rmt (1) - Linux Manuals
rmt: remote magnetic tape protocol server
NAME
rmt - remote magnetic tape protocol serverSYNOPSIS
/opt/schily/sbin/rmt/etc/rmt
DESCRIPTION
This is the description of the enhanced Schily version of the rmt remote tape server program. rmt is a program used by programs like star and ufsdump that like to access remote magnetic tape drives and files through an interprocess communication connection. rmt is normally started up with an rexec(3) or rcmd(3) call.The rmt program accepts open, close, read, write and seek requests as well as requests that are specific to magnetic tapes. rmt performs the commands and then responds with a status indication.
This version of the rmt server gives full compatibility to the original BSD version, the enhanced Sun version and the enhanced GNU version. In addition to the Sun and GNU enhancements, it implements further abstractions for better cross platform compliance. It supports best speed and best compliance even when server and client code are running on different platforms. It is prepared to be installed as a user shell in the passwd file to create remote tape specific logins and security checking. To use the enhanced compatibility features, you need to either use the remote tape client code from star which is available in librmt or reimplement its features.
All responses are send back in ASCII. They are in one of the following two forms.
Successful commands have responses of
- Anumber\n
where number is the ASCII representation of a decimal number that usually is the return code of the corresponding system call. Unsuccessful commands are responded to with
- Eerror-number\nerror-message\n
where error-number is one of the possible error numbers described in intro(2), and error-message is the corresponding error string as retrieved by strerror(3). Note that the error number is valid on the remote system where the rmt code runs and may have a different meaning on the local system.
The protocol implements the following commands:
-
- Odevice\nmode\n
- Odevice\nmode symbolic_mode\n
-
Open the specified
device
or file using the indicated
mode.
device
is a full path name, and
mode
is an
ASCII
representation of a decimal
number suitable for being passed as second parameter to
open(2).
A variant of the
open
command includes the
symbolic_mode
string which is a
GNU
extension.
If both,
mode
and
symbolic_mode
are present, they are separated by a space character;
symbolic_mode
appears on the same line as the numeric mode.
It is send using the same notation as used in a C source (e.g.
O_RDWR|O_CREAT).
If the
symbolic_mode
is send to the server, the numeric
mode
is ignored.
The symbolic notation allows to send the expected open mode over
the wire, using a system independent method.
This is needed because different operating systems usually define all
bits in a different way. An exception are the lowest two bits.
The lowest two bits allow to code
O_RDONLY,O_WRONLY and O_RDWR.
To prevent unexpected behavior,
rmt
masks the numeric open mode with
0x03
before using it as argument to the
open(2)
call.
If you need more bits in the second parameter ot
open(2),
you need to use the symbolic mode.
If no file /etc/default/rmt exists, only filenames starting with /dev/ are accepted for security reasons.
If a device is already open, it is closed before a new open is performed.
A RMT protocol VERSION 1 client should issue a
I-1\n0\n
command just after opening a file or device. This is needed to tell the server that the client is aware of the official order of the mt_op codes in the range 0..7 and that is maps deviating values to the official ones.
- Cdevice\n
-
Close the currently open device or file. The argument
device
is ignored.
- Rcount\n
-
Read
count
bytes of data from the open device or file.
rmt
performs the requested
read(2)
operation and responds with
Acount-read\n
if the read operation was
successful; otherwise an error in
standard format is returned. If the read operation
was successful, the data read is sent directly after
the response described above.
- Wcount\n
-
Write data to the open device or file.
After reading the command specification,
rmt
reads
count
bytes from the network connection and aborts if a premature
EOF
is encountered.
The return value from the
write(2)
operation is returned as reply.
- Lwhence\noffset\n
-
Perform an
lseek(2)
operation on the open device or file using the specified parameters.
The return value from the
lseek(2)
operation is returned as reply.
On large file aware operating systems, rmt will correctly handle large lseek(2) requests.
