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Christopher Klaus

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Jan 31, 1997, 3:00:00 AM1/31/97
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Archive-name: computer-security/anonymous-ftp-faq
Post-Frequency: monthly
Last-modified: 1996/7/16
Version: 3.0

Anonymous FTP FAQ

Version: 3.00
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------

How to Set up a Secure Anonymous FTP Site

The following is a FAQ on setting up a secure FTP Site. FTP sites are known
for much abuse by transferring illegal files. They also open many
oppurtunities for intruders to gain access via misconfigured setups. And
lastly many versions of ftp servers have had security holes. This FAQ is
intended to clean up this abuse by allowing administrators to go through
this check list of steps to make sure their FTP is correctly configured and
that they are running the most current ftp daemon.

This is organized in the following fashion, I am breaking into several parts
as follows:

1. General Description of Setting up an "Anonymous" FTP server.
2. Setting up a chrooted Secure Anonymous FTP server.
3. OS Specific needed information and suggestions.
o Older SVR2 and SVR3 system, RTU 6.0 (Masscomp, now Concurrent Real
Time UNIX), and AT&T 3B1 and 3B2 machines
o HPUX
o Solaris 2.x
o SunOS
4. Where to get other FTP daemons
5. How to Know if your Anonymous FTP Server is Secure
6. Archie

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. General Description of Setting up an "anonymous" ftp server.

1. Create the user ftp in /etc/passwd. Use a misc group. The user's home
directory will be ~ftp where ~ftp is the root you wish anonymous users
to see. Creating this user turns on anonymous ftp.

Use an invalid password and user shell for better security. The entry
in the passwd file should look something like:

ftp:*:400:400:Anonymous FTP:/home/ftp:/bin/true

2. Create the home directory ~ftp. Make the directory owned by root (NOT
ftp) with the same group as ftp. Thus, owner permissions are for root
and group permissions are for the anonymous users. Set the permissions
for ~ftp to 555 (read, nowrite, execute).

Warning: Some MAN pages recommend making the ~ftp directory owned by
ftp. This is a big NO-NO, if you want any type of security on your
system.

3. Create the directory ~ftp/bin. This directory is owned by root (group
e.g. wheel) with permissions 111 (noread, nowrite, execute).

4. Copy the program ls into ~ftp/bin. ls is owned by root with permissions
111 (noread, nowrite, execute). Any other commands you put in ~ftp/bin
should have the same permissions as well.

5. Make the directory ~ftp/etc. This directory is owned by root with
permissions 111.

6. Create from scratch the files /etc/passwd and /etc/group in ~ftp/etc.
These files should be mode 444. The passwd file should only contain
root, daemon, uucp, and ftp. The group file must contain ftp's group.
Use your /etc/passwd and /etc/group files as a template for creating
passwd and group files going to ~ftp/etc. You may even change the user
names in this file, they are used only for 'ls' command. So for example
if all files in your ~ftp/pub/linux hierarchy will be maintained by a
real user 'balon' with uid=156 you may put

linux:*:156:120:Kazik Balon::

in the ~ftp/etc/passwd file (regardless of his real username). Leave
only these users who will own files under ftp hierarchy (e.g. root,
daemon, ftp...) and definitely remove *ALL* passwords by replacing them
with '*' so the entry looks like:

root:*:0:0:Ftp maintainer::
ftp:*:400:400: Anonymous ftp::

For more security, you can just remove ~ftp/etc/passwd and
~ftp/etc/group (the effect is that ls -l will not show the directories'
group names). Wuarchive ftp daemon (and some others) have some
extensions based on the contents of the group/passwd files, so read the
appropriate documentation.

7. Make the directory ~ftp/pub. This directory is owned by you and has the
same group as ftp with permissions 555. On most systems (like SunOS)
you may want to make this directory 2555, ie. set-group-id, in order to
create new files with the same group ownership.

Files are left here for public distribution. All folders inside
~ftp/pub should have the same permissions as 555.

Warning: Neither the home directory (~ftp) nor any directory below it
should be owned by ftp! No files should be owned by ftp either. Modern
ftp daemons support all kinds of useful commands, such as chmod, that
allow outsiders to undo your careful permission settings. They also
have configuration options like the following (WuFTP) to disable them:

# all the following default to "yes" for everybody
delete no guest,anonymous # delete permission?
overwrite no guest,anonymous # overwrite permission?
rename no guest,anonymous # rename permission?
chmod no anonymous # chmod permission?
umask no anonymous # umask permission?

