rstartd(1)


NAME

   rstartd - a sample implementation of a Remote Start rsh helper

SYNOPSIS

   rstartd

   rstartd.real [-c configfilename]

DESCRIPTION

   Rstartd  is  an implementation of a Remote Start "helper" as defined in
   "A Flexible Remote Execution Protocol Based on rsh".

   This document describes the peculiarities of  rstartd  and  how  it  is
   configured.

OPTIONS

   -c configfilename
           This  option  specifies  the  "global"  configuration file that
           rstartd is to read.  Normally, rstartd is a shell  script  that
           invokes   rstartd.real  with  the  -c  switch,  allowing  local
           configuration of the location of the  configuration  file.   If
           rstartd.real  is  started  without  the  -c  option,  it  reads
           /X11/rstart/config.

INSTALLATION

   It is  critical  to  successful  interoperation  of  the  Remote  Start
   protocol  that  rstartd  be  installed  in  a directory which is in the
   "default" search path, so that default rsh requests and the ilk will be
   able to find it.

CONFIGURATION AND OPERATION

   Rstartd  is  by design highly configurable.  One would like things like
   configuration  file  locations  to  be  fixed,  so   that   users   and
   administrators  can find them without searching, but reality is that no
   two vendors will agree on where things should go, and nobody thinks the
   original location is "right".  Thus, rstartd allows one to relocate all
   of its files and directories.

   Rstartd has a hierarchy of configuration files which  are  executed  in
   order when a request is made.  They are:
   global config
   per-user ("local") config
   global per-context config
   per-user ("local") per-context config
   config from request
   As  you  might guess from the presence of "config from request", all of
   the config files are in the  format  of  an  rstart  request.   Rstartd
   defines  a  few  additional  keywords  with  the  INTERNAL-  prefix for
   specifying its configuration.

   Rstartd starts by reading and executing the global config  file.   This
   file  will  normally  specify  the locations of the other configuration
   files and any systemwide defaults.

   Rstartd will then read the  user's  local  config  file,  default  name
   $HOME/.rstart.

   Rstartd will then start interpreting the request.

   Presumably  one  of  the  first  lines in the request will be a CONTEXT
   line.  The context name is converted to lower case.

   Rstartd will read the global config file for that context, default name
   /usr/lib/X11/rstart/contexts/<name>, if any.

   It will then read the user's config file for that context, default name
   $HOME/.rstart.contexts/<name>, if any.

   (If neither of these exists, rstartd aborts with a Failure message.)

   Rstartd will finish interpreting the request, and execute  the  program
   specified.

   This  allows  the  system  administrator and the user a large degree of
   control over the operation of rstartd.   The  administrator  has  final
   say,  because the global config file doesn't need to specify a per-user
   config file.  If it does, however, the user can override anything  from
   the  global  file,  and  can even completely replace the global context
   config files.

   The config files have a somewhat more flexible format than requests do;
   they  are  allowed  to contain blank lines and lines beginning with "#"
   are comments and ignored.  (#s in the middle of  lines  are  data,  not
   comment markers.)

   Any  commands  run  are  provided a few useful pieces of information in
   environment variables.  The  exact  names  are  configurable,  but  the
   supplied defaults are:

   $RSTART_CONTEXT
   $RSTART_GLOBAL_CONTEXTS   the global contexts directory
   $RSTART_LOCAL_CONTEXTS    the local contexts directory
   $RSTART_GLOBAL_COMMANDS   the global generic commands directory
   $RSTART_LOCAL_COMMANDS    the local generic commands directory

   $RSTART_{GLOBAL,LOCAL}_CONTEXTS should contain one special file, @List,
   which contains a list of the contexts in that directory in  the  format
   specified  for ListContexts.  The supplied version of ListContexts will
   cat both the global and local copies of @List.

   Generic commands are searched for in several places: (defaults)
   per-user per-context directory ($HOME/.rstart.commands/<context>)
   global per-context directory (/usr/lib/X11/rstart/commands/<context>)
   per-user all-contexts directory ($HOME/.rstart.commands)
   global all-contexts directory (/usr/lib/X11/rstart/commands)
   (Yes, this means you can't have an all-contexts  generic  command  with
   the same name as a context.  It didn't seem like a big deal.)

   Each  of  these  directories should have a file called @List that gives
   the names and descriptions of the commands in  that  directory  in  the
   format specified for ListGenericCommands.

CONFIGURATION KEYWORDS

   There  are  several  "special"  rstart  keywords  defined  for  rstartd
   configuration.  Unless otherwise  specified,  there  are  no  defaults;
   related features are disabled in this case.

   INTERNAL-REGISTRIES name ...
           Gives  a  space-separated  list  of "MISC" registries that this
           system understands.  (Registries other than this  are  accepted
           but generate a Warning.)

   INTERNAL-LOCAL-DEFAULT relative_filename
           Gives the name ($HOME relative) of the per-user config file.

