450) DEC QSILVER's, Znyx 312 etherarray Allied Telesis LA100PCI-T Danpex EN-9400, Cogent EM110 |
tulip.ko
|
io io_port
|
VIA Rhine PCI Fast Ethernet cards with either the VIA VT86c100A Rhine-II PCI or 3043 Rhine-I D-Link DFE-930-TX PCI 10/100 |
via-rhine.ko
|
max_interrupt_work — VIA Rhine maximum events handled per interrupt
debug — VIA Rhine debug level (0-7)
rx_copybreak — VIA Rhine copy breakpoint for copy-only-tiny-frames
avoid_D3 — Avoid power state D3 (work-around for broken BIOSes)
|
alias
and, possibly, options
lines for each card in /etc/modprobe.conf
.
bonding
kernel module and a special network interface, called a channel bonding interface. Channel bonding enables two or more network interfaces to act as one, simultaneously increasing the bandwidth and providing redundancy.
/etc/modprobe.conf
:
alias bond<N>
bonding
<N>
with the interface number, such as 0
. For each configured channel bonding interface, there must be a corresponding entry in /etc/modprobe.conf
.
miimon
or arp_interval
and the arp_ip_target
parameters. Refer to 節 43.5.2.1, “bonding Module Directives” for a list of available options and how to quickly determine the best ones for your bonded interface.
BONDING_OPTS="<bonding parameters>
"
directive in your bonding interface configuration file (ifcfg-bond0
for example). Parameters to bonded interfaces can be configured without unloading (and reloading) the bonding module by manipulating files in the sysfs
file system.
sysfs
is a virtual file system that represents kernel objects as directories, files and symbolic links. sysfs
can be used to query for information about kernel objects, and can also manipulate those objects through the use of normal file system commands. The sysfs
virtual file system has a line in /etc/fstab
, and is mounted under /sys
. All bonded interfaces can be configured dynamically by interacting with and manipulating files under the /sys/class/net/
directory.
ifcfg-bond0
and inserted SLAVE=yes
and MASTER=bond0
directives in the bonded interfaces following the instructions in 節 15.2.3, “Channel Bonding Interfaces”, you can proceed to testing and determining the best parameters for your bonded interface.
ifconfig bond<N>
up
as root:
ifconfig bond0 up
ifcfg-bond0
bonding interface file, you will be able to see bond0
listed in the output of running ifconfig
(without any options):
~]# ifconfig
bond0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:00:00:00:00:00
UP BROADCAST RUNNING MASTER MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
RX packets:0 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
TX packets:0 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
collisions:0 txqueuelen:0
RX bytes:0 (0.0 b) TX bytes:0 (0.0 b)
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 52:54:00:26:9E:F1
inet addr:192.168.122.251 Bcast:192.168.122.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
inet6 addr: fe80::5054:ff:fe26:9ef1/64 Scope:Link
UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
RX packets:207 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
TX packets:205 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
collisions:0 txqueuelen:1000
RX bytes:70374 (68.7 KiB) TX bytes:25298 (24.7 KiB)
[output truncated]
~]# cat /sys/class/net/bonding_masters
bond0
/sys/class/net/bond<N>
/bonding/
directory. First, the bond you are configuring must be taken down:
ifconfig bond0 down
echo 1000 > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/miimon
balance-alb
mode, you could run either:
echo 6 > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/mode
echo balance-alb > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/mode
ifconfig bond<N>
up
. If you decide to change the options, take the interface down, modify its parameters using sysfs
, bring it back up, and re-test.
BONDING_OPTS=
directive of the /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-bond<N>
file for the bonded interface you are configuring. Whenever that bond is brought up (for example, by the system during the boot sequence if the ONBOOT=yes
directive is set), the bonding options specified in the BONDING_OPTS
will take effect for that bond. For more information on configuring bonded interfaces (and BONDING_OPTS
), refer to 節 15.2.3, “Channel Bonding Interfaces”.
bonding
module. For more in-depth information on configuring channel bonding and the exhaustive list of bonding module parameters, install the kernel-doc package and then locating and opening the included bonding.txt
file:
yum -y install kernel-doc
nano -w $(rpm -ql kernel-doc | grep bonding.txt)
arp_interval=<time_in_milliseconds>
arp_interval
and arp_ip_target
parameters are specified, or, alternatively, the miimon
parameter is specified. Failure to do so can cause degradation of network performance in the event that a link fails.
mode=0
or mode=1
(the two load-balancing modes), the network switch must be configured to distribute packets evenly across the NICs. For more information on how to accomplish this, refer to /usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<kernel_version>
/Documentation/networking/bonding.txt
0
by default, which disables it.
arp_ip_target=<ip_address>
[,<ip_address_2>
,...<ip_address_16>
]
arp_interval
parameter is enabled. Up to 16 IP addresses can be specified in a comma separated list.
arp_validate=<value>
none
. Other valid values are active
, backup
, and all
.
debug=<number>
0
— Debug messages are disabled. This is the default.
1
— Debug messages are enabled.
downdelay=<time_in_milliseconds>
miimon
parameter. The value is set to 0
by default, which disables it.
<value>
slow
or 0
— Default setting. This specifies that partners should transmit LACPDUs every 30 seconds.
fast
or 1
— Specifies that partners should transmit LACPDUs every 1 second.
miimon=<time_in_milliseconds>
ethtool <interface_name>
| grep "Link detected:"
<interface_name
> with the name of the device interface, such as eth0
, not the bond interface. If MII is supported, the command returns:
Link detected: yes
0
(the default), turns this feature off. When configuring this setting, a good starting point for this parameter is 100
.
arp_interval
and arp_ip_target
parameters are specified, or, alternatively, the miimon
parameter is specified. Failure to do so can cause degradation of network performance in the event that a link fails.
mode=<value>
<value>
is one of:
balance-rr
or 0
— Sets a round-robin policy for fault tolerance and load balancing. Transmissions are received and sent out sequentially on each bonded slave interface beginning with the first one available.
active-backup
or 1
— Sets an active-backup policy for fault tolerance. Transmissions are received and sent out via the first available bonded slave interface. Another bonded slave interface is only used if the active bonded slave interface fails.
balance-xor
or 2
— Sets an XOR (exclusive-or) policy for fault tolerance and load balancing. Using this method, the interface matches up the incoming request's MAC address with the MAC address for one of the slave NICs. Once this link is established, transmissions are sent out sequentially beginning with the first available interface.
broadcast
or 3
— Sets a broadcast policy for fault tolerance. All transmissions are sent on all slave interfaces.
802.3ad
or 4
— Sets an IEEE 802.3ad dynamic link aggregation policy. Creates aggregation groups that share the same speed and duplex settings. Transmits and receives on all slaves in the active aggregator. Requires a switch that is 802.3ad compliant.
balance-tlb
or 5
— Sets a Transmit Load Balancing (TLB) policy for fault tolerance and load balancing. The outgoing traffic is distributed according to the current load on each slave interface. Incoming traffic is received by the current slave. If the receiving slave fails, another slave takes over the MAC address of the failed slave.
balance-alb
or 6
— Sets an Active Load Balancing (ALB) policy for fault tolerance and load balancing. Includes transmit and receive load balancing for IPV4 traffic. Receive load balancing is achieved through ARP negotiation.
num_unsol_na=<number>
0 - 255
; the default value is 1
. This option affects only the active-backup mode.
primary=<interface_name>
eth0
, of the primary device. The primary
device is the first of the bonding interfaces to be used and is not abandoned unless it fails. This setting is particularly useful when one NIC in the bonding interface is faster and, therefore, able to handle a bigger load.
active-backup
mode. Refer to /usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<kernel-version>
/Documentation/networking/bonding.txt
for more information.
primary_reselect=<value>
always
or 0
(default) — The primary slave becomes the active slave whenever it comes back up.
better
or 1
— The primary slave becomes the active slave when it comes back up, if the speed and duplex of the primary slave is better than the speed and duplex of the current active slave.
failure
or 2
— The primary slave becomes the active slave only if the current active slave fails and the primary slave is up.
primary_reselect
setting is ignored in two cases:
primary_reselect
policy via sysfs
will cause an immediate selection of the best active slave according to the new policy. This may or may not result in a change of the active slave, depending upon the circumstances
updelay=<time_in_milliseconds>
miimon
parameter. The value is set to 0
by default, which disables it.
use_carrier=<number>
miimon
should use MII/ETHTOOL ioctls or netif_carrier_ok()
to determine the link state. The netif_carrier_ok()
function relies on the device driver to maintains its state with netif_carrier_on/off
; most device drivers support this function.
netif_carrier_on/off
.
1
— Default setting. Enables the use of netif_carrier_ok()
.
0
— Enables the use of MII/ETHTOOL ioctls.
netif_carrier_on/off
.
xmit_hash_policy=<value>
balance-xor
and 802.3ad
modes. Possible values are:
0
or layer2
— Default setting. This option uses the XOR of hardware MAC addresses to generate the hash. The formula used is:
(<source_MAC_address>
XOR<destination_MAC>
) MODULO<slave_count>
1
or layer3+4
— Uses upper layer protocol information (when available) to generate the hash. This allows for traffic to a particular network peer to span multiple slaves, although a single connection will not span multiple slaves.
((<source_port>
XOR<dest_port>
) XOR ((<source_IP>
XOR<dest_IP>
) AND0xffff
) MODULO<slave_count>
layer2
transmit hash policy.
2
or layer2+3
— Uses a combination of layer2 and layer3 protocol information to generate the hash.
(((<source_IP>
XOR<dest_IP>
) AND0xffff
) XOR (<source_MAC>
XOR<destination_MAC>
)) MODULO<slave_count>
lsmod
man page — description and explanation of its output.
insmod
man page — description and list of command line options.
modprobe
man page — description and list of command line options.
rmmod
man page — description and list of command line options.
modinfo
man page — description and list of command line options.
/usr/share/doc/kernel-doc-<version>
/Documentation/kbuild/modules.txt
— how to compile and use kernel modules. Note you must have the kernel-doc
package installed to read this file.
kdump
is an advanced crash dumping mechanism. When enabled, the system is booted from the context of another kernel. This second kernel reserves a small amount of memory, and its only purpose is to capture the core dump image in case the system crashes. Since being able to analyze the core dump helps significantly to determine the exact cause of the system failure, it is strongly recommended to have this feature enabled.
kdump
service in Red Hat Enterprise Linux, and provides a brief overview of how to analyze the resulting core dump using the crash debugging utility.
kdump
Servicekdump
service, you must have the kexec-tools package installed. Refer to 部 II, “套件管理程式” for more information on how to install new packages in Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
kdump
service: at the first boot, using the Kernel Dump Configuration graphical utility, and doing so manually on the command line. It also describes how to test the configuration to verify that everything works as expected.
kdump
service.
kdump
configuration screen
kdump
crash recovery is enabled, the minimum memory requirements increase by the amount of memory reserved for it. This value is determined by a user, and defaults to 128 MB.
kdump
daemon at boot time, select the Enable kdump? check box. This will enable the service for runlevels 2
, 3
, 4
, and 5
, and start it for the current session. Similarly, unselecting the check box will disable it for all runlevels and stop the service immediately.
kdump
kernel, click the up and down arrow buttons next to the Kdump Memory field to increase or decrease the value. Notice that the Usable System Memory field changes accordingly showing you the remaining memory that will be available to the system.
system-config-kdump
at a shell prompt (for example, xterm or GNOME Terminal). Unless you are already authenticated, you will be prompted to enter the superuser password.
kdump
as well as to enable or disable starting the service at boot time. When you are done, click to save the changes. The system reboot will be requested.
kdump
crash recovery is enabled, the minimum memory requirements increase by the amount of memory reserved for it. This value is determined by a user, and defaults to 128 MB.
kdump
daemon at boot time, select the Enable kdump check box. This will enable the service for runlevels 2
, 3
, 4
, and 5
, and start it for the current session. Similarly, unselecting the check box will disable it for all runlevels and stop the service immediately.
kdump
kernel, click the up and down arrow buttons next to the New kdump Memory field to increase or decrease the value. Notice that the Usable Memory field changes accordingly showing you the remaining memory that will be available to the system.
/dev/sdb1
). When you are done, click to confirm your choice.
hostname:directory
form (for example, penguin.example.com:/export
). Clicking the button will confirm your changes. Finally, edit the value of the Path field to customize the destination directory (for instance, cores
).
username@hostname
form (for example, john@penguin.example.com
). Clicking the button will confirm your changes. Finally, edit the value of the Path field to customize the destination directory (for instance, /export/cores
).
vmcore
dump file, kdump
allows you to specify an external application (that is, a core collector) to compress the data, and optionally leave out all irrelevant information. Currently, the only fully supported core collector is makedumpfile
.
-c
parameter is listed after the makedumpfile
command in the Core Collector field (for example, makedumpfile -c
).
-d value
parameter after the makedumpfile
command in the Core Collector field. The value
is a sum of values of pages you want to omit as described in 表格 44.1, “Supported filtering levels”. For example, to remove both zero and free pages, use makedumpfile -d 17
.
makedumpfile
for a complete list of available options.
kdump
fails to create a core dump, select the appropriate option from the Default Action pulldown list. Available options are (the default action), (to reboot the system), (to present a user with an interactive shell prompt), and (to halt the system).
kdump
on the Command Line~]$ su -
Password:
kdump
kernel, open the /boot/grub/grub.conf
file in a text editor and add the crashkernel=<size>
M@16M
parameter to the list of kernel options as shown in 範例 44.1, “A sample /boot/grub/grub.conf
file”.
/boot/grub/grub.conf
file# grub.conf generated by anaconda # # Note that you do not have to rerun grub after making changes to this file # NOTICE: You have a /boot partition. This means that # all kernel and initrd paths are relative to /boot/, eg. # root (hd0,0) # kernel /vmlinuz-version ro root=/dev/sda3 # initrd /initrd-version.img #boot=/dev/sda default=0 timeout=5 splashimage=(hd0,0)/grub/splash.xpm.gz hiddenmenu title Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server (2.6.18-274.3.1.el5) root (hd0,0) kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.18-274.3.1.el5 ro root=/dev/sda3 crashkernel=128M@16M initrd /initrd-2.6.18-274.3.1.el5.img
kdump
crash recovery is enabled, the minimum memory requirements increase by the amount of memory reserved for it. This value is determined by a user, and defaults to 128 MB, as lower values proved to be unreliable. For more information on minimum memory requirements for Red Hat Enterprise Linux, refer to the Required minimums section of the Red Hat Enterprise Linux comparison chart.
vmcore
file in the /var/crash/
directory of the local file system. To change this, open the /etc/kdump.conf
configuration file in a text editor and edit the options as described below.
#path /var/crash
line, and replace the value with a desired directory path. Optionally, if you wish to write the file to a different partition, follow the same procedure with the #ext3 /dev/sda3
line as well, and change both the file system type and the device (a device name, a file system label, and UUID are all supported) accordingly. For example:
ext3 /dev/sda4 path /usr/local/cores
#raw /dev/sda5
line, and replace the value with a desired device name. For example:
raw /dev/sdb1
#net my.server.com:/export/tmp
line, and replace the value with a valid hostname and directory path. For example:
net penguin.example.com:/export/cores
#net user@my.server.com
line, and replace the value with a valid username and hostname. For example:
net john@penguin.example.com
vmcore
dump file, kdump
allows you to specify an external application (that is, a core collector) to compress the data, and optionally leave out all irrelevant information. Currently, the only fully supported core collector is makedumpfile
.
/etc/kdump.conf
configuration file in a text editor, remove the hash sign (“#”) from the beginning of the #core_collector makedumpfile -c --message-level 1
line, and edit the command line options as described below.
-c
parameter. For example:
core_collector makedumpfile -c
-d value
parameter, where value
is a sum of values of pages you want to omit as described in 表格 44.1, “Supported filtering levels”. For example, to remove both zero and free pages, use the following:
core_collector makedumpfile -d 17 -c
makedumpfile
for a complete list of available options.
Option | Description |
---|---|
1
| Zero pages |
2
| Cache pages |
4
| Cache private |
8
| User pages |
16
| Free pages |
kdump
fails to create a core dump, the root file system is mounted and /sbin/init
is run. To change this behavior, open the /etc/kdump.conf
configuration file in a text editor, remove the hash sign (“#”) from the beginning of the #default shell
line, and replace the value with a desired action as described in 表格 44.2, “Supported actions”. For example:
default halt
Option | Action |
---|---|
reboot
| Reboot the system, losing the core in the process. |
halt
| After failing to capture a core, halt the system. |
shell
| Run the msh session from within the initramfs, allowing a user to record the core manually. |
kdump
daemon at boot time, type the following at a shell prompt:
~]# chkconfig kdump on
2
, 3
, 4
, and 5
. Similarly, typing chkconfig kdump off
will disable it for all runlevels. To start the service in the current session, use the following command:
~]# service kdump start
No kdump initial ramdisk found. [WARNING]
Rebuilding /boot/initrd-2.6.18-194.8.1.el5kdump.img
Starting kdump: [ OK ]
kdump
enabled, and make sure that the service is running:
~]# service kdump status
Kdump is operational
~]#echo 1 > /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq
~]#echo c > /proc/sysrq-trigger
YYYY-MM-DD
-HH:MM
/vmcore
file will be copied to the location you have selected in the configuration (that is, to /var/crash/
by default).
vmcore
dump file, you must have the crash and kernel-debuginfo packages installed. To do so, type the following at a shell prompt:
~]# yum install --enablerepo=rhel-debuginfo crash kernel-debuginfo
netdump
, diskdump
, xendump
, or kdump
. When started, it presents you with an interactive prompt very similar to the GNU Debugger (GDB).
crash /var/crash/timestamp
/vmcore /usr/lib/debug/lib/modules/kernel
/vmlinux
kernel
version should be the same as the one that was captured by kdump
. To find out which kernel you are currently running, use the uname -r
command.
crash
utility~]#crash /var/crash/2010-08-04-17\:55/vmcore \
/usr/lib/debug/lib/modules/2.6.18-194.8.1.el5/vmlinux
crash 4.1.2-4.el5_5.1 Copyright (C) 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Red Hat, Inc. Copyright (C) 2004, 2005, 2006 IBM Corporation Copyright (C) 1999-2006 Hewlett-Packard Co Copyright (C) 2005, 2006 Fujitsu Limited Copyright (C) 2006, 2007 VA Linux Systems Japan K.K. Copyright (C) 2005 NEC Corporation Copyright (C) 1999, 2002, 2007 Silicon Graphics, Inc. Copyright (C) 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 Mission Critical Linux, Inc. This program is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License, and you are welcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it under certain conditions. Enter "help copying" to see the conditions. This program has absolutely no warranty. Enter "help warranty" for details. GNU gdb 6.1 Copyright 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc. GDB is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License, and you are welcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it under certain conditions. Type "show copying" to see the conditions. There is absolutely no warranty for GDB. Type "show warranty" for details. This GDB was configured as "i686-pc-linux-gnu"... KERNEL: /usr/lib/debug/lib/modules/2.6.18-194.8.1.el5/vmlinux DUMPFILE: /var/crash/2010-08-04-17:55/vmcore CPUS: 1 DATE: Wed Aug 4 17:50:41 2010 UPTIME: 00:56:53 LOAD AVERAGE: 0.47, 0.47, 0.55 TASKS: 128 NODENAME: localhost.localdomain RELEASE: 2.6.18-194.el5 VERSION: #1 SMP Tue Mar 16 21:52:43 EDT 2010 MACHINE: i686 (2702 Mhz) MEMORY: 1 GB PANIC: "SysRq : Trigger a crashdump" PID: 6042 COMMAND: "bash" TASK: f09c7000 [THREAD_INFO: e1ba9000] CPU: 0 STATE: TASK_RUNNING (SYSRQ) crash>
exit
.
log
command at the interactive prompt.
crash> log
Linux version 2.6.18-194.el5 (mockbuild@x86-007.build.bos.redhat.com) (gcc version 4.1.2 20080704 (Red Hat 4.1.2-48)) #1 SMP Tue Mar 16 21:52:43 EDT 2010
BIOS-provided physical RAM map:
BIOS-e820: 0000000000010000 - 000000000009fc00 (usable)
BIOS-e820: 000000000009fc00 - 00000000000a0000 (reserved)
BIOS-e820: 00000000000f0000 - 0000000000100000 (reserved)
BIOS-e820: 0000000000100000 - 000000003fff0000 (usable)
BIOS-e820: 000000003fff0000 - 0000000040000000 (ACPI data)
BIOS-e820: 00000000fffc0000 - 0000000100000000 (reserved)
127MB HIGHMEM available.
896MB LOWMEM available.
Using x86 segment limits to approximate NX protection
On node 0 totalpages: 262128
DMA zone: 4096 pages, LIFO batch:0
Normal zone: 225280 pages, LIFO batch:31
HighMem zone: 32752 pages, LIFO batch:7
DMI 2.5 present.
Using APIC driver default
... several lines omitted ...
SysRq : Trigger a crashdump
help log
for more information on the command usage.
bt
command at the interactive prompt. You can use bt pid
to display the backtrace of the selected process.
crash> bt
PID: 6042 TASK: f09c7000 CPU: 0 COMMAND: "bash"
#0 [e1ba9d10] schedule at c061c738
#1 [e1ba9d28] netlink_getsockopt at c05d50bb
#2 [e1ba9d34] netlink_queue_skip at c05d40d5
#3 [e1ba9d40] netlink_sock_destruct at c05d506d
#4 [e1ba9d84] sock_recvmsg at c05b6cc8
#5 [e1ba9dd4] enqueue_task at c041eed5
#6 [e1ba9dec] try_to_wake_up at c041f798
#7 [e1ba9e10] vsnprintf at c04efef2
#8 [e1ba9ec0] machine_kexec at c0419bf0
#9 [e1ba9f04] sys_kexec_load at c04448a1
#10 [e1ba9f4c] tty_audit_exit at c0549f06
#11 [e1ba9f50] tty_audit_add_data at c0549d5d
#12 [e1ba9f84] do_readv_writev at c0476055
#13 [e1ba9fb8] system_call at c0404f10
EAX: ffffffda EBX: 00000001 ECX: b7f7f000 EDX: 00000002
DS: 007b ESI: 00000002 ES: 007b EDI: b7f7f000
SS: 007b ESP: bf83f478 EBP: bf83f498
CS: 0073 EIP: 009ac402 ERR: 00000004 EFLAGS: 00000246
help bt
for more information on the command usage.
ps
command at the interactive prompt. You can use ps pid
to display the status of the selected process.
crash> ps
PID PPID CPU TASK ST %MEM VSZ RSS COMM
0 0 0 c068a3c0 RU 0.0 0 0 [swapper]
1 0 0 f7c81aa0 IN 0.1 2152 616 init
... several lines omitted ...