8. If you wish to have a place for anonymous users to leave files, create
the directory ~ftp/pub/incoming. This directory is owned by root with
permissions 733. Do a 'chmod +t ~ftp/pub/incoming'. The ftp daemon will
normally not allow an anonymous user to overwrite an existing file, but
a normal user of the system would be able to delete anything. By
setting the mode to '1733' you prevent this from happening. In wuftpd
you may configure the daemon to create new files with permissions '600'
owned by root or any other user. Many times, incoming directories are
abused by exchanging pirated and pornographic material. Abusers often
create hidden directories there for this purpose. Making the incoming
directory unreadable by anonymous ftp helps to some extent. With
ordinary ftp severs there is no way to prevent directories being
created in incoming. The WUarchive ftp server can limit uploads to
certain directories and can restrict characters used in file names like
this:

# specify the upload directory information
upload /var/spool/ftp * no
upload /var/spool/ftp /incoming yes ftp staff 0600 nodirs

# path filters # path-filter...
path-filter anonymous /etc/msgs/pathmsg ^[-A-Za-z0-9_\.]*$ ^\. ^-
path-filter guest /etc/msgs/pathmsg ^[-A-Za-z0-9_\.]*$ ^\. ^-

Suggestion: Create an extra file-system for your ftp-area (or at least
for your incoming-area) to prevent a denial-of-service attack by
filling your disk with garbage (inside your incoming directory).

If you have wuftpd you may want to add some ftp extensions like
compression/decompression 'on the fly' or creation of tar files for the
directory hierarchies. Get the appropriate sources (gzip, gnutar,
compress), compile them and link statically, put in the ~ftp/bin
directory and edit the appropriate file containing the definitions of
the allowed conversions. /usr/bin/tar is already statically-linked. You
may wish to use gnu tar anyway.

Gary Mills wrote a small program to support the following:

To do tar and compress, he wrote a tiny program called `pipe', and
statically-linked it. His /etc/ftpconversions file looks like this:

#strip prefix:strip postfix:addon prefix:addon postfix:external command:
#types:options:description
:.Z: : :/bin/compress -d -c %s:T_REG|T_ASCII:O_UNCOMPRESS:UNCOMPRESS
:-z: : :/bin/compress -d -c %s:T_REG|T_ASCII:O_UNCOMPRESS:UNCOMPRESS
: : :.Z:/bin/compress -c %s:T_REG:O_COMPRESS:COMPRESS
: : :.tar:/bin/tar cf - %s:T_REG|T_DIR:O_TAR:TAR
: : :.tar.Z:/bin/pipe /bin/tar cf - %s | /bin/compress -c:T_REG|T_DIR:O_COMPRESS|O_TAR:TAR+COMPRESS
: : :.tar:/bin/gtar -c -f - %s:T_REG|T_DIR:O_TAR:TAR
: : :.tar.Z:/bin/gtar -c -Z -f - %s:T_REG|T_DIR:O_COMPRESS|O_TAR:TAR+COMPRESS
: : :.tar.gz:/bin/gtar -c -z -f - %s:T_REG|T_DIR:O_COMPRESS|O_TAR:TAR+GZIP

Here it is:

-----------------8<-------------cut---------------

/* pipe.c: exec two commands in a pipe */

#define NULL (char *)0
#define MAXA 16

main(argc, argv) int argc; char *argv[]; {
char *av1[MAXA], *av2[MAXA];
int i, n, p[2], cpid;

i = 0; n = 0;
while ( ++i < argc && n < MAXA ) {
if ( *argv[i] == '|' && *(argv[i]+1) == '\0' ) break;
av1[n++] = argv[i];
}
if ( n == 0 ) uexit();
av1[n] = NULL;
n = 0;
while ( ++i < argc && n < MAXA )
av2[n++] = argv[i];
if ( n == 0 ) uexit();
av2[n] = NULL;
if ( pipe(p) != 0 ) exit(1);
if ( ( cpid = fork() ) == (-1) ) exit(1);
else if ( cpid == 0 ) {
(void)close(p[0]);
(void)close(1);
(void)dup(p[1]);
(void)close(p[1]);
(void)execv(av1[0], av1);
_exit(127);
}
else {
(void)close(p[1]);
(void)close(0);
(void)dup(p[0]);
(void)close(p[0]);
(void)execv(av2[0], av2);
_exit(127);
}
/*NOTREACHED*/
}
uexit() {
(void)write(2, "Usage: pipe | \n", 34);
exit(1);
}

