sredird: RFC 2217 compliant serial port redirector Version 2.2.0, 09 July 2003 Copyright (C) 1999-2003 InfoTecna s.r.l. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York 1 - Disclaimer This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. To contact the authors: Denis Sbragion InfoTecna Tel, Fax: +39 0362 805396 URL: http://www.infotecna.it E-Mail: d.sbragion@infotecna.it Jeffrey Altman Columbia University URL: http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ E-mail: kermit-support@columbia.edu 2 - Introduction Sredird is a serial port redirector that is compliant with the RFC 2217 "Telnet Com Port Control Option" protocol. This protocol lets you share a serial port through the network. RFC 2217 was orginally implemented in Cisco Terminal Servers in IOS version 11.x. RFC 2217 clients include: . C-Kermit 8.0 for Unix,VMS,QNX,... . DialOut/IP V2, a commercial Windows 95/98/NT client. Information on RFC 2217 and the Telnet Protocol is available at www.ietf.org. 3 - Compilation Just compile the sredird.c file with your favorite compiler and your favorite optimizations options. Under Linux a line like: gcc -O3 -m486 -pipe -fomit-frame-pointer should do the job. Rename the output (usually a.out) to sredird. You can also try the supplied Makefile. Check it for compiler option before running the make command. 4 - Command line parameters Sredird takes three mandatory parameters and two optional parameters, one at the beginning and one at the end of the command line. The mandatory parameters are: Log level: 0 to 7, 0 being no log and 7 being debug log. Sredird uses the standard syslog facility for logging. Look at the syslog(3) man page for further information on the syslog facility and log levels. Device: the device complete path. Something like /dev/ttyS0 or /dev/modem. Lock file: the file to use for inter-application locking. This must match the one used by other applications, usually something like /var/lock/LCK..ttyS0 or /var/lock/LCK..modem for the devices considered above. Sredird supports only HDB style (i.e. ASCII) file locking. The optional parameters are: - At the beginning of the command line: A -i option enables compatibility with the Cisco IOS wich has a small bug in the handling of the inbound flow control. - At the end of the command line: Poll interval: sredird checks for line state changes (DSR/CTS/DCD/RNG) on every single char sent on the serial line. To prevent losing state change when there's no traffic on the serial port, sredird also polls the line state when there's no traffic on the line for more than the poll interval. The value is in milliseconds and the default is 100 milliseconds. Setting it to 0 disables the polling feature. This is also the maximum time data is left in the output buffer before sending it, even if the buffer isn't completely full, so the polling interval globally sets the maximum latency of any sredird action. 5 - Installation Put the executable in a suitable directory (/usr/sbin or /usr/local/sbin). Sredird is designed to run under inetd control. The line in the inetd configuration file (usually /etc/inetd.conf) should look like this: sredir stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /usr/sbin/sredird -i 5 /dev/modem /var/lock/LCK..modem Of course, "sredir" should be defined in the services file (usually /etc/services, usual values start at port 7000) and "/dev/modem" should be substituted by the appropriate device. The lock and the device name must match for correct interlocking with other programs. The tcpd program is the usual tcp wrapper that's not needed for correct operation but is useful for security purposes. Don't forget to send a SIGHUP to the inetd daemon in order to force reload of the configuration file. The initial -i paramater is optional and enables compatibility with the Cisco IOS. 6 - Bugs Patches, bug reports, comments, improvements and anything else are welcome. 7 - Outstanding issues The RFC 2217 protocol is a rather complete protocol that provides a lot of features. Most of them are implemented in sredird but some seldom used options are missing: . does not properly check implement BREAK handling. Need to figure out how to turn a BREAK on and then off based upon receipt of COM-PORT Subnegotiations . does not properly use select to handle input, output and errors on all devices. . Lack of login processing . Lack of Telnet START_TLS to protect the data stream . Lack of Telnet AUTHENTICATION . LineState processing is not implemented . The code probably won't compile on most versions of Unix due to the highly platform dependent nature of the serial apis. The program has been tested only under Linux 2.0.36, gcc 2.7.2.1, libc5 and RedHat 5.2/7.1 but should work on any POSIX compliant operating system. . Use of polling to notify change on the serial control lines is not desireable. Anyone know of an event driven mechanism for discovering modem and line signal changes? . Better documentation and a man page would be useful. 8 - Implementation Notes . Setting the port to 1.5 stop bits isn't supported. When requested, 1 stop bit is set and returned as the response value. . Setting the parity to mark or space isn't supported. When requested, Parity is set to None and returned as the response value. . DTR, DSR and DCD flow control isn't supported. When requested, flow control is disabled and "no flow control" is returned as the response value. . RFC 2217 supports the ability for the Input and Output Parity and Flow control settings to be independent of each other. This is not supported by the majority of serial port UARTs available on the market and is not supported by sredird. Sredird ignores all requests to set the Input Parity and Flow control. The Output values are used for both input and output as specified in the RFC. . DialOut/IP V2 version 2.0.0 has a known bug that prevent it from running at 115200 baud. If you ask for 115200 baud it sets the serial line at 9600 baud. It also has some other small bugs that cause it to crash or fail under some rare circumstances. Use Version 2.0.2 or higher to avoid this problem. 