Additional information concerning TCP wrappers and xinetd is available from system documentation and on the Internet.
The bundled documentation on your system is a good place to start looking for additional TCP Wrappers, xinetd, and access control configuration options.
/usr/share/doc/tcp_wrappers-<version>/ — Contains a README file that discusses how TCP wrappers work and the various hostname and host address spoofing risks that exist.
/usr/share/doc/xinetd-<version>/ — Includes a README file that discusses aspects of access control and a sample.conf file with various ideas for modifying service-specific configuration files in the /etc/xinetd.d/ directory.
TCP wrappers and xinetd related man pages — There are a number of man pages for the various applications and configuration files involved with TCP wrappers and xinetd. The following is a list of some of the more important man pages.
man xinetd — The man page for the xinetd super service daemon.
man 5 hosts_access — The man page for the TCP wrappers hosts access control files.
man hosts_options — The man page for the TCP wrappers options fields.
man xinetd.conf — The man page listing xinetd configuration options.
http://www.xinetd.org/ — The home of xinetd, containing sample configuration files, a full listing of features, and an informative FAQ.
http://www.macsecurity.org/resources/xinetd/tutorial.shtml — A thorough tutorial that discusses many different ways to tweak default xinetd configuration files to meet specific security goals.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Security Guide; Red Hat, Inc. — Provides an overview of workstation, server, and network security with specific suggestions regarding TCP wrappers and xinetd.
Hacking Linux Exposed by Brian Hatch, James Lee, and George Kurtz; Osbourne/McGraw-Hill — An excellent security resource with featuring information about TCP wrappers and xinetd.