Table of Contents for
Linux Network Administrator's Guide, Second Edition

Version ebook / Retour

Cover image for bash Cookbook, 2nd Edition Linux Network Administrator's Guide, Second Edition by Terry Dawson Published by O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2000
  1. Cover
  2. Linux Network Administrator’s Guide, 2nd Edition
  3. Preface
  4. Sources of Information
  5. File System Standards
  6. Standard Linux Base
  7. About This Book
  8. The Official Printed Version
  9. Overview
  10. Conventions Used in This Book
  11. Submitting Changes
  12. Acknowledgments
  13. 1. Introduction to Networking
  14. TCP/IP Networks
  15. UUCP Networks
  16. Linux Networking
  17. Maintaining Your System
  18. 2. Issues of TCP/IP Networking
  19. IP Addresses
  20. Address Resolution
  21. IP Routing
  22. The Internet Control Message Protocol
  23. Resolving Host Names
  24. 3. Configuring the Networking Hardware
  25. A Tour of Linux Network Devices
  26. Ethernet Installation
  27. The PLIP Driver
  28. The PPP and SLIP Drivers
  29. Other Network Types
  30. 4. Configuring the Serial Hardware
  31. Introduction to Serial Devices
  32. Accessing Serial Devices
  33. Serial Hardware
  34. Using the Configuration Utilities
  35. Serial Devices and the login: Prompt
  36. 5. Configuring TCP/IP Networking
  37. Installing the Binaries
  38. Setting the Hostname
  39. Assigning IP Addresses
  40. Creating Subnets
  41. Writing hosts and networks Files
  42. Interface Configuration for IP
  43. All About ifconfig
  44. The netstat Command
  45. Checking the ARP Tables
  46. 6. Name Service and Resolver Configuration
  47. How DNS Works
  48. Running named
  49. 7. Serial Line IP
  50. SLIP Operation
  51. Dealing with Private IP Networks
  52. Using dip
  53. Running in Server Mode
  54. 8. The Point-to-Point Protocol
  55. Running pppd
  56. Using Options Files
  57. Using chat to Automate Dialing
  58. IP Configuration Options
  59. Link Control Options
  60. General Security Considerations
  61. Authentication with PPP
  62. Debugging Your PPP Setup
  63. More Advanced PPP Configurations
  64. 9. TCP/IP Firewall
  65. What Is a Firewall?
  66. What Is IP Filtering?
  67. Setting Up Linux for Firewalling
  68. Three Ways We Can Do Filtering
  69. Original IP Firewall (2.0 Kernels)
  70. IP Firewall Chains (2.2 Kernels)
  71. Netfilter and IP Tables (2.4 Kernels)
  72. TOS Bit Manipulation
  73. Testing a Firewall Configuration
  74. A Sample Firewall Configuration
  75. 10. IP Accounting
  76. Configuring IP Accounting
  77. Using IP Accounting Results
  78. Resetting the Counters
  79. Flushing the Ruleset
  80. Passive Collection of Accounting Data
  81. 11. IP Masquerade and Network Address Translation
  82. Configuring the Kernel for IP Masquerade
  83. Configuring IP Masquerade
  84. Handling Name Server Lookups
  85. More About Network Address Translation
  86. 12. Important Network Features
  87. The tcpd Access Control Facility
  88. The Services and Protocols Files
  89. Remote Procedure Call
  90. Configuring Remote Login and Execution
  91. 13. The Network Information System
  92. NIS Versus NIS+