9 - Credits Thanks to David Yon and Mike Krueger of Tactical Software for their help in the sredird developing process. Thanks also to Tactical Software for its wonderful DialOut/IP package and for choosing an open standard for it. Tactical Software provides also some other useful communication tools and an RFC 2217 compliant server for the Windows environment. Browse http://www.tacticalsoftware.com for more information. Nordic Messaging Tech. AB provides a complete commercial RFC 2217 compliant server for various operating systems including Linux. See http://www.nordicmessaging.com for more information. Implementation of the Telnet State Machines, corrections to RFC 2217, testing against various clients and comparison to hardware implementations in Cisco IOS software was performed by the Kermit Project at Columbia University. The Kermit Project provides the only known client implementation of RFC 2217 for Unix in its C-Kermit and Kermit 95 Telnet clients. See http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ for further details. Thanks to Mario Viara for fixing some long lasting small bugs. Thanks to Russell Coker for providing a man page, a better makefile and some other small patches. 10 - Commercial support InfoTecna (http://www.infotecna.it) is a commercial company and provides commercial support for the sredird package. Sorry, but we really have no time to provide free support apart for bug correction. The Kermit Project provides support for C-Kermit and will provide support for sredird when used in conjunction with Kermit software. 11 - History 01 June 1999 - Version 1.0.0: First stable release. 02 June 1999 - Version 1.0.1: Corrected a bug on the stop size detection function. Corrections and exstensions to the documentation. Added credits to Tactical Software and Nordic Messaging. 07 June 1999 - Version 1.1.0: Added errno.h to the list of the include files. Thanks to Federico Bianchi (f.bianchi@arte.unipi.it) for this. Added an internal buffering scheme, along with handling of the RFC 2217 FLOWCONTROL-SUSPEND and FLOWCONTROL-RESUME, to reduce network latency caused by TCP and socket buffering. Added also some socket options to further reduce network latency. Fixed a bug on the polling feature. 09 June 1999 - Version 1.1.3: Added an output buffer scheme that provides both low latency, depending on the polling interval, and reasonable cpu consumption without limiting the global throughput. Some other minor bug fixing. 11 June 1999 - Version 1.1.4: Fixed compilation under SCO OpenServer and SCO like distributions (Red Hat). Thanks to Anthony Veale (aveale@hotmail.com) and Harri Vartiainen (harriv@sci.fi) for reporting the problem and testing the fixed version. Fixed some other minor bugs. 18 June 1999 - Version 1.1.5: SCO support abandoned. Providing SCO support would require huge changes to the code. Minor cosmetic and documentation changes. 04 September 1999 - Version 1.1.6: Corrected an important bug where bytes directed to the socket were sent to the modem, then read back through the modem device and finally sent to the socket macking things apparently working. Many thanks to Ayman Akt (ayman@uniware.com.au) from UniWare (www.uniware.com.au) for discovering this nasty bug. 20 September 1999 - Version 1.1.7: Improved handling of the clocal tty flag. 09 November 2000 - Version 1.1.8: Corrected a bug in the telnet option negotiation code. Many options were always incorrectly negotiated as TN_TRANSMIT_BINARY. Thanks to David Yon (yon@rfdsoftware.com) for his bug report. Changed the default speed to 9600 baud instead of 38400 when an unknown baud rate is asked by the client. Furthermore now SRedird try to serve anyway when the client refuse the Com Port Control option. Added a simple makefile. Thanks to Kevin Bertram (kevin@cate.com.au) for suggesting this improvements and supplying the makefile. Changed e-mail and web references everywere. 14 January 2002 - Version 2.0.0, fixes the following bugs: . Cisco IOS returns 0 to the client when INBOUND flow control is SET but not supported seperately from OUTBOUND. . Telnet negotiations are used alter the states of both the client and the server. sredird did not implement a Telnet state machine as required by RFC 854. Version 2.0 adds support for a state machine. . Version 1.1.8 corrected the negotiation of Telnet Binary mode (RFC 856). However, it never implemented it. This is now corrected. . Telnet DO ECHO should not be refused. The modem handles the echoing if necessary. . RFC 2217 allows the server (sredird) to give control over a serial port to the client (server in DO mode). It also allows the client to give control over a serial port to the server (server in WILL mode). sredird required both modes even though sredird only offers control over a serial port. . sredird did not properly implement flow control. Buffering was only implemented when writing data to the serial port. Data was not buffered when reading data from the serial port. This could have resulted in inadvertent blocking. Proper select() driven reads and writes are now implemented. 14 November 2002 - Version 2.1.0: . GetPortFlowControl should return 1 to indicate NO FLOW CONTROL instead of 0. . The Cisco IOS hack should become activated only if set by command- line option [-i]. . Changed the order of checks in the EscWriteChar function for slightly better performance 09 July 2003 - Versione 2.2.0 . Applied the patch provided by Marco Viaria . Applied the patch supplied by Russell Coker -- Denis Sbragion InfoTecna Tel, Fax: +39 0362 805396 URL: http://www.infotecna.it E-Mail: d.sbragion@infotecna.it Jeffrey Altman Columbia University URL: http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ E-mail: kermit-support@columbia.edu