Suse Firewall / personal firewall
On startup and shut down, I see the two items listed (not started). What are they, and how do I access them? Are they legitimate firewalls? Also, what do I run to see what ports are open, etc? Harry G, Newbie
* Harry Giles
On startup and shut down, I see the two items listed (not started). What are they, and how do I access them? Are they legitimate firewalls?
IIRC you need to set START_FW=yes in /etc/rc.config
Also, what do I run to see what ports are open, etc?
IIRC Susefirewall has a perl script /usr/sbin/openports HTH -- Togan Muftuoglu
On Mon, May 14, 2001 at 02:16:28AM +0300, Togan Muftuoglu wrote:
IIRC Susefirewall has a perl script /usr/sbin/openports
It requires something called /usr/sbin/ip. Could you check what package does it come from? Thanks, -Kastus
HTH -- Togan Muftuoglu
On Sunday 13 May 2001 23:12, Konstantin (Kastus) Shchuka wrote:
On Mon, May 14, 2001 at 02:16:28AM +0300, Togan Muftuoglu wrote:
IIRC Susefirewall has a perl script /usr/sbin/openports
It requires something called /usr/sbin/ip. Could you check what package does it come from?
anovo@friedman anovo > rpm -qf /usr/sbin/ip iproute2-2.2.4-191 Hope it helps, Alvaro Novo SuSE 7.1 -=- Kernel 2.4.2-4GB -=- KDE 2.1.1 11:13pm up 10 days, 4:03, 2 users, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
On Sun, May 13, 2001 at 11:13:37PM -0500, ?lvaro A. Novo wrote:
On Sunday 13 May 2001 23:12, Konstantin (Kastus) Shchuka wrote:
On Mon, May 14, 2001 at 02:16:28AM +0300, Togan Muftuoglu wrote:
IIRC Susefirewall has a perl script /usr/sbin/openports
It requires something called /usr/sbin/ip. Could you check what package does it come from?
anovo@friedman anovo > rpm -qf /usr/sbin/ip iproute2-2.2.4-191
Thanks, got on CD2. -Kastus
Hope it helps,
Alvaro Novo
The firewall is first configured, then activated within yast yast , system administration, change configuration, do a f4 search for FW this is the beinning of the configuration from then on you just answer the questions <should read the manual> this will allow you to masquerade (use several machines while on one connection) as far as what ports are open you have to look ate /etc/inetd.conf this also ties into /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny what you see in inetd.conf is what your machine is brodcasting as "open" use a # to close off without having to remove the line hth ron Harry Giles wrote:
On startup and shut down, I see the two items listed (not started). What are they, and how do I access them? Are they legitimate firewalls?
Also, what do I run to see what ports are open, etc?
Harry G,
Newbie
-- To unsubscribe send e-mail to suse-linux-e-unsubscribe@suse.com For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the FAQ at http://www.suse.com/support/faq and the archives at http://lists.suse.com
-- -----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK----- Version: 3.12 GIT d+ s+:+ a+ C+++ UL++++ P+ L++ E- W+++ N+++ o K- w O- M- V- PS PE Y PGP t- 5- X R* tv-- b++ DI- D G e* h* r- y++ ------END GEEK CODE BLOCK------
participants (5)
-
dizzy73
-
Harry Giles
-
Konstantin (Kastus) Shchuka
-
Togan Muftuoglu
-
Álvaro A. Novo