  93. The Client Side of NIS
  94. Running an NIS Server
  95. NIS Server Security
  96. Setting Up an NIS Client with GNU libc
  97. Choosing the Right Maps
  98. Using the passwd and group Maps
  99. Using NIS with Shadow Support
  100. 14. The Network File System
  101. Mounting an NFS Volume
  102. The NFS Daemons
  103. The exports File
  104. Kernel-Based NFSv2 Server Support
  105. Kernel-Based NFSv3 Server Support
  106. 15. IPX and the NCP Filesystem
  107. IPX and Linux
  108. Configuring the Kernel for IPX and NCPFS
  109. Configuring IPX Interfaces
  110. Configuring an IPX Router
  111. Mounting a Remote NetWare Volume
  112. Exploring Some of the Other IPX Tools
  113. Printing to a NetWare Print Queue
  114. NetWare Server Emulation
  115. 16. Managing Taylor UUCP
  116. UUCP Configuration Files
  117. Controlling Access to UUCP Features
  118. Setting Up Your System for Dialing In
  119. UUCP Low-Level Protocols
  120. Troubleshooting
  121. Log Files and Debugging
  122. 17. Electronic Mail
  123. How Is Mail Delivered?
  124. Email Addresses
  125. How Does Mail Routing Work?
  126. Configuring elm
  127. 18. Sendmail
  128. Installing sendmail
  129. Overview of Configuration Files
  130. The sendmail.cf and sendmail.mc Files
  131. Generating the sendmail.cf File
  132. Interpreting and Writing Rewrite Rules
  133. Configuring sendmail Options
  134. Some Useful sendmail Configurations
  135. Testing Your Configuration
  136. Running sendmail
  137. Tips and Tricks
  138. 19. Getting Exim Up and Running
  139. If Your Mail Doesn’t Get Through
  140. Compiling Exim
  141. Mail Delivery Modes
  142. Miscellaneous config Options
  143. Message Routing and Delivery
  144. Protecting Against Mail Spam
  145. UUCP Setup
  146. 20. Netnews
  147. What Is Usenet, Anyway?
  148. How Does Usenet Handle News?
  149. 21. C News
  150. Installation
  151. The sys File
  152. The active File
  153. Article Batching
  154. Expiring News
  155. Miscellaneous Files
  156. Control Messages
  157. C News in an NFS Environment
  158. Maintenance Tools and Tasks
  159. 22. NNTP and the nntpd Daemon
  160. Installing the NNTP Server
  161. Restricting NNTP Access
  162. NNTP Authorization
  163. nntpd Interaction with C News
  164. 23. Internet News
  165. Newsreaders and INN
  166. Installing INN
  167. Configuring INN: the Basic Setup
  168. INN Configuration Files
  169. Running INN
  170. Managing INN: The ctlinnd Command
  171. 24. Newsreader Configuration
  172. trn Configuration
  173. nn Configuration
  174. A. Example Network: The Virtual Brewery
  175. B. Useful Cable Configurations
  176. A Serial NULL Modem Cable
  177. C. Linux Network Administrator’s Guide, Second Edition Copyright Information
  178. 1. Applicability and Definitions
  179. 2. Verbatim Copying
  180. 3. Copying in Quantity
  181. 4. Modifications
  182. 5. Combining Documents
  183. 6. Collections of Documents
  184. 7. Aggregation with Independent Works
  185. 8. Translation
  186. 9. Termination
  187. 10. Future Revisions of this License
  188. D. SAGE: The System Administrators Guild
  189. Index
  190. Colophon