6017 1 0 e39f6550 IN 1.2 40200 13000 gnome-terminal
6019 6017 0 e39f6000 IN 0.1 2568 708 gnome-pty-helpe
6020 6017 0 f0421550 IN 0.1 4620 1480 bash
6021 1 0 f7f69aa0 ?? 1.2 40200 13000 gnome-terminal
6039 6020 0 e7e84aa0 IN 0.1 5004 1300 su
> 6042 6039 0 f09c7000 RU 0.1 4620 1464 bash
help ps
for more information on the command usage.
vm
command at the interactive prompt. You can use vm pid
to display information on the selected process.
crash> vm
PID: 6042 TASK: f09c7000 CPU: 0 COMMAND: "bash"
MM PGD RSS TOTAL_VM
e275ee40 e2b08000 1464k 4620k
VMA START END FLAGS FILE
e315d764 1fe000 201000 75 /lib/libtermcap.so.2.0.8
e315de9c 201000 202000 100073 /lib/libtermcap.so.2.0.8
c9b040d4 318000 46a000 75 /lib/libc-2.5.so
e315da04 46a000 46c000 100071 /lib/libc-2.5.so
e315d7b8 46c000 46d000 100073 /lib/libc-2.5.so
e315de48 46d000 470000 100073
e315dba8 9ac000 9ad000 8040075
c9b04a04 a2f000 a4a000 875 /lib/ld-2.5.so
c9b04374 a4a000 a4b000 100871 /lib/ld-2.5.so
e315d6bc a4b000 a4c000 100873 /lib/ld-2.5.so
e315d908 fa1000 fa4000 75 /lib/libdl-2.5.so
e315db00 fa4000 fa5000 100071 /lib/libdl-2.5.so
e315df44 fa5000 fa6000 100073 /lib/libdl-2.5.so
e315d320 ff0000 ffa000 75 /lib/libnss_files-2.5.so
e315d668 ffa000 ffb000 100071 /lib/libnss_files-2.5.so
e315def0 ffb000 ffc000 100073 /lib/libnss_files-2.5.so
e315d374 8048000 80f5000 1875 /bin/bash
c9b045c0 80f5000 80fa000 101873 /bin/bash
... several lines omitted ...
help vm
for more information on the command usage.
files
command at the interactive prompt. You can use files pid
to display files opened by the selected process.
crash> files
PID: 6042 TASK: f09c7000 CPU: 0 COMMAND: "bash"
ROOT: / CWD: /root
FD FILE DENTRY INODE TYPE PATH
0 e33be480 e609bf70 f0e1d880 CHR /dev/pts/1
1 e424d8c0 d637add8 f7809b78 REG /proc/sysrq-trigger
2 e33be480 e609bf70 f0e1d880 CHR /dev/pts/1
10 e33be480 e609bf70 f0e1d880 CHR /dev/pts/1
255 e33be480 e609bf70 f0e1d880 CHR /dev/pts/1
help files
for more information on the command usage.
man kdump.conf
/etc/kdump.conf
configuration file containing the full documentation of available options.
man kexec
kexec
containing the full documentation on its usage.
man crash
/usr/share/doc/kexec-tools-version
/kexec-kdump-howto.txt
kdump
and kexec
installation and usage.
kexec
and kdump
configuration.
內容目錄
nmap
指令執行nmap,再加上要掃描機器的主機名稱或 IP 位址。
nmap foo.example.com
Starting nmap V. 3.50 ( www.insecure.org/nmap/ ) Interesting ports on localhost.localdomain (127.0.0.1): (The 1591 ports scanned but not shown below are in state: closed) Port State Service 22/tcp open ssh 25/tcp open smtp 111/tcp open sunrpc 443/tcp open https 515/tcp open printer 950/tcp open oftep-rpc 6000/tcp open X11 Nmap run completed -- 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 71.825 seconds
安全性漏洞 | 說明 | 附記 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
空的或預設的密碼 | 將系統管理員的密碼設為空白,或使用硬體廠商提供的預設密碼:這些情況最常出現在諸如路由器或防火牆等硬體上。雖然某些 Linux 上的服務使用了預設的管理者密碼;但 Red Hat Enterprise Linux 並不提供這類密碼。 |
| |||
預設共享的金鑰 | 因為發展或評估測試等用途,安全性服務有時會含有預設的安全金鑰。如果這些金鑰未經修改,就伴隨著軟體在網際網路上公佈,那麼所有擁有這些金鑰的使用者,就可以存取這金鑰所分享出來的資源,以及所有的機密資訊。 |
| |||
偽冒 IP 位址 | A remote machine acts as a node on your local network, finds vulnerabilities with your servers, and installs a backdoor program or Trojan horse to gain control over your network resources. |
| |||
網路竊聽 | 藉由網路竊聽兩個節點間的連線來收集在兩個使用中節點間所傳輸的資料。 |
| |||
服務的弱點攻擊 | 攻擊者將會尋找在網際網路上運作之服務的缺陷或弱點處,透過這些地方,攻擊者將可以入侵整個系統並截取它所擁有的任何資料,還可能導致網路上的其他系統遭受入侵。 |
| |||
應用程式的安全性弱點 | Attackers find faults in desktop and workstation applications (such as e-mail clients) and execute arbitrary code, implant Trojan horses for future compromise, or crash systems. Further exploitation can occur if the compromised workstation has administrative privileges on the rest of the network. |
| |||
阻絕服務(DoS)的攻擊 | Attacker or group of attackers coordinate against an organization's network or server resources by sending unauthorized packets to the target host (either server, router, or workstation). This forces the resource to become unavailable to legitimate users. |
|
/tmp/updates
, and save all the downloaded packages to it.
/mnt/cdrom
, use the following command to import it into the keyring (a database of trusted keys on the system):
rpm --import /mnt/cdrom/RPM-GPG-KEY-redhat-release
rpm -qa gpg-pubkey*
gpg-pubkey-37017186-45761324
rpm -qi
command followed by the output from the previous command, as in this example:
rpm -qi gpg-pubkey-37017186-45761324
rpm -K /tmp/updates/*.rpm
gpg OK
. If it doesn't, make sure you are using the correct Red Hat public key, as well as verifying the source of the content. Packages that do not pass GPG verifications should not be installed, as they may have been altered by a third party.
rpm -Uvh /tmp/updates/*.rpm
rpm -ivh /tmp/updates/<kernel-package>
<kernel-package>
in the previous example with the name of the kernel RPM.
rpm -e <old-kernel-package>
<old-kernel-package>
in the previous example with the name of the older kernel RPM.
glibc
, which are used by a number of applications and services. Applications utilizing a shared library typically load the shared code when the application is initialized, so any applications using the updated library must be halted and relaunched.
lsof
command as in the following example:
lsof /usr/lib/libwrap.so*
tcp_wrappers
package is updated.
sshd
, vsftpd
, and xinetd
.
/sbin/service
command as in the following example:
service <service-name>
restart
<service-name>
with the name of the service, such as sshd
.
xinetd
Servicesxinetd
super service only run when a there is an active connection. Examples of services controlled by xinetd
include Telnet, IMAP, and POP3.
xinetd
each time a new request is received, connections that occur after an upgrade are handled by the updated software. However, if there are active connections at the time the xinetd
controlled service is upgraded, they are serviced by the older version of the software.
xinetd
controlled service, upgrade the package for the service then halt all processes currently running. To determine if the process is running, use the ps
command and then use the kill
or killall
command to halt current instances of the service.
imap
packages are released, upgrade the packages, then type the following command as root into a shell prompt:
ps -aux | grep imap
kill <PID>
kill -9 <PID>
<PID>
with the process identification number (found in the second column of the ps
command) for an IMAP session.
killall imapd
cat
command.
grub-md5-crypt
/boot/grub/grub.conf
. Open the file and below the timeout
line in the main section of the document, add the following line:
password --md5 <password-hash>
/boot/grub/grub.conf
file must be edited.
title
line of the operating system that you want to secure, and add a line with the lock
directive immediately beneath it.
title DOS lock
password
line must be present in the main section of the /boot/grub/grub.conf
file for this method to work properly. Otherwise, an attacker can access the GRUB editor interface and remove the lock line.
lock
line to the stanza, followed by a password line.
title DOS lock password --md5 <password-hash>
/etc/passwd
file, which makes the system vulnerable to offline password cracking attacks. If an intruder can gain access to the machine as a regular user, they can copy the /etc/passwd
file to their own machine and run any number of password cracking programs against it. If there is an insecure password in the file, it is only a matter of time before the password cracker discovers it.
/etc/shadow
, which is readable only by the root user.
otrattw,tghwg.
7
for t
and the at symbol (@
) for a
:
o7r@77w,7ghwg.
H
.
o7r@77w,7gHwg.
passwd
, which is Pluggable Authentication Manager (PAM) aware and therefore checks to see if the password is too short or otherwise easy to crack. This check is performed using the pam_cracklib.so
PAM module. Since PAM is customizable, it is possible to add more password integrity checkers, such as pam_passwdqc
(available from http://www.openwall.com/passwdqc/) or to write a new module. For a list of available PAM modules, refer to http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/pam/modules.html. For more information about PAM, refer to 節 46.4, “Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM)”.
chage
command or the graphical User Manager (system-config-users
) application.
-M
option of the chage
command specifies the maximum number of days the password is valid. For example, to set a user's password to expire in 90 days, use the following command:
chage -M 90 <username>
<username>
with the name of the user. To disable password expiration, it is traditional to use a value of 99999
after the -M
option (this equates to a little over 273 years).
chage
command in interactive mode to modify multiple password aging and account details. Use the following command to enter interactive mode:
chage <username>
~]# chage davido
Changing the aging information for davido
Enter the new value, or press ENTER for the default
Minimum Password Age [0]: 10
Maximum Password Age [99999]: 90
Last Password Change (YYYY-MM-DD) [2006-08-18]:
Password Expiration Warning [7]:
Password Inactive [-1]:
Account Expiration Date (YYYY-MM-DD) [1969-12-31]:
~]#
chage
的 man page,進一步了解可使用的選項。
system-config-users
at a shell prompt.
sudo
or su
. A setuid program is one that operates with the user ID (UID) of the program's owner rather than the user operating the program. Such programs are denoted by an s
in the owner section of a long format listing, as in the following example:
-rwsr-xr-x 1 root root 47324 May 1 08:09 /bin/su
s
may be upper case or lower case. If it appears as upper case, it means that the underlying permission bit has not been set.
pam_console.so
, some activities normally reserved only for the root user, such as rebooting and mounting removable media are allowed for the first user that logs in at the physical console (refer to 節 46.4, “Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM)” for more information about the pam_console.so
module.) However, other important system administration tasks, such as altering network settings, configuring a new mouse, or mounting network devices, are not possible without administrative privileges. As a result, system administrators must decide how much access the users on their network should receive.
/sbin/nologin
in the /etc/passwd
file.
效應 | 沒有影響 |
---|---|
Prevents access to the root shell and logs any such attempts. The following programs are prevented from accessing the root account:
|
Programs that do not require a shell, such as FTP clients, mail clients, and many setuid programs. The following programs are not prevented from accessing the root account:
|
/etc/securetty
file. This file lists all devices the root user is allowed to log into. If the file does not exist at all, the root user can log in through any communication device on the system, whether via the console or a raw network interface. This is dangerous, because a user can log in to their machine as root via Telnet, which transmits the password in plain text over the network.
/etc/securetty
file only allows the root user to log in at the console physically attached to the machine. To prevent the root user from logging in, remove the contents of this file by typing the following command at a shell prompt as root:
echo > /etc/securetty
securetty
support in the KDM, GDM, and XDM login managers, add the following line:
auth [user_unknown=ignore success=ok ignore=ignore default=bad] pam_securetty.so
/etc/pam.d/gdm
/etc/pam.d/gdm-autologin
/etc/pam.d/gdm-fingerprint
/etc/pam.d/gdm-password
/etc/pam.d/gdm-smartcard
/etc/pam.d/kdm
/etc/pam.d/kdm-np
/etc/pam.d/xdm
/etc/securetty
file does not prevent the root user from logging in remotely using the OpenSSH suite of tools because the console is not opened until after authentication.
效應 | 沒有影響 |
---|---|
無法透過主控台或網路存取 root 帳號。以下程式無法存取 root 帳號:
|
Programs that do not log in as root, but perform administrative tasks through setuid or other mechanisms. The following programs are not prevented from accessing the root account:
|
/etc/ssh/sshd_config
, and change the line that reads:
#PermitRootLogin yes
PermitRootLogin no
效應 | 沒有影響 |
---|---|
避免透過 OpenSSH 工具組存取 root。以下程式無法存取 root 帳號:
|
Programs that are not part of the OpenSSH suite of tools.
|
/lib/security/pam_listfile.so
module, allows great flexibility in denying specific accounts. The administrator can use this module to reference a list of users who are not allowed to log in. To limit root access to a system service, edit the file for the target service in the /etc/pam.d/
directory and make sure the pam_listfile.so
module is required for authentication.
vsftpd
FTP server in the /etc/pam.d/vsftpd
PAM configuration file (the \
character at the end of the first line is not necessary if the directive is on a single line):
auth required /lib/security/pam_listfile.so item=user \ sense=deny file=/etc/vsftpd.ftpusers onerr=succeed
/etc/vsftpd.ftpusers
file and deny access to the service for any listed user. The administrator can change the name of this file, and can keep separate lists for each service or use one central list to deny access to multiple services.
/etc/pam.d/pop
and /etc/pam.d/imap
for mail clients, or /etc/pam.d/ssh
for SSH clients.
效應 | 沒有影響 |
---|---|
Prevents root access to network services that are PAM aware. The following services are prevented from accessing the root account:
|
不由 PAM 管理的程式與服務。
|
su
or sudo
.
su
Commandsu
command, they are prompted for the root password and, after authentication, is given a root shell prompt.
su
command, the user is the root user and has absolute administrative access to the system[16]. In addition, once a user has become root, it is possible for them to use the su
command to change to any other user on the system without being prompted for a password.
usermod -G wheel <username>
<username>
with the username you want to add to the wheel
group.
system-config-users
at a shell prompt.
su
(/etc/pam.d/su
) in a text editor and remove the comment # from the following line:
auth required /lib/security/$ISA/pam_wheel.so use_uid
wheel
can use this program.
wheel
group by default.
sudo
Commandsudo
command offers another approach to giving users administrative access. When trusted users precede an administrative command with sudo
, they are prompted for their own password. Then, when they have been authenticated and assuming that the command is permitted, the administrative command is executed as if they were the root user.
sudo
command is as follows:
sudo <command>
<command>
would be replaced by a command normally reserved for the root user, such as mount
.
sudo
command should take extra care to log out before walking away from their machines since sudoers can use the command again without being asked for a password within a five minute period. This setting can be altered via the configuration file, /etc/sudoers
.
sudo
command allows for a high degree of flexibility. For instance, only users listed in the /etc/sudoers
configuration file are allowed to use the sudo
command and the command is executed in the user's shell, not a root shell. This means the root shell can be completely disabled, as shown in 節 46.1.4.2, “不允許 root 存取”.
sudo
command also provides a comprehensive audit trail. Each successful authentication is logged to the file /var/log/messages
and the command issued along with the issuer's user name is logged to the file /var/log/secure
.
sudo
command is that an administrator can allow different users access to specific commands based on their needs.
sudo
configuration file, /etc/sudoers
, should use the visudo
command.
visudo
and add a line similar to the following in the user privilege specification section:
juan ALL=(ALL) ALL
juan
, can use sudo
from any host and execute any command.
sudo
:
%users localhost=/sbin/shutdown -h now
/sbin/shutdown -h now
as long as it is issued from the console.
sudoers
has a detailed listing of options for this file.
cupsd
— The default print server for Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
lpd
— An alternative print server.
xinetd
— A super server that controls connections to a range of subordinate servers, such as gssftp
and telnet
.
sendmail
— The Sendmail Mail Transport Agent (MTA) is enabled by default, but only listens for connections from the localhost.
sshd
— The OpenSSH server, which is a secure replacement for Telnet.
cupsd
running. The same is true for portmap
. If you do not mount NFSv3 volumes or use NIS (the ypbind
service), then portmap
should be disabled.
system-config-services
), ntsysv, and chkconfig
. For information on using these tools, refer to 章 17, 控制服務的存取.
netdump
, transmit the contents of memory over the network unencrypted. Memory dumps can contain passwords or, even worse, database entries and other sensitive information.
finger
and rwhod
reveal information about users of the system.
rlogin
, rsh
, telnet
, and vsftpd
.
rlogin
, rsh
, and telnet
) should be avoided in favor of SSH. Refer to 節 46.1.7, “安全性強化的通訊工具” for more information about sshd
.
finger
authd
(this was called identd
in previous Red Hat Enterprise Linux releases.)
netdump
netdump-server
nfs
rwhod
sendmail
smb
(Samba)
yppasswdd
ypserv
ypxfrd
system-config-securitylevel
). This tool creates broad iptables
rules for a general-purpose firewall using a control panel interface.
iptables
is probably a better option. Refer to 節 46.8, “Firewalls” for more information. Refer to 節 46.9, “IPTables” for a comprehensive guide to the iptables
command.
telnet
and rsh
. OpenSSH includes a network service called sshd
and three command line client applications:
ssh
— A secure remote console access client.
scp
— A secure remote copy command.
sftp
— A secure pseudo-ftp client that allows interactive file transfer sessions.
sshd
service is inherently secure, the service must be kept up-to-date to prevent security threats. Refer to 節 45.5, “安全性更新” for more information.
xinetd
, a super server that provides additional access, logging, binding, redirection, and resource utilization control.
xinetd
to create redundancy within service access controls. Refer to 節 46.8, “Firewalls” for more information about implementing firewalls with iptables commands.
xinetd
.
hosts_options
man page for information about the TCP Wrapper functionality and control language.
banner
option.
vsftpd
. To begin, create a banner file. It can be anywhere on the system, but it must have same name as the daemon. For this example, the file is called /etc/banners/vsftpd
and contains the following line:
220-Hello, %c 220-All activity on ftp.example.com is logged. 220-Inappropriate use will result in your access privileges being removed.
%c
token supplies a variety of client information, such as the username and hostname, or the username and IP address to make the connection even more intimidating.
/etc/hosts.allow
file:
vsftpd : ALL : banners /etc/banners/
spawn
directive.
/etc/hosts.deny
file to deny any connection attempts from that network, and to log the attempts to a special file:
ALL : 206.182.68.0 : spawn /bin/ 'date' %c %d >> /var/log/intruder_alert
%d
token supplies the name of the service that the attacker was trying to access.
spawn
directive in the /etc/hosts.allow
file.
spawn
directive executes any shell command, create a special script to notify the administrator or execute a chain of commands in the event that a particular client attempts to connect to the server.
severity
option.
emerg
flag in the log files instead of the default flag, info
, and deny the connection.
/etc/hosts.deny
:
in.telnetd : ALL : severity emerg
authpriv
logging facility, but elevates the priority from the default value of info
to emerg
, which posts log messages directly to the console.
xinetd
to set a trap service and using it to control resource levels available to any given xinetd
service. Setting resource limits for services can help thwart Denial of Service (DoS) attacks. Refer to the man pages for xinetd
and xinetd.conf
for a list of available options.
xinetd
is its ability to add hosts to a global no_access
list. Hosts on this list are denied subsequent connections to services managed by xinetd
for a specified period or until xinetd
is restarted. You can do this using the SENSOR
attribute. This is an easy way to block hosts attempting to scan the ports on the server.
SENSOR
is to choose a service you do not plan on using. For this example, Telnet is used.
/etc/xinetd.d/telnet
and change the flags
line to read:
flags = SENSOR
deny_time = 30
deny_time
attribute are FOREVER, which keeps the ban in effect until xinetd
is restarted, and NEVER, which allows the connection and logs it.
disable = no
SENSOR
is a good way to detect and stop connections from undesirable hosts, it has two drawbacks:
SENSOR
is running can mount a Denial of Service attack against particular hosts by forging their IP addresses and connecting to the forbidden port.
xinetd
is its ability to set resource limits for services under its control.
cps = <number_of_connections> <wait_period>
— Limits the rate of incoming connections. This directive takes two arguments:
<number_of_connections>
— The number of connections per second to handle. If the rate of incoming connections is higher than this, the service is temporarily disabled. The default value is fifty (50).
<wait_period>
— The number of seconds to wait before re-enabling the service after it has been disabled. The default interval is ten (10) seconds.
instances = <number_of_connections>
— Specifies the total number of connections allowed to a service. This directive accepts either an integer value or UNLIMITED
.
per_source = <number_of_connections>
— Specifies the number of connections allowed to a service by each host. This directive accepts either an integer value or UNLIMITED
.
rlimit_as = <number[K|M]>
— Specifies the amount of memory address space the service can occupy in kilobytes or megabytes. This directive accepts either an integer value or UNLIMITED
.
rlimit_cpu = <number_of_seconds>
— Specifies the amount of time in seconds that a service may occupy the CPU. This directive accepts either an integer value or UNLIMITED
.
xinetd
service from overwhelming the system, resulting in a denial of service.
portmap
service is a dynamic port assignment daemon for RPC services such as NIS and NFS. It has weak authentication mechanisms and has the ability to assign a wide range of ports for the services it controls. For these reasons, it is difficult to secure.
portmap
only affects NFSv2 and NFSv3 implementations, since NFSv4 no longer requires it. If you plan to implement an NFSv2 or NFSv3 server, then portmap
is required, and the following section applies.
portmap
service since it has no built-in form of authentication.
portmap
service, it is a good idea to add iptables rules to the server and restrict access to specific networks.
portmap
service) from the 192.168.0.0/24 network. The second allows TCP connections to the same port from the localhost. This is necessary for the sgi_fam
service used by Nautilus. All other packets are dropped.
iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -s! 192.168.0.0/24 --dport 111 -j DROP
iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -s 127.0.0.1 --dport 111 -j ACCEPT
iptables -A INPUT -p udp -s! 192.168.0.0/24 --dport 111 -j DROP
ypserv
,--> which is used in conjunction with portmap
and other related services to distribute maps of usernames, passwords, and other sensitive information to any computer claiming to be within its domain.
/usr/sbin/rpc.yppasswdd
— Also called the yppasswdd
service, this daemon allows users to change their NIS passwords.
/usr/sbin/rpc.ypxfrd
— Also called the ypxfrd
service, this daemon is responsible for NIS map transfers over the network.
/usr/sbin/yppush
— This application propagates changed NIS databases to multiple NIS servers.
/usr/sbin/ypserv
— This is the NIS server daemon.
portmap
service as outlined in 節 46.2.2, “保全 portmap”, then address the following issues, such as network planning.
/etc/passwd
map:
ypcat -d <NIS_domain>
-h <DNS_hostname>
passwd
/etc/shadow
file by typing the following command:
ypcat -d <NIS_domain>
-h <DNS_hostname>
shadow
/etc/shadow
file is not stored within an NIS map.
o7hfawtgmhwg.domain.com
. Similarly, create a different randomized NIS domain name. This makes it much more difficult for an attacker to access the NIS server.
/var/yp/securenets
File/var/yp/securenets
file is blank or does not exist (as is the case after a default installation), NIS listens to all networks. One of the first things to do is to put netmask/network pairs in the file so that ypserv
only responds to requests from the appropriate network.