-------- CUT HERE ------------

9. Other things to do:

as root:

touch ~ftp/.rhosts
touch ~ftp/.forward
chmod 400 ~ftp/.rhosts
chmod 400 ~ftp/.forward

ie. make these files zero-length and owned by root.

Due to the last /bin/mail bugs in SunOS:

touch /usr/spool/mail/ftp; chmod 400 /usr/spool/mail/ftp

Consider an email-alias for the ftp-admin(s) to provide an
email-address for problems-reports.

If you are mounting some disks from other machines (or even your own)
to the ~ftp hierarchy, mount it read-only. The correct entry for the
/etc/fstab (on the host with ftpd) is something like:

other:/u1/linux /home/ftp/pub/linux nfs
ro,noquota,nosuid,intr,bg 1 0

This mounts under /home/ftp/pub/linux the disk from host 'other' with
no quota, no 'suid' programs (just in case), interruptible (in case
'other' goes down) and 'bg' - so if 'other' is down when you reboot it
will not stop you trying to mount /home/ftp/pub/linux all over again.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Setting up a chrooted Secure Anonymous ftp server.

This part was contributed by Marcus J Ranum <m...@tis.com>

1. Build a statically linked version of ftpd and put it in ~ftp/bin. Make
sure it's owned by root.

2. Build a statically linked version of /bin/ls if you'll need one. Put it
in ~ftp/bin. If you are on a Sun, and need to build one, there's a
ported version of the BSD net2 ls command for SunOs on ftp.tis.com:
pub/firewalls/toolkit/patches/ls.tar.Z Make sure it's owned by root.

3. Chown ~ftp to root and make it mode 755 THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT

4. Set up copies of ~ftp/etc/passwd and ~ftp/etc/group just as you would
normally, EXCEPT make 'ftp's home directory '/' -- make sure they are
owned by root.

5. Write a wrapper to kick ftpd off and install it in /etc/inetd.conf The
wrapper should look something like: (assuming ~ftp = /var/ftp)

main()
{
if(chdir("/var/ftp")) {
perror("chdir /var/ftp");
exit(1);
}
if(chroot("/var/ftp")) {
perror("chroot /var/ftp");
exit(1);
}
/* optional: seteuid(FTPUID); */
execl("/bin/ftpd","ftpd","-l",(char *)0);
perror("exec /bin/ftpd");
exit(1);
}

Options:

You can use 'netacl' from the toolkit or tcp_wrappers to achieve the
same effect.

We use 'netacl' to switch so that a few machines that connect to the
FTP service *don't* get chrooted first. This makes transferring files a
bit less painful.

You may also wish to take your ftpd sources and find all the places
where it calls seteuid() and remove them, then have the wrapper do a
setuid(ftp) right before the exec. This means that if someone knows a
hole that makes them "root" they still won't be. Relax and imagine how
frustrated they will be.

If you're hacking ftpd sources, I suggest you turn off a bunch of the
options in ftpcmd.y by unsetting the "implemented" flag in ftpcmd.y.
This is only practical if your FTP area is read-only.

6. As usual, make a pass through the FTP area and make sure that the files
are in correct modes and that there's nothing else in there that can be
executed.

7. Note, now, that your FTP area's /etc/passwd is totally separated from
your real /etc/passwd. This has advantages and disadvantages.

8. Some stuff may break, like syslog, since there is no /dev/log. Either
build a version of ftpd with a UDP-based syslog() routine or run a
second syslogd based on the BSD Net2 code, that maintains a unix-domain
socket named ~ftp/dev/log with the -p flag.

REMEMBER:

If there is a hole in your ftpd that lets someone get "root" access
they can do you some damage even chrooted. It's just lots harder. If
you're willing to hack some code, making the ftpd run without
permissions is a really good thing. The correct operation of your
hacked ftpd can be verified by connecting to it and (while it's still
at the user prompt) do a ps-axu and verify that it's not running as
root.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. OS Specific needed information and suggestions.

