NAME¶
upsset.conf - Configuration for Network UPS Tools upsset.cgi
DESCRIPTION¶
This file only does one job—it lets you convince
upsset.cgi(8) that
your system’s CGI directory is secure. The program will not run until
this file has been properly defined.
SECURITY REQUIREMENTS¶
upsset.cgi(8) allows you to try login name and password combinations.
There is no rate limiting, as the program shuts down between every request.
Such is the nature of CGI programs.
Normally, attackers would not be able to access your
upsd(8) server
directly as it would be protected by the LISTEN directives in your
upsd.conf(5) file, tcp-wrappers (if available when NUT was built), and
hopefully local firewall settings in your OS.
upsset runs on your web server, so upsd will see it as a connection from
a host on an internal network. It doesn’t know that the connection is
actually coming from someone on the outside. This is why you must secure it.
On Apache, you can use the .htaccess file or put the directives in your
httpd.conf. It looks something like this, assuming the .htaccess method:
<Files upsset.cgi>
deny from all
allow from your.network.addresses
</Files>
You will probably have to set "AllowOverride Limit" for this directory
in your server-level configuration file as well.
If this doesn’t make sense, then stop reading and leave this program
alone. It’s not something you absolutely need to have anyway.
Assuming you have all this done, and it actually works (test it!), then you may
add the following directive to this file:
I_HAVE_SECURED_MY_CGI_DIRECTORY
If you lie to the program and someone beats on your upsd through your web
server, don’t blame me.
SEE ALSO¶
upsset.cgi(8)
Internet resources:¶
The NUT (Network UPS Tools) home page:
http://www.networkupstools.org/