/var/yp/securenets
file:
255.255.255.0 192.168.0.0
/var/yp/securenets
file.
rpc.yppasswdd
— the daemon that allows users to change their login passwords. Assigning ports to the other two NIS server daemons, rpc.ypxfrd
and ypserv
, allows for the creation of firewall rules to further protect the NIS server daemons from intruders.
/etc/sysconfig/network
:
YPSERV_ARGS="-p 834" YPXFRD_ARGS="-p 835"
iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -s! 192.168.0.0/24 --dport 834 -j DROP
iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -s! 192.168.0.0/24 --dport 835 -j DROP
iptables -A INPUT -p udp -s! 192.168.0.0/24 --dport 834 -j DROP
iptables -A INPUT -p udp -s! 192.168.0.0/24 --dport 835 -j DROP
/etc/shadow
map is sent over the network. If an intruder gains access to an NIS domain and sniffs network traffic, they can collect usernames and password hashes. With enough time, a password cracking program can guess weak passwords, and an attacker can gain access to a valid account on the network.
portmap
service as outlined in 節 46.2.2, “保全 portmap”. NFS traffic now utilizes TCP in all versions, rather than UDP, and requires it when using NFSv4. NFSv4 now includes Kerberos user and group authentication, as part of the RPCSEC_GSS
kernel module. Information on portmap
is still included, since Red Hat Enterprise Linux supports NFSv2 and NFSv3, both of which utilize portmap
.
/etc/exports
file. Be careful not to add extraneous spaces when editing this file.
/etc/exports
file shares the directory /tmp/nfs/
to the host bob.example.com
with read/write permissions.
/tmp/nfs/ bob.example.com(rw)
/etc/exports
file, on the other hand, shares the same directory to the host bob.example.com
with read-only permissions and shares it to the world with read/write permissions due to a single space character after the hostname.
/tmp/nfs/ bob.example.com (rw)
showmount
command to verify what is being shared:
showmount -e <hostname>
no_root_squash
Optionnfsnobody
user, an unprivileged user account. This changes the owner of all root-created files to nfsnobody
, which prevents uploading of programs with the setuid bit set.
no_root_squash
is used, remote root users are able to change any file on the shared file system and leave applications infected by Trojans for other users to inadvertently execute.
FollowSymLinks
/
.
Indexes
DirectiveUserDir
DirectiveUserDir
directive is disabled by default because it can confirm the presence of a user account on the system. To enable user directory browsing on the server, use the following directives:
UserDir enabled UserDir disabled root
/root/
. To add users to the list of disabled accounts, add a space-delimited list of users on the UserDir disabled
line.
IncludesNoExec
Directivechown root
<directory_name>
chmod 755
<directory_name>
gssftpd
— A Kerberos-aware xinetd
-based FTP daemon that does not transmit authentication information over the network.
tux
) — A kernel-space Web server with FTP capabilities.
vsftpd
— A standalone, security oriented implementation of the FTP service.
vsftpd
FTP service.
vsftpd
, add the following directive to the /etc/vsftpd/vsftpd.conf
file:
ftpd_banner=<insert_greeting_here>
<insert_greeting_here>
in the above directive with the text of the greeting message.
/etc/banners/
. The banner file for FTP connections in this example is /etc/banners/ftp.msg
. Below is an example of what such a file may look like:
######### # Hello, all activity on ftp.example.com is logged. #########
220
as specified in 節 46.2.1.1.1, “TCP 包裹程式與連線標題”.
vsftpd
, add the following directive to the /etc/vsftpd/vsftpd.conf
file:
banner_file=/etc/banners/ftp.msg
/etc/vsftpd/vsftpd.conf
, or else every attempt to connect to vsftpd will result in the connection being closed immediately and a 500 OOPS: cannot open banner <path_to_banner_file>
error message.
banner_file
directive in /etc/vsftpd/vfsftpd.conf
takes precedence over any ftpd_banner
directives in the configuration file: if banner_file
is specified, then ftpd_banner
is ignored.
/var/ftp/
directory activates the anonymous account.
vsftpd
package. This package establishes a directory tree for anonymous users and configures the permissions on directories to read-only for anonymous users.
/var/ftp/pub/
.
mkdir /var/ftp/pub/upload
chmod 730 /var/ftp/pub/upload
drwx-wx--- 2 root ftp 4096 Feb 13 20:05 upload
vsftpd
, add the following line to the /etc/vsftpd/vsftpd.conf
file:
anon_upload_enable=YES
vsftpd
, add the following directive to /etc/vsftpd/vsftpd.conf
:
local_enable=NO
sudo
privileges, the easiest way is to use a PAM list file as described in 節 46.1.4.2, “不允許 root 存取”. The PAM configuration file for vsftpd
is /etc/pam.d/vsftpd
.
vsftpd
, add the username to /etc/vsftpd.ftpusers
/etc/mail/sendmail.cf
by editing the /etc/mail/sendmail.mc
and using the m4
command.
/etc/mail/sendmail.mc
, the effectiveness of such attacks is limited.
confCONNECTION_RATE_THROTTLE
— The number of connections the server can receive per second. By default, Sendmail does not limit the number of connections. If a limit is set and reached, further connections are delayed.
confMAX_DAEMON_CHILDREN
— The maximum number of child processes that can be spawned by the server. By default, Sendmail does not assign a limit to the number of child processes. If a limit is set and reached, further connections are delayed.
confMIN_FREE_BLOCKS
— The minimum number of free blocks which must be available for the server to accept mail. The default is 100 blocks.
confMAX_HEADERS_LENGTH
— The maximum acceptable size (in bytes) for a message header.
confMAX_MESSAGE_SIZE
— The maximum acceptable size (in bytes) for a single message.
/var/spool/mail/
, on an NFS shared volume.
SECRPC_GSS
kernel module does not utilize UID-based authentication. However, it is considered good practice not to put the mail spool directory on NFS shared volumes.
/etc/passwd
file should be set to /sbin/nologin
(with the possible exception of the root user).
netstat -an
or lsof -i
. This method is less reliable since these programs do not connect to the machine from the network, but rather check to see what is running on the system. For this reason, these applications are frequent targets for replacement by attackers. Crackers attempt to cover their tracks if they open unauthorized network ports by replacing netstat
and lsof
with their own, modified versions.
nmap
.
nmap -sT -O localhost
Starting nmap 3.55 ( http://www.insecure.org/nmap/ ) at 2004-09-24 13:49 EDT Interesting ports on localhost.localdomain (127.0.0.1): (The 1653 ports scanned but not shown below are in state: closed) PORT STATE SERVICE 22/tcp open ssh 25/tcp open smtp 111/tcp open rpcbind 113/tcp open auth 631/tcp open ipp 834/tcp open unknown 2601/tcp open zebra 32774/tcp open sometimes-rpc11 Device type: general purpose Running: Linux 2.4.X|2.5.X|2.6.X OS details: Linux 2.5.25 - 2.6.3 or Gentoo 1.2 Linux 2.4.19 rc1-rc7) Uptime 12.857 days (since Sat Sep 11 17:16:20 2004) Nmap run completed -- 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 5.190 seconds
portmap
due to the presence of the sunrpc
service. However, there is also a mystery service on port 834. To check if the port is associated with the official list of known services, type:
cat /etc/services | grep 834
netstat
or lsof
. To check for port 834 using netstat
, use the following command:
netstat -anp | grep 834
tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:834 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 653/ypbind
netstat
is reassuring because a cracker opening a port surreptitiously on a hacked system is not likely to allow it to be revealed through this command. Also, the [p]
option reveals the process ID (PID) of the service that opened the port. In this case, the open port belongs to ypbind
(NIS), which is an RPC service handled in conjunction with the portmap
service.
lsof
command reveals similar information to netstat
since it is also capable of linking open ports to services:
lsof -i | grep 834
ypbind 653 0 7u IPv4 1319 TCP *:834 (LISTEN) ypbind 655 0 7u IPv4 1319 TCP *:834 (LISTEN) ypbind 656 0 7u IPv4 1319 TCP *:834 (LISTEN) ypbind 657 0 7u IPv4 1319 TCP *:834 (LISTEN)
lsof
, netstat
, nmap
, and services
for more information.
nss-tools
package loaded.
certutil -A -d /etc/pki/nssdb -n "root ca cert" -t "CT,C,C" \
-i ./ca_cert_in_base64_format.crt
/etc/pam_pkcs11/pam_pkcs11.conf
file, and locate the following line:
enable_ocsp = false;
enable_ocsp = true;
/etc/pam_pkcs11/cn_map
.
cn_map
file:
MY.CAC_CN.123454
-> myloginid
MY.CAC_CN.123454
is the Common Name on your CAC and myloginid
is your UNIX login ID.
pklogin_finder debug
pklogin_finder
tool in debug mode while an enrolled smart card is plugged in, it attempts to output information about the validity of certificates, and if it is successful in attempting to map a login ID from the certificates that are on the card.
about:config
to display the list of current configuration options.
negotiate
to restrict the list of options.
.example.com
.
kinit
to retrieve Kerberos tickets. To display the list of available tickets, type klist
. The following shows an example output from these commands:
~]$kinit
Password for user@EXAMPLE.COM: ~]$klist
Ticket cache: FILE:/tmp/krb5cc_10920 Default principal: user@EXAMPLE.COM Valid starting Expires Service principal 10/26/06 23:47:54 10/27/06 09:47:54 krbtgt/USER.COM@USER.COM renew until 10/26/06 23:47:54 Kerberos 4 ticket cache: /tmp/tkt10920 klist: You have no tickets cached
export NSPR_LOG_MODULES=negotiateauth:5
export NSPR_LOG_FILE=/tmp/moz.log
/tmp/moz.log
, and may give a clue to the problem. For example:
-1208550944[90039d0]: entering nsNegotiateAuth::GetNextToken() -1208550944[90039d0]: gss_init_sec_context() failed: Miscellaneous failure No credentials cache found
kinit
.
kinit
successfully from your machine but you are unable to authenticate, you might see something like this in the log file:
-1208994096[8d683d8]: entering nsAuthGSSAPI::GetNextToken() -1208994096[8d683d8]: gss_init_sec_context() failed: Miscellaneous failure Server not found in Kerberos database
/etc/krb5.conf
file. For example:
.example.com = EXAMPLE.COM example.com = EXAMPLE.COM
/etc/pam.d/
directory contains the PAM configuration files for each PAM-aware application. In earlier versions of PAM, the /etc/pam.conf
file was used, but this file is now deprecated and is only used if the /etc/pam.d/
directory does not exist.
/etc/pam.d/
directory. Each file in this directory has the same name as the service to which it controls access.
/etc/pam.d/
directory. For example, the login
program defines its service name as login
and installs the /etc/pam.d/login
PAM configuration file.
<module interface>
<control flag>
<module name>
<module arguments>
auth
— This module interface authenticates use. For example, it requests and verifies the validity of a password. Modules with this interface can also set credentials, such as group memberships or Kerberos tickets.
account
— This module interface verifies that access is allowed. For example, it may check if a user account has expired or if a user is allowed to log in at a particular time of day.
password
— This module interface is used for changing user passwords.
session
— This module interface configures and manages user sessions. Modules with this interface can also perform additional tasks that are needed to allow access, like mounting a user's home directory and making the user's mailbox available.
pam_unix.so
provides all four module interfaces.
auth required pam_unix.so
pam_unix.so
module's auth
interface.
reboot
command normally uses several stacked modules, as seen in its PAM configuration file:
~]# cat /etc/pam.d/reboot
#%PAM-1.0
auth sufficient pam_rootok.so
auth required pam_console.so
#auth include system-auth
account required pam_permit.so
auth sufficient pam_rootok.so
— This line uses the pam_rootok.so
module to check whether the current user is root, by verifying that their UID is 0. If this test succeeds, no other modules are consulted and the command is executed. If this test fails, the next module is consulted.
auth required pam_console.so
— This line uses the pam_console.so
module to attempt to authenticate the user. If this user is already logged in at the console, pam_console.so
checks whether there is a file in the /etc/security/console.apps/
directory with the same name as the service name (reboot). If such a file exists, authentication succeeds and control is passed to the next module.
#auth include system-auth
— This line is commented and is not processed.
account required pam_permit.so
— This line uses the pam_permit.so
module to allow the root user or anyone logged in at the console to reboot the system.
required
— The module result must be successful for authentication to continue. If the test fails at this point, the user is not notified until the results of all module tests that reference that interface are complete.
requisite
— The module result must be successful for authentication to continue. However, if a test fails at this point, the user is notified immediately with a message reflecting the first failed required
or requisite
module test.
sufficient
— The module result is ignored if it fails. However, if the result of a module flagged sufficient
is successful and no previous modules flagged required
have failed, then no other results are required and the user is authenticated to the service.
optional
— The module result is ignored. A module flagged as optional
only becomes necessary for successful authentication when no other modules reference the interface.
required
modules are called is not critical. Only the sufficient
and requisite
control flags cause order to become important.
pam.d
man page, and the PAM documentation, located in the /usr/share/doc/pam-<version-number>
/
directory, where <version-number>
is the version number for PAM on your system, describe this newer syntax in detail.
/lib64/security/
directory, the directory name is omitted because the application is linked to the appropriate version of libpam
, which can locate the correct version of the module.
pam_userdb.so
module uses information stored in a Berkeley DB file to authenticate the user. Berkeley DB is an open source database system embedded in many applications. The module takes a db
argument so that Berkeley DB knows which database to use for the requested service.
pam_userdb.so
line in a PAM configuration. The <path-to-file>
is the full path to the Berkeley DB database file:
auth required pam_userdb.so db=<path-to-file>
/var/log/secure
file.
#%PAM-1.0 auth required pam_securetty.so auth required pam_unix.so nullok auth required pam_nologin.so account required pam_unix.so password required pam_cracklib.so retry=3 password required pam_unix.so shadow nullok use_authtok session required pam_unix.so
#
) at the beginning of the line.
auth required pam_securetty.so
— This module ensures that if the user is trying to log in as root, the tty on which the user is logging in is listed in the /etc/securetty
file, if that file exists.
Login incorrect
message.
auth required pam_unix.so nullok
— This module prompts the user for a password and then checks the password using the information stored in /etc/passwd
and, if it exists, /etc/shadow
.
pam_unix.so
module automatically detects whether the user's password is in the passwd
file or the shadow
file. Refer to 節 35.6, “Shadow Passwords” for more information.
auth required pam_nologin.so
— This is the final authentication step. It checks whether the /etc/nologin
file exists. If it exists and the user is not root, authentication fails.
auth
modules are checked, even if the first auth
module fails. This prevents the user from knowing at what stage their authentication failed. Such knowledge in the hands of an attacker could allow them to more easily deduce how to crack the system.
account required pam_unix.so
— This module performs any necessary account verification. For example, if shadow passwords have been enabled, the account interface of the pam_unix.so
module checks to see if the account has expired or if the user has not changed the password within the allowed grace period.
password required pam_cracklib.so retry=3
— If a password has expired, the password component of the pam_cracklib.so
module prompts for a new password. It then tests the newly created password to see whether it can easily be determined by a dictionary-based password cracking program.
retry=3
specifies that if the test fails the first time, the user has two more chances to create a strong password.
password required pam_unix.so shadow nullok use_authtok
— This line specifies that if the program changes the user's password, it should use the password
interface of the pam_unix.so
module to do so.
shadow
instructs the module to create shadow passwords when updating a user's password.
nullok
instructs the module to allow the user to change their password from a blank password, otherwise a null password is treated as an account lock.
use_authtok
, provides a good example of the importance of order when stacking PAM modules. This argument instructs the module not to prompt the user for a new password. Instead, it accepts any password that was recorded by a previous password module. In this way, all new passwords must pass the pam_cracklib.so
test for secure passwords before being accepted.
session required pam_unix.so
— The final line instructs the session interface of the pam_unix.so
module to manage the session. This module logs the user name and the service type to /var/log/secure
at the beginning and end of each session. This module can be supplemented by stacking it with other session modules for additional functionality.
/usr/share/doc/pam-<version-number>
/
directory, where <version-number>
is the version number for PAM on your system.
pam_timestamp.so
module. It is important to understand how this mechanism works, because a user who walks away from a terminal while pam_timestamp.so
is in effect leaves the machine open to manipulation by anyone with physical access to the console.
pam_timestamp.so
module creates a timestamp file. By default, this is created in the /var/run/sudo/
directory. If the timestamp file already exists, graphical administrative programs do not prompt for a password. Instead, the pam_timestamp.so
module freshens the timestamp file, reserving an extra five minutes of unchallenged administrative access for the user.
/var/run/sudo/<user>
file. For the desktop, the relevant file is unknown:root
. If it is present and its timestamp is less than five minutes old, the credentials are valid.
ssh
, use the /sbin/pam_timestamp_check -k root
command to destroy the timestamp file.
/sbin/pam_timestamp_check -k root
command from the same terminal window from which you launched the privileged application.
pam_timestamp.so
module in order to use the /sbin/pam_timestamp_check -k
command. Do not log in as root to use this command.
pam_timestamp_check -k root </dev/null >/dev/null 2>/dev/null
pam_timestamp_check
man page for more information about destroying the timestamp file using pam_timestamp_check
.
pam_timestamp.so
module accepts several directives. The following are the two most commonly used options:
timestamp_timeout
— Specifies the period (in seconds) for which the timestamp file is valid. The default value is 300 (five minutes).
timestampdir
— Specifies the directory in which the timestamp file is stored. The default value is /var/run/sudo/
.
pam_timestamp.so
module.
pam_console.so
.
pam_console.so
module is called by login
or the graphical login programs, gdm, kdm, and xdm. If this user is the first user to log in at the physical console — referred to as the console user — the module grants the user ownership of a variety of devices normally owned by root. The console user owns these devices until the last local session for that user ends. After this user has logged out, ownership of the devices reverts back to the root user.
pam_console.so
by editing the following files:
/etc/security/console.perms
/etc/security/console.perms.d/50-default.perms
50-default.perms
file, you should create a new file (for example, xx
-name.perms
) and enter the required modifications. The name of the new default file must begin with a number higher than 50 (for example, 51-default.perms
). This will override the defaults in the 50-default.perms
file.
<console>
and <xconsole>
directives in the /etc/security/console.perms
to the following values:
<console>=tty[0-9][0-9]* vc/[0-9][0-9]* :0\.[0-9] :0 <xconsole>=:0\.[0-9] :0
<xconsole>
directive entirely and change the <console>
directive to the following value:
<console>=tty[0-9][0-9]* vc/[0-9][0-9]*
/etc/security/console.apps/
directory.
/sbin
and /usr/sbin
.
/sbin/halt
/sbin/reboot
/sbin/poweroff
pam_console.so
module as a requirement for use.
pam
— Good introductory information on PAM, including the structure and purpose of the PAM configuration files.
/etc/pam.conf
and individual configuration files in the /etc/pam.d/
directory. By default, Red Hat Enterprise Linux uses the individual configuration files in the /etc/pam.d/
directory, ignoring /etc/pam.conf
even if it exists.
pam_console
— Describes the purpose of the pam_console.so
module. It also describes the appropriate syntax for an entry within a PAM configuration file.
console.apps
— Describes the format and options available in the /etc/security/console.apps
configuration file, which defines which applications are accessible by the console user assigned by PAM.
console.perms
— Describes the format and options available in the /etc/security/console.perms
configuration file, which specifies the console user permissions assigned by PAM.
pam_timestamp
— Describes the pam_timestamp.so
module.
/usr/share/doc/pam-<version-number>
— Contains a System Administrators' Guide, a Module Writers' Manual, and the Application Developers' Manual, as well as a copy of the PAM standard, DCE-RFC 86.0, where <version-number>
is the version number of PAM.
/usr/share/doc/pam-<version-number>
/txts/README.pam_timestamp
— Contains information about the pam_timestamp.so
PAM module, where <version-number>
is the version number of PAM.
iptables
-based firewall filters out unwelcome network packets within the kernel's network stack. For network services that utilize it, TCP Wrappers add an additional layer of protection by defining which hosts are or are not allowed to connect to "wrapped" network services. One such wrapped network service is the xinetd
super server. This service is called a super server because it controls connections to a subset of network services and further refines access control.
xinetd
in controlling access to network services and reviews how these tools can be used to enhance both logging and utilization management. Refer to 節 46.9, “IPTables” for information about using firewalls with iptables
.
tcp_wrappers
) is installed by default and provides host-based access control to network services. The most important component within the package is the /usr/lib/libwrap.a
library. In general terms, a TCP-wrapped service is one that has been compiled against the libwrap.a
library.
/etc/hosts.allow
and /etc/hosts.deny
) to determine whether or not the client is allowed to connect. In most cases, it then uses the syslog daemon (syslogd
) to write the name of the requesting client and the requested service to /var/log/secure
or /var/log/messages
.
libwrap.a
library. Some such applications include /usr/sbin/sshd
, /usr/sbin/sendmail
, and /usr/sbin/xinetd
.
libwrap.a
, type the following command as the root user:
ldd <binary-name> | grep libwrap
<binary-name>
with the name of the network service binary.
libwrap.a
.
/usr/sbin/sshd
is linked to libwrap.a
:
~]# ldd /usr/sbin/sshd | grep libwrap
libwrap.so.0 => /usr/lib/libwrap.so.0 (0x00655000)
~]#
/etc/hosts.allow
/etc/hosts.deny
/etc/hosts.allow
. — The TCP-wrapped service sequentially parses the /etc/hosts.allow
file and applies the first rule specified for that service. If it finds a matching rule, it allows the connection. If not, it moves on to the next step.
/etc/hosts.deny
. — The TCP-wrapped service sequentially parses the /etc/hosts.deny
file. If it finds a matching rule, it denies the connection. If not, it grants access to the service.
hosts.allow
are applied first, they take precedence over rules specified in hosts.deny
. Therefore, if access to a service is allowed in hosts.allow
, a rule denying access to that same service in hosts.deny
is ignored.
hosts.allow
or hosts.deny
take effect immediately, without restarting network services.
/var/log/messages
or /var/log/secure
. This is also the case for a rule that spans multiple lines without using the backslash character. The following example illustrates the relevant portion of a log message for a rule failure due to either of these circumstances:
warning: /etc/hosts.allow, line 20: missing newline or line too long
/etc/hosts.allow
and /etc/hosts.deny
is identical. Each rule must be on its own line. Blank lines or lines that start with a hash (#) are ignored.
<daemon list>
:<client list>
[:<option>
:<option>
: ...]
<daemon list>
— A comma-separated list of process names (not service names) or the ALL
wildcard. The daemon list also accepts operators (refer to 節 46.5.2.1.4, “Operators”) to allow greater flexibility.
<client list>
— A comma-separated list of hostnames, host IP addresses, special patterns, or wildcards which identify the hosts affected by the rule. The client list also accepts operators listed in 節 46.5.2.1.4, “Operators” to allow greater flexibility.