These machines may need dev/tcp:

* Older SVR2 and SVR3 system
* RTU 6.0 (Masscomp, now Concurrent Real Time UNIX),
* AT&T 3B1 and 3B2 machines

[dev/tcp]

These ftpd implementations may require a ~ftp/dev/tcp in order for anonymous
ftp to work.

You have to create a character special device with the appropriate major and
minor device numbers. The appropriate major and minor numbers of
~ftp/dev/tcp are what the major and minor numbers of /dev/tcp are.

The ~ftp/dev is a directory and ~ftp/dev/tcp is a character special device.
Make them owned and grouped by root. Permissions for ~ftp/dev is root
read/write/exec and other & group read and exec. The permissions for
~ftp/dev/tcp is root read/write, other & group read.

HPUX

[Logging] If you're using HP's native ftpd, the line in /etc/inetd.conf
should execute ftpd -l, which does extra logging.

Solaris 2.x

[Script] Solaris' man page contains a script for installing anonymous ftpd
which saves time. You may still want to check over your anonymous ftpd for
vulnerabilities.

Command for reading the man page is:

$ man ftpd

SunOS

[Libraries] To set up SunOS to use its shared dynamic libraries, follow
these steps:

1. Create the directory ~ftp/usr. This directory is owned by root with
permissions 555.

2. Create the directory ~ftp/usr/lib. This directory is owned by root with
permissions 555.

3. Copy the runtime loader ld.so into ~ftp/usr/lib for use by ls. ld.so is
owned by root with permissions 555.

4. Copy the latest version of the shared C library, libc.so.* into
~ftp/usr/lib for use by ls.

libc.so.* is owned by root with permissions 555.

Note: 4.1.2(or above) users: you also need to copy /usr/lib/libdl.so.*
to ~ftp/lib.

5. Create the directory ~ftp/dev. This directory is owned by root with
permissions 111.

6. ~ftp/dev/zero is needed by the runtime loader. Move into the directory
~ftp/dev and create it with the command:

mknod zero c 3 12

chown ~ftp/dev/zero to root. Make sure it's readable.

Warning: For novices: Don't try to copy /dev/zero to ~ftp/dev/zero!
This is an endless file of zeroes and it will completely fill your
filesystem!

7. If you want to have the local time showing when people connect, create
the directory ~ftp/usr/share/lib/zoneinfo and copy
/usr/share/lib/zoneinfo/localtime

8. If you are bothered by the need for copying your libraries so that you
can use Sun's 'ls', which is dynamically linked, you can try to get a
statically linked copy of 'ls' instead. The CD-ROM that contains Sun's
OS has a statically-linked version of ls. In this case, you can
dispense with steps #6-8.

Statically linked versions may be available from the following sources:

If you want a statically linked "ls" get the GNU fileutils off a
archive site near you and statically link it.

[Logging] Sun's standard ftpd logs *all* password information. To
correct it, install patch:

101640-03 SunOS 4.1.3: in.ftpd logs password info when -d option is
used.

In /etc/inetd.conf find the line that starts with "ftp". At the end of
that line, it should read "in.ftpd". Change that to "in.ftpd -dl". In
/etc/syslog.conf, add a line that looks like:


daemon.* /var/adm/daemonlog

The information can be separated (or like SunOs4.1.1 does not recognize
daemon.* so it requires the following form), such as:

daemon.info /var/adm/daemon.info
daemon.debug /var/adm/daemon.debug
daemon.err /var/adm/daemon.err

Note that the whitespace between the two columns must include at least
one TAB character, not just spaces, or it won't work. Of course your
log file could be anything you want. Then, create the logfile (touch
/var/adm/daemonlog should do). Finally, restart inetd and syslogd,
either individually, or by rebooting the system. You should be good to
go. If you do not install the patch, make sure the log file is owned by
root and mode 600, as the ftp daemon will log *everything*, including
users' passwords.

