On Aug 11, Adam Borowski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I call them "broken". I believe that administrators do not expect that > > services are exposed to IPv6 connections unless they are configured this > > way in inetd.conf. > A service can listen: Does not matter. The behaviour of inetd has always required to explicitly enable tcp, and changing it would be bad.
> Why, for the love of Cthulhu, does netbase depend on inetd in the first > place? Let's see: Historical reasons. > netbase: > critical network configuration. > It has some ancient cruft like /etc/services (which does more ill > than good), but /etc/init.d/networking is not something one wants to > skip. Actually /etc/init.d/networking should be moved to the ifupdown package. > Now, let's see what depends on *-inetd: Under the current rules these packages are buggy, unless they have a *specific* reason to depend on a specific inetd. > It would be good to get rid of inetd from the basic install at all. Those No, it would not. UNIX systems are supposed to have an inetd installed. -- ciao, Marco
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