<option>
— An optional action or colon-separated list of actions performed when the rule is triggered. Option fields support expansions, launch shell commands, allow or deny access, and alter logging behavior.
vsftpd : .example.com
vsftpd
) from any host in the example.com
domain. If this rule appears in hosts.allow
, the connection is accepted. If this rule appears in hosts.deny
, the connection is rejected.
sshd : .example.com \ : spawn /bin/echo `/bin/date` access denied>>/var/log/sshd.log \ : deny
sshd
) is attempted from a host in the example.com
domain, execute the echo
command to append the attempt to a special log file, and deny the connection. Because the optional deny
directive is used, this line denies access even if it appears in the hosts.allow
file. Refer to 節 46.5.2.2, “Option Fields” for a more detailed look at available options.
ALL
— Matches everything. It can be used for both the daemon list and the client list.
LOCAL
— Matches any host that does not contain a period (.), such as localhost.
KNOWN
— Matches any host where the hostname and host address are known or where the user is known.
UNKNOWN
— Matches any host where the hostname or host address are unknown or where the user is unknown.
PARANOID
— Matches any host where the hostname does not match the host address.
KNOWN
, UNKNOWN
, and PARANOID
wildcards should be used with care, because they rely on functioning DNS server for correct operation. Any disruption to name resolution may prevent legitimate users from gaining access to a service.
example.com
domain:
ALL : .example.com
192.168.x.x
network:
ALL : 192.168.
192.168.0.0
through 192.168.1.255
:
ALL : 192.168.0.0/255.255.254.0
3ffe:505:2:1::
through 3ffe:505:2:1:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff
:
ALL : [3ffe:505:2:1::]/64
example.com
domain:
ALL : *.example.com
/etc/telnet.hosts
file for all Telnet connections:
in.telnetd : /etc/telnet.hosts
hosts_access
man 5 page for more information.
Portmap
's implementation of TCP Wrappers does not support host look-ups, which means portmap
can not use hostnames to identify hosts. Consequently, access control rules for portmap in hosts.allow
or hosts.deny
must use IP addresses, or the keyword ALL
, for specifying hosts.
portmap
access control rules may not take effect immediately. You may need to restart the portmap
service.
portmap
to operate, so be aware of these limitations.
EXCEPT
. It can be used in both the daemon list and the client list of a rule.
EXCEPT
operator allows specific exceptions to broader matches within the same rule.
hosts.allow
file, all example.com
hosts are allowed to connect to all services except cracker.example.com
:
ALL: .example.com EXCEPT cracker.example.com
hosts.allow
file, clients from the 192.168.0.x
network can use all services except for FTP:
ALL EXCEPT vsftpd: 192.168.0.
EXCEPT
operators. This allows other administrators to quickly scan the appropriate files to see what hosts are allowed or denied access to services, without having to sort through EXCEPT
operators.
severity
directive.
example.com
domain are logged to the default authpriv
syslog
facility (because no facility value is specified) with a priority of emerg
:
sshd : .example.com : severity emerg
severity
option. The following example logs any SSH connection attempts by hosts from the example.com
domain to the local0
facility with a priority of alert
:
sshd : .example.com : severity local0.alert
syslogd
) is configured to log to the local0
facility. Refer to the syslog.conf
man page for information about configuring custom log facilities.
allow
or deny
directive as the final option.
client-1.example.com
, but deny connections from client-2.example.com
:
sshd : client-1.example.com : allow sshd : client-2.example.com : deny
hosts.allow
or hosts.deny
. Some administrators consider this an easier way of organizing access rules.
spawn
— Launches a shell command as a child process. This directive can perform tasks like using /usr/sbin/safe_finger
to get more information about the requesting client or create special log files using the echo
command.
example.com
domain are quietly logged to a special file:
in.telnetd : .example.com \ : spawn /bin/echo `/bin/date` from %h>>/var/log/telnet.log \ : allow
twist
— Replaces the requested service with the specified command. This directive is often used to set up traps for intruders (also called "honey pots"). It can also be used to send messages to connecting clients. The twist
directive must occur at the end of the rule line.
example.com
domain are sent a message using the echo
command:
vsftpd : .example.com \ : twist /bin/echo "421 This domain has been black-listed. Access denied!"
hosts_options
man page.
spawn
and twist
directives, provide information about the client, server, and processes involved.
%a
— Returns the client's IP address.
%A
— Returns the server's IP address.
%c
— Returns a variety of client information, such as the username and hostname, or the username and IP address.
%d
— Returns the daemon process name.
%h
— Returns the client's hostname (or IP address, if the hostname is unavailable).
%H
— Returns the server's hostname (or IP address, if the hostname is unavailable).
%n
— Returns the client's hostname. If unavailable, unknown
is printed. If the client's hostname and host address do not match, paranoid
is printed.
%N
— Returns the server's hostname. If unavailable, unknown
is printed. If the server's hostname and host address do not match, paranoid
is printed.
%p
— Returns the daemon's process ID.
%s
—Returns various types of server information, such as the daemon process and the host or IP address of the server.
%u
— Returns the client's username. If unavailable, unknown
is printed.
spawn
command to identify the client host in a customized log file.
sshd
) are attempted from a host in the example.com
domain, execute the echo
command to log the attempt, including the client hostname (by using the %h
expansion), to a special file:
sshd : .example.com \ : spawn /bin/echo `/bin/date` access denied to %h>>/var/log/sshd.log \ : deny
example.com
domain are informed that they have been banned from the server:
vsftpd : .example.com \ : twist /bin/echo "421 %h has been banned from this server!"
hosts_access
(man 5 hosts_access
) and the man page for hosts_options
.
xinetd
daemon is a TCP-wrapped super service which controls access to a subset of popular network services, including FTP, IMAP, and Telnet. It also provides service-specific configuration options for access control, enhanced logging, binding, redirection, and resource utilization control.
xinetd
, the super service receives the request and checks for any TCP Wrappers access control rules.
xinetd
verifies that the connection is allowed under its own access rules for that service. It also checks that the service can have more resources allotted to it and that it is not in breach of any defined rules.
xinetd
then starts an instance of the requested service and passes control of the connection to it. After the connection has been established, xinetd
takes no further part in the communication between the client and the server.
xinetd
are as follows:
/etc/xinetd.conf
— The global xinetd
configuration file.
/etc/xinetd.d/
— The directory containing all service-specific files.
/etc/xinetd.conf
file contains general configuration settings which affect every service under xinetd
's control. It is read when the xinetd
service is first started, so for configuration changes to take effect, you need to restart the xinetd
service. The following is a sample /etc/xinetd.conf
file:
defaults { instances = 60 log_type = SYSLOG authpriv log_on_success = HOST PID log_on_failure = HOST cps = 25 30 } includedir /etc/xinetd.d
xinetd
:
instances
— Specifies the maximum number of simultaneous requests that xinetd
can process.
log_type
— Configures xinetd
to use the authpriv
log facility, which writes log entries to the /var/log/secure
file. Adding a directive such as FILE /var/log/xinetdlog
would create a custom log file called xinetdlog
in the /var/log/
directory.
log_on_success
— Configures xinetd
to log successful connection attempts. By default, the remote host's IP address and the process ID of the server processing the request are recorded.
log_on_failure
— Configures xinetd
to log failed connection attempts or if the connection was denied.
cps
— Configures xinetd
to allow no more than 25 connections per second to any given service. If this limit is exceeded, the service is retired for 30 seconds.
includedir
/etc/xinetd.d/
— Includes options declared in the service-specific configuration files located in the /etc/xinetd.d/
directory. Refer to 節 46.5.4.2, “The /etc/xinetd.d/ Directory” for more information.
log_on_success
and log_on_failure
settings in /etc/xinetd.conf
are further modified in the service-specific configuration files. More information may therefore appear in a given service's log file than the /etc/xinetd.conf
file may indicate. Refer to 節 46.5.4.3.1, “Logging Options” for further information.
/etc/xinetd.d/
directory contains the configuration files for each service managed by xinetd
and the names of the files correlate to the service. As with xinetd.conf
, this directory is read only when the xinetd
service is started. For any changes to take effect, the administrator must restart the xinetd
service.
/etc/xinetd.d/
directory use the same conventions as /etc/xinetd.conf
. The primary reason the configuration for each service is stored in a separate file is to make customization easier and less likely to affect other services.
/etc/xinetd.d/krb5-telnet
file:
service telnet { flags = REUSE socket_type = stream wait = no user = root server = /usr/kerberos/sbin/telnetd log_on_failure += USERID disable = yes }
telnet
service:
service
— Specifies the service name, usually one of those listed in the /etc/services
file.
flags
— Sets any of a number of attributes for the connection. REUSE
instructs xinetd
to reuse the socket for a Telnet connection.
REUSE
flag is deprecated. All services now implicitly use the REUSE
flag.
socket_type
— Sets the network socket type to stream
.
wait
— Specifies whether the service is single-threaded (yes
) or multi-threaded (no
).
user
— Specifies which user ID the process runs under.
server
— Specifies which binary executable to launch.
log_on_failure
— Specifies logging parameters for log_on_failure
in addition to those already defined in xinetd.conf
.
disable
— Specifies whether the service is disabled (yes
) or enabled (no
).
xinetd.conf
man page for more information about these options and their usage.
xinetd
. This section highlights some of the more commonly used options.
/etc/xinetd.conf
and the service-specific configuration files within the /etc/xinetd.d/
directory.
ATTEMPT
— Logs the fact that a failed attempt was made (log_on_failure
).
DURATION
— Logs the length of time the service is used by a remote system (log_on_success
).
EXIT
— Logs the exit status or termination signal of the service (log_on_success
).
HOST
— Logs the remote host's IP address (log_on_failure
and log_on_success
).
PID
— Logs the process ID of the server receiving the request (log_on_success
).
USERID
— Logs the remote user using the method defined in RFC 1413 for all multi-threaded stream services (log_on_failure
andlog_on_success
).
xinetd.conf
man page.
xinetd
services can choose to use the TCP Wrappers hosts access rules, provide access control via the xinetd
configuration files, or a mixture of both. Refer to 節 46.5.2, “TCP Wrappers Configuration Files” for more information about TCP Wrappers hosts access control files.
xinetd
to control access to services.
xinetd
administrator restarts the xinetd
service.
xinetd
only affects services controlled by xinetd
.
xinetd
hosts access control differs from the method used by TCP Wrappers. While TCP Wrappers places all of the access configuration within two files, /etc/hosts.allow
and /etc/hosts.deny
, xinetd
's access control is found in each service's configuration file in the /etc/xinetd.d/
directory.
xinetd
:
only_from
— Allows only the specified hosts to use the service.
no_access
— Blocks listed hosts from using the service.
access_times
— Specifies the time range when a particular service may be used. The time range must be stated in 24-hour format notation, HH:MM-HH:MM.
only_from
and no_access
options can use a list of IP addresses or host names, or can specify an entire network. Like TCP Wrappers, combining xinetd
access control with the enhanced logging configuration can increase security by blocking requests from banned hosts while verbosely recording each connection attempt.
/etc/xinetd.d/telnet
file can be used to block Telnet access from a particular network group and restrict the overall time range that even allowed users can log in:
service telnet { disable = no flags = REUSE socket_type = stream wait = no user = root server = /usr/kerberos/sbin/telnetd log_on_failure += USERID no_access = 172.16.45.0/24 log_on_success += PID HOST EXIT access_times = 09:45-16:15 }
10.0.1.0/24
network, such as 10.0.1.2
, tries to access the Telnet service, it receives the following message:
Connection closed by foreign host.
/var/log/messages
as follows:
Sep 7 14:58:33 localhost xinetd[5285]: FAIL: telnet address from=172.16.45.107 Sep 7 14:58:33 localhost xinetd[5283]: START: telnet pid=5285 from=172.16.45.107 Sep 7 14:58:33 localhost xinetd[5283]: EXIT: telnet status=0 pid=5285 duration=0(sec)
xinetd
access controls, it is important to understand the relationship between the two access control mechanisms.
xinetd
when a client requests a connection:
xinetd
daemon accesses the TCP Wrappers hosts access rules using a libwrap.a
library call. If a deny rule matches the client, the connection is dropped. If an allow rule matches the client, the connection is passed to xinetd
.
xinetd
daemon checks its own access control rules both for the xinetd
service and the requested service. If a deny rule matches the client, the connection is dropped. Otherwise, xinetd
starts an instance of the requested service and passes control of the connection to that service.
xinetd
access controls. Misconfiguration can cause undesirable effects.
xinetd
support binding the service to an IP address and redirecting incoming requests for that service to another IP address, hostname, or port.
bind
option in the service-specific configuration files and links the service to one IP address on the system. When this is configured, the bind
option only allows requests to the correct IP address to access the service. You can use this method to bind different services to different network interfaces based on requirements.
redirect
option accepts an IP address or hostname followed by a port number. It configures the service to redirect any requests for this service to the specified host and port number. This feature can be used to point to another port number on the same system, redirect the request to a different IP address on the same machine, shift the request to a totally different system and port number, or any combination of these options. A user connecting to a certain service on a system may therefore be rerouted to another system without disruption.
xinetd
daemon is able to accomplish this redirection by spawning a process that stays alive for the duration of the connection between the requesting client machine and the host actually providing the service, transferring data between the two systems.
bind
and redirect
options are most clearly evident when they are used together. By binding a service to a particular IP address on a system and then redirecting requests for this service to a second machine that only the first machine can see, an internal system can be used to provide services for a totally different network. Alternatively, these options can be used to limit the exposure of a particular service on a multi-homed machine to a known IP address, as well as redirect any requests for that service to another machine especially configured for that purpose.
service telnet { socket_type = stream wait = no server = /usr/kerberos/sbin/telnetd log_on_success += DURATION USERID log_on_failure += USERID bind = 123.123.123.123 redirect = 10.0.1.13 23 }
bind
and redirect
options in this file ensure that the Telnet service on the machine is bound to the external IP address (123.123.123.123
), the one facing the Internet. In addition, any requests for Telnet service sent to 123.123.123.123
are redirected via a second network adapter to an internal IP address (10.0.1.13
) that only the firewall and internal systems can access. The firewall then sends the communication between the two systems, and the connecting system thinks it is connected to 123.123.123.123
when it is actually connected to a different machine.
xinetd
are configured with the bind
and redirect
options, the gateway machine can act as a proxy between outside systems and a particular internal machine configured to provide the service. In addition, the various xinetd
access control and logging options are also available for additional protection.
xinetd
daemon can add a basic level of protection from Denial of Service (DoS) attacks. The following is a list of directives which can aid in limiting the effectiveness of such attacks:
per_source
— Defines the maximum number of instances for a service per source IP address. It accepts only integers as an argument and can be used in both xinetd.conf
and in the service-specific configuration files in the xinetd.d/
directory.
cps
— Defines the maximum number of connections per second. This directive takes two integer arguments separated by white space. The first argument is the maximum number of connections allowed to the service per second. The second argument is the number of seconds that xinetd
must wait before re-enabling the service. It accepts only integers as arguments and can be used in either the xinetd.conf
file or the service-specific configuration files in the xinetd.d/
directory.
max_load
— Defines the CPU usage or load average threshold for a service. It accepts a floating point number argument.
uptime
, who
, and procinfo
commands for more information about load average.
xinetd
. Refer to the xinetd.conf
man page for more information.
xinetd
is available from system documentation and on the Internet.
xinetd
, and access control.
/usr/share/doc/tcp_wrappers-<version>
/
— This directory contains a README
file that discusses how TCP Wrappers work and the various hostname and host address spoofing risks that exist.
/usr/share/doc/xinetd-<version>
/
— This directory contains a README
file that discusses aspects of access control and a sample.conf
file with various ideas for modifying service-specific configuration files in the /etc/xinetd.d/
directory.
xinetd
-related man pages — A number of man pages exist for the various applications and configuration files involved with TCP Wrappers and xinetd
. The following are some of the more important man pages:
man xinetd
— The man page for xinetd
.
man 5 hosts_access
— The man page for the TCP Wrappers hosts access control files.
man hosts_options
— The man page for the TCP Wrappers options fields.
man xinetd.conf
— The man page listing xinetd
configuration options.
xinetd
, containing sample configuration files, a full listing of features, and an informative FAQ.
xinetd
configuration files to meet specific security goals.
/etc/passwd
or /etc/shadow
, to a Kerberos password database can be tedious, as there is no automated mechanism to perform this task. Refer to Question 2.23 in the online Kerberos FAQ:
kinit
. The default keytab file is /etc/krb5.keytab
. The KDC administration server, /usr/kerberos/sbin/kadmind
, is the only service that uses any other file (it uses /var/kerberos/krb5kdc/kadm5.keytab
).
kinit
command allows a principal who has already logged in to obtain and cache the initial ticket-granting ticket (TGT). Refer to the kinit
man page for more information.
root[/instance]@REALM
. For a typical user, the root is the same as their login ID. The instance
is optional. If the principal has an instance, it is separated from the root with a forward slash ("/"). An empty string ("") is considered a valid instance (which differs from the default NULL
instance), but using it can be confusing. All principals in a realm have their own key, which for users is derived from a password or is randomly set for services.
kinit
program after the user logs in.
kinit
program on the client then decrypts the TGT using the user's key, which it computes from the user's password. The user's key is used only on the client machine and is not transmitted over the network.
ntpd
. Refer to /usr/share/doc/ntp-<version-number>
/index.html
for details on setting up Network Time Protocol servers (where <version-number>
is the version number of the ntp
package installed on your system).
/usr/share/doc/krb5-server-<version-number>
for more information (where <version-number>
is the version number of the krb5-server
package installed on your system).
pam_krb5
module (provided in the pam_krb5
package) is installed. The pam_krb5
package contains sample configuration files that allow services such as login
and gdm
to authenticate users as well as obtain initial credentials using their passwords. If access to network servers is always performed using Kerberos-aware services or services that use GSS-API, such as IMAP, the network can be considered reasonably safe.
ntp
package for this purpose. Refer to /usr/share/doc/ntp-<version-number>
/index.html
(where <version-number>
is the version number of the ntp
package installed on your system) for details about how to set up Network Time Protocol servers, and http://www.ntp.org for more information about NTP.
krb5-libs
, krb5-server
, and krb5-workstation
packages on the dedicated machine which runs the KDC. This machine needs to be very secure — if possible, it should not run any services other than the KDC.
/etc/krb5.conf
and /var/kerberos/krb5kdc/kdc.conf
configuration files to reflect the realm name and domain-to-realm mappings. A simple realm can be constructed by replacing instances of EXAMPLE.COM
and example.com
with the correct domain name — being certain to keep uppercase and lowercase names in the correct format — and by changing the KDC from kerberos.example.com
to the name of the Kerberos server. By convention, all realm names are uppercase and all DNS hostnames and domain names are lowercase. For full details about the formats of these configuration files, refer to their respective man pages.
kdb5_util
utility from a shell prompt:
/usr/kerberos/sbin/kdb5_util create -s
create
command creates the database that stores keys for the Kerberos realm. The -s
switch forces creation of a stash file in which the master server key is stored. If no stash file is present from which to read the key, the Kerberos server (krb5kdc
) prompts the user for the master server password (which can be used to regenerate the key) every time it starts.
/var/kerberos/krb5kdc/kadm5.acl
file. This file is used by kadmind
to determine which principals have administrative access to the Kerberos database and their level of access. Most organizations can get by with a single line:
*/admin@EXAMPLE.COM *
kadmind
has been started on the server, any user can access its services by running kadmin
on any of the clients or servers in the realm. However, only users listed in the kadm5.acl
file can modify the database in any way, except for changing their own passwords.
kadmin
utility communicates with the kadmind
server over the network, and uses Kerberos to handle authentication. Consequently, the first principal must already exist before connecting to the server over the network to administer it. Create the first principal with the kadmin.local
command, which is specifically designed to be used on the same host as the KDC and does not use Kerberos for authentication.
kadmin.local
command at the KDC terminal to create the first principal:
/usr/kerberos/sbin/kadmin.local -q "addprinc username
/admin"
service krb5kdc start
service kadmin start
service krb524 start
addprinc
command within kadmin
. kadmin
and kadmin.local
are command line interfaces to the KDC. As such, many commands — such as addprinc
— are available after launching the kadmin
program. Refer to the kadmin
man page for more information.
kinit
to obtain a ticket and store it in a credential cache file. Next, use klist
to view the list of credentials in the cache and use kdestroy
to destroy the cache and the credentials it contains.
kinit
attempts to authenticate using the same system login username (not the Kerberos server). If that username does not correspond to a principal in the Kerberos database, kinit
issues an error message. If that happens, supply kinit
with the name of the correct principal as an argument on the command line (kinit <principal>
).
krb5.conf
configuration file. While ssh
and slogin
are the preferred method of remotely logging in to client systems, Kerberized versions of rsh
and rlogin
are still available, though deploying them requires that a few more configuration changes be made.
krb5-libs
and krb5-workstation
packages on all of the client machines. Supply a valid /etc/krb5.conf
file for each client (usually this can be the same krb5.conf
file used by the KDC).
ssh
or Kerberized rsh
or rlogin
, it must have its own host principal in the Kerberos database. The sshd
, kshd
, and klogind
server programs all need access to the keys for the host service's principal. Additionally, in order to use the kerberized rsh
and rlogin
services, that workstation must have the xinetd
package installed.
kadmin
, add a host principal for the workstation on the KDC. The instance in this case is the hostname of the workstation. Use the -randkey
option for the kadmin
's addprinc
command to create the principal and assign it a random key:
addprinc -randkey host/blah.example.com
kadmin
on the workstation itself, and using the ktadd
command within kadmin
:
ktadd -k /etc/krb5.keytab host/blah.example.com
ssh
— OpenSSH uses GSS-API to authenticate users to servers if the client's and server's configuration both have GSSAPIAuthentication
enabled. If the client also has GSSAPIDelegateCredentials
enabled, the user's credentials are made available on the remote system.
rsh
and rlogin
— To use the kerberized versions of rsh
and rlogin
, enable klogin
, eklogin
, and kshell
.
krb5-telnet
must be enabled.
ftp
. Be certain to set the instance to the fully qualified hostname of the FTP server, then enable gssftp
.
cyrus-imap
package uses Kerberos 5 if it also has the cyrus-sasl-gssapi
package installed. The cyrus-sasl-gssapi
package contains the Cyrus SASL plugins which support GSS-API authentication. Cyrus IMAP should function properly with Kerberos as long as the cyrus
user is able to find the proper key in /etc/krb5.keytab
, and the root for the principal is set to imap
(created with kadmin
).
cyrus-imap
can be found in the dovecot
package, which is also included in Red Hat Enterprise Linux. This package contains an IMAP server but does not, to date, support GSS-API and Kerberos.
gserver
uses a principal with a root of cvs
and is otherwise identical to the CVS pserver
.
foo.example.org → EXAMPLE.ORG
foo.example.com → EXAMPLE.COM
foo.hq.example.com → HQ.EXAMPLE.COM
krb5.conf
. For example:
[domain_realm] .example.com = EXAMPLE.COM example.com = EXAMPLE.COM
kadmind
(it is also your realm's admin server), and one or more KDCs (slave KDCs) keep read-only copies of the database and run kpropd
.
krb5.conf
and kdc.conf
files are copied to the slave KDC.
kadmin.local
from a root shell on the master KDC and use its add_principal
command to create a new entry for the master KDC's host service, and then use its ktadd
command to simultaneously set a random key for the service and store the random key in the master's default keytab file. This key will be used by the kprop
command to authenticate to the slave servers. You will only need to do this once, regardless of how many slave servers you install.
