# source: xio.help # Copyright Gerhard Rieger 2001-2007 Operating systems: The options and features described in this document have been implemented (but not always tested) on the operating systems listed below, unless otherwise noted: SuSE 10.1 Linux on x86 Solaris 8 on Sparc with gcc FreeBSD 6.1 on x86 HP-UX B 11.11 on PA-RISC with gcc =============================================================================== The following sections describe the syntax and semantics of the socat command line stream arguments. Usually a socat stream argument defines a one- or bidirectional stream. There are two principal forms: * a single stream. Depending on use of the -u or -U options and implicit semantics of the stream, such an argument may be resolved to a one- or twodirectional stream. * two onedirectional streams, separated by '!!'. An argument of this form always specifies a twodirectional stream. The first single stream is only used for reading data, and the second is only used for writing data. The general structure of a single stream is: keyword[:required-parameters][,options] The options part starts with the first ',' of the argument. The required parameters are separated by ':' from their predecessor. The last required parameter is terminated by the end of the argument or by the first ',' that iitroduces the first option. The options are separated with ','. The last option is terminated by end-of-string or by '!!'. The are some abbreviations defined that allow to drop the keyword. In these cases the argument syntax is: required-parameter[:required-parameters][,options] The implemented abbreviations are: short form canonical form number FD:number # decimal number path GOPEN:path # must must contain at least one '/' and must not contain ':' or ',' and must not start with a decimal digit =============================================================================== Addresses: Every address specification starts with a keyword or an abbreviation. These keywords are case insensitive. Note: because the option group ANY applies for all addresses, it is not mentioned explicitely below. Bidirectional only addresses: ----------------------------- PIPE FIFO ECHO Opens an unnamed pipe (fifo) where outbound traffic is sent to and inbound traffic is read from. The special semantics of pipes results in an echo like behaviour. Option groups: FD, FIFO (no specific FIFO options are defined yet) Onedirectional only addresses: ------------------------------ Currently all addresses may be used bidirectional. Note: for regular files, behaviour when being used bidirectionally is undefined. One- and bidirectional addresses: --------------------------------- STDIO - ("minus") Uses stdin (FD 0) for inbound traffic and/or stdout (FD 1) for outbound traffic on this address. Option groups: FD; others dependent on actual types of stdin and stdout (FIFO, CHR, BLK, REG, and/or SOCKET). STDIN Uses stdin for traffic. This might fail for outbound traffic. Option groups: FD; dependent on actual type of stdin (FIFO, CHR, BLK, REG, or SOCKET). STDOUT Uses stdout for traffic. This might fail for inbound traffic. Option groups: FD; dependent on actual type of stdout (FIFO, CHR, BLK, REG, or SOCKET). STDERR Uses stdout for traffic. This might fail for inbound traffic. Option group: FD; dependent on actual types of sterr (FIFO, CHR, BLK, REG, or SOCKET). FD:num num Uses the already existing file descriptor for traffic. Option groups: FD; dependent on actual types of file descriptor (FIFO, CHR, BLK, REG, or SOCKET). READLINE Uses the GNU readline function and history capabilies (best known from bash). It always works on stdin and stdout; if stdio is not a tty, readline does not seem to work correctly. Because readline is blocking during line editing, it does not fit well into socats I/O philosophy. socat integrates readline by waiting in the select call as usual; when stdin reports available data, socat invokes readline(). readline blocks until the user presses ENTER or EOF. Data on socats other stream is not handling in this time. socat controls the ECHO flag of the stdin tty (off during select(), on for readline()). When using socat with readline as front end to a service like telnet, POP3 or an other authenticated service, please note that the password is entered as ordinary data, thus appears on the screen! Option groups: FD, READLINE, TERMIOS Useful options: history-file OPEN:path Applies an open() system call to the given path. If the path does not exist a file is created only if the option create is used; if a file, pipe, or device with this name already exists it is opened. Open for reading and/or writing depends on the rw parameter of the xioopen call, or on usage in a socat argument. If no perm option is used, xioopen uses 600 (which might be modified by umask then). Applying this function to files conforms to the semantics as described by the open(2) man page. Opening device files, like /dev/ttyS*, might block until the device gets active (until some peer is connected) With existing named pipes (fifos) please note the usual semantics: Opening the pipe in read/write mode results in an echo service; Opening the pipe in read mode blocks until a writer opens the pipe (close by writer gives EOF for the reader); with option nonblock the open call does not block. Opening the pipe in write mode blocks until a reader opens the pipe (close by reader gives "broken pipe" error on next write); with option nonblock the open call terminates with error "no such device or address" in absence of a reader. Opening a named UNIX stream socket with or without a listening peer might succeed depending on the operating system, but the resulting file descriptor erronously reports available data immediately, and the following read() or write() call always fails with "invalid argument". Even worse, while such a filesystem entry is identified as socket by "file" command and by fstat(), getsockopt() after open() gives error "Socket operation on non-socket". Use GOPEN for reasonable behaviour! Option groups: FD, OPEN, NAMED, and specific for data object type (FILE, FIFO, CHRDEV+TERMIOS, BLKDEV, or SOCKET). GOPEN:path path "Generic open". Tries to open the given path in a smarter way. If the path exists and is a socket, it is connected to; if connecting fails, socat assumes a datagram socket and later uses sendto() calls for data transfer. If the path exists and is not a socket, it is opened: in RDONLY environment for reading from position 0, in WRONLY environment for appending (O_APPEND), in RDWR env. for reading and/or writing starting from position 0. If the path does not exist: in RDONLY environment this is an error in WRONLY environment the file is created (O_CREAT) in RDWR env. for reading and/or writing starting from position 0. However, these flags may be overriden by user supplied options (e.g., "append=0") Option groups: FD, NAMED, and specific for data object type (FILE, FIFO, CHRDEV+TERMIOS, BLKDEV, or SOCKET). CREATE:path CREAT:path Opens the named file with creat(). With UNIX semantics, this address is just a variation of the OPEN address, see there for more details. Note: The creat() system call does not create a completely new file, but inherits some properties of the old file if it exists, e.g. permissions. Use option "unlink-early" to remove the old entry before. Option groups: FD, NAMED, FILE Useful options: unlink-late PIPE:path FIFO:path Creates and opens a pipe if path does not exist; opens path if it already exists. Option groups: FD, NAMED, FIFO Note: this address uses the mknod(2) system call to create the named pipe. On FreeBSD, this call requires root privilege EXEC:cmdline Forks off a child process after establishing a bidirectional communication channel (with socketpair, pipes, or pty). The child then starts "cmdline" with execvp(). Note: spaces and shell meta characters in cmdline must be quoted if socat is invoked from the command line. Option groups: FD, FORK, EXEC, SOCKET, SOCK_UNIX, FIFO, TERMIOS Useful options: path, fdin, fdout, chroot, su, pty, stderr Note: on AIX, search permissions on /dev/pts/ are required to use option pty. SYSTEM:cmdline Forks off a child process after establishing a bidirectional communication channel (with socketpair, pipes, or pty). The child then starts "cmdline" with system(). Note: spaces and shell meta characters in cmdline must be quoted if socat is invoked from the command line. Option groups: FD, FORK, EXEC, SOCKET, SOCK_UNIX, FIFO, TERMIOS Useful options: path, fdin, fdout, chroot, su, pty, stderr Note: there are slightly different semantics with options pty or pipes, because they do not communicate an EOF condition to the shell process. Therefore, the shell process and its child do not terminate due to EOF, but are explicitly killed during close of the socat file handle. Consider using exec:'/bin/sh -c command',pty... UNIX:path LOCAL:path Connects to a UNIX domain socket. Option groups: FD, SOCKET, SOCK_UNIX NOTE: you need rw permissions to connect to a local socket. My Linux answers with "connection refused" to insufficient permissions, not existing socket, not a socket, or just a socket entry without a listening process. NOTE: this address does not implement option group NAMED because its connect call succeeds only if there is already someone listening, but at this point the NAMED group actions no longer affect this socket, only the fs entry. UNIX-listen:path UNIX-l:path Create a listening UNIX domain socket. With the fork option, for each accepted connection a new process is forked off, and more connections are accepted on the parent socket. Without fork, only the first connection is accepted. Option groups: FD, NAMED, SOCKET, SOCK_UNIX, LISTEN, CHILD IP:host:protocol IP4:host:protocol Open a raw socket with IP4 protocol. This mode sends packets to and accepts them only from host. protocol is a number from 0 to 255, with 1 meaning ICMP, 6..TCP, 17..UDP, 255..raw IP; 0 might be unsupported by the local IP stack, resulting in an error. Requires root privilege. Note: my Linux 2.4.10 kernel seems to drop payloads smaller than 8 bytes on their way from the network to the application. Option groups: FD, SOCKET, SOCK_IP TCP:host:port TCP4:host:port INET:host:port Create a TCP/IP4 client socket and connect to the given host/port combination. Option groups: FD, SOCKET, SOCK_IP, IPAPP, IP_TCP Useful options: crlf, bind, tos, mtudiscover, mss, nodelay, TCP-l:port TCP-listen:port TCP4-l:port TCP4-listen:port INET-l:port INET-listen:port Create a TCP/IP4 server socket and wait for an incoming connection. With the fork option, for each accepted connection a new process is forked off, and more connections are accepted on the parent socket. Without fork, only the first connection is accepted. Option groups: FD, SOCKET, SOCK_IP, IPAPP, IP_TCP, LISTEN, RANGE, CHILD Useful options: fork, crlf, bind, backlog, mtu, tcpwrap UDP:host:port UDP-CONNECT:host:port Connects to port on host using UDP/IP version 4 or 6 depending on address specification, name resolution, or option pf. Please note that, due to UDP protocol properties, no real connection is established; data has to be sent for `connecting' to the server, and no end-of-file condition can be transported. Option groups: FD, SOCKET, SOCK_IP4, SOCK_IP6, IP_UDP Useful options: ttl UDP4:host:port UDP4-CONNECT:host:port Like UDP-CONNECT, but only supports IPv4 protocol. Option groups: FD, SOCKET, SOCK_IP, IPAPP, IP_UDP UDP-listen:port UDP-l:port Emulates a UDP server in the same way as netcat: Create a UDP/IP4 socket and bind to the given port. Then wait for the first packet, get its sender address (without consuming its data), connect() to this address, and leave xioopen(). Afterwards, our socket only communicates with this peer. Option groups: FD, SOCKET, SOCK_IP, IPAPP, IP_UDP, RANGE Note: with fork option, child processes might hang forever because UDP cannot transport EOF conditions. #UDP-dgram:port #UDP-d:port # #Create and use a pure datagram oriented UDP socket. #The following restrictions apply: #* range option does not work #* de facto this is a read-only endpoint: sending data to 0.0.0.0 might fail. TCP6:host:port INET6:host:port Create a TCP/IP6 client socket and connect to the given host/port combination. Option groups: FD, SOCKET, SOCK_IP, IPAPP, IP_TCP Note: Address syntax parsing is awkward, since the IPv6 address word separator is ':' which is used as port separator too. An FTP listen entry looks in netstat ":::21"! TCP6-l:port TCP6-listen:port INET6-l:port INET6-listen:port Create a TCP server socket and wait for an incoming connection. With the fork option, for each accepted connection a new process is forked off, and more connections are accepted on the parent socket. Without fork, only the first connection is accepted. Option groups: FD, SOCKET, SOCK_IP, IPAPP, IP_TCP, LISTEN, RANGE, CHILD SOCKS4:sockd:host:port SOCKS:sockd:host:port Use a socks server, socks protocol version 4, to build a TCP (IPv4) connection. Sockd is the name or address of the socks server, host and port specify the destination address. Use option socksport if the socks server does not listen on port 1080. Option groups: FD, SOCKET, SOCK_IP, IPAPP, IP_TCP, IP_SOCKS Useful options: sp, socksport, socksuser Note: If you do not specify option socksuser, xioopen tries to derive it from environment: LOGNAME or USER, and might therefore undisclose your identity. SOCKS4a:sockd:host:port Like SOCKS4, but use the socks version 4a extension for destination name resolution on the socks server. Option groups: FD, SOCKET, SOCK_IP, IPAPP, IP_TCP, IP_SOCKS PTY Creates a pseudo terminal (pty) and uses its master side. Another process may open the pty´s slave side using it like a serial line or terminal. Option groups: FD,NAMED,PTY,TERMIOS Useful options: link, openpty, mode, user, group OPENSSL-CONNECT:host:port OPENSSL:host:port Tries to establish a SSL connection to port on host using TCP/IPv4. Note: this is currently only an experimental integration of openssl! (it does not provide any trust between the peers because is does not check certificates!) Option groups: FD,SOCKET,SOCK_IP4,IP_TCP,OPENSSL,RETRY Useful options: cipher, method, verify, cafile, capath, certificate, bind, sourceport, retry OPENSSL-LISTEN:port Listens on