show/hide this revision's text 3 fix typo

It's very annoying to have this limitation on my development box, when there won't every ever be any users other than me.

I'm aware of the standard workarounds, but none of them do exactly what I want:

  1. authbind (The version in Debian testing, 1.0, only supports IPv4)
  2. Using the iptables REDIRECT target to redirect a low port to a high port (the "nat" table is not yet implemented for ip6tables, the IPv6 version of iptables)
  3. sudo (Running as root is what I'm trying to avoid)
  4. SELinux (or similar). (This is just my dev box, I don't want to introduce a lot of extra complexity.)

So is there some simple sysctl variable for this, or am I just out of luck?

EDIT: In some cases, you can use capabilities to do this.

show/hide this revision's text 2 Added link to my answer using capabilities

It's very annoying to have this limitation on my development box, when there won't every be any users other than me.

I'm aware of the standard workarounds, but none of them do exactly what I want:

  1. authbind (The version in Debian testing, 1.0, only supports IPv4)
  2. Using the iptables REDIRECT target to redirect a low port to a high port (the "nat" table is not yet implemented for ip6tables, the IPv6 version of iptables)
  3. sudo (Running as root is what I'm trying to avoid)
  4. SELinux (or similar). (This is just my dev box, I don't want to introduce a lot of extra complexity.)

So is there some simple sysctl variable for this, or am I just out of luck?

EDIT: In some cases, you can use capabilities to do this.

show/hide this revision's text 1

Is there a way for non-root processes to bind to "privileged" ports (<1024) on Linux?

It's very annoying to have this limitation on my development box, when there won't every be any users other than me.

I'm aware of the standard workarounds, but none of them do exactly what I want:

  1. authbind (The version in Debian testing, 1.0, only supports IPv4)
  2. Using the iptables REDIRECT target to redirect a low port to a high port (the "nat" table is not yet implemented for ip6tables, the IPv6 version of iptables)
  3. sudo (Running as root is what I'm trying to avoid)
  4. SELinux (or similar). (This is just my dev box, I don't want to introduce a lot of extra complexity.)

So is there some simple sysctl variable for this, or am I just out of luck?