~]#kadmin.local -r EXAMPLE.COM
Authenticating as principal root/admin@EXAMPLE.COM with password. kadmin:add_principal -randkey host/masterkdc.example.com
Principal "host/host/masterkdc.example.com@EXAMPLE.COM" created. kadmin:ktadd host/masterkdc.example.com
Entry for principal host/masterkdc.example.com with kvno 3, encryption type Triple DES cbc mode with \ HMAC/sha1 added to keytab WRFILE:/etc/krb5.keytab. Entry for principal host/masterkdc.example.com with kvno 3, encryption type ArcFour with HMAC/md5 \ added to keytab WRFILE:/etc/krb5.keytab. Entry for principal host/masterkdc.example.com with kvno 3, encryption type DES with HMAC/sha1 added \ to keytab WRFILE:/etc/krb5.keytab. Entry for principal host/masterkdc.example.com with kvno 3, encryption type DES cbc mode with RSA-MD5 \ added to keytab WRFILE:/etc/krb5.keytab. kadmin:quit
kadmin
from a root shell on the slave KDC and use its add_principal
command to create a new entry for the slave KDC's host service, and then use kadmin
's ktadd
command to simultaneously set a random key for the service and store the random key in the slave's default keytab file. This key is used by the kpropd
service when authenticating clients.
~]#kadmin -p jimbo/admin@EXAMPLE.COM -r EXAMPLE.COM
Authenticating as principal jimbo/admin@EXAMPLE.COM with password. Password for jimbo/admin@EXAMPLE.COM: kadmin:add_principal -randkey host/slavekdc.example.com
Principal "host/slavekdc.example.com@EXAMPLE.COM" created. kadmin:ktadd host/slavekdc.example.com@EXAMPLE.COM
Entry for principal host/slavekdc.example.com with kvno 3, encryption type Triple DES cbc mode with \ HMAC/sha1 added to keytab WRFILE:/etc/krb5.keytab. Entry for principal host/slavekdc.example.com with kvno 3, encryption type ArcFour with HMAC/md5 added \ to keytab WRFILE:/etc/krb5.keytab. Entry for principal host/slavekdc.example.com with kvno 3, encryption type DES with HMAC/sha1 added \ to keytab WRFILE:/etc/krb5.keytab. Entry for principal host/slavekdc.example.com with kvno 3, encryption type DES cbc mode with RSA-MD5 added \ to keytab WRFILE:/etc/krb5.keytab. kadmin:quit
kprop
service with a new realm database. To restrict access, the kprop
service on the slave KDC will only accept updates from clients whose principal names are listed in /var/kerberos/krb5kdc/kpropd.acl
. Add the master KDC's host service's name to that file.
~]# echo host/masterkdc.example.com@EXAMPLE.COM > /var/kerberos/krb5kdc/kpropd.acl
/var/kerberos/krb5kdc/.k5.REALM
, either copy it to the slave KDC using any available secure method, or create a dummy database and identical stash file on the slave KDC by running kdb5_util create -s
(the dummy database will be overwritten by the first successful database propagation) and supplying the same password.
kprop
service. Then, double-check that the kadmin
service is disabled.
kprop
command will read (/var/kerberos/krb5kdc/slave_datatrans
), and then use the kprop
command to transmit its contents to the slave KDC.
~]#/usr/kerberos/sbin/kdb5_util dump /var/kerberos/krb5kdc/slave_datatrans
~]#kprop slavekdc.example.com
kinit
, verify that a client system whose krb5.conf
lists only the slave KDC in its list of KDCs for your realm is now correctly able to obtain initial credentials from the slave KDC.
kprop
command to transmit the database to each slave KDC in turn, and configure the cron
service to run the script periodically.
A.EXAMPLE.COM
to access a service in the B.EXAMPLE.COM
realm, both realms must share a key for a principal named krbtgt/B.EXAMPLE.COM@A.EXAMPLE.COM
, and both keys must have the same key version number associated with them.
~]#kadmin -r A.EXAMPLE.COM
kadmin:add_principal krbtgt/B.EXAMPLE.COM@A.EXAMPLE.COM
Enter password for principal "krbtgt/B.EXAMPLE.COM@A.EXAMPLE.COM": Re-enter password for principal "krbtgt/B.EXAMPLE.COM@A.EXAMPLE.COM": Principal "krbtgt/B.EXAMPLE.COM@A.EXAMPLE.COM" created. kadmin:quit
~]#kadmin -r B.EXAMPLE.COM
kadmin:add_principal krbtgt/B.EXAMPLE.COM@A.EXAMPLE.COM
Enter password for principal "krbtgt/B.EXAMPLE.COM@A.EXAMPLE.COM": Re-enter password for principal "krbtgt/B.EXAMPLE.COM@A.EXAMPLE.COM": Principal "krbtgt/B.EXAMPLE.COM@A.EXAMPLE.COM" created. kadmin:quit
get_principal
command to verify that both entries have matching key version numbers (kvno
values) and encryption types.
add_principal
command's -randkey
option to assign a random key instead of a password, dump the new entry from the database of the first realm, and import it into the second. This will not work unless the master keys for the realm databases are identical, as the keys contained in a database dump are themselves encrypted using the master key.
A.EXAMPLE.COM
realm are now able to authenticate to services in the B.EXAMPLE.COM
realm. Put another way, the B.EXAMPLE.COM
realm now trusts the A.EXAMPLE.COM
realm, or phrased even more simply, B.EXAMPLE.COM
now trusts A.EXAMPLE.COM
.
B.EXAMPLE.COM
realm may trust clients from the A.EXAMPLE.COM
to authenticate to services in the B.EXAMPLE.COM
realm, but the fact that it does has no effect on whether or not clients in the B.EXAMPLE.COM
realm are trusted to authenticate to services in the A.EXAMPLE.COM
realm. To establish trust in the other direction, both realms would need to share keys for the krbtgt/A.EXAMPLE.COM@B.EXAMPLE.COM
service (take note of the reversed in order of the two realms compared to the example above).
A.EXAMPLE.COM
can authenticate to services in B.EXAMPLE.COM
, and clients from B.EXAMPLE.COM
can authenticate to services in C.EXAMPLE.COM
, then clients in A.EXAMPLE.COM
can also authenticate to services in C.EXAMPLE.COM
, even if C.EXAMPLE.COM
doesn't directly trust A.EXAMPLE.COM
. This means that, on a network with multiple realms which all need to trust each other, making good choices about which trust relationships to set up can greatly reduce the amount of effort required.
service/server.example.com@EXAMPLE.COM
EXAMPLE.COM
is the name of the realm.
domain_realm
section of /etc/krb5.conf
to map either a hostname (server.example.com) or a DNS domain name (.example.com) to the name of a realm (EXAMPLE.COM).
A.EXAMPLE.COM
, B.EXAMPLE.COM
, and EXAMPLE.COM
. When a client in the A.EXAMPLE.COM
realm attempts to authenticate to a service in B.EXAMPLE.COM
, it will, by default, first attempt to get credentials for the EXAMPLE.COM
realm, and then to use those credentials to obtain credentials for use in the B.EXAMPLE.COM
realm.
A.EXAMPLE.COM
, authenticating to a service in B.EXAMPLE.COM
:
A.EXAMPLE.COM → EXAMPLE.COM → B.EXAMPLE.COM
A.EXAMPLE.COM
and EXAMPLE.COM
share a key for krbtgt/EXAMPLE.COM@A.EXAMPLE.COM
EXAMPLE.COM
and B.EXAMPLE.COM
share a key for krbtgt/B.EXAMPLE.COM@EXAMPLE.COM
SITE1.SALES.EXAMPLE.COM
, authenticating to a service in EVERYWHERE.EXAMPLE.COM
:
SITE1.SALES.EXAMPLE.COM → SALES.EXAMPLE.COM → EXAMPLE.COM → EVERYWHERE.EXAMPLE.COM
SITE1.SALES.EXAMPLE.COM
and SALES.EXAMPLE.COM
share a key for krbtgt/SALES.EXAMPLE.COM@SITE1.SALES.EXAMPLE.COM
SALES.EXAMPLE.COM
and EXAMPLE.COM
share a key for krbtgt/EXAMPLE.COM@SALES.EXAMPLE.COM
EXAMPLE.COM
and EVERYWHERE.EXAMPLE.COM
share a key for krbtgt/EVERYWHERE.EXAMPLE.COM@EXAMPLE.COM
DEVEL.EXAMPLE.COM
and PROD.EXAMPLE.ORG
):
DEVEL.EXAMPLE.COM → EXAMPLE.COM → COM → ORG → EXAMPLE.ORG → PROD.EXAMPLE.ORG
DEVEL.EXAMPLE.COM
and EXAMPLE.COM
share a key for krbtgt/EXAMPLE.COM@DEVEL.EXAMPLE.COM
EXAMPLE.COM
and COM
share a key for krbtgt/COM@EXAMPLE.COM
COM
and ORG
share a key for krbtgt/ORG@COM
ORG
and EXAMPLE.ORG
share a key for krbtgt/EXAMPLE.ORG@ORG
EXAMPLE.ORG
and PROD.EXAMPLE.ORG
share a key for krbtgt/PROD.EXAMPLE.ORG@EXAMPLE.ORG
capaths
section of /etc/krb5.conf
, so that clients which have credentials for one realm will be able to look up which realm is next in the chain which will eventually lead to the being able to authenticate to servers.
capaths
section is relatively straightforward: each entry in the section is named after a realm in which a client might exist. Inside of that subsection, the set of intermediate realms from which the client must obtain credentials is listed as values of the key which corresponds to the realm in which a service might reside. If there are no intermediate realms, the value "." is used.
[capaths] A.EXAMPLE.COM = { B.EXAMPLE.COM = . C.EXAMPLE.COM = B.EXAMPLE.COM D.EXAMPLE.COM = B.EXAMPLE.COM D.EXAMPLE.COM = C.EXAMPLE.COM }
A.EXAMPLE.COM
realm can obtain cross-realm credentials for B.EXAMPLE.COM
directly from the A.EXAMPLE.COM
KDC.
C.EXAMPLE.COM
realm, they will first need to obtain necessary credentials from the B.EXAMPLE.COM
realm (this requires that krbtgt/B.EXAMPLE.COM@A.EXAMPLE.COM
exist), and then use those
credentials to obtain credentials for use in the C.EXAMPLE.COM
realm (using krbtgt/C.EXAMPLE.COM@B.EXAMPLE.COM
).
D.EXAMPLE.COM
realm, they will first need to obtain necessary credentials from the B.EXAMPLE.COM
realm, and then credentials from the C.EXAMPLE.COM
realm, before finally obtaining credentials for use with the D.EXAMPLE.COM
realm.
A.EXAMPLE.COM
realm can obtain cross-realm credentials from B.EXAMPLE.COM
realm directly. Without the "." indicating this, the client would instead attempt to use a hierarchical path, in this case:
A.EXAMPLE.COM → EXAMPLE.COM → B.EXAMPLE.COM
/usr/share/doc/krb5-server-<version-number>
/
directory (where <version-number>
is the version number of the krb5-server
package installed on your system).
/usr/share/doc/krb5-workstation-<version-number>
/
directory (where <version-number>
is the version number of the krb5-workstation
package installed on your system).
man kerberos
— An introduction to the Kerberos system which describes how credentials work and provides recommendations for obtaining and destroying Kerberos tickets. The bottom of the man page references a number of related man pages.
man kinit
— Describes how to use this command to obtain and cache a ticket-granting ticket.
man kdestroy
— Describes how to use this command to destroy Kerberos credentials.
man klist
— Describes how to use this command to list cached Kerberos credentials.
man kadmin
— Describes how to use this command to administer the Kerberos V5 database.
man kdb5_util
— Describes how to use this command to create and perform low-level administrative functions on the Kerberos V5 database.
man krb5kdc
— Describes available command line options for the Kerberos V5 KDC.
man kadmind
— Describes available command line options for the Kerberos V5 administration server.
man krb5.conf
— Describes the format and options available within the configuration file for the Kerberos V5 library.
man kdc.conf
— Describes the format and options available within the configuration file for the Kerberos V5 AS and KDC.
racoon
keying daemon handles the IKE key distribution and exchange. Refer to the racoon
man page for more information about this daemon.
ipsec-tools
RPM package be installed on all IPsec hosts (if using a host-to-host configuration) or routers (if using a network-to-network configuration). The RPM package contains essential libraries, daemons, and configuration files for setting up the IPsec connection, including:
/sbin/setkey
— manipulates the key management and security attributes of IPsec in the kernel. This executable is controlled by the racoon
key management daemon. Refer to the setkey
(8) man page for more information.
/usr/sbin/racoon
— the IKE key management daemon, used to manage and control security associations and key sharing between IPsec-connected systems.
/etc/racoon/racoon.conf
— the racoon
daemon configuration file used to configure various aspects of the IPsec connection, including authentication methods and encryption algorithms used in the connection. Refer to the racoon.conf
(5) man page for a complete listing of available directives.
system-config-network
to start the Network Administration Tool.
ipsec0
. If required, select the check box to automatically activate the connection when the computer starts. Click to continue.
racoon
daemon manages the encryption key. The ipsec-tools
package must be installed if you want to use automatic encryption.
ifconfig <device>
<device>
is the Ethernet device that you want to use for the VPN connection.
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:0C:6E:E8:98:1D inet addr:172.16.44.192 Bcast:172.16.45.255 Mask:255.255.254.0
inet addr:
label.
service network restart
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-<nickname>
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/keys-<nickname>
/etc/racoon/<remote-ip>
.conf
/etc/racoon/psk.txt
/etc/racoon/racoon.conf
is also created.
/etc/racoon/racoon.conf
is modified to include <remote-ip>
.conf
.
ipsec1
. This is used to identify the IPsec connection and to distinguish it from other devices or connections.
racoon
.
Key_Value01
, and the users agree to let racoon
automatically generate and share an authentication key between each host. Both host users decide to name their connections ipsec1
.
ipsec1
, so the resulting file is called /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-ipsec1
.
DST=X.X.X.X
TYPE=IPSEC
ONBOOT=no
IKE_METHOD=PSK
X.X.X.X
is the IP address of Workstation B. For Workstation B, X.X.X.X
is the IP address of Workstation A. This connection is not set to initiate on boot-up (ONBOOT=no
) and it uses the pre-shared key method of authentication (IKE_METHOD=PSK
).
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/keys-ipsec1
) that both workstations need to authenticate each other. The contents of this file should be identical on both workstations, and only the root user should be able to read or write this file.
IKE_PSK=Key_Value01
keys-ipsec1
file so that only the root user can read or edit the file, use the following command after creating the file:
chmod 600 /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/keys-ipsec1
keys-ipsec1
file on both workstations. Both authentication keys must be identical for proper connectivity.
X.X.X.X
.conf
, where X.X.X.X
is the IP address of the remote IPsec host. Note that this file is automatically generated when the IPsec tunnel is activated and should not be edited directly.
remote X.X.X.X
{
exchange_mode aggressive, main;
my_identifier address;
proposal {
encryption_algorithm 3des;
hash_algorithm sha1;
authentication_method pre_shared_key;
dh_group 2 ;
}
}
X.X.X.X
X.X.X.X
IP address.
/etc/racoon/racoon.conf
files should be identical on all IPsec nodes except for the include "/etc/racoon/X.X.X.X
.conf"
statement. This statement (and the file it references) is generated when the IPsec tunnel is activated. For Workstation A, the X.X.X.X
in the include
statement is Workstation B's IP address. The opposite is true of Workstation B. The following shows a typical racoon.conf
file when the IPsec connection is activated.
# Racoon IKE daemon configuration file. # See 'man racoon.conf' for a description of the format and entries. path include "/etc/racoon"; path pre_shared_key "/etc/racoon/psk.txt"; path certificate "/etc/racoon/certs"; sainfo anonymous { pfs_group 2; lifetime time 1 hour ; encryption_algorithm 3des, blowfish 448, rijndael ; authentication_algorithm hmac_sha1, hmac_md5 ; compression_algorithm deflate ; } include "/etc/racoon/X.X.X.X.conf";
racoon.conf
file includes defined paths for IPsec configuration, pre-shared key files, and certificates. The fields in sainfo anonymous
describe the phase 2 SA between the IPsec nodes — the nature of the IPsec connection (including the supported encryption algorithms used) and the method of exchanging keys. The following list defines the fields of phase 2:
modp1024
) of the Diffie-Hellman cryptographic key exchange groups. Group 2 uses a 1024-bit modular exponentiation that prevents attackers from decrypting previous IPsec transmissions even if a private key is compromised.
ifup <nickname>
tcpdump
utility to view the network packets being transferred between the hosts and verify that they are encrypted via IPsec. The packet should include an AH header and should be shown as ESP packets. ESP means it is encrypted. For example:
~]# tcpdump -n -i eth0 host <targetSystem>
IP 172.16.45.107 > 172.16.44.192: AH(spi=0x0954ccb6,seq=0xbb): ESP(spi=0x0c9f2164,seq=0xbb)
ipsec1
. This is used to identify the IPsec connection and to distinguish it from other devices or connections.
racoon
system-config-network
to start the Network Administration Tool.
ipsec0
. If required, select the check box to automatically activate the connection when the computer starts. Click to continue.
racoon
daemon manages the encryption key. The ipsec-tools
package must be installed if you want to use automatic encryption.
192.168.1.0
if configuring ipsec1, and enter 192.168.2.0
if configuring ipsec0.
/etc/sysctl.conf
and set net.ipv4.ip_forward
to 1
.
sysctl -p /etc/sysctl.conf
r3dh4tl1nux
, and the administrators of A and B agree to let racoon
automatically generate and share an authentication key between each IPsec router. The administrator of LAN A decides to name the IPsec connection ipsec0
, while the administrator of LAN B names the IPsec connection ipsec1
.
ifcfg
file for a network-to-network IPsec connection for LAN A. The unique name to identify the connection in this example is ipsec0
, so the resulting file is called /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-ipsec0
.
TYPE=IPSEC
ONBOOT=yes
IKE_METHOD=PSK
SRCGW=192.168.1.254
DSTGW=192.168.2.254
SRCNET=192.168.1.0/24
DSTNET=192.168.2.0/24
DST=X.X.X.X
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/keys-ipsecX
(where X
is 0 for LAN A and 1 for LAN B) that both networks use to authenticate each other. The contents of this file should be identical and only the root user should be able to read or write this file.
IKE_PSK=r3dh4tl1nux
keys-ipsecX
file so that only the root user can read or edit the file, use the following command after creating the file:
chmod 600 /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/keys-ipsec1
keys-ipsecX
file on both IPsec routers. Both keys must be identical for proper connectivity.
/etc/racoon/racoon.conf
configuration file for the IPsec connection. Note that the include
line at the bottom of the file is automatically generated and only appears if the IPsec tunnel is running.
# Racoon IKE daemon configuration file.
# See 'man racoon.conf' for a description of the format and entries.
path include "/etc/racoon";
path pre_shared_key "/etc/racoon/psk.txt";
path certificate "/etc/racoon/certs";
sainfo anonymous
{
pfs_group 2;
lifetime time 1 hour ;
encryption_algorithm 3des, blowfish 448, rijndael ;
authentication_algorithm hmac_sha1, hmac_md5 ;
compression_algorithm deflate ;
}
include "/etc/racoon/X.X.X.X
.conf"
X.X.X.X
.conf
(where X.X.X.X
is the IP address of the remote IPsec router). Note that this file is automatically generated when the IPsec tunnel is activated and should not be edited directly.
remote X.X.X.X
{
exchange_mode aggressive, main;
my_identifier address;
proposal {
encryption_algorithm 3des;
hash_algorithm sha1;
authentication_method pre_shared_key;
dh_group 2 ;
}
}
/etc/sysctl.conf
and set net.ipv4.ip_forward
to 1
.
sysctl -p /etc/sysctl.conf
ifup ipsec0
ifup
on the IPsec connection. To show a list of routes for the network, use the following command:
ip route list
tcpdump
utility on the externally-routable device (eth0 in this example) to view the network packets being transferred between the hosts (or networks), and verify that they are encrypted via IPsec. For example, to check the IPsec connectivity of LAN A, use the following command:
tcpdump -n -i eth0 host lana.example.com
12:24:26.155529 lanb.example.com > lana.example.com: AH(spi=0x021c9834,seq=0x358): \ lanb.example.com > lana.example.com: ESP(spi=0x00c887ad,seq=0x358) (DF) \ (ipip-proto-4)
ifup <nickname>
<nickname>
is the nickname configured earlier, such as ipsec0
.
ifdown <nickname>
方法 | 說明 | 優點 | 缺點 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NAT | Network Address Translation (NAT) places private IP subnetworks behind one or a small pool of public IP addresses, masquerading all requests to one source rather than several. The Linux kernel has built-in NAT functionality through the Netfilter kernel subsystem. |
|
| ||||||
封包過濾器 | A packet filtering firewall reads each data packet that passes through a LAN. It can read and process packets by header information and filters the packet based on sets of programmable rules implemented by the firewall administrator. The Linux kernel has built-in packet filtering functionality through the Netfilter kernel subsystem. |
|
| ||||||
代理伺服器 | 代理防火牆會過濾從區網用戶端傳送到一部代理機器某種通訊協定或類型的所有封包,它將會代理本地用戶端 向網際網路發出要求。 一部代理機器將扮演惡意的遠端使用者與內部網路用戶端機器間的一個緩衝區。 |
|
|
iptables
tool.
iptables
administration tool, a command line tool similar in syntax to its predecessor, ipchains
.
ipchains
requires intricate rule sets for: filtering source paths; filtering destination paths; and filtering both source and destination connection ports.
iptables
uses the Netfilter subsystem to enhance network connection, inspection, and processing. iptables
features advanced logging, pre- and post-routing actions, network address translation, and port forwarding, all in one command line interface.
iptables
. For more detailed information, refer to 節 46.9, “IPTables”.
system-config-securitylevel
iptables
rules.
/etc/sysconfig/iptables
file. If you choose Disabled and click , these configurations and firewall rules will be lost.
httpd
package be installed.
vsftpd
package be installed.
openssh-server
package be installed.
telnet-server
package be installed.
fetchmail
. To allow delivery of mail to your machine, select this check box. Note that an improperly configured SMTP server can allow remote machines to use your server to send spam.
iptables
. For example, to allow IRC and Internet printing protocol (IPP) to pass through the firewall, add the following to the Other ports section:
194:tcp,631:tcp
iptables
commands and written to the /etc/sysconfig/iptables
file. The iptables
service is also started so that the firewall is activated immediately after saving the selected options. If Disable firewall was selected, the /etc/sysconfig/iptables
file is removed and the iptables
service is stopped immediately.
