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SOCKS.CONF(5)							 SOCKS.CONF(5)

NAME
       socks.conf - SOCKS clients configuration file

SYNOPSIS
       /etc/socks.conf

DESCRIPTION
       All  SOCKS  client  programs  use this file to determine whether to use
       direct or proxy connection to a given destination host,	and  to	 exert
       access  control	based  on  the destination host, the requested service
       (port number on the destination host), and the effective user-id of the
       requesting  local user. If this file is absent, SOCKS clients will only
       try direct connections, making them behave like their regular  counter‐
       parts.

       Each  line in the file may be up to 1024 characters long.  Lines start‐
       ing with a # are comments. Non-comment lines must  be  of  one  of  the
       three forms:

       deny [*=userlist]   dst_addr  dst_mask  [op dst_port]  [: shell_cmd]
       direct	 [*=userlist]	dst_addr  dst_mask  [op dst_port]  [: shell_cmd]
       sockd	 [@=serverlist] [*=userlist]  dst_addr	dst_mask  [op dst_port]	 [: shell_cmd]

       A deny line tells the SOCKS clients when to reject a request.  A direct
       lines tells when to use a direct connection.  A	sockd  line  indicates
       when  to	 use  a	 proxy	connection  and, optionally, which SOCKS proxy
       server or servers it should try.

       Spaces and tabs separate the fields. Fields enclosed in square brackets
       are optional.

       The  userlist  field, when present, consists of one or more user-ids or
       filenames, with comma as separator. No spaces or tabs  are  allowed  in
       the  list.  The	user-ids should be ids of users on the local host, not
       those on the destination host or the SOCKS server host.	The  filenames
       must  be full pathnames with the leading /. Inside the specified files,
       user-ids may be listed one or several per line, with any combination of
       blanks,	tabs,  and commas as separators. The appearance of # marks the
       remainder of the line as comment. Each line in the files may be	up  to
       1023  characters	 long.	 If  the *=userlist field is omitted, the line
       applies to all user-ids.

       The dst_addr field specifies either the IP address of a	host,  a  net‐
       work,  or  a  subnet  in the usual dotted form, e.g., 129.201.4.0, or a
       doamin name, e.g., internic.net. dst_mask specifies  mask  for  the  IP
       address	used in dst_addr.  Bits in dst_mask that are set to 0 indicate
       the bit positions to be ignored during comparison of IP addresses.  So,
       specifying  255.255.255.255  in	dst_mask  demands  an exact match with
       dst_addr, whereas 0.0.0.0 in dst_mask causes a matching with any	 given
       destination  address regardless of what is specified for dst_addr. If a
       domain name is used for dst_addr, the contents of dst_mask are ignored,
       though  it  must still be supplied (simply use 0.0.0.0).	 If the domain
       name starts with a period, it specifies a zone and matches  all	domain
       names  within  that  zone,  otherwise  it  matches only the domain name
       itself. For example, xyz.com matches only xyz.comP, while .xyz.com mac‐
       thes  not only xyz.com, but also abc.xyz.com and this.and.that.xyz.com,
       among others.  The special symbol ALL (which must be entirely in upper‐
       case) matches everything. Domain names are otherwise case-insentive.

       When using a domain name in dst_addr, you have be very careful in main‐
       taining your DNS setup. See the last few paragraphs in sockd.conf(5).

       The op field must be eq, neq, lt, gt, le, or ge, for the	 condition  of
       equal,  not  equal,  less  than,	 greater than, less than or equal, and
       greater than or equal, respectively.  The dst_port field can be	either
       a port number, e.g., 23, or the equivalent service name as specified in
       file /etc/services, e.g., telnet for port number 23. If	this  pair  is
       omitted, the line applies to all services.

       The serverlist, which may only be used in a sockd line, consists of one
       or more SOCKS proxy servers, which the client program should try to use
       (in  the	 indicated  order)  for establishing a proxy connection.  Only
       commas can be used as separator, no spaces or tabs are allowed  in  the
       list. Domain names of the servers may be used in the list, though it is
       probably more prudent to specify IP addresses.  If this field is	 omit‐
       ted,  the client program will use the default SOCKS proxy server, which
       is determined by the environment variable SOCKS_SERVER if it exists, or
       the name compiled into the SOCKS client program otherwise.

       Consider

       sockd  @=1.2.3.4	 *=boss,root 11.12.13.14 255.255.255.255 eq telnet

       To match the condition indicated in this line, a request must come from
       a local user whose effective id is either boss or root, the destination
       IP  address must be 11.12.13.14 exactly, and the service requested must
       be telnet. In that case, connection to host 11.12.13.14 should be  done
       via a SOCKS proxy server on host 1.2.3.4.

       Every  time  a SOCKS client has to make a network connection, it checks
       the pending request against the file /etc/socks.conf,  one  line	 at  a
       time.  Once  it	finds  a  line with conditions that are matched by the
       request, the action specified on that  line  is	taken.	The  remaining
       lines of file /etc/socks.conf are skipped. So the order of the lines in
       the file is extremely important; switch two  lines  and	you  may  have
       entirely	 different  results.   If no matching line is found throughout
       the file, the request is denied.

       The shell_cmd field specifies a command string that  is	executed  when
       the  conditions on that line are satisfied. The following substitutions
       occur before the string is presented to the Borne shell for execution:

	%A -- replaced by the client host's domainname if known, by its IP address otherwise
	%a -- replaced by the client host's IP address
	%c -- replaced by "connect" or "bind"
	%p -- replaced by the process id of the client program
	%S -- replaced by the service name (e.g., ftp) if known, by the destination port number otherwise
	%s -- replaced by the destination port number
	%U -- replaced by the user-id at login
	%u -- replaced by the effective user-id
	%Z -- replaced by the destination host's domainname if known, by its IP address otherwise
	%z -- replaced by the destination host's IP address
	%% -- replaced by a single %

       Several shell commands can be strung together in	 the  usual  way  with
       `|', `;', etc.

       Although there is an implied 'deny all' at the end of the control file,
       you may supply one explicitly so as to take some specific  action  when
       requests are so rejected, e.g.,

	deny 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 : /usr/ucb/mail -s 'SOCKS: rejected %S from %u to %Z' root

       Unlike the previous version, connection to address 127.0.0.1 or 0.0.0.0
       is always done directly to localhost, so there is no  need  to  specify
       either of them in /etc/socks.conf.

       You  have  the option of using the frozen file /etc/socks.fc instead of
       /etc/socks.conf. The frozen file is produced  by	 make_socksfc  and  is
       essentially the memory image of the parsed configuration file. using it
       can reduced the start-up delay of SOCKS client  applications  since  no
       parsing	is  needed.  Because SOCKS client applications always look for
       /etc/socks.fc first, be sure that you  always  run  make_socksfc	 every
       time after you modify /etc/socks.conf.

ENVIRONMENT
       SOCKS_SERVER, if defined, specifies the name or IP address of the SOCKS
       proxy server host to use, overriding the default server	compiled  into
       the programs.

SEE ALSO
       dump_socksfc(8),	     make_socksfc(8),	  sockd(8),	sockd.conf(5),
       socks_clients(1), socks.fc(5)

				  May 6, 1996			 SOCKS.CONF(5)
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