Again the list comes through. All respondents agreed that commenting the service out of /etc/inetd.conf was enough to disable that service. They also reminded me to HUP inetd to make the changes effective. One respondent caught my typo in init.d/conf instead of inetd.conf All respondents agreed that I did not need to touch /etc/services. (Andrew Sit) said: For you to check the connectivity to a port, you can telnet to the port and it will return either a handshake or a blank prompt if it is listening. A "Connection refused" message will occur if there is no connectivity. Darren Dunham gave this example of how to interprete the response I get from telneting to a given port % telnet localhost swat Trying 127.0.0.1... Connected to localhost. Escape character is '^]'. <-connected. The port is up. ^] telnet> q Connection closed. % telnet localhost 55555 Trying 127.0.0.1... telnet: Unable to connect to remote host: Connection refused <-not connected. The port is down. Jon Godfrey responded with this information, which I honestly never thought of: Removing/commenting an entry from /etc/services has no effect on the service unless it is referenced by name. The /etc/services file is really only a lookup service so that you could use, for example, the keyword 'telnet' instead of the port number '23'. Reginald Beavers responded this good advice: /etc/services is used as a lookup table. If /etc/nsswitch.conf contains 'services: files', then commenting out selected services in /etc/services would prevent the lookup and therefore prevent the service requested. Several peole suggested nmap (http://www.nmap.org/nmap/nmap_download.html) for port checking. Andrew_Rotramel@cch-lis.com@sunmanagers.org on 08/08/2002 12:06:09 PM Sent by: sunmanagers-admin@sunmanagers.org To: sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org cc: Subject: services and inetd I have checked the archives and google, but can't find the answer to these questions. 1. If I want to disable an inetd service, do I really need to comment it out of the /etc/services file, or is commenting it out of the /etc/init.d/conf file enough? 2. How can I test the response from a given port. I try telnet servername port, and ftp, but get nothing usefull in return. I am hoping there is a command called checkport or something similar, but have not seen one yet. Andrew _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagers _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Thu Aug 8 14:55:55 2002
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