Warning: You want to make all logs root only readable for security
reasons If a user mistypes his password for his username, it could be
compromised if anyone can read the log files.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

4. Where to get other FTP daemons

* Wuarchive FTP 2.4- A secure FTP daemon that allows improved
access-control, logging, pre-login banners, and is very configurable:

Can be ftp'd from ftp.uu.net in "/networking/ftp/wuarchive-ftpd"
directory. Be certain to verify the checksum information to confirm
that you have retrieved a valid copy. [Warning: Older versions of
Wu-FTP are extremely insecure and in some cases have been trojaned.]

BSD SVR4
File Checksum Checksum MD5 Digital Signature
----------------- -------- --------- --------------------------------
wu-ftpd-2.4.tar.Z 38213 181 20337 362 cdcb237b71082fa23706429134d8c32e
patch_2.3-2.4.Z 09291 8 51092 16 5558a04d9da7cdb1113b158aff89be8f

* For DECWRL ftpd, sites can obtain version 5.93 via anonymous FTP from
gatekeeper.dec.com in the "/pub/misc/vixie" directory.

BSD SVR4
File Checksum Checksum MD5 Digital Signature
----------------- -------- --------- --------------------------------
ftpd.tar.gz 38443 60 1710 119 ae624eb607b4ee90e318b857e6573500

* For BSDI systems, patch 005 should be applied to version 1.1 of the
BSD/386 software. You can obtain the patch file via anonymous FTP from
ftp.bsdi.com in the "/bsdi/patches-1.1" directory.

BSD SVR4
File Checksum Checksum MD5 Digital Signature
----------------- -------- --------- --------------------------------
BU110-005 35337 272 54935 543 1f454d4d9d3e1397d1eff0432bd383cf

* Public Domain Sources:

ftp.uu.net ~ftp/systems/unix/bsd-sources/libexec/ftpd
gatekeeper.dec.com ~ftp/pub/DEC/gwtools/ftpd.tar.Z

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

5. How to Know if your Anonymous FTP Server is Secure

This section is intended for the administrator to go down a small check list
of things to make sure his server is not easily compromised.

1. Check to make sure your ftp server does not have SITE EXEC command by
telneting to port 21 and typing SITE EXEC. If your ftp daemon has SITE
EXEC make sure it is the most current version (ie, Wu-FTP 2.4). In
older versions this allows anyone to gain shell via port 21.

2. Check to make sure no one can log in and make files or directories in
the main directory. If anyone can log in as anonymous FTP and make
files such as .rhosts and .forward, instant access is granted to any
intruder.

3. Check to make sure the main directory is NOT owned by ftp. If it is
owned by FTP, an intruder could SITE CHMOD 777 the main directory and
then plant files to give him instant access. SITE CHMOD command should
be removed because anonymous users do not need any extra priviledges.

4. Check to make sure NO files or directories are owned by ftp. If they
are, it is possible an intruder could replace them with his own trojan
versions.

5. There were several bugs in old daemons, so it is very important to make
sure you are running the most current ftp daemons.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

6. Archie

Searches FTP sites for programs. Login into these sites as archie or use
client software for faster access. To get your own anonymous site added to
Archie's search list, e-mail archie-...@bunyip.com.

archie.ac.il 132.65.20.254 (Israel server)
archie.ans.net 147.225.1.10 (ANS server, NY (USA))
archie.au 139.130.4.6 (Australian Server)
archie.doc.ic.ac.uk 146.169.11.3 (United Kingdom Server)
archie.edvz.uni-linz.ac.at 140.78.3.8 (Austrian Server)
archie.funet.fi 128.214.6.102 (Finnish Server)
archie.internic.net 198.49.45.10 (AT&T server, NY (USA))
archie.kr 128.134.1.1 (Korean Server)
archie.kuis.kyoto-u.ac.jp 130.54.20.1 (Japanese Server)
archie.luth.se 130.240.18.4 (Swedish Server)
archie.ncu.edu.tw 140.115.19.24 (Taiwanese server)
archie.nz 130.195.9.4 (New Zealand server)
archie.rediris.es 130.206.1.2 (Spanish Server)
archie.rutgers.edu 128.6.18.15 (Rutgers University (USA))
archie.sogang.ac.kr 163.239.1.11 (Korean Server)
archie.sura.net 128.167.254.195 (SURAnet server MD (USA))
archie.sura.net(1526) 128.167.254.195 (SURAnet alt. MD (USA))
archie.switch.ch 130.59.1.40 (Swiss Server)
archie.th-darmstadt.de 130.83.22.60 (German Server)
archie.unipi.it 131.114.21.10 (Italian Server)
archie.univie.ac.at 131.130.1.23 (Austrian Server)
archie.unl.edu 129.93.1.14 (U. of Nebraska, Lincoln (USA))
archie.univ-rennes1.fr (French Server)
archie.uqam.ca 132.208.250.10 (Canadian Server)
archie.wide.ad.jp 133.4.3.6 (Japanese Server)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Acknowledgements

