9.6. Using the TIS Internet Firewall Toolkit for Proxying
The free firewalls toolkit (TIS
FWTK), from Trusted Information Systems, includes a number of proxy
servers of various types. TIS FWTK also provides a number of other
tools for authentication and other purposes, which are discussed
where appropriate in other chapters of this book.
Appendix B, "Tools", provides information on how to get TIS FWTK.
Whereas SOCKS attempts to provide a single, general proxy, TIS FWTK
provides individual proxies for the most common Internet services (as
shown in Figure 9-5). The idea is that by using
small separate programs with a common configuration file, it can
provide intelligent proxies that are provably safe, while still
allowing central control. The result is an extremely flexible toolkit
and a rather large configuration file.
Figure 9-5. Using TIS FWTK for proxying
9.6.1. FTP Proxying with TIS FWTK
TIS FWTK provides FTP proxying either
with proxy-aware client programs or proxy-aware user procedures
(
ftp-gw). If you wish to use the same machine to
support proxied FTP and straight FTP (for example, allowing people on
the Internet to pick up files from the same machine that does
outbound proxying for your users), the toolkit will support it, but
you will have to use proxy-aware user procedures.
Using proxy-aware user procedures is the most common configuration
for TIS FWTK. The support for proxy-aware client programs is somewhat
half-hearted (for example, no proxy-aware clients or libraries are
provided). Because it's a dedicated FTP proxy, it provides
logging, denial, and extra user authentication of particular FTP
commands.
9.6.2. Telnet and rlogin Proxying with TIS FWTK
TIS FWTK Telnet
(
telnet-gw) and
rlogin
(
rlogin-gw) proxies support proxy-aware user
procedures only. Users connect via Telnet or
rlogin to the proxy host, and instead of getting
a "login" prompt for the proxy host, they are presented
with a prompt from the proxy program, allowing them to specify what
host to connect to (and whether to make an X connection if the
x-gw software is installed, as we describe in
Section 9.6.4, "Other TIS FWTK Proxies" that follows).
9.6.3. Generic Proxying with TIS FWTK
TIS FWTK
provides a purely generic proxy,
plug-gw, which
requires no modifications to clients, but supports a limited range of
protocols and uses. It examines the address it received a connection
from and the port the connection came in on, and it creates a
connection to another host on an appropriate port. You can't
specify which host it should connect to while making that connection;
it's determined by the incoming host. This makes
plug-gw inappropriate for services that are
employed by users, who rarely want to connect to the same host every
time. It provides logging but no other security enhancements, and
therefore needs to be used with caution even in situations where
it's appropriate (e.g., for NNTP connections).
9.6.4. Other TIS FWTK Proxies
TIS FWTK proxies HTTP and Gopher via the
http-gw program. This program supports either
proxy-aware clients or proxy-aware procedures. Most HTTP clients
support proxying; you just need to tell them where the proxy server
is. To use
http-gw with an HTTP client
that's not proxy-aware, you add
http://firewall/ in front of the URL. Using
it with a Gopher client that is not proxy-aware is slightly more
complex, since all the host and port information has to be moved into
the path specification.
x-gw is an X gateway.
It provides some minimal security by requiring confirmation from the
user before allowing a remote X client to connect. The X gateway is
started up by connecting to the Telnet or rlogin
proxy and typing "x", which displays a control
window.
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9.5. Using SOCKS for Proxying | | 9.7. Using Microsoft Proxy Server |