/etc/sysconfig/system-config-securitylevel
file so that the settings can be restored the next time the application is started. Do not edit this file by hand.
iptables
service is not configured to start automatically at boot time. Refer to 節 46.8.2.6, “Activating the IPTables Service” for more information.
iptables
service is running. To manually start the service, use the following command:
service iptables restart
iptables
starts when the system is booted, use the following command:
chkconfig --level 345 iptables on
ipchains
service is not included in Red Hat Enterprise Linux. However, if ipchains
is installed (for example, an upgrade was performed and the system had ipchains
previously installed), the ipchains
and iptables
services should not be activated simultaneously. To make sure the ipchains
service is disabled and configured not to start at boot time, use the following two commands:
service ipchains stop
chkconfig --level 345 ipchains off
iptables
is to start the iptables
service. Use the following command to start the iptables
service:
service iptables start
ip6tables
service can be turned off if you intend to use the iptables
service only. If you deactivate the ip6tables
service, remember to deactivate the IPv6 network also. Never leave a network device active without the matching firewall.
iptables
to start by default when the system is booted, use the following command:
chkconfig --level 345 iptables on
iptables
to start whenever the system is booted into runlevel 3, 4, or 5.
iptables
command illustrates the basic command syntax:
iptables -A <chain>
-j <target>
-A
option specifies that the rule be appended to <chain>. Each chain is comprised of one or more rules, and is therefore also known as a ruleset.
-j <target>
option specifies the target of the rule; i.e., what to do if the packet matches the rule. Examples of built-in targets are ACCEPT, DROP, and REJECT.
iptables
man page for more information on the available chains, options, and targets.
iptables
chain is comprised of a default policy, and zero or more rules which work in concert with the default policy to define the overall ruleset for the firewall.
iptables -P INPUT DROP
iptables -P OUTPUT DROP
iptables -P FORWARD DROP
iptables
are transitory; if the system is rebooted or if the iptables
service is restarted, the rules are automatically flushed and reset. To save the rules so that they are loaded when the iptables
service is started, use the following command:
service iptables save
/etc/sysconfig/iptables
and are applied whenever the service is started or the machine is rebooted.
iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -m tcp --dport 80 -j ACCEPT
iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -m tcp --dport 443 -j ACCEPT
iptables
ruleset, order is important.
-I
option. For example:
iptables -I INPUT 1 -i lo -p all -j ACCEPT
iptables
to accept connections from remote SSH clients. For example, the following rules allow remote SSH access:
iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 22 -j ACCEPT
iptables -A OUTPUT -p tcp --sport 22 -j ACCEPT
iptables
filtering rules.
FORWARD
and NAT Rulesiptables
provides routing and forwarding policies that can be implemented to prevent abnormal usage of network resources.
FORWARD
chain allows an administrator to control where packets can be routed within a LAN. For example, to allow forwarding for the entire LAN (assuming the firewall/gateway is assigned an internal IP address on eth1), use the following rules:
iptables -A FORWARD -i eth1 -j ACCEPT
iptables -A FORWARD -o eth1 -j ACCEPT
eth1
device.
sysctl -w net.ipv4.ip_forward=1
/etc/sysctl.conf
file as follows:
net.ipv4.ip_forward = 0
net.ipv4.ip_forward = 1
sysctl.conf
file:
sysctl -p /etc/sysctl.conf
iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE
-t nat
) and specifies the built-in POSTROUTING chain for NAT (-A POSTROUTING
) on the firewall's external networking device (-o eth0
).
-j MASQUERADE
target is specified to mask the private IP address of a node with the external IP address of the firewall/gateway.
-j DNAT
target of the PREROUTING chain in NAT to specify a destination IP address and port where incoming packets requesting a connection to your internal service can be forwarded.
iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 80 -j DNAT --to 172.31.0.23:80
iptables -A FORWARD -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 80 -d 172.31.0.23 -j ACCEPT
iptables
rules to route traffic to certain machines, such as a dedicated HTTP or FTP server, in a demilitarized zone (DMZ). A DMZ is a special local subnetwork dedicated to providing services on a public carrier, such as the Internet.
PREROUTING
table to forward the packets to the appropriate destination:
iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 80 -j DNAT --to-destination 10.0.4.2:80
iptables -A OUTPUT -o eth0 -p tcp --dport 31337 --sport 31337 -j DROP
iptables -A FORWARD -o eth0 -p tcp --dport 31337 --sport 31337 -j DROP
iptables -A FORWARD -s 192.168.1.0/24 -i eth0 -j DROP
DROP
and REJECT
targets when dealing with appended rules.
REJECT
target denies access and returns a connection refused
error to users who attempt to connect to the service. The DROP
target, as the name implies, drops the packet without any warning.
REJECT
target is recommended.
iptables
uses a method called connection tracking to store information about incoming connections. You can allow or deny access based on the following connection states:
新的(NEW)
— 某個封包請求開啟新的連線,例如 HTTP 請求。
已建立(ESTABLISHED)
— 屬於某個現有連線的封包。
RELATED
— A packet that is requesting a new connection but is part of an existing connection. For example, FTP uses port 21 to establish a connection, but data is transferred on a different port (typically port 20).
無效的(INVALID)
— 在連結追蹤表中,不屬於任何連線的封包。
iptables
connection tracking with any network protocol, even if the protocol itself is stateless (such as UDP). The following example shows a rule that uses connection tracking to forward only the packets that are associated with an established connection:
iptables -A FORWARD -m state --state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT
ip6tables
command. In Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5, both IPv4 and IPv6 services are enabled by default.
ip6tables
command syntax is identical to iptables
in every aspect except that it supports 128-bit addresses. For example, use the following command to enable SSH connections on an IPv6-aware network server:
ip6tables -A INPUT -i eth0 -p tcp -s 3ffe:ffff:100::1/128 --dport 22 -j ACCEPT
iptables
command, including definitions for many command options.
iptables
man page contains a brief summary of the various options.
iptables
project.
iptables
. It includes topics that cover analyzing firewall logs, developing firewall rules, and customizing your firewall using various graphical tools.
ipchains
as well as Netfilter and iptables
. Additional security topics such as remote access issues and intrusion detection systems are also covered.
ipchains
for packet filtering and used lists of rules applied to packets at each step of the filtering process. The 2.4 kernel introduced iptables
(also called netfilter), which is similar to ipchains
but greatly expands the scope and control available for filtering network packets.
ipchains
and iptables
, explains various options available with iptables
commands, and explains how filtering rules can be preserved between system reboots.
iptables
rules and setting up a firewall based on these rules.
iptables
, but iptables
cannot be used if ipchains
is already running. If ipchains
is present at boot time, the kernel issues an error and fails to start iptables
.
ipchains
is not affected by these errors.
filter
— The default table for handling network packets.
nat
— Used to alter packets that create a new connection and used for Network Address Translation (NAT).
mangle
— Used for specific types of packet alteration.
netfilter
.
filter
table are as follows:
nat
table are as follows:
mangle
table are as follows:
/etc/sysconfig/iptables
or /etc/sysconfig/ip6tables
files.
iptables
service starts before any DNS-related services when a Linux system is booted. This means that firewall rules can only reference numeric IP addresses (for example, 192.168.0.1). Domain names (for example, host.example.com) in such rules produce errors.
ACCEPT
target for a matching packet, the packet skips the rest of the rule checks and is allowed to continue to its destination. If a rule specifies a DROP
target, that packet is refused access to the system and nothing is sent back to the host that sent the packet. If a rule specifies a QUEUE
target, the packet is passed to user-space. If a rule specifies the optional REJECT
target, the packet is dropped, but an error packet is sent to the packet's originator.
ACCEPT
, DROP
, REJECT
, or QUEUE
. If none of the rules in the chain apply to the packet, then the packet is dealt with in accordance with the default policy.
iptables
command configures these tables, as well as sets up new tables if necessary.
ipchains
and iptables
use chains of rules that operate within the Linux kernel to filter packets based on matches with specified rules or rule sets. However, iptables
offers a more extensible way of filtering packets, giving the administrator greater control without building undue complexity into the system.
ipchains
and iptables
:
iptables
, each filtered packet is processed using rules from only one chain rather than multiple chains. ipchains
would have to go through the INPUT, FORWARD, and OUTPUT chains to continue to its destination. However, iptables
only sends packets to the INPUT chain if they are destined for the local system, and only sends them to the OUTPUT chain if the local system generated the packets. It is therefore important to place the rule designed to catch a particular packet within the chain that actually handles the packet.
ipchains
, packets that matched a rule in a chain could be directed to the DENY target. This target must be changed to DROP in iptables
.
ipchains
, the order of the rule options does not matter.
iptables
command has a stricter syntax. The iptables
command requires that the protocol (ICMP, TCP, or UDP) be specified before the source or destination ports.
-i
option) can only be used in INPUT or FORWARD chains. Similarly, outgoing interfaces (-o
option) can only be used in FORWARD or OUTPUT chains.
iptables
command. The following aspects of the packet are most often used as criteria:
iptables
rules must be grouped logically, based on the purpose and conditions of the overall rule, for the rule to be valid. The remainder of this section explains commonly-used options for the iptables
command.
iptables
commands have the following structure:
iptables [-t<table-name>
]<command>
<chain-name>
\<parameter-1>
<option-1>
\<parameter-n>
<option-n>
<table-name>
— Specifies which table the rule applies to. If omitted, the filter
table is used.
<command>
— Specifies the action to perform, such as appending or deleting a rule.
<chain-name>
— Specifies the chain to edit, create, or delete.
<parameter>-<option>
pairs — Parameters and associated options that specify how to process a packet that matches the rule.
iptables
command can change significantly, based on its purpose.
iptables -D <chain-name> <line-number>
iptables
commands, it is important to remember that some parameters and options require further parameters and options to construct a valid rule. This can produce a cascading effect, with the further parameters requiring yet more parameters. Until every parameter and option that requires another set of options is satisfied, the rule is not valid.
iptables -h
to view a comprehensive list of iptables
command structures.
iptables
to perform a specific action. Only one command option is allowed per iptables
command. With the exception of the help command, all commands are written in upper-case characters.
iptables
commands are as follows:
-A
— Appends the rule to the end of the specified chain. Unlike the -I
option described below, it does not take an integer argument. It always appends the rule to the end of the specified chain.
-C
— Checks a particular rule before adding it to the user-specified chain. This command can help you construct complex iptables
rules by prompting you for additional parameters and options.
-D <integer> | <rule>
— Deletes a rule in a particular chain by number (such as 5
for the fifth rule in a chain), or by rule specification. The rule specification must exactly match an existing rule.
-E
— Renames a user-defined chain. A user-defined chain is any chain other than the default, pre-existing chains. (Refer to the -N
option, below, for information on creating user-defined chains.) This is a cosmetic change and does not affect the structure of the table.
Match not found
error. You cannot rename the default chains.
-F
— Flushes the selected chain, which effectively deletes every rule in the chain. If no chain is specified, this command flushes every rule from every chain.
-h
— Provides a list of command structures, as well as a quick summary of command parameters and options.
-I [<integer>]
— Inserts the rule in the specified chain at a point specified by a user-defined integer argument. If no argument is specified, the rule is inserted at the top of the chain.
-A
or -I
option.
-I
with an integer argument. If you specify an existing number when adding a rule to a chain, iptables
adds the new rule before (or above) the existing rule.
-L
— Lists all of the rules in the chain specified after the command. To list all rules in all chains in the default filter
table, do not specify a chain or table. Otherwise, the following syntax should be used to list the rules in a specific chain in a particular table:
iptables -L <chain-name>
-t <table-name>
-L
command option, which provide rule numbers and allow more verbose rule descriptions, are described in 節 46.9.3.6, “Listing Options”.
-N
— Creates a new chain with a user-specified name. The chain name must be unique, otherwise an error message is displayed.
-P
— Sets the default policy for the specified chain, so that when packets traverse an entire chain without matching a rule, they are sent to the specified target, such as ACCEPT or DROP.
-R
— Replaces a rule in the specified chain. The rule's number must be specified after the chain's name. The first rule in a chain corresponds to rule number one.
-X
— Deletes a user-specified chain. You cannot delete a built-in chain.
-Z
— Sets the byte and packet counters in all chains for a table to zero.
iptables
commands, including those used to add, append, delete, insert, or replace rules within a particular chain, require various parameters to construct a packet filtering rule.
-c
— Resets the counters for a particular rule. This parameter accepts the PKTS
and BYTES
options to specify which counter to reset.
-d
— Sets the destination hostname, IP address, or network of a packet that matches the rule. When matching a network, the following IP address/netmask formats are supported:
N.N.N.N
/M.M.M.M
— Where N.N.N.N
is the IP address range and M.M.M.M
is the netmask.
N.N.N.N
/M
— Where N.N.N.N
is the IP address range and M
is the bitmask.
-f
— Applies this rule only to fragmented packets.
!
) option after this parameter to specify that only unfragmented packets are matched.
-i
— Sets the incoming network interface, such as eth0
or ppp0
. With iptables
, this optional parameter may only be used with the INPUT and FORWARD chains when used with the filter
table and the PREROUTING chain with the nat
and mangle
tables.
!
) — Reverses the directive, meaning any specified interfaces are excluded from this rule.
+
) — A wildcard character used to match all interfaces that match the specified string. For example, the parameter -i eth+
would apply this rule to any Ethernet interfaces but exclude any other interfaces, such as ppp0
.
-i
parameter is used but no interface is specified, then every interface is affected by the rule.
-j
— Jumps to the specified target when a packet matches a particular rule.
ACCEPT
, DROP
, QUEUE
, and RETURN
.
iptables
RPM package. Valid targets in these modules include LOG
, MARK
, and REJECT
, among others. Refer to the iptables
man page for more information about these and other targets.
-o
— Sets the outgoing network interface for a rule. This option is only valid for the OUTPUT and FORWARD chains in the filter
table, and the POSTROUTING chain in the nat
and mangle
tables. This parameter accepts the same options as the incoming network interface parameter (-i
).
-p <protocol>
— Sets the IP protocol affected by the rule. This can be either icmp
, tcp
, udp
, or all
, or it can be a numeric value, representing one of these or a different protocol. You can also use any protocols listed in the /etc/protocols
file.
all
" protocol means the rule applies to every supported protocol. If no protocol is listed with this rule, it defaults to "all
".
-s
— Sets the source for a particular packet using the same syntax as the destination (-d
) parameter.
iptables
command. For example, -p <protocol-name>
enables options for the specified protocol. Note that you can also use the protocol ID, instead of the protocol name. Refer to the following examples, each of which have the same effect:
iptables -A INPUT -p icmp --icmp-type any -j ACCEPT
iptables -A INPUT -p 5813 --icmp-type any -j ACCEPT
/etc/services
file. For readability, it is recommended that you use the service names rather than the port numbers.
/etc/services
file to prevent unauthorized editing. If this file is editable, crackers can use it to enable ports on your machine you have otherwise closed. To secure this file, type the following commands as root:
chown root.root /etc/services
chmod 0644 /etc/services
chattr +i /etc/services
-p tcp
):
--dport
— Sets the destination port for the packet.
:
). For example: -p tcp --dport 3000:3200
. The largest acceptable valid range is 0:65535
.
!
) after the --dport
option to match all packets that do not use that network service or port.
/etc/services
file.
--destination-port
match option is synonymous with --dport
.
--sport
— Sets the source port of the packet using the same options as --dport
. The --source-port
match option is synonymous with --sport
.
--syn
— Applies to all TCP packets designed to initiate communication, commonly called SYN packets. Any packets that carry a data payload are not touched.
!
) after the --syn
option to match all non-SYN packets.
--tcp-flags <tested flag list> <set flag list>
— Allows TCP packets that have specific bits (flags) set, to match a rule.
--tcp-flags
match option accepts two parameters. The first parameter is the mask; a comma-separated list of flags to be examined in the packet. The second parameter is a comma-separated list of flags that must be set for the rule to match.
ACK
FIN
PSH
RST
SYN
URG
ALL
NONE
iptables
rule that contains the following specification only matches TCP packets that have the SYN flag set and the ACK and FIN flags not set:
--tcp-flags ACK,FIN,SYN SYN
!
) after the --tcp-flags
to reverse the effect of the match option.
--tcp-option
— Attempts to match with TCP-specific options that can be set within a particular packet. This match option can also be reversed with the exclamation point character (!
).
-p udp
):
--dport
— Specifies the destination port of the UDP packet, using the service name, port number, or range of port numbers. The --destination-port
match option is synonymous with --dport
.
--sport
— Specifies the source port of the UDP packet, using the service name, port number, or range of port numbers. The --source-port
match option is synonymous with --sport
.
--dport
and --sport
options, to specify a range of port numbers, separate the two numbers with a colon (:). For example: -p tcp --dport 3000:3200
. The largest acceptable valid range is 0:65535.
-p icmp
):
--icmp-type
— Sets the name or number of the ICMP type to match with the rule. A list of valid ICMP names can be retrieved by typing the iptables -p icmp -h
command.
iptables
command.
-m <module-name>
, where <module-name>
is the name of the module.
limit
module — Places limits on how many packets are matched to a particular rule.
LOG
target, the limit
module can prevent a flood of matching packets from filling up the system log with repetitive messages or using up system resources.
LOG
target.
limit
module enables the following options:
--limit
— Sets the maximum number of matches for a particular time period, specified as a <value>/<period>
pair. For example, using --limit 5/hour
allows five rule matches per hour.
3/hour
is assumed.
--limit-burst
— Sets a limit on the number of packets able to match a rule at one time.
--limit
option.
state
module — Enables state matching.
state
module enables the following options:
--state
— match a packet with the following connection states:
ESTABLISHED
— The matching packet is associated with other packets in an established connection. You need to accept this state if you want to maintain a connection between a client and a server.
INVALID
— The matching packet cannot be tied to a known connection.
NEW
— The matching packet is either creating a new connection or is part of a two-way connection not previously seen. You need to accept this state if you want to allow new connections to a service.
RELATED
— The matching packet is starting a new connection related in some way to an existing connection. An example of this is FTP, which uses one connection for control traffic (port 21), and a separate connection for data transfer (port 20).
-m state --state INVALID,NEW
.
mac
module — Enables hardware MAC address matching.
mac
module enables the following option:
--mac-source
— Matches a MAC address of the network interface card that sent the packet. To exclude a MAC address from a rule, place an exclamation point character (!
) after the --mac-source
match option.
iptables
man page for more match options available through modules.
<user-defined-chain>
— A user-defined chain within the table. User-defined chain names must be unique. This target passes the packet to the specified chain.
ACCEPT
— Allows the packet through to its destination or to another chain.
DROP
— Drops the packet without responding to the requester. The system that sent the packet is not notified of the failure.
QUEUE
— The packet is queued for handling by a user-space application.
RETURN
— Stops checking the packet against rules in the current chain. If the packet with a RETURN
target matches a rule in a chain called from another chain, the packet is returned to the first chain to resume rule checking where it left off. If the RETURN
rule is used on a built-in chain and the packet cannot move up to its previous chain, the default target for the current chain is used.
LOG
— Logs all packets that match this rule. Because the packets are logged by the kernel, the /etc/syslog.conf
file determines where these log entries are written. By default, they are placed in the /var/log/messages
file.
LOG
target to specify the way in which logging occurs:
--log-level
— Sets the priority level of a logging event. Refer to the syslog.conf
man page for a list of priority levels.
--log-ip-options
— Logs any options set in the header of an IP packet.
--log-prefix
— Places a string of up to 29 characters before the log line when it is written. This is useful for writing syslog filters for use in conjunction with packet logging.
log-prefix
value.
--log-tcp-options
— Logs any options set in the header of a TCP packet.
--log-tcp-sequence
— Writes the TCP sequence number for the packet in the log.
REJECT
— Sends an error packet back to the remote system and drops the packet.
REJECT
target accepts --reject-with <type>
(where <type>
is the rejection type) allowing more detailed information to be returned with the error packet. The message port-unreachable
is the default error type given if no other option is used. Refer to the iptables
man page for a full list of <type>
options.
nat
table, or with packet alteration using the mangle
table, can be found in the iptables
man page.
iptables -L [<chain-name>]
, provides a very basic overview of the default filter table's current chains. Additional options provide more information:
-v
— Displays verbose output, such as the number of packets and bytes each chain has processed, the number of packets and bytes each rule has matched, and which interfaces apply to a particular rule.
-x
— Expands numbers into their exact values. On a busy system, the number of packets and bytes processed by a particular chain or rule may be abbreviated to Kilobytes
, Megabytes
(Megabytes) or Gigabytes
. This option forces the full number to be displayed.
-n
— Displays IP addresses and port numbers in numeric format, rather than the default hostname and network service format.
--line-numbers
— Lists rules in each chain next to their numeric order in the chain. This option is useful when attempting to delete the specific rule in a chain or to locate where to insert a rule within a chain.
-t <table-name>
— Specifies a table name. If omitted, defaults to the filter table.
-x
option.
~]#iptables -L OUTPUT -v -n -x
Chain OUTPUT (policy ACCEPT 64005 packets, 6445791 bytes) pkts bytes target prot opt in out source destination 1593 133812 ACCEPT icmp -- * * 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0/0 ~]#iptables -L OUTPUT -v -n
Chain OUTPUT (policy ACCEPT 64783 packets, 6492K bytes) pkts bytes target prot opt in out source destination 1819 153K ACCEPT icmp -- * * 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0/0 ~]#
iptables
command are stored in memory. If the system is restarted before saving the iptables
rule set, all rules are lost. For netfilter rules to persist through a system reboot, they need to be saved. To save netfilter rules, type the following command as root:
service iptables save
iptables
init script, which runs the /sbin/iptables-save
program and writes the current iptables
configuration to /etc/sysconfig/iptables
. The existing /etc/sysconfig/iptables
file is saved as /etc/sysconfig/iptables.save
.
iptables
init script reapplies the rules saved in /etc/sysconfig/iptables
by using the /sbin/iptables-restore
command.
iptables
rule before committing it to the /etc/sysconfig/iptables
file, it is possible to copy iptables
rules into this file from another system's version of this file. This provides a quick way to distribute sets of iptables
rules to multiple machines.
iptables-save > <filename>
<filename>
is a user-defined name for your ruleset.
/etc/sysconfig/iptables
file to other machines, type /sbin/service iptables restart
for the new rules to take effect.
iptables
command (/sbin/iptables
), which is used to manipulate the tables and chains that constitute the iptables
functionality, and the iptables
service (/sbin/iptables service
), which is used to enable and disable the iptables
service itself.
iptables
in Red Hat Enterprise Linux:
system-config-securitylevel
) — A graphical interface for creating, activating, and saving basic firewall rules. Refer to 節 46.8.2, “Basic Firewall Configuration” for more information.
/sbin/service iptables <option>
— Used to manipulate various functions of iptables
using its initscript. The following options are available:
start
— If a firewall is configured (that is, /etc/sysconfig/iptables
exists), all running iptables
are stopped completely and then started using the /sbin/iptables-restore
command. This option only works if the ipchains
kernel module is not loaded. To check if this module is loaded, type the following command as root:
lsmod | grep ipchains
/sbin/rmmod
command to remove the module.
stop
— If a firewall is running, the firewall rules in memory are flushed, and all iptables modules and helpers are unloaded.