Thanks to the following people for suggestions that help shape this FAQ:

Tomasz Surmacz (tsur...@asic.ict.pwr.wroc.pl)
Wolfgang Ley (L...@rz.tu-clausthal.de)
Russel Street (russ...@ccu1.auckland.ac.nz)
Gary Mills (mi...@CC.UManitoba.CA)
Mirsad Todorovac (mirsad.t...@etf.hr)
Nicholas Ironmonger (n...@sam.math.ethz.ch)
Morten Welinder (te...@diku.dk)
Nick Christenson (n...@minotaur.jpl.nasa.gov)
Mark Hanning-Lee (mar...@romoe.caltech.edu)
Marcus J Ranum <m...@tis.com>

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright

This paper is Copyright (c) 1994, 1995, 1996
by Christopher Klaus of Internet Security Systems, Inc.

Permission is hereby granted to give away free copies electronically. You
may distribute, transfer, or spread this paper electronically. You may not
pretend that you wrote it. This copyright notice must be maintained in any
copy made. If you wish to reprint the whole or any part of this paper in any
other medium excluding electronic medium, please ask the author for
permission.

Disclaimer

The information within this paper may change without notice. Use of this
information constitutes acceptance for use in an AS IS condition. There are
NO warranties with regard to this information. In no event shall the author
be liable for any damages whatsoever arising out of or in connection with
the use or spread of this information. Any use of this information is at the
user's own risk.

Address of Author

Please send suggestions, updates, and comments to:
Christopher Klaus <ckl...@iss.net> of Internet Security Systems, Inc.
<i...@iss.net>

Internet Security Systems, Inc.

ISS is the leader in network security tools and technology through
innovative audit, correction, and monitoring software. The Atlanta-based
company's flagship product, Internet Scanner, is the leading commercial
attack simulation and security audit tool. The Internet Scanner SAFEsuite is
based upon ISS' award-winning Internet Scanner and was specifically designed
with expanded capabilities to assess a variety of network security issues
confronting web sites, firewalls, servers and workstations. The Internet
Scanner SAFEsuite is the most comprehensive security assessment tool
available. For more information about ISS or its products, contact the
company at (770) 395-0150 or e-mail at i...@iss.net. ISS maintains a Home
Page on the World Wide Web at http://www.iss.net
--
Christopher William Klaus Voice: (770)395-0150. Fax: (770)395-1972
Internet Security Systems, Inc. "Internet Scanner SAFEsuite finds
Ste. 660,41 Perimeter Center East,Atlanta,GA 30346 your network security holes
Web: http://www.iss.net/ Email: ckl...@iss.net before the hackers do."

Christopher Klaus

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Anonymous FTP FAQ

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----------------------------------------------------------------------------

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Here it is:

-----------------8<-------------cut---------------

-------- CUT HERE ------------

as root:

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Options:

REMEMBER:

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

[dev/tcp]

HPUX

Solaris 2.x

$ man ftpd

SunOS


daemon.* /var/adm/daemonlog

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

* Public Domain Sources:

ftp.uu.net ~ftp/systems/unix/bsd-sources/libexec/ftpd
gatekeeper.dec.com ~ftp/pub/DEC/gwtools/ftpd.tar.Z

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

6. Archie

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Acknowledgements

Tomasz Surmacz (tsur...@asic.ict.pwr.wroc.pl)


Russel Street (russ...@ccu1.auckland.ac.nz)
Gary Mills (mi...@CC.UManitoba.CA)
Mirsad Todorovac (mirsad.t...@etf.hr)
Nicholas Ironmonger (n...@sam.math.ethz.ch)
Morten Welinder (te...@diku.dk)
Nick Christenson (n...@minotaur.jpl.nasa.gov)

Christopher Klaus

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Jan 31, 1997, 3:00:00 AM1/31/97
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Christopher Klaus

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