The Remote-SCSI protocol gives you SCSI-Anywhere features. The protocol used by netscsid is based on rscsi from the cdrtools, developed by Joerg Schilling. However, no guarantee for the compatibility or reliability can be made. This documentation is based on rscsi documentation from Joerg Schilling, but is not identical to the original. There are three possible ways to control access to the remote users: - Let the remote scsi lib log in as a standard user. In this case netscsid will be called via sh -c netscsid /usr/sbin/netscsid NOTE: In this case, netscsid must be installed suid root. --- This would need to allow any valid local user to access SCSI ---- It could be a security problem. - Log in as root and call netscsid via sh -c netscsid NOTE that this will fore you to allow remote logins as root which is considered to be a security hole. - Create one or more special user(s) that have netscsid as login shell with their own home directory. You then may create special .rhosts files for each user. NOTE: In this case, netscsid must be installed suid root. **** This is the preferred method **** To enable remote SCSI via the login shell method you should do the following: - Install netscsid into /usr/sbin. It can be set suid-root if neccessary, see security section below. - Install a file /etc/netscsid.conf and define access rights. Without this file, netscsid will not work at all. The template for this file is: netscsid/netscsid.dfl - For the special user method, create a user account. This can be done with a frontend like adduser or useradd, if available. The user should have /usr/sbin/netscsid as the login shell. If there is no frontend tool, try this: + Add an entry to /etc/passwd in the form: netscsid:x:1999:1000:Tape:/home/netscsid:/usr/sbin/netscsid (modify this according to your OS). And don't forget to modify /etc/shadow the way it needs to be on your OS. + Create the home directory for this user, adapt the user/group ownership on this directory. - if you use SSH as the login shell (via appropriate RSH environment variable or a symlink to "rsh" which is the case for many Linux distribution), consult the ssh documentation for details. Note that SSH requires sufficiently powered client/server systems to encrypt/decrypt data in realtime. - if you use traditional rsh, add a .rhosts file to this directory to allow access to all users you like (see rsh documentation) NETSCSID Security: - When netscsid starts, it checks if /etc/netscsid.conf exists. If not, it dies. - If netscsid is not called by a user listed in /etc/netscsid.conf it dies. - To access a SCSI target there must be an entry that lists the user rcsi hast been started from, the hostname and the SCSI target. netscsid compares the hostname field in /etc/netscsid.conf to the peername retrived from STDIN: - legal host name IP connection - "ILLEGAL_SOCKET" Not an IP socket - "NOT_IP" Not a socket NETSCSID Security hints: - Do not generally allow other users to see your boot disk via NETSCSID. All people who see this disk may edit your passwd file. This especially applies to suid-root usage. For non-suid-root, check the access permissions. - If you are in doubt, only export CD-ROM drives, scanners and similar devices that are not directly security sensitive. If anybody sees a security hole in my security precautions, please send me a mail! NETSCSID usage: - To use remote SCSI devices you need to know how to access a specific remote SCSI target. - dev=REMOTE:host: or dev=REMOTE:host will allow you to do SCSI bus scanning while you log in as yourself - dev=REMOTE:user@host: or dev=REMOTE:user@host will allow you to do SCSI bus scanning while you log in as "user" If you use the setup described above, you should use: dev=REMOTE:netscsid@babbel: to do SCSI Bus scanning on host babbel - To access a specific SCSI device, you must specify dev=REMOTE:host: or dev=REMOTE:user@host: is the SCSI target specification as it is needed on the remote host dev=REMOTE:netscsid@babbel:1,3,0 Will let you log in as netscsid on host babbel and open Target 3 lun 0 on SCSI bus #1 - If you use wodim -vv ...., wodim will on startup print some information about the remote libscg version used for the connection. - To be able to use the remote SCSI client code from win32 you need to create a file /etc/passwd with a correct entry for the user you are on win32. Call 'id' to get the right user id. Note that remote SCSI has not yet been tested on Win32. NETSCSID speed: - On a Ultra-10 running Solaris 8, the command overhead time is 400 usec. You may achieve up to 9900 kB/s via a 100MB/s ethernet connection between two of such machines. - With 100 MB/s, 12x recording should be no problem. - With 10 MB/s, 4x recording is the maximum. Do tests before! - Logging into a remote machine and running wodim on the remote machine causes the buffer cache on that machine to be trashed. The main user is disturbed. - Doing cdrecording via Remote SCSI causes only the netscsid command with less than 200kB to be needed on the remote machine hosting the CD recorder. The main user on that machine is not disturbed. The buffer cache of the machine running wodim is trashed. - It is desirable to use a Burn-Proof recorder to make sure that network load will not cause buffer underruns. - USER= test and test for hostname are using a pattern matcher.