Access Control Commands and Options

giffrom Pogo, Walt Kelly

The skunk watches for intruders and sprays.

Last update: 7-Jan-2018 23:56 UTC


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Commands and Options

Unless noted otherwise, further information about these ccommands is on the Access Control Support page.

discard [ average avg ][ minimum min ] [ monitor prob ]
Set the parameters of the rate control facility which protects the server from client abuse. If the limited flag is present in the ACL, packets that violate these limits are discarded. If, in addition, the kod flag is present, a kiss-o'-death packet is returned. See the Rate Management page for further information. The options are:
average avg
Specify the minimum average interpacket spacing (minimum average headway time) in log2 s with default 3.
minimum min
Specify the minimum interpacket spacing (guard time) in seconds with default 2.
monitor
Specify the probability of being recorded for packets that overflow the MRU list size limit set by mru maxmem or mru maxdepth. This is a performance optimization for servers with aggregate arrivals of 1000 packets per second or more.
restrict [-4 | -6] default [ippeerlimit num] [flag][...]
restrict source [ippeerlimit num] [flag][...]
restrict address [mask mask] [ippeerlimit num] [flag][...]
The address argument expressed in IPv4 or IPv6 numeric address form is the address of a host or network. Alternatively, the address argument can be a valid host DNS name. The mask argument expressed in IPv4 or IPv6 numeric address form defaults to all mask bits on, meaning that the address is treated as the address of an individual host. A default entry (address 0.0.0.0, mask 0.0.0.0 for IPv4 and address :: mask :: for IPv6) is always the first entry in the list. restrict default, with no mask option, modifies both IPv4 and IPv6 default entries. restrict source configures a template restriction automatically added at runtime for each association, whether configured, ephemeral, or preemptible, and removed when the association is demobilized.
The optional ippeerlimit takes a numeric argument that indicates how many incoming (at present) peer requests will be permitted for each IP, regardless of whether or not the request comes from an authenticated source. A value of -1 means "unlimited", which is the current default. A value of 0 means "none". Ordinarily one would expect at most 1 of these sessions to exist per IP, however if the remote side is operating thru a proxy there would be one association for each remote peer at that IP.
Some flags have the effect to deny service, some have the effect to enable service and some are conditioned by other flags. The flags are not orthogonal, in that more restrictive flags will often make less restrictive ones redundant. The flags that deny service are classed in two categories, those that restrict time service and those that restrict informational queries and attempts to do run-time reconfiguration of the server. One or more of the following flags may be specified:
flake
Discard received NTP packets with probability 0.1; that is, on average drop one packet in ten. This is for testing and amusement. The name comes from Bob Braden's flakeway, which once did a similar thing for early Internet testing.
ignore
Deny packets of all kinds, including ntpq and ntpdc queries.
kod
Send a kiss-o'-death (KoD) packet if the limited flag is present and a packet violates the rate limits established by the discard command. KoD packets are themselves rate limited for each source address separately. If the kod flag is used in a restriction which does not have the limited flag, no KoD responses will result.
limited
Deny time service if the packet violates the rate limits established by the discard command. This does not apply to ntpq and ntpdc queries.
lowpriotrap
Declare traps set by matching hosts to be low priority. The number of traps a server can maintain is limited (the current limit is 3). Traps are usually assigned on a first come, first served basis, with later trap requestors being denied service. This flag modifies the assignment algorithm by allowing low priority traps to be overridden by later requests for normal priority traps.
mssntp
Enable Microsoft Windows MS-SNTP authentication using Active Directory services. Note: Potential users should be aware that these services involve a TCP connection to another process that could potentially block, denying services to other users. Therefore, this flag should be used only for a dedicated server with no clients other than MS-SNTP.
noepeer
Deny packets that would mobilize an ephemeral peering association, even if authenticated.
nomodify
Deny ntpq and ntpdc queries which attempt to modify the state of the server (i.e., run time reconfiguration). Queries which return information are permitted.
noquery
Deny ntpq and ntpdc queries. Time service is not affected.
nopeer
Deny packets that might mobilize an association unless authenticated. This includes broadcast, symmetric-active and manycast server packets when a configured association does not exist. It also includes pool associations, so if you want to use servers from a pool directive and also want to use nopeer by default, you'll want a "restrict source ..." line as well that does not include the nopeer directive. Note that this flag does not apply to packets that do not attempt to mobilize an association.
noserve
Deny all packets except ntpq and ntpdc queries.
notrap
Decline to provide mode 6 control message trap service to matching hosts. The trap service is a subsystem of the ntpdc control message protocol which is intended for use by remote event logging programs.
notrust
Deny packets that are not cryptographically authenticated. Note carefully how this flag interacts with the auth option of the enable and disable commands. If auth is enabled, which is the default, authentication is required for all packets that might mobilize an association. If auth is disabled, but the notrust flag is not present, an association can be mobilized whether or not authenticated. If auth is disabled, but the notrust flag is present, authentication is required only for the specified address/mask range.
ntpport
This is actually a match algorithm modifier, rather than a restriction flag. Its presence causes the restriction entry to be matched only if the source port in the packet is the standard NTP UDP port (123). A restrict line containing ntpport is considered more specific than one with the same address and mask, but lacking ntpport.
version
Deny packets that do not match the current NTP version.
Default restriction list entries with the flags ignore, ntpport, for each of the local host's interface addresses are inserted into the table at startup to prevent the server from attempting to synchronize to its own time. A default entry is also always present, though if it is otherwise unconfigured; no flags are associated with the default entry (i.e., everything besides your own NTP server is unrestricted).