IPTABLES_SAVE_ON_STOP
directive in the /etc/sysconfig/iptables-config
configuration file is changed from its default value to yes
, current rules are saved to /etc/sysconfig/iptables
and any existing rules are moved to the file /etc/sysconfig/iptables.save
.
iptables-config
file.
restart
— If a firewall is running, the firewall rules in memory are flushed, and the firewall is started again if it is configured in /etc/sysconfig/iptables
. This option only works if the ipchains
kernel module is not loaded.
IPTABLES_SAVE_ON_RESTART
directive in the /etc/sysconfig/iptables-config
configuration file is changed from its default value to yes
, current rules are saved to /etc/sysconfig/iptables
and any existing rules are moved to the file /etc/sysconfig/iptables.save
.
iptables-config
file.
status
— Displays the status of the firewall and lists all active rules.
/etc/sysconfig/iptables-config
file and change the value of IPTABLES_STATUS_NUMERIC
to no
. Refer to 節 46.9.5.1, “IPTables Control Scripts Configuration File” for more information about the iptables-config
file.
panic
— Flushes all firewall rules. The policy of all configured tables is set to DROP
.
save
— Saves firewall rules to /etc/sysconfig/iptables
using iptables-save
. Refer to 節 46.9.4, “Saving IPTables Rules” for more information.
ip6tables
for iptables
in the /sbin/service
commands listed in this section. For more information about IPv6 and netfilter, refer to 節 46.9.6, “IPTables and IPv6”.
iptables
initscripts is controlled by the /etc/sysconfig/iptables-config
configuration file. The following is a list of directives contained in this file:
IPTABLES_MODULES
— Specifies a space-separated list of additional iptables
modules to load when a firewall is activated. These can include connection tracking and NAT helpers.
IPTABLES_MODULES_UNLOAD
— Unloads modules on restart and stop. This directive accepts the following values:
yes
— The default value. This option must be set to achieve a correct state for a firewall restart or stop.
no
— This option should only be set if there are problems unloading the netfilter modules.
IPTABLES_SAVE_ON_STOP
— Saves current firewall rules to /etc/sysconfig/iptables
when the firewall is stopped. This directive accepts the following values:
yes
— Saves existing rules to /etc/sysconfig/iptables
when the firewall is stopped, moving the previous version to the /etc/sysconfig/iptables.save
file.
no
— The default value. Does not save existing rules when the firewall is stopped.
IPTABLES_SAVE_ON_RESTART
— Saves current firewall rules when the firewall is restarted. This directive accepts the following values:
yes
— Saves existing rules to /etc/sysconfig/iptables
when the firewall is restarted, moving the previous version to the /etc/sysconfig/iptables.save
file.
no
— The default value. Does not save existing rules when the firewall is restarted.
IPTABLES_SAVE_COUNTER
— Saves and restores all packet and byte counters in all chains and rules. This directive accepts the following values:
yes
— Saves the counter values.
no
— The default value. Does not save the counter values.
IPTABLES_STATUS_NUMERIC
— Outputs IP addresses in numeric form instead of domain or hostnames. This directive accepts the following values:
yes
— The default value. Returns only IP addresses within a status output.
no
— Returns domain or hostnames within a status output.
iptables-ipv6
package is installed, netfilter in Red Hat Enterprise Linux can filter the next-generation IPv6 Internet protocol. The command used to manipulate the IPv6 netfilter is ip6tables
.
iptables
, except the nat
table is not yet supported. This means that it is not yet possible to perform IPv6 network address translation tasks, such as masquerading and port forwarding.
ip6tables
are saved in the /etc/sysconfig/ip6tables
file. Previous rules saved by the ip6tables
initscripts are saved in the /etc/sysconfig/ip6tables.save
file.
ip6tables
init script are stored in /etc/sysconfig/ip6tables-config
, and the names for each directive vary slightly from their iptables
counterparts.
iptables-config
directive IPTABLES_MODULES
:the equivalent in the ip6tables-config
file is IP6TABLES_MODULES
.
iptables
.
man iptables
— Contains a description of iptables
as well as a comprehensive list of targets, options, and match extensions.
iptables
, including a FAQ addressing specific problems and various helpful guides by Rusty Russell, the Linux IP firewall maintainer. The HOWTO documents on the site cover subjects such as basic networking concepts, kernel packet filtering, and NAT configurations.
iptables
commands.
avc: denied
message detailed in /var/log/messages
if permission is denied. The security context of subjects and objects is applied from the installed policy, which also provides the information to populate the security server's matrix.
/selinux/
pseudo-file system contains commands that are most commonly used by the kernel subsystem. This type of file system is similar to the /proc/
pseudo-file system.
/selinux/
directory:
-rw-rw-rw- 1 root root 0 Sep 22 13:14 access dr-xr-xr-x 1 root root 0 Sep 22 13:14 booleans --w------- 1 root root 0 Sep 22 13:14 commit_pending_bools -rw-rw-rw- 1 root root 0 Sep 22 13:14 context -rw-rw-rw- 1 root root 0 Sep 22 13:14 create --w------- 1 root root 0 Sep 22 13:14 disable -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Sep 22 13:14 enforce -rw------- 1 root root 0 Sep 22 13:14 load -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Sep 22 13:14 mls -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Sep 22 13:14 policyvers -rw-rw-rw- 1 root root 0 Sep 22 13:14 relabel -rw-rw-rw- 1 root root 0 Sep 22 13:14 user
cat
command on the enforce
file reveals either a 1
for enforcing mode or 0
for permissive mode.
/etc/
directory.
/etc/sysconfig/selinux
Configuration Filesystem-config-selinux
), or manually editing the configuration file (/etc/sysconfig/selinux
).
/etc/sysconfig/selinux
file is the primary configuration file for enabling or disabling SELinux, as well as for setting which policy to enforce on the system and how to enforce it.
/etc/sysconfig/selinux
contains a symbolic link to the actual configuration file, /etc/selinux/config
.
SELINUX=enforcing|permissive|disabled
— Defines the top-level state of SELinux on a system.
enforcing
— The SELinux security policy is enforced.
permissive
— The SELinux system prints warnings but does not enforce policy.
avc: denied
messages for every directory level read. In enforcing mode, SELinux would have stopped the initial traversal and kept further denial messages from occurring.
disabled
— SELinux is fully disabled. SELinux hooks are disengaged from the kernel and the pseudo-file system is unregistered.
/.autorelabel
and reboot the machine. This causes the relabel to occur very early in the boot process, before any processes are running on the system. Using this procedure means that processes can not accidentally create files in the wrong context or start up in the wrong context.
fixfiles relabel
command prior to enabling SELinux to relabel the file system. This method is not recommended, however, because after it is complete, it is still possible to have processes potentially running on the system in the wrong context. These processes could create files that would also be in the wrong context.
SELINUXTYPE=targeted|strict
— Specifies which policy SELinux should enforce.
targeted
— Only targeted network daemons are protected.
dhcpd, httpd (apache.te), named, nscd, ntpd, portmap, snmpd, squid
, and syslogd
. The rest of the system runs in the unconfined_t domain. This domain allows subjects and objects with that security context to operate using standard Linux security.
/etc/selinux/targeted/src/policy/domains/program
. These files are subject to change as newer versions of Red Hat Enterprise Linux are released.
system-config-selinux
).
1
disables SELinux protection for the daemon. For example, you can set dhcpd_disable_trans
to 1
to prevent init
, which executes apps labeled dhcpd_exec_t
, from transitioning to the dhcpd_t
domain.
getsebool -a
command to list all SELinux booleans. The following is an example of using the setsebool
command to set an SELinux boolean. The -P
option makes the change permanent. Without this option, the boolean would be reset to 1
at reboot.
setsebool -P dhcpd_disable_trans=0
strict
— Full SELinux protection, for all daemons. Security contexts are defined for all subjects and objects, and every action is processed by the policy enforcement server.
SETLOCALDEFS=0|1
— Controls how local definitions (users and booleans) are set. Set this value to 1 to have these definitions controlled by load_policy
from files in /etc/selinux/<policyname>
. or set it to 0 to have them controlled by semanage
.
/etc/selinux/
Directory/etc/selinux/
directory is the primary location for all policy files as well as the main configuration file.
/etc/selinux/
directory:
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 448 Sep 22 17:34 config drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 4096 Sep 22 17:27 strict drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 4096 Sep 22 17:28 targeted
strict/
and targeted/
, are the specific directories where the policy files of the same name (that is, strict
and targeted
) are contained.
/usr/sbin/setenforce
— Modifies in real-time the mode in which SELinux runs.
setenforce 1
— SELinux runs in enforcing mode.
setenforce 0
— SELinux runs in permissive mode.
setenforce
parameter in /etc/sysconfig/selinux
or pass the parameter selinux=0
to the kernel, either in /etc/grub.conf
or at boot time.
/usr/sbin/sestatus -v
— Displays the detailed status of a system running SELinux. The following example shows an excerpt of sestatus -v
output:
SELinux status: enabled SELinuxfs mount: /selinux Current mode: enforcing Mode from config file: enforcing Policy version: 21 Policy from config file: targeted Process contexts: Current context: user_u:system_r:unconfined_t:s0 Init context: system_u:system_r:init_t:s0 /sbin/mingetty system_u:system_r:getty_t:s0
/usr/bin/newrole
— Runs a new shell in a new context, or role. Policy must allow the transition to the new role.
policycoreutils-newrole
package installed, which is required for the strict and MLS policies.
/sbin/restorecon
— Sets the security context of one or more files by marking the extended attributes with the appropriate file or security context.
/sbin/fixfiles
— Checks or corrects the security context database on the file system.
setools
or policycoreutils
package contents for more information on all available binary utilities. To view the contents of a package, use the following command:
rpm -ql <package-name>
/usr/share/doc/setools-<version-number
>/
All documentation for utilities contained in the setools
package. This includes all helper scripts, sample configuration files, and documentation.
<x>
series of Linux kernels. This module stored PSIDs in a normal file, and SELinux was able to support more file systems. This solution was not optimal for performance, and was inconsistent across platforms. Finally, the SELinux code was integrated upstream to the 2.6.x
kernel, which has full support for LSM and has extended attributes (xattrs) in the ext3 file system. SELinux was moved to using xattrs to store security context information. The xattr namespace provides useful separation for multiple security modules existing on the same system.
"security."
namespace is used for security modules, and the security.selinux
name is used to persistently store SELinux security labels on files. The contents of this attribute will vary depending on the file or directory you inspect and the policy the machine is enforcing.
getxattr(2)
always returns the kernel's canonicalized version of the label.
ls -Z
command to view the category label of a file:
~]# ls -Z gravityControl.txt
-rw-r--r-- user user user_u:object_r:tmp_t:Moonbase_Plans gravityControl.txt
gefattr(1)
command to view the internal category value (c10):
~]# getfattr -n security.selinux gravityControl.txt
# file: gravityControl.txt
security.selinux="user_u:object_r:tmp_t:s0:c10\000"
semanage user -l
command to list SELinux users:
~]# semanage user -l
Labeling MLS/ MLS/
SELinux User Prefix MCS Level MCS Range SELinux Roles
root user s0 s0-s0:c0.c1023 system_r sysadm_r user_r
system_u user s0 s0-s0:c0.c1023 system_r
user_u user s0 s0-s0:c0.c1023 system_r sysadm_r user_r
user_u
). This is solved by introducing the concept of an SELinux login. This is used during the login process to assign MCS categories to Linux users when their shell is launched.
semanage login -a
command to assign Linux users to SELinux user identities:
~]#semanage login -a james
~]#semanage login -a daniel
~]#semanage login -a olga
~]# semanage login -l
Login Name SELinux User MLS/MCS Range
__default__ user_u s0
james user_u s0
daniel user_u s0
root root s0-s0:c0.c1023
olga user_u s0
setrans.conf
file. The system administrator edits this file to manage and maintain the required categories.
chcat -L
command to list the current categories:
~]# chcat -L
s0
s0-s0:c0.c1023 SystemLow-SystemHigh
s0:c0.c1023 SystemHigh
/etc/selinux/<selinuxtype
>/setrans.conf
file. For the example introduced above, add the Marketing, Finance, Payroll, and Personnel categories as follows (this example uses the targeted policy, and irrelevant sections of the file have been omitted):
~]# vi /etc/selinux/targeted/setrans.conf
s0:c0=Marketing
s0:c1=Finance
s0:c2=Payroll
s0:c3=Personnel
chcat -L
command to check the newly-added categories:
~]# chcat -L
s0:c0 Marketing
s0:c1 Finance
s0:c2 Payroll
s0:c3 Personnel
s0
s0-s0:c0.c1023 SystemLow-SystemHigh
s0:c0.c1023 SystemHigh
setrans.conf
file, you need to restart the MCS translation service before those changes take effect. Use the following command to restart the service:
~]# service mcstrans restart
chcat
command to assign MCS categories to SELinux logins:
~]#chcat -l -- +Marketing james
~]#chcat -l -- +Finance,+Payroll daniel
~]#chcat -l -- +Personnel olga
chcat
command with additional command-line arguments to list the categories that are assigned to users:
~]# chcat -L -l daniel james olga
daniel: Finance,Payroll
james: Marketing
olga: Personnel
# Create a user account for the company director (Karl) ~]#useradd karl
~]#passwd karl
Changing password for user karl. New UNIX password: Retype new UNIX password: passwd: all authentication tokens updated successfully. # Assign the user account to an SELinux login ~]#semanage login -a karl
# Assign all the MCS categories to the new login ~]#chcat -l -- +Marketing,+Finance,+Payroll,+Personnel karl
chcat
command to verify the addition of the new user:
~]# chcat -L -l daniel james olga karl
daniel: Finance,Payroll
james: Marketing
olga: Personnel
karl: Marketing,Finance,Payroll,Personnel
[daniel@dhcp-133 ~]$ echo "Financial Records 2006" > financeRecords.txt
ls -Z
command to check the initial security context of the file:
[daniel@dhcp-133 ~]$ ls -Z financeRecords.txt
-rw-r--r-- daniel daniel user_u:object_r:user_home_t financeRecords.txt
user_home_t
) and has no categories assigned to it. We can add the required category using the chcat
command. Now when you check the security context of the file, you can see the category has been applied.
[daniel@dhcp-133 ~]$chcat -- +Finance financeRecords.txt
[daniel@dhcp-133 ~]$ls -Z financeRecords.txt
-rw-r--r-- daniel daniel root:object_r:user_home_t:Finance financeRecords.txt
[daniel@dhcp-133 ~]$chcat -- +Payroll financeRecords.txt
[daniel@dhcp-133 ~]$ls -Z financeRecords.txt
-rw-r--r-- daniel daniel root:object_r:user_home_t:Finance,Payroll financeRecords.txt
[olga@dhcp-133 ~]$ cat financeRecords.txt
cat: financeRecords.txt: Permission Denied
semanage
and chcat
for more information on the available options for these commands.
Sensitivity
: — A hierarchical attribute such as "Secret" or "Top Secret".
Categories
: — A set of non-hierarchical attributes such as "US Only" or "UFO".
user_home_t
.
unconfined_t
domain have an executable file with a type such as sbin_t
. From an SELinux perspective, this means they are all equivalent in terms of what they can and cannot do on the system.
/usr/bin/postgres
has the type postgresql_exec_t. All of the targeted daemons have their own *_exec_t
type for their executable applications. In fact, the entire set of PostgreSQL executables such as createlang
, pg_dump
, and pg_restore
have the same type, postgresql_exec_t
, and they transition to the same domain, postgresql_t
, upon execution.
$AUDIT_LOG
file. In Red Hat Enterprise Linux, this is set to /var/log/messages
. The policy is compiled into binary format for loading into the kernel security server, and each time the security server makes a decision, it is cached in the AVC to optimize performance.
init
, as explained in 節 47.7.3, “The Role of Policy in the Boot Process”. Ultimately, every system operation is determined by the policy and the type-labeling of the files.
m4
macros to capture common sets of low-level rules. A number of m4
macros are defined in the existing policy, which facilitate the writing of new policy. These rules are preprocessed into many additional rules as part of building the policy.conf
file, which is compiled into the binary policy.
newrole
, or by requiring a new process execution in the new domain. This movement between domains is referred to as a transition.
selinux-policy-<policyname>
package and supplies the binary policy file.
selinux-policy-devel
package is installed.
/etc/selinux/targeted/
— this is the root directory for the targeted policy, and contains the binary tree.
/etc/selinux/targeted/policy/
— this is the location of the binary policy file policy.<xx>
. In this guide, the variable SELINUX_POLICY
is used for this directory.
/etc/selinux/targeted/contexts/
— this is the location of the security context information and configuration files, which are used during runtime by various applications.
/etc/selinux/targeted/contexts/files/
— contains the default contexts for the entire file system. This is referenced by restorecon
when performing relabeling operations.
/etc/selinux/targeted/contexts/users/
— in the targeted policy, only the root
file is in this directory. These files are used for determining context when a user logs in. For example, for the root user, the context is user_u:system_r:unconfined_t.
/etc/selinux/targeted/modules/active/booleans*
— this is where the runtime Booleans are configured.
getsebool
, setsebool
and semanage
tools to manipulate runtime Booleans.
selinux-policy-devel
package includes all of the interface files used to build policy. It is recommended that people who build policy use these files to build the policy modules.
/usr/share/selinux/devel/include
and has make
files installed in /usr/share/selinux/devel/Makefile
.
libselinux
provides a number of functions that return the paths to the different configuration files and directories. This negates the need for applications to hard-code the paths, especially since the active policy location is dependent on the SELINUXTYPE setting in /etc/selinux/config
.
/etc/selinux/strict
.
man 3 selinux_binary_policy_path
libselinux-devel
RPM installed.
libselinux
and related functions is outside the scope of this document.
init
performs some essential operations early in the boot process to maintain synchronization between labeling and policy enforcement.
/sbin/init
mounts /proc/
, and then searches for the selinuxfs
file system type. If it is present, that means SELinux is enabled in the kernel.
init
does not find SELinux in the kernel, or if it is disabled via the selinux=0
boot parameter, or if /etc/selinux/config
specifies that SELINUX=disabled
, the boot process proceeds with a non-SELinux system.
init
sets the enforcing status if it is different from the setting in /etc/selinux/config
. This happens when a parameter is passed during the boot process, such as enforcing=0
or enforcing=1
. The kernel does not enforce any policy until the initial policy is loaded.
/selinux/
is mounted.
init
checks /selinux/policyvers
for the supported policy version. The version number in /selinux/policyvers
is the latest policy version your kernel supports. init
inspects /etc/selinux/config
to determine which policy is active, such as the targeted policy, and loads the associated file at $SELINUX_POLICY/policy.<version>
.
init
attempts to load the policy file if it is a previous version. This provides backward compatibility with older policy versions.
/etc/selinux/targeted/booleans
are different from those compiled in the policy, init
modifies the policy in memory based on the local settings prior to loading the policy into the kernel.
init
then re-executes itself so that it can transition to a different domain, if the policy defines it. For the targeted policy, there is no transition defined and init
remains in the unconfined_t
domain.
init
continues with its normal boot process.
init
re-executes itself is to accommodate stricter SELinux policy controls. The objective of re-execution is to transition to a new domain with its own granular rules. The only way that a process can enter a domain is during execution, which means that such processes are the only entry points into the domains.
init
, such as init_t
, a method is required to change from the initial SID, such as kernel, to the correct runtime domain for init
. Because this transition may need to occur, init
is coded to re-execute itself after loading the policy.
init
transition occurs if the domain_auto_trans(kernel_t, init_exec_t, <target_domain_t>
)
rule is present in the policy. This rule states that an automatic transition occurs on anything executing in the kernel_t
domain that executes a file of type init_exec_t. When this execution occurs, the new process is assigned the domain <target_domain_t>
, using an actual target domain such as init_t
.
filesystem
for file systems, file
for files, and dir
for directories. Each class has its own associated set of permissions.
filesystem
class can mount, unmount, get attributes, set quotas, relabel, and so forth. The file
class has common file permissions such as read, write, get and set attributes, lock, relabel, link, rename, append, etc.
tcp_socket
for TCP sockets, netif
for network interfaces, and node
for network nodes.
netif
class, for example, can send and receive on TCP, UDP and raw sockets (tcp_recv
, tcp_send
, udp_send
, udp_recv
, rawip_recv
, and rawip_send
.)
unconfined_t
domain except for the specific targeted daemons. Objects that are in the unconfined_t
domain have no restrictions and fall back to using standard Linux security, that is, DAC. The daemons that are part of the targeted policy run in their own domains and are restricted in every operation they perform on the system. This way daemons that are exploited or compromised in any way are contained and can only cause limited damage.
http
and ntp
daemons are both protected in the default targeted policy, and run in the httpd_t
and ntpd_t
domains, respectively. The ssh
daemon, however, is not protected in this policy, and consequently runs in the unconfined_t
domain.
user_u:system_r:httpd_t 25129 ? 00:00:00 httpd user_u:system_r:ntpd_t 25176 ? 00:00:00 ntpd system_u:system_r:unconfined_t 25245 ? 00:00:00 sshd
dhcpd
; httpd
; mysqld
; named
; nscd
; ntpd
; portmap
; postgres
; snmpd
; squid
; syslogd
; and winbind
.
unconfined_t
type exists in every role, which significantly reduces the usefulness of roles in the targeted policy. More extensive use of roles requires a change to the strict policy paradigm, where every process runs in an individually considered domain.
system_r
and object_r
. The initial role is system_r
, and everything else inherits that role. The remaining roles are defined for compatibility purposes between the targeted policy and the strict policy.[20]
object_r
, is an implied role and is not found in policy source. Because roles are created and populated by types using one or more declarations in the policy, there is no single file that declares all roles. (Remember that the policy itself is generated from a number of separate files.)
system_r
system_r (28 types) dhcpd_t httpd_helper_t httpd_php_t httpd_suexec_t httpd_sys_script_t httpd_t httpd_unconfined_script_t initrc_t ldconfig_t mailman_cgi_t mailman_mail_t mailman_queue_t mysqld_t named_t ndc_t nscd_t ntpd_t pegasus_t portmap_t postgresql_t snmpd_t squid_t syslogd_t system_mail_t unconfined_t winbind_helper_t winbind_t ypbind_t
user_r
unconfined_t
domain.
object_r
object_r
, and the role is only used as a placeholder in the label.
sysadm_r
staff_r
. If this is true, use the newrole -r sysadm_r
command to change to the SELinux system administrator role to perform system administration tasks. In the targeted policy, the following retain sysadm_r
for compatibility:
sysadm_r (6 types) httpd_helper_t httpd_sys_script_t initrc_t ldconfig_t ndc_t unconfined_t
user_u
identity was chosen because libselinux
falls back to user_u
as the default SELinux user identity. This occurs when there is no matching SELinux user for the Linux user who is logging in. Using user_u
as the single user in the targeted policy makes it easier to change to the strict policy. The remaining users exist for compatibility with the strict policy.[21]
root
. You may notice root
as the user identity in a process's context. This occurs when the SELinux user root
starts daemons from the command line, or restarts a daemon originally started by init
.
system_r
already had existing authorization for the daemon domains, simplifying the process. This was done because no mechanism currently exists to alias roles.
unconfined_t
along with the rest of the system except the targeted daemons.
avc: denied
message.
mv
and cp
may have unexpected results.
cp
follows the default behavior of creating a new file based on the domain of the creating process and the type of the target directory. Unless there is a specific rule to set the label, the file inherits the type from the target directory.
