inetd.conf - telnet
I used YaST2 to enable ftp telnet shell and login under Basic Network -> inetd I then saved my changes and came back to the prompt... I checked /etc/inetd.conf and /etc/services to make sure that the appropriate entries were there, they were! using telnet as an example... /etc/inetd.conf telnet stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd in.telnetd /etc/services telnet 23/tcp # Telnet telnet 23/udp # Telnet then # ps -ef|grep inetd root 14412 1 0 11:01 ? 00:00:00 /usr/sbin/inetd root 14854 14671 0 13:38 pts/7 00:00:00 grep inetd #kill -HUP 14412 # ps -ef|grep inetd root 14412 1 0 11:01 ? 00:00:00 /usr/sbin/inetd root 14854 14671 0 13:38 pts/7 00:00:00 grep inetd Shouldn't the process id change for /usr/sbin/inetd ? Also I still cannot telnet in... and none of the other services I initialised login, shell and ftp are working either... what am I missing? thanks -- Ahbaid Gaffoor
On Tuesday 19 November 2002 21.41, Ahbaid Gaffoor wrote:
#kill -HUP 14412
# ps -ef|grep inetd root 14412 1 0 11:01 ? 00:00:00 /usr/sbin/inetd root 14854 14671 0 13:38 pts/7 00:00:00 grep inetd
Shouldn't the process id change for /usr/sbin/inetd ?
No, inetd doesn't die from the Hangup signal. It just re-reads its configuration. So the pid stays the same.
Also I still cannot telnet in... and none of the other services I initialised login, shell and ftp are working either...
what am I missing?
Is there a firewall running, perhaps? Or maybe you have something in hosts.allow and/or hosts.deny that excludes the machine you're working from?! regards Anders
The 02.11.19 at 14:41, Ahbaid Gaffoor wrote:
# ps -ef|grep inetd root 14412 1 0 11:01 ? 00:00:00 /usr/sbin/inetd root 14854 14671 0 13:38 pts/7 00:00:00 grep inetd
#kill -HUP 14412
No, do a "rcinetd restart", or perhaps reload. -- Cheers, Carlos Robinson
Duh! I forgot to install the telnet server!!!! Sorry for my stupid mistake list... telnet-server-1.0-291.i586.rpm http://ocpdba.net/suse/telnet-server-1.0-291.i586.rpm Carlos E. R. wrote:
The 02.11.19 at 14:41, Ahbaid Gaffoor wrote:
# ps -ef|grep inetd root 14412 1 0 11:01 ? 00:00:00 /usr/sbin/inetd root 14854 14671 0 13:38 pts/7 00:00:00 grep inetd
#kill -HUP 14412
No, do a "rcinetd restart", or perhaps reload.
-- Ahbaid Gaffoor
participants (3)
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Ahbaid Gaffoor
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Anders@samantha.rydsbo.net
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Carlos E. R.