tcp4 port. When a connection is accepted, this address behaves as SSL server. Option groups: FD,SOCKET,SOCK_IP4,TCP,LISTEN,CHILD,RANGE,OPENSSL,RETRY Usefule options: cipher, method, verify, cafile, capath, certificate, retry PROXY:proxy:host:port PROXY-CONNECT:proxy:host:port Connects to an HTTP proxy server on port 8080 using TCP/IPv4, and sends a CONNECT request for host:port. If the proxy grants access and succeeds to connect to the target, data transfer between socat and the target can start. Note that the traffic need not be HTTP but can be an arbitrary protocol. Option groups: FD,SOCKET,IP4,TCP,HTTP Useful options: proxyport, ignorecr, proxyauth, crnl, bind, mss, sourceport =============================================================================== Option Groups: Each option is member of one option group. Address definitions specify which option groups they support. This allows to reject unapplyable options in an early stage of address processing. Address groups are identified by single bit positions. Option definitions specify to which group the option belongs (some options are member or more than one group). Addresses use a bit pattern to specify which option groups they support. Currently the following option groups are defined: GROUP_FD: All addresses that result in one or more file descriptors. These options are typically applied with fcntl() or some special calls like fchown() or fchmod(). There is no documented restriction to apply these functions to any file descriptor; but they are not always meaningful, and sometimes lead to OS exceptions. GROUP_APPL: All addresses. The options do not need file descriptors, because they manipulate the data streams at application level (ignoreeof, line terminator conversion). GROUP_PROCESS: For options that change process related attributes, like user id (setuid). GROUP_FIFO: Options for pipes. Currently not used. GROUP_CHR: Options for character devices. Currently not used. GROUP_BLK: Options for block devices. Currently not used. GROUP_REG, GROUP_FILE: Options for regular files. Currently not used. GROUP_SOCKET: Options for arbitrary type sockets, e.g. so-sndbuf, so-linger. GROUP_NAMED: Options for file system entries, e.g. user-early, unlink. GROUP_OPEN: Options that are applied with the open() system call. GROUP_EXEC: Options for program or script execution, e.g. path. GROUP_FORK: Options for communication with children processes, e.g. fdin, pty. GROUP_LISTEN: Options for listening sockets. Only backlog. GROUP_DEVICE: not used GROUP_CHILD: Options for addresses that may fork off independent child processes. Currently only option fork. GROUP_RETRY: Options for failure handling. Currently not used. GROUP_TERMIOS: Options for terminal settings, e.g. echo, b38400, raw. GROUP_READLINE: Options for readline (GNU line editing and history). GROUP_RANGE: Options for checking peer address. Currently only range. GROUP_SOCK_UNIX: Options for UNIX domain sockets. Currently not used. GROUP_SOCK_IP4: Options for IP4 sockets. Currently not used. GROUP_SOCK_IP6: Options for IP6 sockets. Currently not used. GROUP_SOCK_IP: Options for IP sockets, e.g. mtu, ip-options, ttl. GROUP_IP_UDP: Options for UDP sockets. Currently not used. GROUP_IP_TCP: Options for TCP sockets, e.g. maxseg, nodelay. GROUP_IPAPP: Options for UDP and TCP sockets. Currently only sourceport. GROUP_IP_SOCKS4: Options for SOCKS client connections, e.g. socksuser. GROUP_PROCESS: Options for process wide attributes, e.g. su, chroot. GROUP_APPL: Options handled by application. Currently not used. GROUP_PTY: Options for pseudo terminals. Used with addresses PTY, EXEC, and SYSTEM. GROUP_OPENSSL: Options for the OPENSSL address. There are "combined" group definitions too: #define GROUP_ANY (GROUP_PROCESS|GROUP_APPL) #define GROUP_ALL 0xffffffff =============================================================================== Address Options Address options are identified by a case insensitive keyword. If the options needs a parameter value, the option syntax is always: OPTION=VALUE Currently there do not exist options that take more than one argument; sometimes, two values are combined to form one argument value, e.g. IP4 address and port: 192.168.0.1:80 Note: "Type" describes the type of data that may or must be given to the option and that is passed to the system. There are some options with boolean semantics (on/off or yes/no), but their values are passed to the system with an int parameter. This situation is indicated as "Logical type: bool" and "Physical type: int". In this case xioopen passes the physical value to the system, giving the user one more hacking playground. Option: append Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: LATE Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the O_APPEND flag via a fcntl() call and F_SETFL; with OPEN type addresses, this flag is applied with the open() call. All data written is appended to the actual file end, even if other processes have written to or truncated the file in the meantime. Option: async Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: LATE Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux, SunOS Sets the O_ASYNC (or FASYNC) flag via a fcntl() call and F_SETFL; with FILE addresses, this flag is applied with the open() call. Consult your kernel documentation for effects of this flag. NOTE: socat does not handle the SIGIO signal. Option: cloexec Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: LATE Platforms: all Sets the FD_CLOEXEC (close-on-exec) flag on the file descriptor via a fcntl()call with F_SETFD. Use with caution, because xioopen() makes use of this flag to archieve what we consider the most reasonable behaviour; using this option overrides xioopen's setting! Option: flock-ex Aliases: flock, lock Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: FD Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux Applies the flock(fd, LOCK_EX) call to the file descriptor(s). This locks a file exclusively (but only for processes also using flock() on this file - otherwise, they seem to have unrestricted access). If the file is already locked with flock, our flock call blocks until the other processes lock is released. Note: the "lock" option name alias applies to this option only if the fcntl locking mechanism is not available on a platform. Option: flock-ex-nb Aliases: flock-nb Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: FD Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux Applies the flock(fd, LOCK_EX|LOCK_NB) call to the file descriptor(s). This locks a file exclusively (but only for processes also using flock() on this file - otherwise, they seem to have unrestricted access). If the file is already locked with flock, our flock call returns the error "Resource temporarily unavailable". Option: flock-sh Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: FD Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux Applies a shared advisory lock to the file using the flock(fd, LOCK_SH) call. This prevents processes from locking the file exclusively. If the file has already an exclusive lock, our flock call blocks until the other processes lock is released. Option: flock-sh-nb Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: FD Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux Applies a shared advisory lock to the file using the flock(fd, LOCK_SH|LOCK_NB) call. This prevents processes from locking the file exclusively. If the file has already an exclusive lock, our flock call returns with error "Resource temporarily unavailable". Option: f-setlk-rd Aliases: setlk-rd Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: FD Platforms: all Locks the complete file with fcntl(fd, F_SETLK, {F_RDLCK}) (complete means from its start to its maximal length). This locks the file exclusively (but only if the other processes accessing this file also use f-setlk or f-setlkw - otherwise, they seem to have unrestricted access). If the file is already locked with f-setlk or f-setlkw, the fcntl call blocks until release by the other process. Option: f-setlk-wr Aliases: f-setlk, setlk-wr, setlk Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: FD Platforms: all Locks the complete file with fcntl(fd, F_SETLK, {F_WRLCK}) (complete means from its start to its maximal length). This locks the file exclusively (but only if the other processes accessing this file also use f-setlk or f-setlkw - otherwise, they seem to have unrestricted access). If the file is already locked with f-setlk or f-setlkw, the fcntl call blocks until release by the other process. Option: f-setlkw-rd Aliases: setlkw-rd Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: FD Platforms: all Locks the complete file with fcntl(fd, F_SETLKW, {F_RDLCK}) (complete means from its start to its maximal length). This locks the file exclusively (but only if the other processes accessing this file also use f-setlk or f-setlkw - otherwise, they seem to have unrestricted access). If the file is already locked with f-setlk or f-setlkw, fcntl returns with EAGAIN. Option: f-setlkw-wr Aliases: setlkw-wr, f-setlkw, setlkw, lockw, lock Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: FD Platforms: all Locks the complete file with fcntl(fd, F_SETLKW, {F_WRLCK}) (complete means from its start to its maximal length). This locks the file exclusively (but only if the other processes accessing this file also use f-setlk or f-setlkw - otherwise, they seem to have unrestricted access). If the file is already locked with f-setlk or f-setlkw, fcntl returns with EAGAIN. Option: fork Type: BOOL Option group: CHILD Phase: PASTACCEPT Platforms: all Without fork (or fork=0), the listening process accepts exactly one connections, and terminates afterwards. With fork set, it forks off a new socat child process for each incoming connection. It is very important to understand what socat does with this fork option: The parent process remains in a loop of accept() and fork() calls until terminated from outside. The child process leaves this loop and goes on with the socat processing. If the fork occurs in the first address argument, the child process continues with parsing and activating the second address argument. This will in most cases be what you want or expect. If the fork call occurs in socats second address argument, all children will inherit and share the already activated first address. Option: group=value Aliases: gid=value Type: GIDT or unsigned int Option group: NAMED Type: GIDT Platforms: all Takes one argument, a UNIX group name or a numeric group id. The first character of value is a digit for group ids. With NAMED addresses this option is applied via a chown() call, with a fchown() call otherwise. If groupname is a name it must be a valid groupname from /etc/group and is converted to a group id with a getgrnam(3) call. On most modern operating systems, the owner of the process must be member of the group being set; only root may set any group, even numbers without group name. A Linux 2.2.10 kernel SIGSEGVs the process in the fchown() call when this option is used with a socket or pipe. Is fixed with Linux 2.4. LINUXBUG TESTCASE: SH1: socat -D - unix-l:/tmp/socket,unlink-early SH2: socat -d -d -d -d -D gopen:/tmp/socket,group=floppy - Option: group-late=value Type: GIDT or string Option group: FD Type: GIDT Platforms: all Takes one argument, a UNIX group name or a numeric group id. The first character of value is a digit for group ids. This option is applied via a fchown(2) call. If groupname is a name it must be a valid groupname from /etc/group and is converted to a group id with a getgrnam(3) call. On most modern operating systems, the owner of the process must be member of the group being set; only root may set any group, even numberic group ids without group name. Option: o-nonblock Aliases: nonblock Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: FD Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the O_NONBLOCK flag of a file descriptor via a fcntl(2) call and F_SETFL; with OPEN type addresses, this flag is applied with the open() call. It does not change the behaviour of socat's data transfer loop because socat uses select() which blocks nevertheless. Currently is has only two documented uses: 1) With address TCP, the connect() call does not block; instead, it continues through the open step. The channel is passed to the select() call. If something is written to the channel before it is connected, this is an error. If connection fails, a read condition occurs and read() returns the error. 