Anonymous UUCP If you want to provide anonymous
Anonymous UUCP If you want to provide anonymous UUCP access to your system, you first have to set up a special account for it as previously described. A common practice is to give the anonymous account a login name and a password of uucp. In addition, you have to set a few of the security options for unknown systems. For instance, you may want to prohibit them from executing any commands on your system. However, you cannot set these parameters in a sys file entry because the system command requires the system’s name, which you don’t have. Taylor UUCP solves this dilemma through the unknown command. unknown can be used in the config file to specify any command that can usually appear in a system entry: unknown remote-receive ~/incoming unknown remote-send ~/pub unknown max-remote-debug none unknown command-path /usr/lib/uucp/anon-bin unknown commands rmail This will restrict unknown systems to downloading files from below the pub directory and uploading files to the incoming directory below /var/spool/uucppublic. The next line will make uucico ignore any requests from the remote system to turn on debugging locally. The last two lines permit unknown systems to execute rmail; but the command path specified makes uucico look for the rmail command in a private directory named anon- bin only. This restriction allows you to provide some special rmail that, for instance, forwards all mail to the superuser for examination. This allows anonymous users to reach the maintainer of the system, but at the same time prevents them from injecting any mail to other sites. To enable anonymous UUCP, you must specify at least one unknown statement in config. Otherwise uucico will reject all unknown systems. UUCP Low-Level Protocols To negotiate session control and file transfers with the remote end, uucico uses a set of standardized messages. This is often referred to as the high-level protocol. During the initialization phase and the hangup phase these are simply sent across as strings. However, during the real transfer phase, an additional low-level protocol that is mostly transparent to the higher levels is employed. This protocol offers some added benefits, such as allowing error checks on data sent over unreliable links. Protocol Overview UUCP is used over different types of connections, such as serial lines, TCP, or sometimes even X.25; it is advantageous to transport UUCP within protocols designed specifically for the underlying network protocol. In addition, several implementations of UUCP have introduced different protocols that do roughly the same thing. Protocols can be divided into two categories: streaming and packet protocols. Protocols of the streaming variety transfer a file as a whole, possibly computing a checksum over it. This is nearly free of overhead, but requires a reliable connection because any error will cause the whole file to be retransmitted. These protocols are commonly used over TCP connections but are not suitable for use over telephone lines. Although modern modems do quite a good job at error correction, they are not perfect, nor is there any error detection between your computer and the modem. On the other hand, packet-oriented protocols split up the file into several chunks of equal size. Each packet is sent and received separately, a checksum is computed, and an acknowledgment is returned to the sender. To make this more efficient, sliding-window protocols have been invented, which allow for a limited number (a window) of outstanding acknowledgments at any time. This greatly reduces the amount of time uucico has to wait during a transmission. Still, the relatively large overhead compared to a streaming protocol makes packet protocols inefficient for TCP use, but ideal for telephone lines. The width of the data path also makes a difference. Sometimes sending 8-bit characters over a serial connection is impossible; for instance, the connection could go through a stupid terminal server that strips off the eighth bit. When you transmit 8-bit characters over a 7-bit connection, they have to be quoted on transmission. In the worst