   INTERNAL-GLOBAL-CONTEXTS absolute_directory_name
           Gives the name of the system-wide contexts directory.

   INTERNAL-LOCAL-CONTEXTS relative_directory_name
           Gives  the  name  ($HOME  relative)  of  the  per-user contexts
           directory.

   INTERNAL-GLOBAL-COMMANDS absolute_directory_name
           Gives the name of the system-wide generic commands directory.

   INTERNAL-LOCAL-COMMANDS relative_directory_name
           Gives  the  name  ($HOME  relative)  of  the  per-user  generic
           commands directory.

   INTERNAL-VARIABLE-PREFIX prefix
           Gives  the  prefix  for the configuration environment variables
           rstartd passes to its kids.

   INTERNAL-AUTH-PROGRAM authscheme program argv[0] argv[1] ...
           Specifies the program to run to set up authentication  for  the
           specified  authentication  scheme.  "program argv[0] ..." gives
           the program to run and its arguments, in the same form  as  the
           EXEC keyword.

   INTERNAL-AUTH-INPUT authscheme
           Specifies  the data to be given to the authorization program as
           its standard input.  Each argument is passed as a single  line.
           $n,  where  n  is a number, is replaced by the n'th argument to
           the "AUTH authscheme arg1 arg2 ..." line.

   INTERNAL-PRINT arbitrary text
           Prints its arguments as a Debug message.   Mostly  for  rstartd
           debugging, but could be used to debug config files.

NOTES

   When  using  the  C shell, or any other shell which runs a script every
   time the shell is started, the script may get run  several  times.   In
   the worst case, the script may get run three times:
   By rsh, to run rstartd
   By rstartd, to run the specified command
   By the command, eg xterm
   rstartd currently limits lines, both from config files and requests, to
   BUFSIZ bytes.

   DETACH is implemented by redirecting file descriptors  0,1,  and  2  to
   /dev/null and forking before executing the program.

   CMD  is  implemented by invoking $SHELL (default /bin/sh) with "-c" and
   the specified command as arguments.

   POSIX-UMASK is implemented in the obvious way.

   The authorization programs are run in the same context  as  the  target
   program  - same environment variables, path, etc.  Long term this might
   be a problem.

   In the X context, GENERIC-CMD Terminal runs xterm.  In the  OpenWindows
   context, GENERIC-CMD Terminal runs cmdtool.

   In   the  X  context,  GENERIC-CMD  LoadMonitor  runs  xload.   In  the
   OpenWindows context, GENERIC-CMD LoadMonitor runs perfmeter.

   GENERIC-CMD ListContexts lists  the  contents  of  @List  in  both  the
   system-wide  and per-user contexts directories.  It is available in all
   contexts.

   GENERIC-CMD ListGenericCommands lists the  contents  of  @List  in  the
   system-wide  and  per-user  commands  directories,  including  the per-
   context subdirectories for the current context.  It is available in all
   contexts.

   CONTEXT None is not implemented.

   CONTEXT Default is really dull.

   For  installation  ease,  the  "contexts" directory in the distribution
   contains a file "@Aliases" which lists a context name and  aliases  for
   that  context.   This file is used to make symlinks in the contexts and
   commands directories.

   All MISC values are passed unmodified as environment variables.

   One can mistreat rstartd in any number of ways, resulting  in  anything
   from  stupid  behavior to core dumps.  Other than by explicitly running
   programs I don't think it can write or delete any files, but there's no
   guarantee  of  that.  The important thing is that (a) it probably won't
   do anything REALLY stupid and (b) it runs with the user's  permissions,
   so it can't do anything catastrophic.

   @List  files  need not be complete; contexts or commands which are dull
   or which need not or should not be advertised need not be  listed.   In
   particular,  per-user  @List  files should not list things which are in
   the system-wide @List files.  In the future, perhaps  ListContexts  and
   ListGenericCommands  will automatically suppress lines from the system-
   wide files when there are per-user replacements for those lines.

   Error handling is OK to weak.  In particular, no  attempt  is  made  to
   properly  report  errors  on the exec itself.  (Perversely, exec errors
   could be reliably reported when detaching, but  not  when  passing  the
   stdin/out socket to the app.)

   If compiled with -DODT1_DISPLAY_HACK, rstartd will work around a bug in
   SCO ODT version 1.  (1.1?)  (The bug is that  the  X  clients  are  all
   compiled with a bad library that doesn't know how to look host names up
   using DNS.  The fix  is  to  look  up  a  host  name  in  $DISPLAY  and
   substitute   an   IP  address.)   This  is  a  trivial  example  of  an
   incompatibility that rstart can hide.

SEE ALSO

   rstart(1), rsh(1), A Flexible Remote Execution Protocol Based on rsh

AUTHOR

   Jordan Brown, Quarterdeck Office Systems





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