Using the Configuration Utilities

Now let’s spend some time looking at the two most useful serial device configuration utilities: setserial and stty.

The setserial Command

The kernel will make its best effort to correctly determine how your serial hardware is configured, but the variations on serial device configuration makes this determination difficult to achieve 100 percent reliably in practice. A good example of where this is a problem is the internal modems we talked about earlier. The UART they use has a 16-byte FIFO buffer, but it looks like a 16450 UART to the kernel device driver: unless we specifically tell the driver that this port is a 16550 device, the kernel will not make use of the extended buffer. Yet another example is that of the dumb 4-port cards that allow sharing of a single IRQ among a number of serial devices. We may have to specifically tell the kernel which IRQ port it’s supposed to use, and that IRQs may be shared.

setserial was created to configure the serial driver at runtime. The setserial command is most commonly executed at boot time from a script called 0setserial on some distributions, and rc.serial on others. This script is charged with the responsibility of initializing the serial driver to accommodate any nonstandard or unusual serial hardware in the machine.

The general syntax for the setserial command is:

setserial device [parameters]

in which the device is one of the serial devices, such as ttyS0.

The setserial command has a large number of parameters. The most common of these are described in Table 4.1. For information on the remainder of the parameters, you should refer to the setserial manual page.

Table 4-1. setserial Command-Line Parameters

ParameterDescription
port port_number

Specify the I/O port address of the serial device. Port numbers should be specified in hexadecimal notation, e.g., 0x2f8.

irq num

Specify the interrupt request line the serial device is using.

uart uart_type

Specify the UART type of the serial device. Common values are 16450, 16550, etc. Setting this value to none will disable this serial device.

fourport

Specifying this parameter instructs the kernel serial driver that this port is one port of an AST Fourport card.

spd_hi

Program the UART to use a speed of 57.6 kbps when a process requests 38.4 kbps.

spd_vhi

Program the UART to use a speed of 115 kbps when a process requests 38.4 kbps.

spd_normal

Program the UART to use the default speed of 38.4 kbps when requested. This parameter is used to reverse the effect of a spd_hi or spd_vhi performed on the specified serial device.

auto_irq

This parameter will cause the kernel to attempt to automatically determine the IRQ of the specified device. This attempt may not be completely reliable, so it is probably better to think of this as a request for the kernel to guess the IRQ. If you know the IRQ of the device, you should specify that it use the irq parameter instead.

autoconfig

This parameter must be specified in conjunction with the port parameter. When this parameter is supplied, setserial instructs the kernel to attempt to automatically determine the UART type located at the supplied port address. If the auto_irq parameter is also supplied, the kernel attempts to automatically determine the IRQ, too.

skip_test

This parameter instructs the kernel not to bother performing the UART type test during auto-configuration. This is necessary when the UART is incorrectly detected by the kernel.

A typical and simple rc file to configure your serial ports at boot time might look something like that shown in Example 4.1. Most Linux distributions will include something slightly more sophisticated than this one.

Example 4-1. Example rc.serial setserial Commands

# /etc/rc.serial - serial line configuration script.
#
# Configure serial devices
/sbin/setserial /dev/ttyS0 auto_irq skip_test autoconfig
/sbin/setserial /dev/ttyS1 auto_irq skip_test autoconfig
/sbin/setserial /dev/ttyS2 auto_irq skip_test autoconfig
/sbin/setserial /dev/ttyS3 auto_irq skip_test autoconfig
#
# Display serial device configuration
/sbin/setserial -bg /dev/ttyS*

The -bg /dev/ttyS* argument in the last command will print a neatly formatted summary of the hardware configuration of all active serial devices. The output will look like that shown in Example 4.2.

Example 4-2. Output of setserial -bg /dev/ttyS Command

/dev/ttyS0 at 0x03f8 (irq = 4) is a 16550A
/dev/ttyS1 at 0x02f8 (irq = 3) is a 16550A

The stty Command

The name stty probably means “set tty,” but the stty command can also be used to display a terminal’s configuration. Perhaps even more so than setserial, the stty command provides a bewildering number of characteristics you can configure. We’ll cover the most important of these in a moment. You can find the rest described in the stty manual page.

The stty command is most commonly used to configure terminal parameters, such as whether characters will be echoed or what key should generate a break signal. We explained earlier that serial devices are tty devices and the stty command is therefore equally applicable to them.

One of the more important uses of the stty for serial devices is to enable hardware handshaking on the device. We talked briefly about hardware handshaking earlier. The default configuration for serial devices is for hardware handshaking to be disabled. This setting allows “three wire” serial cables to work; they don’t support the necessary signals for hardware handshaking, and if it were enabled by default, they’d be unable to transmit any characters to change it.

