Identd: Difference between revisions

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===Customization===
===Customization===
'''1.''' [[Edit]] the unit with systemctl command:
'''1.''' [[Override the unit]] with systemctl command:
  # systemctl edit --full nullidentdmod@.service
  # systemctl edit --full nullidentdmod@.service



Revision as of 19:49, 13 November 2018

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Reason: Unnecessary use of ordered lists; other style issues, see Help:Style. (Discuss in Talk:Identd)

The Ident service as specified by RFC 1413 is mostly used by various IRC networks and the occasional old FTP server to ask a remote server which user is making a connection. This method is quite untrustworthy, as the remote host can simply choose to lie.

So you have two choices:

  1. Tell the truth (see #oidentd below)
  2. Tell a little white lie (see nullidentdmod or nullidentd below)

oidentd

See oidentd.

If all went well, you should have the auth service running on port 113. A good way of checking this is by installing nmap (if you do not have it already) and typing

$ nmap localhost

nullIdentdMod

1. Install the nullidentdmodAUR package.

2. Enable nullidentdmod.socket on systemd.

3. Start nullidentdmod.socket on systemd.

4. Check if is working here.

As is, nullidentdmod will return a random userid.

Customization

1. Override the unit with systemctl command:

# systemctl edit --full nullidentdmod@.service

At line 6, write desired userid

[Unit]                                   
Description=NullidentdMod service        
                                         
[Service]                                
User=nobody                              
ExecStart=/usr/bin/nullidentdmod <userid>
StandardInput=socket                     
StandardOutput=socket                    
                                         
[Install]                                
WantedBy=multi-user.target               

Obviously where <userid> you put your custom userid.

4. Check if is working here

nullIdent

This Ident server is capable of only returning the same name for any query. With a quick change to a single line of code, it can be customized to return any name you can think. One use for such a simple service would be for IRC client connections to ensure a degree of privacy (remote IRC server and users do not know your username) as well as allowing a small degree of 'vanity plating' for use in IRC channels.

The original code suffered link rot, but may now be found on github, at this address https://github.com/dxtr/nullidentd.

systemd activation

Below are two files you need to create under /etc/systemd/system/

1. identd@.service

[Unit]
Description=per connection null identd

[Service]
User=nobody
ExecStart=/usr/local/sbin/nullidentd
StandardInput=socket
StandardOutput=socket

2. ident.socket

[Unit]
Description=socket for ident

[Socket]
ListenStream=113
Accept=yes

[Install]
WantedBy=sockets.target

3. inform SystemD of the new files

# systemctl daemon-reload

4. Test that the socket is listening sucessfully

$ systemctl status ident.socket

this should yield output similar to the below

ident.socket - socket for ident
   Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/ident.socket; enabled)
   Active: active (listening) since Fri 2014-01-24 02:30:53 WST; 30 seconds ago
   Listen: [::]:113 (Stream)
 Accepted: 0; Connected: 0

Jan 24 02:30:53 HOSTNAME systemd[1]: Listening on socket for ident.