2) Opening a named pipe does not block with this option. Option: o-ndelay Aliases: ndelay Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: LATE Platforms: HP-UX, SunOS (UNIX98) Under Solaris it sets the O_NDELAY of the file descriptor via a fcntl(2) call and F_SETFL; with OPEN type addresses, this flag is applied with the open() call. With all other operating systems, this is just another name for the nonblock option. Option: o-noatime Aliases: noatime Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: FD Platforms: Linux Sets the O_NOATIME flag of a file descriptor via a fcntl(2) call and F_SETFL; with OPEN type addresses, this flag is applied with the open() call. It prevents the access time from being updated during read operations. Option: perm=value Aliases: mode=value Type: MODET (mode_t) Option group: NAMED Phase: FD Platforms: all This option changes the mode (permissions) of an addresses inode. xioopen tries to apply this option already during open phase. If the address does not have a open phase or if the option cannot be applied there, the value is applied directly on the file descriptor afterwards. It is up to you to (1) have the permission to change the permissions, and (2) not to set permissions that prevent you from performing your transactions :-) NOTE: At least with some Linux 2.2, setting permissions on an existing file or device with fchmod() does not change the permissions of its inode on disk. See perm-early which uses chmod() instead. NOTE: At least with some Linux 2.2, restricting mode on file descriptors does not restrict this file descriptors data transfer capabilities. Option: perm-late=value Type: MODET (mode_t) Option group: FD Phase: LATE Platforms: all This option changes the mode (permissions) of a file descriptor with fchmod() in the last phase of address processing. Option: seek-set=offset Aliases: lseek=offset, seek=offset Type: OFF32 or OFF64 Option group: BLK Phase: LATE Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Positions the file at the given absolute offset, using lseek() (or lseek64() if available) with SEEK_SET. Option: seek-cur=offset Type: OFF32 or OFF64 Option group: BLK Phase: LATE Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Positions the file at the given offset from the current position, using lseek() (or lseek64() if available) with SEEK_SET. Option: seek-end=offset Type: OFF32 or OFF64 Option group: BLK Phase: LATE Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Positions the file at the given offset from the file end, using lseek() (or lseek64() if available) with SEEK_END. Option: lseek32-set=offset Aliases: lseek32=offset Type: OFF32 Option group: BLK Phase: LATE Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Positions the file at the given absolute offset using lseek() with SEEK_SET. This call might fail for non random access data objects like character devices or sockets. NOTE: this option seems to be useless on files with O_APPEND set. Option: lseek32-cur=offset Type: OFF32 (instead of off_t) Option group: BLK Phase: LATE Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Positions the file at the given offset from the current position using lseek() with SEEK_CUR. This call might fail for non random access data objects like character devices. On Linux, the seek() call fails on pipes, sockets and ttys but works on files and /dev/null NOTE: this option seems to be useless on files with O_APPEND set. Option: lseek32-end=offset Type: OFF32 Option group: BLK Phase: LATE Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Positions the file at the given offset from the file end using lseek() with SEEK_END. This call might fail for non random access data objects like character devices. NOTE: this option seems to be useless on files with O_APPEND set. Option: lseek64-set=offset Aliases: lseek64=offset Type: OFF64 Option group: BLK Phase: LATE Platforms: all Positions the file at the given absolute offset using lseek64() with SEEK_SET. This call might fail for non random access data objects like character devices or sockets. NOTE: this option seems to be useless on files with O_APPEND set. Option: lseek64-cur=offset Type: OFF64 Option group: BLK Phase: LATE Platforms: all Positions the file at the given offset from the current position using lseek64() with SEEK_CUR. This call might fail for non random access data objects like character devices. NOTE: this option seems to be useless on files with O_APPEND set. Option: lseek64-end=offset Type: OFF64 Option group: BLK Phase: LATE Platforms: all Positions the file at the given offset from the file end using lseek64() with SEEK_END. This call might fail for non random access data objects like character devices. NOTE: this option seems to be useless on files with O_APPEND set. Option: chroot=path Type: STRING Option group: PROCESS Phase: LATE Platforms: all Invokes the chroot() system call with the given path after the address resolution, so the path names of the address must be specified with absolute pathes. Note: when you combine chroot with substuser, with substuser applied within the chroot environment, usually the etc/passwd and etc/group files in the chroot environment are used for group set etc. See appendix "generating a sandbox" Option: chroot-early=path Type: STRING Option group: PROCESS Phase: EARLY Platforms: all Invokes the chroot() system call with the given path before the address is resolved, this means before file opening in OPEN, GOPEN and before program execution in EXEC and SYSTEM, so their pathes must be specified related to their chroot directory. See appendix "generating a sandbox" Option: setgid=group Type: GIDT (gid_t or string) Option group: PROCESS Phase: LATE2 Platforms: all Invokes setgid() with the group id. For EXEC and SYSTEM this call is performed for the child process after the fork and therefore does not affect the socat process directly. For LISTEN group addresses with fork option, this call is performed only on the child processes. For all other addresses, it is performed in the late phase of address processing, so it does not affect the address where it is used, but for the next address (if any), and for the data loop. Note: setgid() does not remove any groups from the current process group set. Option: setuid=user Type: UIDT (uid_t or string) Option group: PROCESS Phase: LATE2 Platforms: all Invokes setuid() with the user id. For EXEC and SYSTEM this call is performed for the child process after the fork and therefore does not affect the socat process directly. For LISTEN group addresses with fork option, this call is performed only on the child processes. For all other addresses, it is performed in the late phase of address processing, so it does not affect the address where it is used, but the next address (if any), and the data loop. Note: setuid() is invoked AFTER setgid(), if both are applied. Note: setuid() does not influence the processes group set; in most cases, you want to prefer substuser option. Option: substuser=user Aliases: su=user Type: UIDT (uid_t or string) Option group: PROCESS Phase: LATE2 Platforms: all Tries to switch the process to the given user and its group set. To make sure that the groups are set correctly for the new process owner, the system calls initgroups(), setgid(), and setuid() are invoked with the appropriate arguments. On sane operating system, this option requires root privileges. Note: this option sets the user and group ids of the process, but does not change the environment; therefore, all variables including $USER, $HOME, $LOGNAME, $SHELL etc. are inherited from the old users environment. Note: starting a SETUID program after applying substuser or setuid gives the process the SETUID owner, which might give root privileges again. Option: substuser-delayed=user Aliases: su-d=user Type: UIDT (unsigned int or string) Option group: PROCESS Phase: INIT Platforms: all Like substuser, but reads the user and group information in an early phase of address processing, but applies the appropriate system calls in a late phase. This allows to use user information from the host in a chroot environment, without exposing this data within the sandbox. Option: o-trunc Aliases: trunc Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: LATE Platforms: all Sets the O_TRUNC flag of the open() call, thus truncating the file to zero length. #! block devices? Option: ftruncate=value Aliases: truncate=value Type: OFF32 or OFF64 Option group: REG Phase: LATE Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Invokes the ftruncate() (or ftruncate64() if available) call for the file descriptor with the given value, thus reducing the length of the file to the given length. On Linux, ftruncate() fails on sockets and devices but works on regular files and pipes. #! block devices? Note: AIX docu says: for regular files only Option: ftruncate32=value Type: OFF32 Option group: REG Phase: LATE Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Invokes the ftruncate() call (even if ftruncate64() is available) call for the file descriptor with the given value, thus reducing the length of the file to the given length. Option: ftruncate64=value Type: OFF64 Option group: REG Phase: LATE Platforms: all Invokes the ftruncate64() call if available, for the file descriptor with the given value, thus reducing the length of the file to the given length. Option: o-binary Aliases: binary, bin Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: OPEN Platforms: none; Cygwin Sets the O_BINARY flag with open() or fcntl() to avoid implicit line terminator conversions. Option: o-text Aliases: text Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: OPEN Platforms: none; Cygwin Sets the O_TEXT flag with open() or fcntl() to force implicit line terminator conversions. Option: o-noinherit Aliases: noinherit Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: OPEN Platforms: none; Cygwin Sets the O_NOINHERIT flag with open() or fcntl() to not keep this file open in a spawned process. Option: cool-write Aliases: coolwrite Type: BOOL Option group: FD Phase: INIT Platforms: all Takes it easy when write fails with EPIPE or ECONNRESET and logs the message with notice level instead of error. This prevents the log file from being filled with useless error messages when socat is used as a high volume server or proxy where clients often abort the connection. This option is experimental. Option: end-close Aliases: close Type: CONST Option group: FD Phase: INIT Platforms: all Changes the (address dependent) method to close a connection to just close the file descriptors. This is useful when the connection is to be reused by or shared with other processes. Normally, socket connections will be ended with shutdown(2) which terminates the socket even if it is shared by multiple processes. close(2) "unlinks" the socket from the process but keeps it active as long as there are still links from other processes. Similarly, when an address of type EXEC or SYSTEM is ended, socat usually will explicitely kill the sub process. With this option, it will just close the file descriptors. Option: user=value Aliases: owner=value, uid=value Type: UIDT (unsigned int or string) Option group: NAMED Phase: FD Platforms: all Takes one argument, a UNIX user name or a numeric user id. The first character of value is a digit for user ids. For NAMED addresses, if the file already exists, this option is applied via a chown() call, with fchown() for all other cases. If username is a name it must be a valid username from /etc/passwd and is converted to a user id with a getpwnam() call. On sane operating systems, the owner of the process must be root to change the owner of a file descriptor; root may even apply undefined (unnamed) user ids. My Linux 2.2 kernel SIGSEGVs the process in the fchown() call when this option is used with a (UNIX, unconnected or connected) socket or pipe. Linux 2.4.0 handles this call correctly. TESTCASE: ./socat -d -d -d -d - tcp:loopback:21,user=root Option: user-late=value Aliases: uid-l=value Type: UIDT (unsigned int or string) Option group: FD Phase: LATE Platforms: all Takes one argument, a UNIX user name or a numeric user id. The first character of value is a digit for user ids. This option is applied via a fchown() call just before xioopen_single() terminates. If username is a name it must be a valid username from /etc/passwd and is converted to a user id with a getpwnam() call. On sane operating systems, the owner of the process must be root to change the owner of a file descriptor; root may even apply undefined (unnamed) user ids. My Linux 2.2 kernel SIGSEGVs the process in the fchown() call when this option is used with a socket or pipe. =============================================================================== OPEN group options Options of this group may be used with all addresses that support OPEN group options. Option: o-rdonly Aliases: rdonly Type: BOOL (inherent - no value) Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: all Use O_RDONLY with the open() call instead of the position dependend default. Take care not to block later write operations. Option: o-wronly Aliases: wronly Type: BOOL (inherent - no value) Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: all Use O_WRONLY with the open() call instead of the position dependend default. Take care not to block later write operations. Option: o-rdwr Aliases: rdwr Type: BOOL (inherent - no value) Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: all Use O_RDWR with the open() call instead of the position dependend default. Option: o-create Aliases: create, creat Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: all Sets the O_CREAT flag of the open() call. This means that it is not an error if the file does not exist. Option: o-defer Aliases: defer Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: none Sets the O_DEFER flag of the open() call. This means that write data is stored in paging space until an fsync() call. Option: o-delay Aliases: delay Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: none Sets the O_DELAY flag of the open() call. This lets open block until the share conditions are fulfilled (see nshare, rshare) Option: o-direct Aliases: direct Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: FreeBSD, HP-UX, Linux Sets the O_DIRECT flag of the open() call. Option: o-directory Aliases: directory Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: Linux Sets the O_DIRECTORY flag of the open() call. This lets open fail if the given path is not a directory. This does not seem to be useful with socat. Option: o-dsync Aliases: dsync Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS (UNIX98) Sets the O_DSYNC flag with the open() call. This lets write() calls wait until modification metainfo is physically written to media. Option: o-excl Aliases: excl Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: all Sets the O_EXCL flag of the open() call. Option: o-largefile Aliases: largefile Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the O_LARGEFILE flag of the open() flag. Option: o-noctty Aliases: noctty Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: all Sets the O_NOCTTY flag of the open() call, so the opened device does not become the controlling tty of the process. Option: o-nofollow Aliases: nofollow Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux Sets the O_NOFOLLOW flag of the open() call. This means that the last component of the open path must no be a symlink. Option: o-sync Aliases: sync Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the O_SYNC flag with the open() call. This lets write() calls wait until data is physically written to media. Option: o-rshare Aliases: rshare Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: none Sets the O_RSHARE flag of the open() call. This means that the file must not be opened for writing by other processes ("read sharing"). Option: o-nshare Aliases: nshare Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: none