-Z user:role:type
option to specify the required label for the new file.
-p
(or --preserve=mode,ownership,timestamps
) option preserves the specified attributes and, if possible, additional attributes such as links.
touch bar foo ls -Z bar foo -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t bar -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t foo
cp
command without any additional command-line arguments, a copy of the file is created in the new location using the default type of the creating process and the target directory. In this case, because there is no specific rule that applies to cp
and /tmp
, the new file has the type of the parent directory:
cp bar /tmp ls -Z /tmp/bar -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:tmp_t /tmp/bar
tmp_t
is the default type for temporary files.
-Z
option to specify the label for the new file:
cp -Z user_u:object_r:user_home_t foo /tmp ls -Z /tmp/foo -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t /tmp/foo
mv
retains the original type associated with the file. Care should be taken using this command as it can cause problems. For example, if you move files with the type user_home_t
into ~/public_html
, then the httpd
daemon is not able to serve those files until you relabel them. Refer to 節 48.1.3, “Relabeling a File or Directory” for more information about file labeling.
Command | Behavior |
---|---|
mv
|
The file retains its original label. This may cause problems, confusion, or minor insecurity. For example, the tmpwatch program running in the sbin_t domain might not be allowed to delete an aged file in the /tmp directory because of the file's type.
|
cp
|
Makes a copy of the file using the default behavior based on the domain of the creating process (cp ) and the type of the target directory.
|
cp -p
| Makes a copy of the file, preserving the specified attributes and security contexts, if possible. The default attributes are mode, ownership, and timestamps. Additional attributes are links and all. |
cp -Z
|
Makes a copy of the file with the specified labels. The -Z option is synonymous with --context .
|
-Z
option is equivalent to --context
, and can be used with the ps
, id
, ls
, and cp
commands. The behavior of the cp
command with respect to SELinux is explained in 表格 48.1, “Behavior of mv and cp Commands”.
ps
command. Most of the processes are running in the unconfined_t
domain, with a few exceptions.
[user@localhost ~]$ ps auxZ LABEL USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TTY STAT START TIME COMMAND system_u:system_r:init_t root 1 0.0 0.1 2032 620 ? Ss 15:09 0:00 init [5] system_u:system_r:kernel_t root 2 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S 15:09 0:00 [migration/0] system_u:system_r:kernel_t root 3 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? SN 15:09 0:00 [ksoftirqd/0] user_u:system_r:unconfined_t user 3122 0.0 0.6 6908 3232 ? S 16:47 0:01 /usr/libexec/gconfd-2 5 user_u:system_r:unconfined_t user 3125 0.0 0.1 2540 588 ? S 16:47 0:00 /usr/bin/gnome-keyring-daemon user_u:system_r:unconfined_t user 3127 0.0 1.4 33612 6988 ? Sl 16:47 0:00 /usr/libexec/gnome-settings-daemon user_u:system_r:unconfined_t user 3144 0.1 1.4 16528 7360 ? Ss 16:47 0:01 metacity --sm-client-id=default1 user_u:system_r:unconfined_t user 3148 0.2 2.9 79544 14808 ? Ss 16:47 0:03 gnome-panel --sm-client-id default2
-Z
option with the id
command to determine a user's security context. Note that with this command you cannot combine -Z
with other options.
[root@localhost ~]# id -Z user_u:system_r:unconfined_t
-Z
option with the id
command to inspect the security context of a different user. That is, you can only display the security context of the currently logged-in user:
[user@localhost ~]$ id uid=501(user) gid=501(user) groups=501(user) context=user_u:system_r:unconfined_t [user@localhost ~]$ id root uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=0(root),1(bin),2(daemon),3(sys),4(adm),6(disk),10(wheel) [user@localhost ~]$ id -Z root id: cannot display context when selinux not enabled or when displaying the id of a different user
-Z
option with the ls
command to group common long-format information. You can display mode, user, group, security context, and filename information.
cd /etc ls -Z h* -d drwxr-xr-x root root system_u:object_r:etc_t hal -rw-r--r-- root root system_u:object_r:etc_t host.conf -rw-r--r-- root root user_u:object_r:etc_t hosts -rw-r--r-- root root system_u:object_r:etc_t hosts.allow -rw-r--r-- root root system_u:object_r:etc_t hosts.canna -rw-r--r-- root root system_u:object_r:etc_t hosts.deny drwxr-xr-x root root system_u:object_r:hotplug_etc_t hotplug drwxr-xr-x root root system_u:object_r:etc_t hotplug.d drwxr-xr-x root root system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t htdig drwxr-xr-x root root system_u:object_r:httpd_config_t httpd
~/public_html
directories, or when writing scripts that work in directories outside of /home
.
/usr/sbin/mysqld
has the wrong security label, and you address this by using a relabeling operation such as restorecon
, you must restart mysqld
after the relabeling operation. Setting the executable file to have the correct type (mysqld_exec_t
) ensures that it transitions to the proper domain when started.
chcon
command to change a file to the correct type. You need to know the correct type that you want to apply to use this command. The directories and files in the following example are labeled with the default type defined for file system objects created in /home
:
cd ~ ls -Zd public_html/ drwxrwxr-x auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t public_html/ ls -Z web_files/ -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 1.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 2.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 3.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 4.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 5.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t index.html
public_html
directory, they retain the original type:
mv web_files/* public_html/ ls -Z public_html/ -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 1.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 2.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 3.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 4.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 5.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t index.html
httpd
has permissions to read, presuming the Apache HTTP Server is configured for UserDir and the Boolean value httpd_enable_homedirs
is enabled.
chcon -R -t httpd_user_content_t public_html/ ls -Z public_html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t 1.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t 2.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t 3.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t 4.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t 5.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t index.html ls -Z public_html/ -d drwxrwxr-x auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t public_html/
chcon system_u:object_r:shlib_t foo.so
. Otherwise, you will receive an error about applying a partial context to an unlabeled file.
restorecon
command to restore files to the default values according to the policy. There are two other methods for performing this operation that work on the entire file system: fixfiles
or a policy relabeling operation. Each of these methods requires superuser privileges. Cautions against both of these methods appear in 節 48.2.2, “Relabeling a File System”.
ls -Z /tmp/ -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:tmp_t /tmp/file1 -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:tmp_t /tmp/file2 -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:tmp_t /tmp/file3 mv /tmp/{1,2,3} archives/ mv public_html/* archives/ ls -Z archives/ -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:tmp_t file1 -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t file1.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:tmp_t file2 -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t file2.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:tmp_t file3 -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t file3.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t file4.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t file5.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:httpd_user_content_t index.html
archives/
directory already has the default type because it was created in the user's home directory:
ls -Zd archives/ drwxrwxr-x auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t archives/
restorecon
command to relabel the files uses the default file contexts set by the policy, so these files are labeled with the default label for their current directory.
/sbin/restorecon -R archives/ ls -Z archives/ -rw-rw-r-- auser auser system_u:object_r:user_home_t file1 -rw-rw-r-- auser auser system_u:object_r:user_home_t file1.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser system_u:object_r:user_home_t file2 -rw-rw-r-- auser auser system_u:object_r:user_home_t file2.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser system_u:object_r:user_home_t file3 -rw-rw-r-- auser auser system_u:object_r:user_home_t file3.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser system_u:object_r:user_home_t file4.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser system_u:object_r:user_home_t file5.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser system_u:object_r:user_home_t index.html
tar
or star
utilities to create archives that retain SELinux security contexts. The following example uses star
to demonstrate how to create such an archive. You need to use the appropriate -xattr
and -H=exustar
options to ensure that the extra attributes are captured and that the header for the *.star
file is of a type that fully supports xattrs. Refer to the man page for more information about these and other options.
ls -Z public_html/ web_files/ public_html/: -rw-rw-r-- auser auser ...httpd_user_content_t 1.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser ...httpd_user_content_t 2.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser ...httpd_user_content_t 3.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser ...httpd_user_content_t 4.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser ...httpd_user_content_t 5.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser ...httpd_user_content_t index.html web_files/: -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 1.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 2.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 3.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 4.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 5.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t index.html
star -xattr -H=exustar -c -f all_web.star public_html/ web_files/ star: 11 blocks + 0 bytes (total of 112640 bytes = 110.00k).
ls
command with the -Z
option to validate the security context:
ls -Z all_web.star -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t \ all_web.star
/tmp
. If there is no specific policy to make a derivative temporary type, the default behavior is to acquire the tmp_t
type.
cp all_web.star /tmp/ cd /tmp/ ls -Z all_web.star -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:tmp_t all_web.star
star
and it restores the extended attributes:
star -xattr -x -f all_web.star star: 11 blocks + 0 bytes (total of 112640 bytes = 110.00k). ls -Z /tmp/public_html/ /tmp/web_files/ /tmp/public_html/: -rw-rw-r-- auser auser ...httpd_sys_content_t 1.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser ...httpd_sys_content_t 2.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser ...httpd_sys_content_t 3.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser ...httpd_sys_content_t 4.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser ...httpd_sys_content_t 5.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser ...httpd_sys_content_t index.html /tmp/web_files/: -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 1.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 2.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 3.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 4.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t 5.html -rw-rw-r-- auser auser user_u:object_r:user_home_t \ index.html
star
, the archive expands on that same path. For example, an archive made with this command restores the files to /var/log/httpd/
:
star -xattr -H=exustar -c -f httpd_logs.star /var/log/httpd/
star
issues a warning if the files in the path are newer than the ones in the archive.
sestatus
command provides a configurable view into the status of SELinux. The simplest form of this command shows the following information:
~]# sestatus
SELinux status: enabled
SELinuxfs mount: /selinux
Current mode: enforcing
Mode from config file: enforcing
Policy version: 21
Policy from config file: targeted
-v
option includes information about the security contexts of a series of files that are specified in /etc/sestatus.conf
:
~]# sestatus -v
SELinux status: enabled
SELinuxfs mount: /selinux
Current mode: enforcing
Mode from config file: enforcing
Policy version: 21
Policy from config file: targeted
Process contexts:
Current context: user_u:system_r:unconfined_t
Init context: system_u:system_r:init_t
/sbin/mingetty system_u:system_r:getty_t
/usr/sbin/sshd system_u:system_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023
File contexts:
Controlling term: user_u:object_r:devpts_t
/etc/passwd system_u:object_r:etc_t
/etc/shadow system_u:object_r:shadow_t
/bin/bash system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t
/bin/login system_u:object_r:login_exec_t
/bin/sh system_u:object_r:bin_t -> system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t
/sbin/agetty system_u:object_r:getty_exec_t
/sbin/init system_u:object_r:init_exec_t
/sbin/mingetty system_u:object_r:getty_exec_t
/usr/sbin/sshd system_u:object_r:sshd_exec_t
/lib/libc.so.6 system_u:object_r:lib_t -> system_u:object_r:lib_t
/lib/ld-linux.so.2 system_u:object_r:lib_t -> system_u:object_r:ld_so_t
-b
displays the current state of booleans. You can use this in combination with grep or other tools to determine the status of particular booleans:
~]# sestatus -b | grep httpd | grep on$
httpd_builtin_scripting on
httpd_disable_trans on
httpd_enable_cgi on
httpd_enable_homedirs on
httpd_unified on
init
process to perform the relabeling, ensuring that applications have the correct labels when they are started and that they are started in the right order. If you relabel a file system without rebooting, some processes may continue running with an incorrect context. Manually ensuring that all the daemons are restarted and running in the correct context can be difficult.
touch /.autorelabel
reboot
init.rc
checks for the existence of /.autorelabel
. If this file exists, SELinux performs a complete file system relabel (using the /sbin/fixfiles -f -F relabel
command), and then deletes /.autorelabel
.
fixfiles
command, or to relabel based on the RPM database:
fixfiles
command:
fixfiles relabel
fixfiles -R <packagename>
restore
fixfiles
to restore contexts from packages is safer and quicker.
fixfiles
on the entire file system without rebooting may make the system unstable.
fixfiles relabel
prompts for approval to empty /tmp/
because it is not possible to reliably relabel /tmp/
. Since fixfiles
is run as root, temporary files that applications are relying upon are erased. This could make the system unstable or behave unexpectedly.
nfs_t
type, which is not a type that httpd_t
is allowed to execute.
nfs_t
, try mounting the home directories with a different context:
mount -t nfs -o context=user_u:object_r:user_home_dir_t \
fileserver.example.com:/shared/homes/ /home
httpd
can execute scripts. If you do this for user home directories, it gives the Apache HTTP Server increased access to those directories. Remember that a mountpoint label applies to the entire mounted file system.
root_t
, tmp_t
, and usr_t
that grant read access for a directory. These types are suitable for directories that do not contain any confidential information, and that you want to be widely readable. They could also be used for a parent directory of more secured directories with different contexts.
avc: denied
message, there are some common problems that arise with directory traversal. For example, many programs run a command equivalent to ls -l /
that is not necessary to their operation but generates a denial message in the logs. For this you need to create a dontaudit
rule in your local.te
file.
path=/
component. This path is not related to the label for the root file system, /
. It is actually relative to the root of the file system on the device node. For example, if your /var/
directory is located on an LVM (Logical Volume Management [22]) device, /dev/dm-0
, the device node is identified in the message as dev=dm-0
. When you see path=/
in this example, that is the top level of the LVM device dm-0
, not necessarily the same as the root file system designation /
.
setenforce
command to change between permissive and enforcing modes at runtime. Use setenforce 0
to enter permissive mode; use setenforce 1
to enter enforcing mode.
sestatus
command displays the current mode and the mode from the configuration file referenced during boot:
~]# sestatus | grep -i mode
Current mode: permissive
Mode from config file: permissive
~]#setenforce 1
~]#sestatus | grep -i mode
Current mode: enforcing Mode from config file: permissive
named
daemon and SELinux, you can turn off enforcing for just that daemon.
getsebool
command to get the current status of the boolean:
~]# getsebool named_disable_trans
named_disable_trans --> off
~]#setsebool named_disable_trans 1
~]#getsebool named_disable_trans
named_disable_trans --> on
-P
option to make the change persistent across reboots.
~]# getsebool -a | grep disable.*on
httpd_disable_trans=1
mysqld_disable_trans=1
ntpd_disable_trans=1
setsebool
command:
setsebool -P httpd_disable_trans=1 mysqld_disable_trans=1 ntpd_disable_trans=1
togglesebool <boolean_name>
to change the value of a specific boolean:
~]#getsebool httpd_disable_trans
httpd_disable_trans --> off ~]#togglesebool httpd_disable_trans
httpd_disable_trans: active
setenforce(1)
, getenforce(1)
, and selinuxenabled(1)
commands.
/etc/sysconfig/selinux
file. This file is a symlink to /etc/selinux/config
. The configuration file is self-explanatory. Changing the value of SELINUX
or SELINUXTYPE
changes the state of SELinux and the name of the policy to be used the next time the system boots.
~]# cat /etc/sysconfig/selinux
# This file controls the state of SELinux on the system.
# SELINUX= can take one of these three values:
# enforcing - SELinux security policy is enforced.
# permissive - SELinux prints warnings instead of enforcing.
# disabled - SELinux is fully disabled.
SELINUX=permissive
# SELINUXTYPE= type of policy in use. Possible values are:
# targeted - Only targeted network daemons are protected.
# strict - Full SELinux protection.
SELINUXTYPE=targeted
# SETLOCALDEFS= Check local definition changes
SETLOCALDEFS=0
Disabled
, Enforcing
or Permissive
, and then click .
Enabled
to Disabled
or vice versa, you need to restart the machine for the change to take effect.
/etc/sysconfig/selinux
.
/etc/sysconfig/selinux
:
SELINUXTYPE=<policyname>
<policyname>
is the policy name directory under /etc/selinux/
. This assumes that you have the custom policy installed. After changing the SELINUXTYPE
parameter, run the following commands:
touch /.autorelabel
reboot
/etc/selinux
.
mount -o context=
command to set a single context for an entire file system. This might be a file system that is already mounted and that supports xattrs, or a network file system that obtains a genfs label such as cifs_t
or nfs_t
.
httpd_sys_content_t
:
mount -t nfs -o context=system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t \
server1.example.com:/shared/scripts /var/www/cgi
httpd
and SELinux problems, reduce the complexity of your situation. For example, if you have the file system mounted at /mnt
and then symbolically linked to /var/www/html/foo
, you have two security contexts to be concerned with. Because one security context is of the object class file and the other of type lnk_file, they are treated differently by the policy and unexpected behavior may occur.
runcon
command to run a command in a specific context. This is useful for scripting or for testing policy, but care should be taken to ensure that it is implemented correctly.
~/bin/contexttest
is a user-defined script.)
runcon -t httpd_t ~/bin/contexttest -ARG1 -ARG2
runcon user_u:system_r:httpd_t ~/bin/contexttest
getenforce
setenforce [ Enforcing
| Permissive
| 1
| 0
]
1
or Enforcing
tells SELinux to enter enforcing mode. The option 0
or Permissive
tells SELinux to enter passive mode. Access violations are still logged, but not prevented.
selinuxenabled
0
if SELinux is enabled, and 1
if SELinux is disabled.
~]#selinuxenabled
~]#echo $?
0
getsebool [-a] [boolean_name
]
-a
) or a specific boolean (<boolean_name>
).
setsebool [-P] <boolean_name> value | bool1=val1 bool2=val2 ...
-P
option makes the changes persistent across reboots.
togglesebool boolean ...
newrole
command to run a new shell with the specified type and/or role. Changing roles is typically only meaningful in the strict policy; the targeted policy is generally restricted to a single role. Changing types may be useful for testing, validation, and development purposes.
newrole -r <role_r>
-t <type_t>
[-- [ARGS]...]
ARGS
are passed directly to the shell specified in the user's entry in the /etc/passwd
file.
newrole
command is part of the policycoreutils-newrole
package, which is required if you install the strict or MLS policy. It is not installed by default in Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
audit=1
parameter to your kernel boot line, either in the /etc/grub.conf
file or on the GRUB menu at boot time.
httpd
is denied access to ~/public_html
because the directory is not labeled as Web content. Notice that the time and serial number stamps in the audit(...) field are identical in each case. This makes it easier to track a specific event in the audit logs:
Jan 15 08:03:56 hostname kernel: audit(1105805036.075:2392892): \ avc: denied { getattr } for pid=2239 exe=/usr/sbin/httpd \ path=/home/auser/public_html dev=hdb2 ino=921135 \ scontext=user_u:system_r:httpd_t \ tcontext=system_u:object_r:user_home_t tclass=dir
Jan 15 08:03:56 hostname kernel: audit(1105805036.075:2392892): \ syscall=195 exit=4294967283 a0=9ef88e0 a1=bfecc0d4 a2=a97ff4 \ a3=bfecc0d4 items=1 pid=2239 loginuid=-1 uid=48 gid=48 euid=48 \ suid=48 fsuid=48 egid=48 sgid=48 fsgid=48
Jan 15 08:03:56 hostname kernel: audit(1105805036.075:2392892): \ item=0 name=/home/auser/public_html inode=921135 dev=00:00
/var/log/messages
, such as /var/log/audit/audit.log
.
selinux-policy-targeted-sources
packages and then to create a local.te
file in the /etc/selinux/targeted/src/policy/domains/misc
directory. You could use the audit2allow
utility to translate the AVC messages into allow rules, and then rebuild and reload the policy.
selinux-policy-XYZ.src.rpm
. A further package, selinux-policy-devel
, has also been added, which provides further customization functionality.
semodule
.
semodule
is the tool used to manage SELinux policy modules, including installing, upgrading, listing and removing modules. You can also use semodule
to force a rebuild of policy from the module store and/or to force a reload of policy without performing any other transaction. semodule
acts on module packages created by semodule_package
. Conventionally, these files have a .pp suffix (policy package), although this is not mandated in any way.
semodule -l
command:
~]# semodule -l
amavis 1.1.0
ccs 1.0.0
clamav 1.1.0
dcc 1.1.0
evolution 1.1.0
iscsid 1.0.0
mozilla 1.1.0
mplayer 1.1.0
nagios 1.1.0
oddjob 1.0.1
pcscd 1.0.0
pyzor 1.1.0
razor 1.1.0
ricci 1.0.0
smartmon 1.1.0
/usr/share/selinux/targeted/
directory contains a number of policy package (*.pp) files. These files are included in the selinux-policy
rpm and are used to build the policy file.
ypbind init
script, which executes the setsebool
command, which in turn tries to use the terminal. This is generating the following denial:
type=AVC msg=audit(1164222416.269:22): avc: denied { use } for pid=1940 comm="setsebool" name="0" dev=devpts ino=2 \ scontext=system_u:system_r:semanage_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:system_r:init_t:s0 tclass=fd
audit2allow
utility now has the ability to build policy modules. Use the following command to build a policy module based on specific contents of the audit.log
file:
ausearch -m AVC --comm setsebool | audit2allow -M mysemanage
audit2allow
utility has built a type enforcement file (mysemanage.te
). It then executed the checkmodule
command to compile a module file (mysemanage.mod
). Lastly, it uses the semodule_package
command to create a policy package (mysemanage.pp
). The semodule_package
command combines different policy files (usually just the module and potentially a file context file) into a policy package.
cat
command to inspect the contents of the TE file:
~]# cat mysemanag.te
module mysemanage 1.0;
require {
class fd use;
type init_t;
type semanage_t;
role system_r;
};
allow semanage_t init_t:fd use;
module
command, which identifies the module name and version. The module name must be unique. If you create an semanage
module using the name of a pre-existing module, the system would try to replace the existing module package with the newly-created version. The last part of the module line is the version. semodule
can update module packages and checks the update version against the currently installed version.
require
block. This informs the policy loader which types, classes and roles are required in the system policy before this module can be installed. If any of these fields are undefined, the semodule
command will fail.
dontaudit
, because semodule
does not need to access the file descriptor.
semodule
command to load the policy package:
~]# semodule -i mysemanage.pp
mysemanage.pp
) to other machines and install it using semodule
.
audit2allow
command outputs the commands it executed to create the policy package so that you can edit the TE file. This means you can add new rules as required or change the allow
rule to dontaudit
. You could then recompile and repackage the policy package to be installed again.
內容目錄
修訂記錄 | ||||||||||||
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修訂 10-0 | Thu Jul 21 2011 | |||||||||||
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修訂 9-0 | Thu Jan 13 2011 | |||||||||||
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修訂 8-0 | Thu July 30 2010 | |||||||||||
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修訂 7-0 | Wed Sep 30 2009 | , , | ||||||||||
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修訂 7-0 | Mon Sep 14 2009 | |||||||||||
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修訂 6-0 | Wed Sep 02 2009 | |||||||||||
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修訂 5-0 | Wed Jan 28 2009 | |||||||||||
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