-
The following whence values are supported:
- 0
- Mapped to SEEK_SET.
- 1
- Mapped to SEEK_CUR.
- 2
- Mapped to SEEK_END.
- 3
- Mapped to SEEK_DATA If avalable on the remote system.
- 4
- Mapped to SEEK_HOLE If avalable on the remote system.
-
- S
-
The old non-portable status call.
This call should not be used anymore, it has been replaced by the
new
RMT protocol version 1
extended status call below.
If the currently open device is a magnetic tape, return the magnetic tape status,
as obtained with a
MTIOCGET
ioctl
call.
If the open device is not a magnetic tape, an error is returned.
If the
MTIOCGET
operation was successful,
an ``ack'' is sent with the size of the
status buffer, then the status buffer is sent.
As the status buffer is sent in binary, this
command it considered outdated. Please use the extended status command instead.
This command is not terminated by a new-line.
- ssub-command
-
The new portable status call.
This command is part of the
RMT protocol version 1.
If the currently open device is a magnetic tape, return a single specified
member of the magnetic tape status structure, as obtained with a
MTIOCGET
ioctl
call.
If the open device is not a magnetic tape, an error is returned.
If the
MTIOCGET
operation was successful, the numerical value of the structure member
is returned in decimal.
The following sub commands are supported:
-
- T
-
return the content of the structure member
mt_type
which contains the type of the magnetic tape device.
- D
-
return the content of the structure member
mt_dsreg
which contains the ``drive status register''.
- E
-
return the content of the structure member
mt_erreg
which contains the ``error register''.
This structure member must be retrieved first because it is cleared after each MTIOCGET ioctl call. The librmt will always retrieve the member mt_erreg first when it is told to retrieve a complete status structure.
- R
-
return the content of the structure member
mt_resid
which contains the residual count of the last I/O.
- F
-
return the content of the structure member
mt_fileno
which contains the block number of the current tape position.
- B
-
return the content of the structure member
mt_blkno
which contains the block number of the current tape position.
- f
-
return the content of the structure member
mt_flags
which contains MTF_ flags from the driver.
- b
- return the content of the structure member mt_bf which contains the optimum blocking factor.
This command is not terminated with a new-line.
-
- Ioperation\ncount\n
-
Perform a
MTIOCOP
ioctl(2)
command using the specified parameters.
The parameters are interpreted as the
ASCII
representations of the decimal values to place in the
mt_op
and
mt_count
fields of the structure used in the
ioctl
call.
When the operation is successful the return value is the
count
parameter.
Only Opcodes 0..7 are unique across different architectures.
In many cases
Linux
does not even follow this rule.
If we know that we have been called by a
RMT protocol VERSION 1
client, we may safely assume that the client is not using
Linux
mapping over the wire but the standard mapping described below:
-
- -1
-
Retrieve the version number of the
rmt
server and tell the server that the client is aware of the official
order of the
MTIOCOP
ioctl(2)
opcodes in the range 0..7.
Local
mt_op
codes must be remapped to the official values before sending them
over the wire.
The answer of the current version of rmt is 1. Old rmt implementations send an error code back when this command is used. Future rmt implementations with further enhancements will send an answer with a value > 1.
- 0
- Issue a MTWEOF command (write count end-of-file records).
- 1
- Issue a MTFSF command (forward space over count file marks).
- 2
- Issue a MTBSF command (backward space over count file marks).
- 3
- Issue a MTFSR command (forward space count inter-record gaps).
- 4
- Issue a MTBSR command (backward space count inter-record gaps).
- 5
- Issue a MTREW command (rewind).
- 6
- Issue a MTOFFL command (rewind and put the drive off-line).
- 7
- Issue a MTNOP command (no operation, set status only).
-
- ioperation\ncount\n
-
Perform a
MTIOCOP
ioctl(2)
command using the specified parameters.
This command is a
RMT protocol VERSION 1
extension and implements support for commands beyond MTWEOF..MTNOP (0..7).