Sets the O_NSHARE flag of the open() call. This means that the file must not be shared with other processes ("no sharing"). Option: o-rsync Aliases: rsync Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS (UNIX98) Sets the O_RSYNC flag with the open() call. This lets write() calls wait until read metainfo is physically written to media. Option: o-priv Aliases: priv Type: BOOL Option group: OPEN Phase: OPEN Platforms: none (Solaris) Sets the O_PRIV flag with the open() call. =============================================================================== NAMED group options This group is valid for all addresses that refer to a file system entry like file, device, named pipe, or named UNIX domain socket. Option: unlink-early Aliases: new Type: BOOL Option group: NAMED Phase: EARLY Platforms: all This options tries to remove the filesystem entry given in the address before starting any other processing (even before user-early, perm-early, or group-early). unlink() is called; note that this call, in contrast to rm(1), removes entries regardless of their permissions. Instead, ownership or root privileges and write permissions in the directory are required and sufficient. Option: unlink Type: BOOL Option group: NAMED Phase: PREOPEN Platforms: all This options tries to remove the filesystem entry given in the address before it is tried to open, but past user-early, perm-early, or group-early). unlink() is called; note that this call, in contrast to rm(1), removes entries regardless of their permissions. Instead, ownership or root privileges and write permissions in the directory are required and sufficient. Option: unlink-late Type: BOOL Option group: NAMED Phase: PASTOPEN Platforms: all This option tries to remove the filesystem entry after it has been opened. Options can still be applied to the file descriptor, and the node or files data can be used, but it can no longer be accessed by other processes (except by tricks?), and after closing the stream the data or node is completely removed. unlink() is called; note that this call, in contrast to rm(1), removes entries regardless of their permissions. Instead, ownership or root privileges and write permissions in the directory are required and sufficient. Option: perm-early=value Type: MODET (mode_t) Option group: NAMED Phase: PREOPEN Platforms: all This option changes the mode (permissions) of an already existing filesystem entry with chmod() before the file is opened or after the UNIX domain socket is bound, but before it listens/connects. Option: user-early=value Aliases: uid-e=value Type: UIDT (unsigned int or string) Option group: NAMED Phase: PREOPEN Platforms: all Takes one argument, a UNIX user name or a numeric user id. The first character of value is a digit for user ids. This option is applied via a chown() call before the file system entry is opened or after the UNIX domain socket is bound, but before it starts to listen/connect. If username is a name it must be a valid username from /etc/passwd and is converted to a user id with a getpwnam() call. On sane operating systems, the owner of the process must be root to change the owner of a file descriptor; root may even apply undefined (unnamed) user ids. Option: group-early=value Aliases: gid-e=value Type: GIDT (unsigned int or string) Option group: NAMED Phase: PREOPEN Platforms: all Takes one argument, a UNIX group name or a numeric group id. The first character of value is a digit for group ids. This option is applied via a chown() call before the file system entry is opened or after the UNIX domain socket is bound, but before it listens/connects. If groupname is a name it must be a valid groupname from /etc/group and is converted to a group id with a getgrnam() call. On most modern operating systems, the owner of the process must be member of the group being set; only root may set any group, even numbers without group name. Option: umask=value Type: MODET Option group: NAMED Phase: EARLY Platforms: all Sets the umask before opening a file or creating a UNIX domain socket. This is especially useful for these sockets, because there interface does not provide a mode argument. Option: unlink-close Type: BOOL Option group: NAMED Phase: LATE Platforms: all Remove the addresses file system entry when closing the address. For named pipes, listening unix domain sockets, and the symbolic links of pty addresses, the default is 1; for created files, opened files, generic opened files, and client unix domain sockets the default is 0. =============================================================================== FORK and EXEC options Option: path=string Type: STRING Option group: EXEC Phase: PREEXEC Platforms: all Changes the PATH environment variable in the child process before the exec() or system() call. Option: nofork Type: BOOL Option group: FORK Phase: BIGEN Platforms: all Does not fork a subprocess for executing the program, instead calls execvp() directly from the actual socat instance. This avoids the overhead of another process between the program and the communication peer, but introduces lots of restrictions: * this option can only be applied to the second socat() address. * the first socat address cannot be OPENSSL or READLINE * socat options -b, -t, -D, -l, -v, -x, -t become useless * for both addresses, options ignoreeof, cr and crnl become useless * for the second address (the one with option nofork), options append, async, cloexec, flock, user, group, mode, nonblock, perm-late, setlk, and setpgid cannot be applied, and should be used on the first address instead. Option: pipes Type: BOOL Option group: FORK Phase: BIGEN Platforms: all For communication between the exec() or system() subprocess with socat, use two unnamed pipes instead of creating a socket pair. Option: pty Type: BOOL Option group: FORK Phase: BIGEN Platforms: all For communication between the exec() or system() subprocess with socat, use a pseudo terminal instead of a socket pair. The executed program gets the slave side, and socat the controlling side of the pseudo terminal. This is especially useful if you want to use, e.g., chat with socat (see EXAMPLES). Plus, ptys do not buffer I/O. Note: implementation of pseudo terminals are differing between platforms, so extra porting struggles might be required for porting this feature. Option: fdin=num Type: USHORT Option group: FORK Phase: PASTBIGEN Platforms: all After forking the child process, assign the stream where the child receives data from socat, to file descriptor num instead of stdin. Option: fdout=num Type: USHORT Option group: FORK Phase: PASTBIGEN Platforms: all After forking the child process, assign the stream where the child writes data to socat, to file descriptor num instead of stdout. Option: stderr Type: BOOL Option group: FORK Phase: PASTFORK Platforms: all Normally, the stderr filedescriptor of the forked program is a clone of socat's stderr fd. If this option is used, the programs stderr filedescriptor is a copy of the "normal" data output of the program, i.e. of its stdout or fdout. Option: setsid Aliases: sid Type: BOOL Option group: PROCESS Phase: LATE Platforms: all Invokes setsid() to make the forked off subprocess the leader of a new session. This also generates a new process group with this process as leader. This is useful, e.g., when exec'ing ssh to get the password prompt into the I/O channel (see EXAMPLES) Option: setpgid Aliases: pgid Type: INT Option group: FORK Phase: LATE Platforms: all Invokes setpgid(0, val) from the child process. Option: tiocsctty Aliases: ctty Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: LATE2 Platforms: all Applies only in combination with the pty option or its variants. Tries to make the pty the controlling terminal. May require option setsid to work correctly. Option: dash Aliases: login Type: BOOL Option group: EXEC Phase: PREEXEC Platforms: all Prefixes argv[0] for the execvp() call with '-', thus making a shell behave as login shell. Option: sighup Type: CONST Option group: PARENT Phase: LATE Platforms: all Has socat pass an eventual SIGHUP signal to the sub process. If no address has this option, socat terminates on SIGHUP. Option: sigint Type: CONST Option group: PARENT Phase: LATE Platforms: all Has socat pass an eventual SIGINT signal to the sub process. If no address has this option, socat terminates on SIGINT. Option: sigquit Type: CONST Option group: PARENT Phase: LATE Platforms: all Has socat pass an eventual SIGQUIT signal to the sub process. If no address has this option, socat dumps core and terminates on SIGQUIT. =============================================================================== PTY options These options may be used with addresses that create a pseudo terminal (pty). In particular, these are addresses EXEC, SYSTEM, and PTY. Option: openpty Type: BOOL Option group: PTY Phase: BIGEN Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux Like pty, but only use the openpty mechanism, not any other way for pty generation. Option: ptmx Type: BOOL Option group: PTY Phase: BIGEN Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Like pty, but only use the /dev/ptmx (/dev/ptc on AIX) mechanism, not any other way for pty generation. Option: symbolic-link=filename Type: FILENAME Option group: PTY Phase: LATE Platforms: all Generates a symbolic link that points to the actual pseudo terminal (pty). This might help to solve the problem that ptys are generated with more or less unpredictable names, making it difficult to directly access the socat generated pty automatically. With this option, the user can specify a "fix" point in the file hierarchy that helps him to access the actual pty. Option: pty-wait-slave Aliases: wait-slave, waitslave Type: BOOL Option group: PTY Phase: EARLY Platforms: all Blocks the open phase until a process opens the slave side of the pty. Usually, socat continues after generating the pty with opening the next address or with entering the transfer engine. With the wait-slave option, socat waits until some process opens the slave side of the pty before continuing. This option only works if the operating system provides the tt(poll()) system call. And it depends on an undocumented behaviour of pty's, so it does not work on all operating systems. It has successfully been tested on Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, and on Tru64 with openpty. Option: pty-interval Type: TIMESPEC Option group: PTY Phase: EARLY Platforms: all When the wait-slave option is set, socat periodically checks the HUP condition using poll() to find if the pty's slave side has been opened. The default polling interval is 1s. Use the pty-interval option to change this value. =============================================================================== SOCKET options These are options that may be applied to all socket type addresses: UNIX (LOCAL) domain sockets (even with EXEC type addresses if not pipes), IP, and IPv6. Option: so-debug Aliases: debug Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_DEBUG socket option. Requires root. Option: so-acceptconn Aliases: acceptconn Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Tries to set the SO_ACCEPTCONN socket option. Read-only! Option: so-broadcast Aliases: broadcast Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_BROADCAST socket option. Option: so-reuseaddr Aliases: reuseaddr Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_REUSEADDR socket option. Allows to bind to a port even if this port is already used for a connection. Option: so-keepalive Aliases: keepalive Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: FD Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_KEEPALIVE socket option. Option: so-linger=value Aliases: linger=value Type: LINGER Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Activates the SO_LINGER option and sets a value (seconds) for it. This lets shutdown() or close() block until data transfers have finished or the given value timed out. Note: on some systems, the type for setsockopt() is struct { int; int; } In this case, xioopen() sets {1,value}. Option: so-oobinline Aliases: oobinline Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_OOBINLINE socket option. Option: so-sndbuf=value Aliases: sndbuf=value Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_SNDBUF option of the socket to the given value. This option is applied after the socket() (or socketpair()) call. NOTE: The kernel might change the effective value: My Linux 2.2 with TCP doubles the value, but uses at least 2048. Option: so-sndbuf-late=value Aliases: sndbuf-late=value Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: LATE Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_SNDBUF option of the socket to the given value. This option is applied after the connect() or accept() (or socketpair) call. NOTE: The kernel might change the effective value: My Linux 2.2 with TCP doubles the value, but uses at least 2048, and a maximum of 131070 (system limit?). Option: so-rcvbuf=value Aliases: rcvbuf=value Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_RCVBUF option of the socket to the given value. This option is applied after the socket() call. NOTE: The kernel might change the effective value: My Linux 2.2 with TCP connect doubles the value, but uses at least 256 and at most 131070. My Linux 2.2 with TCP listen doubles the value but uses at least 11772. NOTE: For applying the SO_RCVBUF options after the connect() or accept() calls see rcvbuf-late. Option: so-rcvbuf-late=value Aliases: rcvbuf-late=value Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: LATE Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_RCVBUF option of the socket to the given value. This option is applied after the connect() or listen() call. NOTE: The kernel might change the effective value: My Linux 2.2 with TCP doubles the value, but uses at least 256 and maximal 131070. NOTE: sequence of this call may be relevant for the effecting value (AIX 4.3.3). For applying the SO_RCVBUF option immediately after the socket() call see rcvbuf. Option: so-error Aliases: error Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Tries to set the SO_ERROR socket option which is a read-only option. On my Linux 2.2 it gives "protocol not available". Option: so-type=value Aliases: type=value Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Set the sockettype argument of the socket() or socketpair() call. This overrides the per protocol default (e.g., TCP: SOCK_STREAM). Most values might not be supported by a given protocol. The following combinations are known to work at least under one OS: TCP SOCK_STREAM (system default) UDP SOCK_DGRAM (system default) IP SOCK_RAW (socat default) UNIX SOCK_STREAM (system default) UNIX SOCK_DGRAM Option: so-dontroute Aliases: dontroute Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_DONTROUTE socket option. Option: so-rcvlowat=value Aliases: rcvlowat=value Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_RCVLOWAT socket option. Cannot be changed in Linux (always gives "protocol not available"). Option: so-rcvtimeo=value Aliases: rcvtimeo=value Provided type: double Physical type: TIMEVAL (long[2]) Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_RCVTIMOE socket option. Cannot be changed in Linux (always gives "protocol not available"). Option: so-sndlowat=value Aliases: sndlowat=value Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_SNDLOWAT socket option. Cannot be changed in Linux (always gives "protocol not available"). Option: so-sndtimeo=value Aliases: sndtimeo=value Provided type: double Physical type: TIMEVAL (long[2]) Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all (UNIX98) Sets the SO_SNDTIMEO socket option. Cannot be changed in Linux (always gives "protocol not available"). Option: so-audit Aliases: audit Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Sets the SO_AUDIT socket option. Option: so-attach-filter Aliases: attach-filter, attachfilter Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Linux docu recommends to use libpcap for this feature. "protocol not available", need kernel CONFIG_FILTER! Option: so-detach-filter Aliases: detach-filter, detachfilter Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux See Linux "man 7 socket". "protocol not available", need kernel CONFIG_FILTER! Option: so-bindtodevice=string Aliases: bindtodevice, interface, if Type: NAME Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Binds the socket to a net interface, e.g. lo0 or eth0 (interface names depend on operating system). Might require root privilege. Option: so-bsdcompat Aliases: bsdcompat Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Sets the SO_BSDCOMPAT socket option. See Linux "man 7 socket". Option: so-cksumrecv Aliases: cksumrecv Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Sets the SO_CKSUMRECV socket option. Option: so-kernaccept Aliases: kernaccept Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Sets the SO_KERNACCEPT socket option. Option: so-no-check Aliases: no-check, nocheck Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the SO_NO_CHECK socket option." Intentionally undocumented" under Linux (see "man 7 socket"), don't know what it does.... Option: so-noreuseaddr Aliases: noreuseaddr Type: INT? Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Sets the SO_NOREUSEADDR socket option. Option: passcred Aliases: so-passcred Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the SO_PASSCRED option of a socket. Option: so-peercred Aliases: peercred Type: INT3 or int[3]? Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Enables receiving of credentials. Read only. Not really implemented yet. Nevertheless, Gives "Protocol not available". Option: so-priority=value Aliases: priority=value Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the protocol defined priority for all packets to be sent on this socket. Docu says it requires root privileges. Normal user may set 0..6 for UNIX domain and TCP client sockets on Linux 2.2. root may send any int value. Option: so-reuseport Aliases: reuseport Type: INT? Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: FreeBSD, HP-UX Sets the SO_REUSEPORT socket option. Option: so-security-authentication Aliases: security-authentication, securityauthentication Type: INT? Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the SO_SECURITY_AUTHENTICATION socket option. Gives "protocol not available" error. In Linux 2.2.16 source, only exists in asm-*/socket.h Option: so-security-encryption-network Aliases: security-encryption-network, securityencryptionnetwork Type: INT? Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the SO_SECURITY_ENCRYPTION_NETWORK option of the socket. Gives "protocol not available" error. In Linux 2.2.16 source, only exists in asm-*/socket.h Option: so-security-encryption-transport Aliases: security-encryption-transport, securityencryptiontransport Type: INT? Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the SO_SECURITY_ENCRYPTION_TRANSPORT option of the socket. Gives "protocol not available" error. In Linux 2.2.16 source, only exists in asm-*/socket.h Option: so-use-ifbufs Aliases: use-ifbufs, useifbufs Type: INT? Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Sets the SO_USE_IFBUFS socket option. Option: so-useloopback Aliases: useloopback Type: INT? Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: FreeBSD, HP-UX, SunOS Sets the SO_USELOOPBACK socket option. Option: so-dgram-errind Aliases: dgram-errind, dgramerrind Logical type: bool? Physical type: INT? Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: SunOS Sets the SO_DGRAM_ERRIND flag. Option: so-dontlinger Aliases: dontlinger Type: INT? Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: SunOS Sets the SO_DONTLINGER socket option. Option: so-prototype Aliases: prototype Type: INT? Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: HP-UX, SunOS Sets the SO_PROTOTYPE socket option. Option: type Type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Sets the type of the socket, usually as argument to the socket() or socketpair() call, to . Under Linux, 1 means stream oriented socket, 2 means datagram socket, and 3 means raw socket. Option: protocol-family Aliases: pf Type: STRING Option group: SOCKET Phase: PRESOCKET Platforms: all Forces the use of the specified IP version. can be something like "ip4" or "ip6". Option: fiosetown Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux Sets the FIOSETOWN ioctl (in "man 7 socket" called FIOCSETOWN). #Option: ciocspgrp # #Allowed in addresses: SOCKET #Logical type: bool #Physical type: int # #Sets the CIOCSPGRP ioctl. #Option: addr=value # #Allowed in addresses: SOCKET #Type: socket-address # #For client socket, sets the local (bind) address. Not yet implemented. Option: bind=socketaddress Type: STRING Option group: SOCKET Phase: BIND Platforms: all Gives the address to be used in the bind(2) system call. The format of the socketaddress depends on the socket type (see below). For "client" sockets this option inserts a bind(2) call between socket(2) and connect(2) calls. For "server" sockets this option is ignored! For datagram sockets behaviour of this option is currently unspecified. Note: for client sockets in the UNIX domain this option is not useful: with the same address as connect it will conflict with the bind call of the server socket; another address for bind is ignored (with Linux 2.2). For TCP sockets these formats are currently implemented: HOSTNAME HOSTNAME:PORT IPADDR IPADDR:PORT :PORT .PORT Option: connect-timeout=seconds Type: TIMEVAL Option group: SOCKET Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Abort the connection attempt after the given time with error status. # Option: backlog=value Type: INT Option group: LISTEN Phase: LISTEN Platforms: all Sets the value to be used with the listen(2) system call. The default is 5. It does not seem to work for Linux 2.2; Linux seems to allow much more established connections, but then they stay even after server process shutdown... Option: range=address:mask, range=address/bits Type: STRING Option group: RANGE Phase: ACCEPT Platforms: all Implementation status: only for INET (IP4) addresses Defines a subnet where clients may connect from. If other clients connect the accepted connection is shut down immediately after examination of the client address. If this option is not used, the default is 0.0.0.0:0.0.0.0, allowing arbitrary client addresses. bits is the number of high order bits that must match between the range value and the clients address. Option: tcpwrap, tcpwrap=name Type: STRING_NULL Option group: RANGE Phase: ACCEPT Platforms: (depends on libwrap installation) Uses the rules introduced by Wietse Venema's libwrap (tcpd) library to check if the client is allowed to connect. The configuration files are /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny. See "man 5 hosts_access" for more information. is passed to the wrapper functions as daemon process name. If omitted, the basename of socats invokation (argv[0]) is passed. If both tcpwrap and and range options are applied to an address, both conditions must be fulfilled to allow the connection. Option: hosts-allow, tcpwrap-hosts-allow-table Type: FILENAME Option group: RANGE Phase: ACCEPT Platforms: (depends on libwrap installation) Takes the specified file instead of /etc/hosts.allow. Option: hosts-deny, tcpwrap-hosts-deny-table Type: FILENAME Option group: RANGE Phase: ACCEPT Platforms: (depends on libwrap installation) Takes the specified file instead of /etc/hosts.deny. Option: tcpwrap-etc, tcpwrap-dir Type: FILENAME Option group: RANGE Phase: ACCEPT Platforms: (depends on libwrap installation) Looks for hosts.allow and hosts.deny in the specified directory. Is overriden by options hosts-allow and hosts-deny. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- IP options Option: ip-options=values Aliases: ipoptions Type: BIN Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Sets the IP_OPTIONS values of the IP socket. For example, to send packets to destination D.D.D.D via a router G.G.G.G you have to specify G.G.G.G as the "normal" destination, and D.D.D.D in the source route: TCP:G.G.G.G:25,ip-options=x890704dddddddd Note that the destination will see G.G.G.G as sender of the packets, and therefore might not return the answers correctly. See RFC791 for detailed specification of IP option fields. Examples: x01 ... nop x8307040a000001 ... loose source route x890b040a000001c0c1c2c3 ... strict source route Note: with source routes, you should not specifiy destination address and hops as defined in RFC791 (first hop as IP header destination address, further hops and final destination in source route) because the (Linux?) kernel changes them to a more intuitive form (final destination as destination in IP header, gateways in source route). So, in destination address give the final destination, and in the source route the gateways! Note: this option may be mulitply applied per socket but the (Linux?) kernel pads each setting with 0' to align the options end to 4 octets. So you should better pad the options data with nops (01) yourself. Option: ip-pktinfo Aliases: ippktinfo, pktinfo Type: INT (should be struct in_pktinfo) Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Status: Not completely implemented (ancillary messages are not supported by socat/xio) Pass an IP_PKTINFO ancillary message. Option: ip-recvtos Aliases: iprecvtos, recvtos Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Status: Not completely implemented (ancillary messages are not supported by socat/xio) Set the IP_RECVTOS socket option which enables IP_TOS ancillary message passing. Option: ip-recvttl Aliases: iprecvttl, recvttl Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Implementation status: No results. Set the IP_RECVTTL socket option. Option: ip-recvopts Aliases: iprecvopts, recvopts Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Implementation status: No results. Set the IP_RECVOPTS socket option. Option: ip-retopts Aliases: ipretopts, retopts Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Implementation status: No results. Set the IP_RETOPTS socket option. Option: ip-tos=value Aliases: iptos=value, tos=value Logical type: byte Physical type: INT Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Sets the TOS (type of service) flags for the outgoing IP headers of the socket. My Linux 2.2 does not allow to set values other than 0 (probably needs some optional kernel features). Option: ip-ttl=value Aliases: ipttl=value, ttl=value Logical type: byte Physical type: INT Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Sets the TTL (time to live) field for the outgoing IP headers of the socket. 0 does not seem to be useful and gives "invalid argument" error in Linux. This option can be used to implement a "poor mans traceroute" in conjunction with tcpdump. Option: ip-hdrincl Aliases: iphdrincl, hdrincl Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Set the IP_HDRINCL socket option. User will supply IP header before user data. For raw IP sockets only. Not tested. Option: ip-recverr Aliases: iprecverr, recverr Type: INT Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Set the IP_RECVERR socket option. Implementation status: No results. Option: ip-mtu-discover=value Aliases: ipmtudiscover=value, mtudiscover=value Type: INT (0..2) Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the IP_MTU_DISCOVER flag of the IP socket. In Linux there are three values defined: 0..dont(never), 1..want(per route), 2..do(always) Option: ip-mtu Aliases: ipmtu, mtu Type: INT Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Sets the MTU (maximal transfer unit) of the socket. In Linux this is a read-only parameter and results in a "protocol not available" error. Option: ip-freebind Aliases: ipfreebind, freebind Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Allows the socket to locally bind to any address, even those that are not covered by an interface address, alias address or a local subnet. Even broadcast and multicast addresses are possible. Note: this option has been found on Linux 2.4 in . This file might not be included per default, because it creates errors. To make this option available, "make" socat with the CCOPT environment variable set to "-DIP_FREEBIND=15" Option: ip-router-alert=value Aliases: iprouteralert, routeralert Type: INT Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the IP_ROUTER_ALERT socket option. Only works with raw sockets. "Invalid argument" Option: ip-add-membership=multicast-address:interface-address ip-add-membership=multicast-address:interface-name ip-add-membership=multicast-address:interface-index ip-add-membership=multicast-address:interface-address:interface-name ip-add-membership=multicast-address:interface-address:interface-index Aliases: add-membership ip-membership Type: IP_MREQN Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Makes the socket member of the specified multicast group. This is currently only implemented for IPv4. The option takes the IP address of the multicast group and info about the desired network interface. The most common syntax is the first one, while the others are only available on systems that provide tt(struct mreqn) (Linux).nl() The indices of active network interfaces can be shown using the utility procan(). Option: ip-drop-membership Not implemented. #! Option: ipv6-join-group Option: ip-multicast-ttl=byte Aliases: ipmulticastttl, multicastttl Type: BYTE Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Sets the TTL used for outgoing multicast traffic. Default is 1. Option: ip-multicast-loop Aliases: ipmulticastloop, multicastloop Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Specifies if outgoing multicast traffic should loop back to the interface. Option: ip-multicast-if=hostname Aliases: multicast-if Type: IP4NAME Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Specifies hostname or address of the network interface to be used for multicast traffic. Option: ip-pktoptions Aliases: ippktoptions, pktoptions, pktopts Type: INT? Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Set the IP_PKTOPTIONS socket option. No docu found. Implementation status: "Protocol not available". Option: res-debug Type: BOOL Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: INIT Platforms: all Apply the debug resolver option to all queries of this XIO address. Option: res-aaonly Aliases: aaonly Type: BOOL Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: INIT Platforms: all Apply the aaonly resolver option to all queries of this XIO address. Option: res-usevc Aliases: usevc Type: BOOL Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: INIT Platforms: all Apply the usevc resolver option to all queries of this XIO address. Option: res-primary Aliases: primary Type: BOOL Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: INIT Platforms: all Apply the primary resolver option to all queries of this XIO address. Option: res-igntc Aliases: igntc Type: BOOL Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: INIT Platforms: all Apply the igntc resolver option to all queries of this XIO address. Option: res-recurse Aliases: recurse Type: BOOL Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: INIT Platforms: all Apply the recurse resolver option to all queries of this XIO address. Option: res-defnames Aliases: defnames Type: BOOL Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: INIT Platforms: all Apply the defnames resolver option to all queries of this XIO address. Option: res-stayopen Aliases: stayopen Type: BOOL Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: INIT Platforms: all Apply the stayopen resolver option to all queries of this XIO address. Option: res-dnsrch Aliases: dnsrch Type: BOOL Option group: SOCK_IP Phase: INIT Platforms: all Apply the dnsrch resolver option to all queries of this XIO address. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- IP6 options Option: ipv6-v6only=value Alias: ipv6only, v6only Type: BOOL Option group: SOCK_IP6 Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux Apply the IPV6_V6ONLY socket option to the file descriptor. This controls if the socket listens only on the IPv6 protocol or also on IPv4. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- IPAPP (TCP and UDP) options Option: sourceport=value Alias: sp=value Type: 2BYTE Option group: IPAPP (IP_TCP and IP_UDP) Phase: LATE Platforms: all For outgoing (client) TCP and UDP connections, it sets the source port (local port, client side port) of the socket connection. For server type addresses, requires the client to use this sourceport, otherwise socat immediately shuts down the connection. On UNIX class operating systems root privilege are required to set a source port between 1 and 1023 incl. 0 gives a "random" port number >= 1024, which is the default. Option: lowport Type: BOOL Option group: IPAPP (IP_TCP and IP_UDP) Phase: LATE Platforms: all For outgoing (client) TCP and UDP connections, it sets the source to an unused random port between 640 and 1023 incl. On UN*X type operating systems, this requires root privilege, and thus guaranties the peer to be root authorized. With TCP or UDP listen addresses, socat immediately shuts down the connection if the client does not use a sourceport <= 1023. This mechanism can provide limited authorization under some circumstances. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TCP options Option: tcp-nodelay Aliases: nodelay Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Sets the TCP_NODELAY flag of the TCP socket. This turns off Nagles algorithm. Option: tcp-maxseg Aliases: maxseg, mss Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: all Limits the MAXSEG (MSS) value of the TCP socket. This option is applied before the connect or listen call, so it is transferred in the SYN packet to the peer socket. Linux client: 0 gives "invalid argument", higher values are used in SYN negotiation, but effective MSS is n-12, at least 8. On AIX, this is a read-only option. Option: tcp-maxseg-late Aliases: maxseg-late, mss-late Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: CONNECTED Platforms: all Limits the MAXSEG (MSS) value of the TCP socket. This option is applied past the connect or accept call, so it is not transferred as MSS to the peer socket. Observation with Linux 2.2: does not influence the size of packets generated by the local socket. Option: tcp-cork Aliases: cork Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the TCP_CORK option. Option: tcp-stdurg Aliases: stdurg Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Applies the TCP_STDURG option with setsockopt. This enables RFC 1122 compliant urgent point handling. Option: tcp-rfc1323 Aliases: rfc1323 Logical type: bool Physical type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Applies the TCP_RFC1323 option with setsockopt. This enables RFC1323 TCP enhancements (window scale, timestamp). Option: tcp-keepidle Aliases: keepidle Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the TCP_KEEPIDLE value of the socket with setsockopt(). Starts keepalive after this period (in seconds?) Option: tcp-keepintvl Aliases: keepintvl Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the TCP_KEEPINTVL value of the socket with setsockopt(). Interval between keepalives (in seconds?) Option: tcp-keepcnt Aliases: keepcnt Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the TCP_KEEPCNT value of the socket with setsockopt(). Number of keepalives before death. Option: tcp-syncnt Aliases: syncnt Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the TCP_SYNCNT value of the socket with setsockopt(). Number of SYN retransmits. Option: tcp-linger2 Aliases: linger2 Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the TCP_LINGER2 value of the socket with setsockopt(). Life time of orphaned FIN-WAIT-2 state. Option: tcp-defer-accept Aliases: defer-accept Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the TCP_DEFER_ACCEPT value of the socket with setsockopt(). accept() of the listener will only return when data arrived at the new connection. The value is converted to seconds by some algorithm. Option: tcp-window-clamp Aliases: window-clamp Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the TCP_WINDOW_CLAMP value of the socket with setsockopt(). "Bound advertised window". Option: tcp-info Aliases: info Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux Sets the TCP_INFO value of the socket with setsockopt(). Is a read only option, so it always generates an error. Option: tcp-quickack Aliases: quickack Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: Linux Sets the TCP_QUICKACK option with setsockopt(). Option: tcp-md5sig Aliases: md5sig Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Enables generation of MD5 digests on the packets. Option: tcp-noopt Aliases: noopt Type: INT Option: group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: FreeBSD Disables use of TCP options. Option: tcp-nopush Aliases: nopush Type: INT Option: group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: FreeBSD Sets the TCP_NOPUSH option. Option: tcp-sack-disable Aliases: sack-disable Type: INT Option: group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Disables use the selective acknowledge feature. Option: tcp-signature-enable Aliases: signature-enable Type: INT Option: group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Enables generation of MD5 digests on the packets. Option: tcp-abort-threshold Aliases: abort-threshold Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: HP-UX, SunOS Sets the time to wait for an answer of the peer on an established connection. Option: tcp-conn-abort-threshold Aliases: conn-abort-threshold Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: HP-UX, SunOS Sets the time to wait for an answer of the server during the initial connect. Option: tcp-keepinit Aliases: keepinit Type: INT Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Sets the time to wait for an answer of the server during connect() before giving up. Value in half seconds, default is 150 (75s). Option: tcp-paws Aliases: paws Type: BOOL Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Enables the "protect against wrapped sequence numbers" feature. Option: tcp-sackena Aliases: sackena Type: BOOL Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Enables selective acknowledge. Option: tcp-tsoptena Aliases: tsoptena Type: BOOL Option group: IP_TCP Phase: PASTSOCKET Platforms: none Enables the time stamp option that allows RTT recalculation on existing connections. =============================================================================== SOCKS options Option: socksport Type: STRING Option group: IP_SOCKS4 Phase: LATE Platforms: all Overrides the default socks server port 1080 Option: socksuser Type: NAME Option group: IP_SOCKS4 Phase: LATE Platforms: all Overrides the system derived socks user name ($USER or $LOGNAME or "anonymous") =============================================================================== HTTP options Option: proxyport Type: STRING Option group: HTTP Phase: LATE Platforms: all Overrides the default HTTP proxy port 8080. Option: ignorecr Type: BOOL Option group: HTTP Phase: LATE Platforms: all The HTTP protocol requires the use of CR+NL as line terminator. When a proxy server violates this standard, socat might not understand its answer. This option directs socat to interprete NL as line terminator and to ignore CR in the answer. Nevertheless, socat sends CR+NL to the proxy. Option: proxyauth Type: STRING Option group: HTTP Phase: LATE Platforms: all Provide "basic" authentication to the proxy server. The argument to the option must be the username followed by ':' followed by the password. This string is used with a "Proxy-Authorize: Base" header in base64 encoded form. Option: resolve Type: BOOL Option group: HTTP Phase: LATE Platforms: all Per default, socat sends to the proxy a CONNECT request containing the target hostname. With this option, socat resolves the hostname locally and sends the IP address. =============================================================================== TERMIOS options These options are applied with tcsetattr calls with a struct termios. Attention: Applying these options to stdin/stdout when they refer to your terminal might directly effect your terminal! See Linux:"man 3 termios" and Linux:"man 2 stty" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TERMIOS combined modes Option: raw Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Is equivalent to ignbrk=0,brkint=0,ignpar=0,parmrk=0,inpck=0,istrip=0,inlcr=0,igncr=0,icrnl=0,ixon=0,ixoff=0,iuclc=0,ixany=0,imaxbel=0,opost=0,isig=0,icanon=0,xcase=0,vmin=1,vtime=0 Option: sane Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Is equivalent to cread,ignbrk=0,brkint,inlcr=0,igncr=0,icrnl,ixoff=0,iuclc=0,-ixany=0,imaxbel,opost,olcuc=0,ocrnl=0,onlcr,onocr=0,onlret=0,ofill=0,ofdel=0,nl0,cr0,tab0,bs0,vt0,ff0,isig,icanon,iexten,echo,echoe,echok,echonl=0,noflsh=0,xcase=0,tostop=0,echoprt=0,echoctl,echoke ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TERMIOS input mode flags Option: ignbrk Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the IGNBRK flag of the terminal driver. Option: brkint Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the BRKINT flag of the terminal driver. Option: ignpar Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the IGNPAR flag of the terminal driver. Option: parmrk Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the PARMRK flag of the terminal driver. Option: inpck Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the INPCK flag of the terminal driver. Enables input parity checking. Option: istrip Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ISTRIP flag of the terminal driver. Strips off the eighth bit. Option: inlcr Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the INLCR flag of the terminal driver. Translates NL to CR on input. Option: igncr Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the IGNCR flag of the terminal driver. Ignores CR character on input. Option: icrnl Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ICRNL flag of the terminal driver. Translates CR to NL on input. This option is ignored when IGNCR is set. Option: iuclc Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the IUCLC flag of the terminal driver. Changes characters in input from uppercase to lowercase. Option: ixon Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the IXON flag of the terminal driver. Enables XON/XOFF flow control on output (?). Option: ixany Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the IXANY flag of the terminal driver. Enables any character to restart output. Option: ixoff Aliases: tandem Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the IXOFF flag of the terminal driver. Enables XON/XOFF flow control on input. Option: imaxbel Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the IMAXBEL flag of the terminal driver. Rings the bell when the input queue is full. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TERMIOS output mode flags Option: opost Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the OPOST flag of the terminal driver. Option: olcuc Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the OLCUC flag of the terminal driver. Option: onlcr Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ONLCR flag of the terminal driver. Option: ocrnl Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the OCRNL flag of the terminal driver. Option: onocr Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ONOCR flag of the terminal driver. Option: onlret Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ONLRET flag of the terminal driver. Option: ofill Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the OFILL flag of the terminal driver. Option: ofdel Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the OFDEL flag of the terminal driver. Option: nldly Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the NLDLY flag of the terminal driver. 0 sets the value to NL0, and 1 to NL1. See nl0, nl1. Option: nl0 Type: CONST (const bool, always sets 0) Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the field NLDLY to the value NL0. Option: nl1 Type: CONST (const bool, always sets 1) Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the field NLDLY to the value NL1. Option: crdly=value Type: UINT (0..3) Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the field CRDLY to the given value. See cr0, cr1, cr2, cr3. Option: cr0 Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the CRDLY field to the value CR0. See crdly. Option: cr1 Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the CRDLY field to the value CR1. See crdly. Option: cr2 Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the CRDLY field to the value CR2. See crdly. Option: cr3 Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the CRDLY field to the value CR3. See crdly. Option: tab0 Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the horizontal tab delay mask to TAB0. See tabdly. Option: tab1 Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the horizontal tab delay mask to TAB1. See tabdly. Option: tab2 Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the horizontal tab delay mask to TAB2. See tabdly. Option: tab3 Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the horizontal tab delay mask to TAB3. See tabdly. Option: tabdly=value Type: UINT (0..3) Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the field TABDLY to the given value. See tab0, tab1, tab2, and tab3. Option: xtabs Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the horizontal tab delay mask to XTABS. Option: bs0 Type: CONST (0) Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the field BSDLY to the value BS0 Option: bs1 Type: CONST (1) Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the field BSDLY to the value BS1 Option: bsdly Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the BSDLY flag of the terminal driver. 0 sets the value to BS0, and 1 to BS1. See bs0, bs1. Option: vt0 Type: CONST (0) Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the field VTDLY to the value VT0 Option: vt1 Type: CONST (1) Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the field VTDLY to the value VT1 Option: vtdly Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the VTDLY flag of the terminal driver. 0 sets the value to VT0, and 1 to VT1. See vt0, vt1. Option: ff0 Type: CONST (0) Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the field FFDLY to the value FF0 See ffdly. Option: ff1 Type: CONST (1) Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the field FFDLY to the value FF1 See ffdly. Option: ffdly Type: BOOL (0..1) Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the FFDLY flag of the terminal driver. 0 sets the value to FF0, and 1 to FF1. See ff0, ff1. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TERMIOS control mode flags Option: cs5 Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the field CSIZE to the value CS5 Option: cs6 Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the field CSIZE to the value CS6 Option: cs7 Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the field CSIZE to the value CS7 Option: cs8 Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the field CSIZE to the value CS8 Option: csize Type: UINT (0..3) Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the field CSIZE. 0..CS5, 1..CS6, 2..CS7, 3..CS8 Option: cstopb Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the flag CSTOPB. Option: cread Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the value of the CREAD flag. Option: parenb Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the PARENB flag of the terminal driver. Option: parodd Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the PARODD flag of the terminal driver. Option: hupcl Aliases: hup Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the HUPCL flag of the terminal driver. Option: clocal Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the CLOCAL flag of the terminal driver. Option: crtscts Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux, SunOS Sets the CRTSCTS flag of the terminal driver. Option: b0 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b50 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b75 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b110 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b134 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b150 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b200 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b300 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b600 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b900 (HP-UX) Option: b1200 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b1800 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b2400 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b3600 (HP-UX) Option: b4800 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b7200 (HP-UX) Option: b9600 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b19200 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b38400 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b57600 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b115200 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b230400 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b460800 (HP-UX, Linux, SunOS) Option: b500000 (Linux) Option: b576000 (Linux) Option: b921600 (Linux) Option: b1000000 (Linux) Option: b1152000 (Linux) Option: b1500000 (Linux) Option: b2000000 (Linux) Option: b2500000 (Linux) Option: b3000000 (Linux) Option: b3500000 (Linux) Option: b4000000 (Linux) Type: CONST Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Sets the baud rate to the implied value. b0 "hangs up" the connection. Option: ispeed Type: UINT Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux Sets the input baud rate to the specified value. This works on systems where struct termios has a special c_ispeed field. Option: ospeed Type: UINT Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux Sets the input baud rate to the specified value. This works on systems where struct termios has a special c_ospeed field. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TERMIOS local mode flags Option: isig Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ISIG flag of the terminal driver. Option: icanon Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ICANON flag of the terminal driver. Option: xcase Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: HP-UX, Linux, SunOS Sets the XCASE flag of the terminal driver. Option: echo Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ECHO flag of the terminal driver. Option: echoe Aliases: crterase Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ECHOE flag of the terminal driver. Option: echok Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ECHOK flag of the terminal driver. Option: echonl Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ECHONL flag of the terminal driver. Option: echoctl Aliases: ctlecho Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ECHOCTL flag of the terminal driver. Option: echoprt Aliases: prterase Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ECHOPRT flag of the terminal driver. Option: echoke Aliases: crtkill Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the ECHOKE flag of the terminal driver. Option: flusho Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the FLUSHO flag of the terminal driver. Option: noflsh Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the NOFLSH flag of the terminal driver. Option: tostop Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the TOSTOP flag of the terminal driver. Option: pendin Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the PENDIN flag of the terminal driver. Option: iexten Type: BOOL Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the IEXTEN flag of the terminal driver. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TERMIOS options for functional characters Option: vintr=value Aliases: intr=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: tested Sets the value for the VINTR character that interrupts the current process. On UNIX systems the preset value usually is 3 (^C). Option: vquit=value Aliases: quit=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: tested Sets the value for the VQUIT character that quits the current process. On my Linux 2.2 system the preset value is 0x1c (^\). Option: verase=value Aliases: erase=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: tested Sets the value for the VERASE character that erases the last character. On many UNIX systems the preset value is 0x7f. Option: vkill=value Aliases: kill=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: tested Sets the value for the VKILL character that kills (erases) the current line. On my Linux 2.2 system systems the preset value is 0x15 (^U). Option: veof=value Aliases: eof=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: tested Sets the value for the VEOF character that kills indicate end of file. On most UNIX systems the preset value is 0x04 (^D). Option: vtime=value Aliases: time=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: not tested Sets the value of VTIME. See "man 1 stty" / time. On my Linux 2.2 system the preset value is 0. Option: vmin=value Aliases: min=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: not tested Sets the value of VMIN. See "man 1 stty" / time. On my Linux 2.2 system the preset value is 1. Option: vswtc=value Aliases: swtc=value, swtch=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: Linux Status: not tested Sets the value of VSWTC. "Switches to a different shell layer". On my Linux 2.2 system the preset value is 0. Option: vstart=value Aliases: start=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: tested Sets the value for the VSTART character that resumes data flow after a stop. Usually the preset value is 0x11 (^Q). Option: vstop=value Aliases: stop=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: tested Sets the value for the VSTOP character that stops output. Usually the preset value is 0x13 (^S) Option: vsusp=value Aliases: susp=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: tested Sets the value for the VSUSP character that suspends the current foreground process and reactivates the shell. Usually the preset value is 0x1a (^Z) Option: vdsusp=value Aliases: dsusp=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: FreeBSD, HP-UX, SunOS Status: tested Sets the value for the VDSUSP character that suspends the current foreground process and reactivates the shell. Option: veol=value Aliases: eol=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: tested with awkward results Sets the value for the VEOL character that should indicate end of line. Not clear what differentiates it from the return key; xterm window put "xterm" into the input buffer. On my Linux 2.2 system the preset value is 0 (disabled) Option: vreprint=value Aliases: reprint=value, rprnt=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux, SunOS Status: not tested Sets the value for the VREPRINT character that should reprint the current line. On my Linux 2.2 system the preset value is 0x12 (^R). Nevertheless, bash enters backward search mode. Option: vdiscard=value Aliases: discard=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: FreeBSD, Linux, SunOS Status: not tested Sets the value for the VDISCARD character. On my Linux 2.2 system the preset value is 0x0f (^O) Option: vwerase=value Aliases: werase=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: tested Sets the value for the VWERASE character that erases the last word. On my Linux 2.2 system the preset value is 0x17 (^W) Option: vlnext=value Aliases: lnext=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: tested Sets the value for the VLNEXT character that lets the next input character raw (not interpreted). On my Linux 2.2 system the preset value is 0x16 (^V) Option: veol2=value Aliases: eol2=value Type: BYTE Option group: TERMIOS Phase: FD Platforms: all Status: not tested Sets the value for the VEOL2 character. On my Linux 2.2 system the preset value is 0 (disabled). =============================================================================== READLINE options Option: history-file=filename Aliases: history=filename Type: STRING Option group: READLINE Phase: LATE Platforms: (depends on libreadline installation) Without this option, the readline address uses only a per process history list. With this option, socat tries to read history lines during initialization from the given file, and on termination writes the old and new lines to the file. NOTE: currently, no mechanism is implemented for limiting the length of the history file. NOTE: filename must be a valid relativ or absolute path; "~" is not supported! Option: noprompt Type: BOOL Option group: READLINE Phase: LATE Platforms: all Since version 1.3.3, socat per default tries to determine a prompt - that is then passed to the readline call - by remembering the last incomplete line of the output. With this option, socat does not pass a prompt to the readline call, so it might set the cursor to the first column of the terminal. Option: noecho Type: STRING Option group: READLINE Phase: LATE Platforms: all Specifies a regular pattern for a prompt that prevents the following input line from being displayed on the screen and from being added to the history. The prompt is defined as the text that was output to the readline address after the lastest newline character and before an input character was typed. The pattern is a regular expression, e.g. "^[Pp]assword:.