Network Working Group                                          B. Kantor
Request for Comments: 1258                      Univ. of Calif San Diego
                                                         September 1991


                              BSD Rlogin

Status of this Memo

  This memo documents an existing protocol and common implementation
  that is extensively used on the Internet.  This memo provides
  information for the Internet community.  It does not specify an
  Internet standard.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Protocol Description

  The rlogin facility provides a remote-echoed, locally flow-controlled
  virtual terminal with proper flushing of output.  It is widely used
  between Unix hosts because it provides transport of more of the Unix
  terminal environment semantics than does the Telnet protocol, and
  because on many Unix hosts it can be configured not to require user
  entry of passwords when connections originate from trusted hosts.

  The rlogin protocol requires the use of the TCP.  The contact port is
  513.  An eight-bit transparent stream is assumed.

Connection Establishment

  Upon connection establishment, the client sends four null-terminated
  strings to the server.  The first is an empty string (i.e., it
  consists solely of a single zero byte), followed by three non-null
  strings: the client username, the server username, and the terminal
  type and speed.  More explicitly:

       <null>
       client-user-name<null>
       server-user-name<null>
       terminal-type/speed<null>

       For example:

       <null>
       bostic<null>
       kbostic<null>
       vt100/9600<null>

  The server returns a zero byte to indicate that it has received these
  strings and is now in data transfer mode.  Window size negotiation



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  may follow this initial exchange (see below).

From Client to Server (and Flow Control)

  Initially, the client begins operation in "cooked" (as opposed to
  to "raw") mode.  In this mode, the START and STOP (usually ASCII
  DC1,DC3) characters are intercepted and interpreted by the client to
  start and stop output from the remote server to the local terminal,
  whereas all other characters are transmitted to the remote host as
  they are received.  (But see below for the handling of the
  local-escape character.)

  In "raw" mode, the START and STOP characters are not processed
  locally, but are sent as any other character to the remote server.
  The server thus determines the semantics of the START and STOP
  characters when in "raw" mode; they may be used for flow control or
  have quite different meanings independent of their ordinary usage on
  the client.

Screen/Window Size

  The remote server indicates to the client that it can accept window
  size change information by requesting a window size message (as
  described below) just after connection establishment and user
  identification exchange.  The client should reply to this request
  with the current window size.

  If the remote server has indicated that it can accept client window
  size changes and the size of the client's window or screen dimensions
  changes, a 12-byte special sequence is sent to the remote server to
  indicate the current dimensions of the client's window, should the
  user process running on the server care to make use of that
  information.

  The window change control sequence is 12 bytes in length, consisting
  of a magic cookie (two consecutive bytes of hex FF), followed by two
  bytes containing lower-case ASCII "s", then 8 bytes containing the
  16-bit values for the number of character rows, the number of
  characters per row, the number of pixels in the X direction, and the
  number of pixels in the Y direction, in network byte order.  Thus:

       FF FF s s rr cc xp yp

  Other flags than "ss" may be used in future for other in-band control
  messages.  None are currently defined.






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From Server to Client

  Data from the remote server is sent to the client as a stream of
  characters.  Normal data is simply sent to the client's display, but
  may be processed before actual display (tabs expanded, etc.).

  The server can imbed single-byte control messages in the data stream
  by inserting the control byte in the stream of data and pointing the
  TCP "urgent-data" pointer at the control byte.  When a TCP urgent-
  data pointer is received by the client, data in the TCP stream up to
  the urgent byte is buffered for possible display after the control
  byte is handled, and the control byte pointed to is received and
  interpreted as follows:

  02   A control byte of hex 02 causes the client to discard all buffered
       data received from the server that has not yet been written to the
       client user's screen.

  10   A control byte of hex 10 commands the client to switch to "raw"
       mode, where the START and STOP characters are no longer handled by
       the client, but are instead treated as plain data.

  20   A control byte of hex 20 commands the client to resume interception
       and local processing of START and STOP flow control characters.

  All other values of the urgent-data control byte are ignored.  In all
  cases, the byte pointed to by the urgent data pointer is NOT written
  to the client user's display.

Connection Closure

  When the TCP connection closes in either direction, the client or
  server process which notices the close should perform an orderly
  shut-down, restoring terminal modes and notifying the user or
  processes of the close before it closes the connection in the other
  direction.

Implementation Notes

  The client defines a client-escape character (customarily the tilde,
  "~"), which is handled specially only if it is the first character to
  be typed at the beginning of a line.  (The beginning of a line is
  defined to be the first character typed by the client user after a
  new-line [CR or LF] character, after a line-cancel character, after
  resumption of a suspended client session, or after initiation of the
  connection.)

  The client-escape character is not transmitted to the server until



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  the character after it has been examined, and if that character is
  one of the defined client escape sequences, neither the client-escape
  nor the character following it are sent.  Otherwise, both the
  client-escape character and the character following it are sent to
  the server as ordinary user input.

  If the character following the client-escape character is the dot
  ".", or the client-defined end-of-file character (usually control-D),
  the connection is closed.  This is normally treated by the server as
  a disconnection, rather than an orderly logout.

  Other characters (client-defined, usually control-Z and control-Y)
  are used to temporarily suspend the rlogin client when the host has
  that ability.  One character suspends both remote input and output;
  the other suspends remote input but allows remote output to continue
  to be directed to the local client's terminal.

  Most client implementations have invocation switches that can defeat
  normal output processing on the client system, and which can force
  the client to remain in raw mode despite switching notification from
  the server.

A Cautionary Tale

  The rlogin protocol (as commonly implemented) allows a user to set up
  a class of trusted users and/or hosts which will be allowed to log on
  as himself without the entry of a password.  While extremely
  convenient, this represents a weakening of security that has been
  successfully exploited in previous attacks on the internet.  If one
  wishes to use the password-bypass facilities of the rlogin service,
  it is essential to realize the compromises that may be possible
  thereby.

  Bypassing password authentication from trusted hosts opens ALL the
  systems so configured when just one is compromised.  Just as using
  the same password for all systems to which you have access lets a
  villain in everywhere you have access, allowing passwordless login
  among all your systems gives a marauder a wide playing field once he
  has entered any of your systems.  One compromise that many feel
  achieves a workable balance between convenience and security is to
  allow password bypass from only ONE workstation to the other systems
  you use, and NOT allow it between those systems.  With this measure,
  you may have reduced exposure to a workable minimum.

  The trusted host specification is ordinarily one of a host name.  It
  is possible, by compromise of your organization's domain name server,
  or compromise of your network itself, for a villain to make an
  untrusted host masquerade as a trusted system.  There is little that



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  a user can do about this form of attack.  Luckily, so far such
  attacks have been rare, and often cause enough disruption of a
  network that attempts are quickly noticed.

  When the file containing a user's list of trusted logins is
  inadvertently left writeable by other users, untrustworthy additions
  may be made to it.

  Secure authentication extensions to the rlogin protocol (Kerberos,
  et al) can greatly reduce the possibility of compromise whilst still
  allowing the convenience of bypassing password entry.  As these become
  more widely deployed in the internet community, the hazards of rlogin
  will decrease.

Security Considerations

  See the "A Cautionary Tale" section above.

Author's Address

  Brian Kantor
  University of California at San Diego
  Network Operations C-024
  La Jolla, CA 92093-0214

  Phone: (619) 534-6865

  EMail: [email protected]























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