3
3
"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
4
4
<!ENTITY CONFNAME "mandos-clients.conf">
5
5
<!ENTITY CONFPATH "<filename>/etc/mandos/clients.conf</filename>">
6
<!ENTITY TIMESTAMP "2011-11-26">
6
<!ENTITY TIMESTAMP "2012-06-23">
7
7
<!ENTITY % common SYSTEM "common.ent">
65
66
><refentrytitle>mandos</refentrytitle>
66
67
<manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>, read by it at startup.
67
68
The file needs to list all clients that should be able to use
68
the service. All clients listed will be regarded as enabled,
69
even if a client was disabled in a previous run of the server.
69
the service. The settings in this file can be overridden by
70
runtime changes to the server, which it saves across restarts.
71
(See the section called <quote>PERSISTENT STATE</quote> in
72
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>mandos</refentrytitle><manvolnum
73
>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.) However, any <emphasis
74
>changes</emphasis> to this file (including adding and removing
75
clients) will, at startup, override changes done during runtime.
72
78
The format starts with a <literal>[<replaceable>section
161
167
This option is <emphasis>optional</emphasis>.
164
This option allows you to override the default shell
165
command that the server will use to check if the client is
166
still up. Any output of the command will be ignored, only
167
the exit code is checked: If the exit code of the command
168
is zero, the client is considered up. The command will be
169
run using <quote><command><filename>/bin/sh</filename>
170
This option overrides the default shell command that the
171
server will use to check if the client is still up. Any
172
output of the command will be ignored, only the exit code
173
is checked: If the exit code of the command is zero, the
174
client is considered up. The command will be run using
175
<quote><command><filename>/bin/sh</filename>
170
176
<option>-c</option></command></quote>, so
171
177
<varname>PATH</varname> will be searched. The default
172
178
value for the checker command is <quote><literal
329
335
<option>extended_timeout</option> option.
332
The <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is specified as a
333
space-separated number of values, each of which is a
334
number and a one-character suffix. The suffix must be one
335
of <quote>d</quote>, <quote>s</quote>, <quote>m</quote>,
336
<quote>h</quote>, and <quote>w</quote> for days, seconds,
337
minutes, hours, and weeks, respectively. The values are
338
added together to give the total time value, so all of
339
<quote><literal>330s</literal></quote>,
340
<quote><literal>110s 110s 110s</literal></quote>, and
341
<quote><literal>5m 30s</literal></quote> will give a value
342
of five minutes and thirty seconds.
338
The <replaceable>TIME</replaceable> is specified as an RFC
339
3339 duration; for example
340
<quote><literal>P1Y2M3DT4H5M6S</literal></quote> meaning
341
one year, two months, three days, four hours, five
342
minutes, and six seconds. Some values can be omitted, see
343
RFC 3339 Appendix A for details.
403
404
<quote><literal>approval_duration</literal></quote>,
404
405
<quote><literal>created</literal></quote>,
405
406
<quote><literal>enabled</literal></quote>,
407
<quote><literal>expires</literal></quote>,
406
408
<quote><literal>fingerprint</literal></quote>,
407
409
<quote><literal>host</literal></quote>,
408
410
<quote><literal>interval</literal></quote>,
505
507
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>mandos.conf</refentrytitle>
506
508
<manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
507
509
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>mandos</refentrytitle>
510
<manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
511
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>fping</refentrytitle>
508
512
<manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>
517
RFC 3339: <citetitle>Date and Time on the Internet:
518
Timestamps</citetitle>
522
The time intervals are in the "duration" format, as
523
specified in ABNF in Appendix A of RFC 3339.
512
530
<!-- Local Variables: -->