Sunday, October 6, 2024

Restricting Access by Time of Day

Problem
You want a service to be available only at certain times of day.

Solution
For xinetd, use its access_times attribute. For example, to make telnetd accessible from 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. (17:00) each day:

/etc/xinetd.conf or /etc/xinetd.d/telnet:
service telnet
{
...
access_times = 8:00-17:00
}

For inetd, we’ll implement this manually using the m4 macro processor and cron. First, invent some strings to represent times of day, such as “working” to mean 8:00 a.m. and “playing” to mean 5:00 p.m. Then create a script (say, inetd-services) that uses m4 to select lines in a template file, creates the inetd configuration file, and signals inetd to reread it:

/usr/local/sbin/inetd-services:
#!/bin/sh
m4 "$@" /etc/inetd.conf.m4 > /etc/inetd.conf.$$
mv /etc/inetd.conf.$$ /etc/inetd.conf
kill -HUP `pidof inetd`

Copy the original /etc/inetd.conf file to the template file, /etc/inetd.conf.m4. Edit the template to enable services conditionally according to the value of a parameter, say, TIMEOFDAY. For example, the telnet service line that originally looks like this:

telnet stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd in.telnetd

might now look like:

ifelse(TIMEOFDAY,working,telnet stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd in.telnetd)

which means “if TIMEOFDAY is working, include the telnet line, otherwise don’t.” Finally, set up crontab entries to enable or disable services at specific times of day, by setting the TIMEOFDAY parameter:

0 8 * * * /usr/local/sbin/inetd-services -DTIMEOFDAY=working
0 17 * * * /usr/local/sbin/inetd-services -DTIMEOFDAY=playing

Discussion
For xinetd, we can easily control each service using the access_times parameter. Times are specified on a 24-hour clock.

For inetd, we need to work a bit harder, rebuilding the configuration file at different times of day to enable and disable services. The recipe can be readily extended with additional parameters and values, like we do with TIMEOFDAY. Notice that the xinetd solution uses time ranges, while the inetd solution uses time instants (i.e., the minute that cron triggers inetd-services).

*Reprinted with the permission of the O’Reilly Network.

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The Linux Security Cookbook includes real solutions to a wide range of targeted problems, such as sending encrypted email within Emacs, restricting access to network services at particular times of day, firewalling a webserver, preventing IP spoofing, setting up key-based SSH authentication, and much more. With over 150 ready-to-use scripts and configuration files, this unique book helps administrators secure their systems without having to look up specific syntax.

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