.\" Copyright (c) 1980 Regents of the University of California. .\" All rights reserved. The Berkeley software License Agreement .\" specifies the terms and conditions for redistribution. .\" .\" @(#)fingerd.8c 6.1 (Berkeley) 5/23/86 .\" .TH FINGERD 8 "May 23, 1986" .UC 6 .SH NAME fingerd, in.fingerd \- remote user information server .SH SYNOPSIS .B "finger stream tcp nowait nobody /usr/sbin/in.fingerd in.fingerd" .br .B "tcpd finger /usr/sbin/in.fingerd in.fingerd" .SH DESCRIPTION .B Fingerd is a simple protocol based on RFC742 that provides an interface to the Name and Finger programs at several network sites. The program is supposed to return a friendly, human-oriented status report on either the system at the moment or a particular person in depth. There is no required format and the protocol consists mostly of specifying a single ``command line''. .PP .B Fingerd listens for TCP requests at port 79. Once connected it reads a single command line terminated by a which is passed to .BR finger (1). .B Fingerd closes its connections as soon as the output is finished. .PP If the line is null (i.e. just a is sent) then .B finger returns a ``default'' report that lists all people logged into the system at that moment. .PP If a user name is specified (e.g. eric) then the response lists more extended information for only that particular user, whether logged in or not. Allowable ``names'' in the command line include both ``login names'' and ``user names''. If a name is ambiguous, all possible derivations are returned. .SH SEE ALSO .BR finger (1). .SH BUGS Connecting directly to the server from a TIP or an equally narrow-minded TELNET-protocol user program can result in meaningless attempts at option negotiation being sent to the server, which will foul up the command line interpretation. .B Fingerd should be taught to filter out IAC's and perhaps even respond negatively (IAC WON'T) to all option commands received.