Surprisingly, some serial communications programs don’t enable hardware handshaking, so if your modem supports hardware handshaking, you should configure the modem to use it (check your modem manual for what command to use), and also configure your serial device to use it. The stty command has a crtscts flag that enables hardware handshaking on a device; you’ll need to use this. The command is probably best issued from the rc.serial file (or equivalent) at boot time using commands like those shown in Example 4.3.

Example 4-3. Example rc.serial stty Commands

#
stty crtscts < /dev/ttyS0
stty crtscts < /dev/ttyS1
stty crtscts < /dev/ttyS2
stty crtscts < /dev/ttyS3
#

The stty command works on the current terminal by default, but by using the input redirection (“<”) feature of the shell, we can have stty manipulate any tty device. It’s a common mistake to forget whether you are supposed to use “<” or “>”; modern versions of the stty command have a much cleaner syntax for doing this. To use the new syntax, we’d rewrite our sample configuration to look like that shown in Example 4.4.

Example 4-4. Example rc.serial stty Commands Using Modern Syntax

#
stty crtscts -F /dev/ttyS0
stty crtscts -F /dev/ttyS1
stty crtscts -F /dev/ttyS2
stty crtscts -F /dev/ttyS3
#

We mentioned that the stty command can be used to display the terminal configuration parameters of a tty device. To display all of the active settings on a tty device, use:

$ stty -a -F /dev/ttyS1

The output of this command, shown in Example 4.5, gives you the status of all flags for that device; a flag shown with a preceding minus, as in -crtscts, means that the flag has been turned off.

Example 4-5. Output of stty -a Command

speed 19200 baud; rows 0; columns 0; line = 0;
intr = ^C; quit = ^\; erase = ^?; kill = ^U; eof = ^D; eol = <undef>; 
         eol2 = <undef>; start = ^Q; stop = ^S; susp = ^Z; rprnt = ^R;
         werase = ^W; lnext = ^V; flush = ^O; min = 1; time = 0;
-parenb -parodd cs8 hupcl -cstopb cread clocal -crtscts
-ignbrk -brkint -ignpar -parmrk -inpck -istrip -inlcr -igncr -icrnl -ixon
        -ixoff -iuclc -ixany -imaxbel
-opost -olcuc -ocrnl onlcr -onocr -onlret -ofill -ofdel nl0 cr0 tab0
         bs0 vt0 ff0
-isig -icanon iexten echo echoe echok -echonl -noflsh -xcase -tostop
         -echoprt echoctl echoke

A description of the most important of these flags is given in Table 4.2. Each of these flags is enabled by supplying it to stty and disabled by supplying it to stty with the - character in front of it. Thus, to disable hardware handshaking on the ttyS0 device, you would use:

$ stty -crtscts -F /dev/ttyS0

Table 4-2. stty Flags Most Relevant to Configuring Serial Devices

FlagsDescription
N

Set the line speed to N bits per second.

crtsdts

Enable/Disable hardware handshaking.

ixon

Enable/Disable XON/XOFF flow control.

clocal

Enable/Disable modem control signals such as DTR/DTS and DCD. This is necessary if you are using a “three wire” serial cable because it does not supply these signals.

cs5 cs6 cs7 cs8

Set number of data bits to 5, 6, 7, or 8, respectively.

parodd

Enable odd parity. Disabling this flag enables even parity.

parenb

Enable parity checking. When this flag is negated, no parity is used.

cstopb

Enable use of two stop bits per character. When this flag is negated, one stop bit per character is used.

echo

Enable/Disable echoing of received characters back to sender.

The next example combines some of these flags and sets the ttyS0 device to 19,200 bps, 8 data bits, no parity, and hardware handshaking with echo disabled:

$ stty 19200 cs8 -parenb crtscts -echo -F /dev/ttyS0