*$" or "([Uu]ser:|[Pp]assword:)". See regex(7) for details. Option: prompt Type: STRING Option group: READLINE Phase: LATE Platforms: all Passes the string as prompt to the readline function. readline prints this prompt when stepping through the history. If this string matches a constant prompt issued by an interactive program on the other socat address, consistent look and feel can be archieved. =============================================================================== OPENSSL options Option: openssl-cipherlist=string Aliases: cipherlist=string, ciphers=string, cipher=string Type: STRING Option group: OPENSSL Phase: SPEC Platforms: (depends on openssl installation) Selects the list of ciphers that may be used for the connection. See the man page ciphers(1), section CIPHER LIST FORMAT, for detailed information about syntax, values, and default of the cipherlist string. Several cipher strings may be given, separated by ':'. Some simple cipher strings: 3DES Uses a cipher suite with triple DES. MD5 Uses a cipher suite with MD5. aNULL Uses a cipher suite without authentication. NULL Does not use encryption. HIGH Uses a cipher suite with "high" encryption. Note that the peer must support the selected property, or the negotiation will fail. Option: openssl-method=string Aliases: method=string Type: STRING Option group: OPENSSL Phase: SPEC Platforms: (depends on openssl installation) Sets the protocol version to be used. Valid strings (not case sensitive) are: SSLv2 Select SSL protocol version 2. SSLv3 Select SSL protocol version 3. SSLv23 Select SSL protocol version 2 or 3. This is the default when this option is not provided. TLSv1 Select TLS protocol version 1. Option: openssl-verify=bool Aliases: verify=bool Type: BOOL Option group: OPENSSL Phase: SPEC Platforms: (depends on openssl installation) Controls check of the peer's certificate. Default is 1 (true). Disabling verify might open your socket for everyone! Option: openssl-certificate=file Aliases: cert=file Type: FILENAME Option group: OPENSSL Phase: SPEC Platforms: (depends on openssl installation) Specifies the file with the certificate. The certificate must be in OpenSSL format (*.pem). With openssl-listen, this option is strongly recommended: except with cipher aNULL, "no shared ciphers" error might occur when no certificate is given. Option: openssl-key=file Aliases: key Type: FILENAME Option group: OPENSSL Phase: SPEC Platforms: (depends on openssl installation) Specifies the file with the private key. The private key may be in this file or in the file given with the ref(cert) option. The party that has to proof that it is the owner of a certificate needs the private key. Option: openssl-cafile=file Aliases: cafile Type: FILENAME Option group: OPENSSL Phase: SPEC Platforms: (depends on openssl installation) Specifies the file with the trusted (root) authority certificates. The file must be in PEM format and should contain one or more certificates. Option: openssl-capath=directory Aliases: capath Type: FILENAME Option group: OPENSSL Phase: SPEC Platforms: (depends on openssl installation) Specify the directory with the trusted (root) certificates. The directory must contain certificates in PEM format and their hashes (see OpenSSL documentation) Option: openssl-egd=file Aliases: egd Type: FILENAME Option group: OPENSSL Phase: SPEC Platforms: (depends on openssl installation) On some systems, openssl requires an explicit source of random data. Specify the socket name where an entropy gathering daemon like egd provides random data, e.g. /dev/egd-pool. Option: openssl-pseudo Aliases: pseudo Type: BOOL Option group: OPENSSL Phase: SPEC Platforms: (depends on openssl installation) On systems where openssl cannot find an entropy source and where no entropy gathering daemon can be utilized, this option activates a mechanism for providing pseudo entropy. This is archieved by taking the current time in microseconds for feeding the libc pseudo random number generator with an initial value. openssl is then feeded with output from random calls. NOTE:This mechanism is not sufficient for generation of secure keys! Option: openssl-fips Aliases: fips Type: BOOL Option group: BOOL Phase: SPEC Platforms: (depends on OpenSSL installation and FIPS implementation) Enables FIPS mode if compiled in. For info about the FIPS encryption implementation standard see http://oss-institute.org/fips-faq.html. This mode might require that the involved certificates are generated with a FIPS enabled version of openssl. Setting or clearing this option on one socat address affects all OpenSSL addresses of this process. Option: openssl-compress Aliases: compress Type: STRING Option group: OPENSSL Phase: SPEC Platforms: (depends on openssl installation) Enable or disable the use of compression for a connection. Setting this to "none" disables compression, setting it to "auto" lets OpenSSL choose the best available algorithm supported by both parties. The default is to not touch any compression-related settings. NOTE: Requires OpenSSL 0.9.8 or higher. NOTE: Disabling compression with OpenSSL 0.9.8 affects all new connections in the same process. =============================================================================== Application specific address options Option: ignoreeof Aliases: ignoreof Type: BOOL Option group: APPL Phase: LATE Platforms: all This option has to be supported by the application. For socat it means that an EOF condition on this data source does not trigger termination procedures, but instead the read/write loop waits for one second and then tries to read more input data. This behaviour emulates "tail -f" and might not be useful for all kinds of input devices, but regular files and /dev/null are good candidates. Termination of socat then can only occur by EOF condition of the other input device, an error, or by external events. Option: cr Type: CONST Option group: APPL Phase: LATE Platforms: all The appropriate data endpoint uses CR ('\r', 0x0d) as line terminator character. Convert data to and from this stream appropriately. This is useful for, e.g., modems. Option: crnl Aliases: crlf Type: CONST Option group: APPL Phase: LATE Platforms: all The appropriate data endpoint uses CR+LF ("\r\n", 0x0d0a ) as line terminator string. Convert data to and from this stream appropriately. This is useful for, e.g., TCP protocols like SMTP and FTP. Option: readbytes=num Aliases: bytes Type: SIZE_T Option group: APPL Phase: LATE Platforms: all socat reads only so many bytes from this address (the address provides only so many bytes for transfer and pretends to be at EOF afterwards). Option: lockfile=filename Type: FILENAME Option group: APPL Phase: INIT Platforms: all If lockfile exists, exits with error. If lockfile does not exist, creates it and continues; removes lockfile on exit. Option: waitlock=filename Type: FILENAME Option group: APPL Phase: INIT Platforms: all If lockfile exists, waits until it disappears. When lockfile does not exist, creates it and continues; removes lockfile on exit. =============================================================================== RETRY options Option: retry= Type: UINT Option group: RETRY Phase: INIT Platforms: all Number of retries before the connection or listen attempt is aborted. Default is 0, which means just one attempt. Option: interval= Type: TIMESPEC Option group: RETRY Phase: INIT Platforms: all Time between consecutive attempts (seconds). Default is 1 second. Option: forever Type: BOOL Option group: RETRY Phase: INIT Platforms: all Performs an unlimited number of retry attempts. =============================================================================== EXT2 options Option: ext2-secrm= Aliases: secrm= Type: BOOL Option group: REG Phase: FD Platforms: Linux Sets the secrm file attribute on the file. Option: ext2-unrm= Aliases: unrm= Type: BOOL Option group: REG Phase: FD Platforms: Linux Sets the unrm file attribute on the file. Option: ext2-compr= Aliases: compr= Type: BOOL Option group: REG Phase: FD Platforms: Linux Sets the compr file attribute on the file. Option: ext2-sync= Type: BOOL Option group: REG Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the sync file attribute on the file. Option: ext2-immutable= Aliases: immutable= Type: BOOL Option group: REG Phase: FD Platforms: Linux Sets the immutable file attribute on the file. Option: ext2-append= Type: BOOL Option group: REG Phase: FD Platforms: all Sets the append file attribute on the file. Option: ext2-nodump= Aliases: nodump= Type: BOOL Option group: REG Phase: FD Platforms: Linux Sets the nodump file attribute on the file. Option: ext2-noatime= Type: BOOL Option group: REG Phase: FD Platforms: Linux Sets the noatime file attribute on the file. Option: ext2-journal-data= Aliases: journal-data= Type: BOOL Option group: REG Phase: FD Platforms: Linux Sets the journal-data file attribute on the file. Option: ext2-notail= Aliases: notail= Type: BOOL Option group: REG Phase: FD Platforms: none Sets the notail file attribute on the file. Option: ext2-dirsync= Aliases: dirsync= Type: BOOL Option group: REG Phase: FD Platforms: Linux Sets the dirsync file attribute on the file. Option: ext2-topdir= Aliases: topdir= Type: BOOL Option group: REG Phase: FD Platforms: Linux Sets the topdir file attribute on the file. =============================================================================== Appendix: generating a sandbox (chroot environment) While it is possible to generate a sandbox almost anywhere in the file system, I recommend to use a file system that has been mounted with restrictions, especially nosuid and maybe nodev, or even ro. You may mount a dedicated file system for the sandbox, so it gets a little harder for the guests to determine for sure if they are within a sandbox when using "ls -id /" The following desribes typical steps for generating a sandbox. Depending on your operating system, application, and security requirements, your mileage may vary. With the below steps, you will be able to run some check programs to play around with the sandbox. I Installation 1) Create a sandbox group - but give it and all following "sandbox" ids a more cryptic name! 2) Create a sandbox user, only in sandbox group. If this user must never login, give it a useless shell like /bin/false 3) Check the sandbox home directory (e.g. /home/sandbox) and save and remove all .profile, public_html/ etc. 4) Optionally mount a new file system over the new home directory 5) Generate subdirectories bin, lib, etc, usr, usr/bin, usr/lib. Set their permissions and ownership equal to the original directories (or use only root.root) 6) Generate subdirectory home/sandbox (or similarly; like sandbox home) 7) Generate etc/passwd with users sandbox and root, but do not store original password hashes there! 8) Generate etc/group with only groups sandbox and root (or system on AIX) 9) Copy test programs and utilities to bin, e.g. su, id, ls, mount, strace (but without SUID/SGID) 10) Copy the required shared libraries and the shared library loader to their directories. On Linux, e.g. /lib/ld-linux.so.2, /lib/libnss_compat.so.2 Note: it is often difficult to find out what shared libraries are (still) not installed in the sandbox. The programs invoked in the sandbox typically do not give useful error messages. If chroot's exec call gives an error like "no such file or directory", and you do not know if it even found the program itself, then remove the test programs execute permission; the error message should change to "execute permission denied" or so. Redo the execute permissions and look for the shared libraries... List required libraries of a program: Linux: ldd AIX: xdb map 11) For testing purposes, install id, ls, su, mount, strace, and maybe sh in the sandbox. Test it. II Customization 12) Copy your applications, configuration files, and data to the appropriate directories within the sandbox. Test function of the application in the sandbox, and add missing files and libraries. If an application program gets killed immediately after start, it might miss a shared library. III Cleanup, check 13) Implement your own tricks how to improve security of the sandbox 14) Remove test programs like bin/sh, id, ls, mount, strace =============================================================================== socket types, modes and their security features: IP.v4.TCP.connect IP.v4.TCP.listen range tcpwrap srcport lowport IP.v4.UDP.connect IP.v4.UDP.listen range tcpwrap srcport lowport IP.v4.UDP.sendto IP.v4.UDP.recvfrom range tcpwrap srcport lowport IP.v4.UDP.recv range tcpwrap srcport lowport IP.v4.raw.sendto IP.v4.raw.recvfrom range tcpwrap IP.v4.raw.recv range tcpwrap IP.v6.TCP.connect IP.v6.TCP.listen range tcpwrap srcport lowport IP.v6.UDP.connect IP.v6.UDP.listen range tcpwrap srcport lowport IP.v6.UDP.sendto IP.v6.UDP.recvfrom range tcpwrap srcport lowport IP.v6.UDP.recv range tcpwrap srcport lowport IP.v6.raw.sendto IP.v6.raw.recvfrom range tcpwrap IP.v6.raw.recv srcport lowport UNIX.stream.connect UNIX.stream.listen UNIX.dgram.sendto UNIX.dgram.recvfrom UNIX.dgram.recv OPENSSL.connect OPENSSL.TCP4.listen range tcpwrap srcport lowport OPENSSL.TCP6.listen range tcpwrap srcport lowport =============================================================================== Missing features and Caveats: . no support for SIGIO mechanism . no support for socket ancillary messages . Probably many ioctls not implemented due to missing documentation . only limited implementation of raw sockets and interfaces, . no support for high level sockets beyond UNIX, INET, and INET6 domains