CONTROL.CTL(5) InterNetNews Documentation CONTROL.CTL(5)NAMEcontrol.ctl - Specify handling of Usenet control messages
DESCRIPTIONcontrol.ctl in pathetc is used to determine what action is taken when a
control message is received. It is read by controlchan, which is nor‐
mally invoked as a channel program by innd. When control.ctl is modi‐
fied, controlchan notices this automatically and reloads it.
Blank lines and lines beginning with a number sign ("#") are ignored.
All other lines should consist of four fields separated by colons:
<type>:<from>:<newsgroups>:<action>
The first field, <type>, is the type of control message for which this
line is valid. It should either be the name of a control message or
the word "all" to indicate that it applies to all control messages.
The second field, <from>, is a shell-style pattern that matches the
e-mail address of the person posting the message (with the address
first converted to lowercase). The matching is done with rules equiva‐
lent to those of the shell's case statement; see sh(1) for more
details.
If the control message is a newgroup or rmgroup, the third field,
<newsgroups>, is a shell-style pattern matching the newsgroup affected
by the control message. If the control message is a checkgroups, the
third field is a shell-style pattern matching the newsgroups that
should be processed for checking. If the control message is of any
other type, the third field is ignored.
The fourth field, <action>, specifies what action to take with control
messages that match this line. The following actions are understood:
doit
The action requested by the control message should be performed.
In some cases, the control script will also send mail to the news
administrator (the argument to --with-news-master given at config‐
ure time, "usenet" by default), but if notification of the action
should always be sent, use "doit=mail" instead (see below).
doifarg
If the control message has an argument, this is equivalent to doit.
If it does not have an argument, this is equivalent to mail. This
is only useful for entries for sendsys control messages, allowing a
site to request its own newsfeeds entry by posting a "sendsys
mysite" control message, but not allowing the entire newsfeeds file
to be sent. This was intended to partially counter so-called
"sendsys bombs," where forged sendsys control messages were used to
mailbomb people.
Processing sendsys control messages is not recommended even with
this work-around unless they are authenticated in some fashion.
The risk of having news servers turned into anonymous mail bombing
services is too high.
doit=file
The action is performed as in doit, and additionally a log entry is
written to the specified log file file. If file is the word
"mail", the log entry is mailed to the news administrator instead.
An empty string is equivalent to /dev/null and says to log nothing.
If file starts with a slash, it is taken as the absolute filename
to use for the log file. Otherwise, the filename is formed by
prepending pathlog and a slash and appending ".log". In other
words, an action of "doit=newgroup" will log to pathlog/new‐
group.log.
drop
No action is taken and the message is ignored.
verify-*
If the action starts with the string "verify-", as in:
verify-news.announce.newgroups
then PGP verification of the control message will be done and the
user ID of the key of the authenticated signer will be checked
against the expected identity defined by the rest of the string
("news.announce.newgroups" in the above example. This verification
is done via pgpverify; see pgpverify(8) for more details.
If no logging is specified (with =file as mentioned below), notifi‐
cation of successful newgroup and rmgroup control messages and the
output of checkgroups messages will be mailed to the news adminis‐
trator.
verify-*=file
PGP verification is done as for the verify-* action described
above, and a log entry is written to the specified file as
described in doit=file above. (In the case of checkgroups mes‐
sages, this means that the shell script output of the checkgroups
message will be written to that file.)
log A one-line log message is sent to standard error. innd normally
directs this to pathlog/errlog.
log=file
A log entry is written to the specified log file, which is inter‐
preted as in doit=file described above.
mail
A mail message is sent to the news administrator.
Processing of a checkgroups message will never actually change the
active file (the list of groups carried by the server). The difference
between a doit or verify action and a mail action for a checkgroups
control message lies only in what e-mail is sent; doit or verify will
mail the news administrator a shell script to create, delete, or modify
newsgroups to match the checkgroups message, whereas mail will just
mail the entire message. In either case, the news administrator will
have to take action to implement the checkgroups message, and if that
mail is ignored, nothing will be changed.
Lines are matched in order and the last matching line in the file will
be used.
Use of the verify action for processing newgroup, rmgroup, and check‐
groups messages is STRONGLY recommended. Abuse of control messages is
rampant, and authentication via PGP signature is currently the only
reliable way to be sure that a control message comes from who it claims
to be from. Most major hierarchies are now issuing PGP-authenticated
control messages.
In order to use verify actions, the PGP key ring of the news user must
be populated with the PGP keys of the hierarchy maintainers whose con‐
trol messages you want to honor. For more details on PGP-authenticated
control messages and the URL for downloading the PGP keys of major
hierarchies, see pgpverify(8).
Control messages of type cancel are handled internally by innd and can‐
not be affected by any of the mechanisms described here.
EXAMPLE
With the following three lines in control.ctl:
newgroup:*:*:drop
newgroup:group-admin@isc.org:comp.*:verify-news.announce.newgroups
newgroup:kre@munnari.oz.au:aus.*:mail
a newgroup coming from "group-admin@isc.org" will be honored if it is
for a newsgroup in the comp.* hierarchy and if it has a valid signature
corresponding to the PGP key with a user ID of "news.announce.new‐
groups". If any newgroup claiming to be from "kre@munnari.oz.au" for a
newsgroup in the aus.* hierarchy is received, it too will be honored.
All other newgroup messages will be ignored.
WARNINGS
The third argument for a line affecting checkgroups does not affect
whether the line matches. It is only used after a matching line is
found, to filter out which newsgroups listed in the checkgroups will be
processed. This means that a line like:
checkgroups:*:*binaries*:drop
will cause all checkgroups control messages to be dropped unless they
match a line after this one in control.ctl, not just ignore newsgroups
containing "binaries" in the name. The general rule is to never use
"*" in the second field for a line matching checkgroups messages.
There is unfortunately no way to do what the author of a line like the
above probably intended to do (yet).
HISTORY
Written by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net> for InterNetNews. Rewritten
in POD by Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu>.
$Id: control.ctl.5,v 1.15 2002/12/03 05:31:09 vinocur Exp $
SEE ALSOcontrolchan(8), inn.conf(5), innd(8), newsfeeds(5), pgpverify(8),
sh(1).
INN 2.4.0 2002-12-03 CONTROL.CTL(5)