The parameters are interpreted as the
ASCII
representations of the decimal values described below.
They are converted into the local values
mt_op
and
mt_count
fields of the structure used in the
ioctl
call according to the actual values found in <sys/mtio.h>.
When the operation is successful the return value is the
count
parameter.
-
- 0
- Issue a MTCACHE command (switch cache on).
- 1
- Issue a MTNOCACHE command (switch cache off).
- 2
- Issue a MTRETEN command (retension the tape).
- 3
- Issue a MTERASE command (erase the entire tape).
- 4
- Issue a MTEOM command (position to end of media).
- 5
- Issue a MTNBSF command (backward space count files to BOF).
-
- v\n
- Return the version of the rmt server. This is currently the decimal number 1.
Any other command causes rmt to exit.
FILES
- /etc/default/rmt
-
The file
/etc/default/rmt
allows to set up rules to limit the accessibility of files based on rules.
This feature is typically used when the rmt run from a non personal but
task specific login.
Default values can be set for the following options in /etc/default/rmt. For example:
DEBUG=/tmp/rmt.debug
USER=tape
ACCESS=tapeAll keywords must be on the beginning of a line.
-
- DEBUG
- If you like to get debug information, set this to a file name where rmt should put debug information.
- USER
- The name of a user (local to the magnetic tape server) that may use the services of the rmt server. More than one USER=name line is possible. A line USER=* grants access to all users.
- ACCESS
-
This keyword is followed by three parameters separated by a TAB.
The name of a user (local to the magnetic tape server host) that may use
the services of the
rmt
server followed by the name of a host from where operation is granted
and a file specifier pattern for a file or file sub tree that may be accessed
if this
ACCESS
line matches.
More than one
ACCESS=name host path
line is possible.
If standard input of rmt is not a socket from a remote host, rmt will compare the host entry from /etc/default/rmt with the following strings:
-
- PIPE
-
If
stdin
is a
UNIX
pipe.
If you like to allow remote connections that use the ssh protocol, you need to use the word PIPE instead of the real hostname in the matching ACCESS= line.
- ILLEGAL_SOCKET
- If getpeername() does not work for stdin.
- NOT_IP
- If getpeername() works for stdin but is not connected to an internet socket.
-
-
DIAGNOSTICS
All responses are send to the network connection. They use the form described above.NOTES
To use rmt as a remote file access protocol you need to use the symbolic open modes as e.g. the O_CREAT flag is not unique between different architectures.
In order to allow this implementation to be used as a remote file access protocol, it accepts file names up to 4096 bytes with the open command. Other rmt implementations allow no more than 64 bytes.
The possibility to create a debug file by calling rmt file has been disabled for security reasons. If you like to debug rmt edit /etc/default/rmt and insert a DEBUG entry.
This implementation of rmt adds some security features to the server that make it behave slightly different from older implementations. Read the above documentation about the file /etc/default/rmt to make sure your local installation is configured for your needs.
To grant the same permissions as with old rmt servers, create a file /etc/default/rmt and add the following lines to this file:
USER=*
ACCESS=* * *
Note that the three fields in the ACCESS= line need to be separated by a TAB character.
Be very careful when designing patterns to match path names that may be accepted for open. If a pattern would allow to include /../ in the path, a possible intruder could virtually access any path on your system. For this reason, /../ is not allowed to appear in a path regardless of the pattern.
BUGS
HISTORY
The rmt command first appeared on BSD in march 1981. This rmt server is a new implementation that tries to be compatible to all existing implementations. It is the only known implementation that in addition tries to fix the data exchange problems between different architectures.
AUTHOR
Joerg Schilling Seestr. 110 D-13353 Berlin Germany
Mail bugs and suggestions to:
joerg.schilling [at] fokus.fraunhofer.de or js [at] cs.tu-berlin.de or joerg [at] schily.isdn.cs.tu-berlin.de