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Date:      Fri, 28 Dec 2001 05:21:26 -0800 (PST)
From:      <dwmalone@FreeBSD.org>
To:        dwmalone@FreeBSD.org, freebsd-bugs@FreeBSD.org, dwmalone@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: misc/33261: FreeBSD base system does not install tcpd
Message-ID:  <200112281321.fBSDLQa50277@freefall.freebsd.org>

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Synopsis: FreeBSD base system does not install tcpd

Responsible-Changed-From-To: freebsd-bugs->dwmalone
Responsible-Changed-By: dwmalone
Responsible-Changed-When: Fri Dec 28 05:21:03 PST 2001
Responsible-Changed-Why: 
As you know, tcpd is not installed in the base system because its
functionality is built into inetd. If you want to run some services
wrapped and some unwrapped then it is simple to do this by adding
apropriate allow rules (at the top of) hosts.allow. Alternatively,
you can run a second copy of inetd without wrapping.

If you want to install something from ports with which you want to
use tcpd then you can build tcpd from ports for from the main source
tree. It might be useful to have some infrasturcture to do this,
but I believe most users who have enough knowlege to decide they
want to use tcpd with tcpserver are capable of building tcpd in one
of the ways I have mentioned.

(Besides, wouldn't using tcpd with tcpserver be some sort of religious
travisty ;-)

As you point out in -stable, tcpd is a very small program and it
wouldn't take up much space we shipped it with the base system.  My
main fear would be that it would cause more confusion about how tcp
wrapping works. People would accidently use both tcpd's and inetd's
wrapping and get unexpected effects. We could get around this by
adding "tcpd: ALL: allow" to the top of the default hosts.allow,
but this is likely to cause even move confusion about hosts.allow.


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