This is from the document gopher_anon:[customer_support.mail_archives.info-multinet]info-multinet.1993-03;1 X-ST-Status: N Return-path: Received: from sun2.nsfnet-relay.ac.uk ([128.86.8.45]) by TGV.COM via INTERNET ; Fri, 5 Mar 93 16:57:52 PST Via: uk.co.ggr; Fri, 5 Mar 1993 18:27:31 +0000 Received: from uk0x04.ggr.co.uk by uk0x08.ggr.co.uk; Fri, 5 Mar 93 13:38:37 GMT Received: from uk0x04.ggr.co.uk (uk0x04) by uk0x07.ggr.co.uk (5.59/imd231092) id AA17013; Fri, 5 Mar 93 13:33:44 GMT Received: by uk0x04.ggr.co.uk (4.1/imd231092) id AA08920; Fri, 5 Mar 93 13:35:01 GMT Date: Fri, 5 Mar 93 13:35:01 GMT From: Dr I M Dunkin Message-Id: <9303051335.AA08920@uk0x04.ggr.co.uk> To: info-multinet@tgv.com Subject: Socks appeal Is there any interest at TGV in the `Socks' package? For those not familiar with it, Socks is `an Internet socket service consisting of client library routines and a daemon which interact through a simple protocol to provide convenient and secure network connectivity through a firewall host'. To explain: Say you have a few systems on your local, private network. For security, you want to put a firewall system between them and the Wide World, and you want this firewall to provide proxy service for any of your accesses (eg telnet, ftp) to the Wide World: your local systems will not talk to the wide world _themselves_, but will talk instead to a proxy server on the firewall system, which will then do so on their behalf. This is a familar mechanism, provided, for example, as part of DEC's SEAL firewall package. Socks gives an alternative, _generic_ mechanism for this. You run the sockd daemon on your firewall host and it serves as a generic proxy server for any clients (eg telnet, ftp) on your local hosts that have been linked with the socks client library. It's simple enough to set this up with sockd running on a Unix firewall host and with socks-complaint clients built on local Unix systems. But if you have local VMS systems too, perhaps running Multinet TCP/IP, you have a problem: how can you build modified telnet, ftp &c, clients linked with the socks client library, to use the Socks system? ..unless of course TGV were to provide this option. Do they? Is there any interest in this?? I. (Socks was written by David and Michelle R Koblas, and is available by anonymous ftp from s1.gov. It was also described in a recent USENIX Security Proceedings.)