Re: [newbie] PMFirewall question...

2000-11-15 Thread Ronald J. Hall

Dennis Myers wrote:
 
 I would have to agree, mine does about a two page print of many different ports
 and I haven't   found the screen shot menu so I can't post it. But, based on
 mine I would say yours is not set up to do a whole lot of good.  When I set up
 mine I said no to most of the ports and allowed unlimited access only to the
 addresses on my local net and 127.0.0.1.   you might try a new install.  Good
 Luck,  Dennis

I followed the script recommendation posted a couple of times on this list. ;-(
I did say no to most options. I gave that 127.0.0.1/255.255.255.0 range, only
opening port 110 (I think) for service.

I'm a little unclear as to how its supposed to start. I picked no for startup
at boot, but yes for startup upon successfull ppp connection. So, is the
startup line supposed to go in /etc/ip-up, or /etc/ip-up.local or in
/etc/ppp/ip-up or /etc/ppp/ip-up.local? ;-)

Thanks!

-- 
 
   /\
   DarkLord
   \/




Re: [newbie] PMFirewall question...

2000-11-14 Thread Ronald J. Hall

Eric Becker wrote:
 
 Type ipchains -L to see if pmfirewall is running.  If there's a whole bunch
 of rules listed...then it's working.  If it just says:
 
 Chain input (policy ACCEPT):
 Chain forward (policy DENY):
 Chain output (policy ACCEPT):
 
 If it just says that, and nothing else...then it ain't working.  You may
 have to manually run /etc/rc.d/init.d/pmfirewall.

I've attached a small text file that shows what I got. Can you look at it and
tell me what you think? Thanks! ;-)

-- 
 
   /\
   DarkLord
   \/

[root@localhost darklord]# ipchains -L
Chain input (policy ACCEPT):
target prot opt sourcedestination   ports
ACCEPT all  --  anywhere anywhere  n/a
ACCEPT tcp  !y  anywhere davl1-3.kih.net   any -   any





RE: [newbie] PMFirewall question...

2000-11-14 Thread Eric Becker

Ya...that's probably not working correctly.  I haven't really played with
pmfirewall for a ppp connection.  The only thing I could tell ya is to go to
www.pmfirewall.com and check out their mailing list.  I'd either just
subscribe to that mailing list...or just browse through the archive.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Ronald J. Hall
Sent: Tuesday, November 14, 2000 7:39 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [newbie] PMFirewall question...

Eric Becker wrote:

 Type ipchains -L to see if pmfirewall is running.  If there's a whole
bunch
 of rules listed...then it's working.  If it just says:

 Chain input (policy ACCEPT):
 Chain forward (policy DENY):
 Chain output (policy ACCEPT):

 If it just says that, and nothing else...then it ain't working.  You may
 have to manually run /etc/rc.d/init.d/pmfirewall.

I've attached a small text file that shows what I got. Can you look at it
and
tell me what you think? Thanks! ;-)

--

   /\

DarkLord
   \/





Re: [newbie] PMFirewall question...

2000-11-14 Thread Dennis Myers

I would have to agree, mine does about a two page print of many different ports
and I haven't   found the screen shot menu so I can't post it. But, based on
mine I would say yours is not set up to do a whole lot of good.  When I set up
mine I said no to most of the ports and allowed unlimited access only to the
addresses on my local net and 127.0.0.1.   you might try a new install.  Good
Luck,  Dennis


Eric Becker wrote:

 Ya...that's probably not working correctly.  I haven't really played with
 pmfirewall for a ppp connection.  The only thing I could tell ya is to go to
 www.pmfirewall.com and check out their mailing list.  I'd either just
 subscribe to that mailing list...or just browse through the archive.

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 Ronald J. Hall
 Sent: Tuesday, November 14, 2000 7:39 AM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: [newbie] PMFirewall question...

 Eric Becker wrote:
 
  Type ipchains -L to see if pmfirewall is running.  If there's a whole
 bunch
  of rules listed...then it's working.  If it just says:
 
  Chain input (policy ACCEPT):
  Chain forward (policy DENY):
  Chain output (policy ACCEPT):
 
  If it just says that, and nothing else...then it ain't working.  You may
  have to manually run /etc/rc.d/init.d/pmfirewall.

 I've attached a small text file that shows what I got. Can you look at it
 and
 tell me what you think? Thanks! ;-)

 --

/\

 DarkLord
\/

--
Dennis M. a registered Linux user #180842







[newbie] PMFirewall question...

2000-11-13 Thread Ronald J. Hall

Okay, I'm currently using ipchains/PMFirewall. My question is, since I *think*
I've got everything installed correctly (the script said it installed OK),
should I not be able to see PMFirewall running, using something like ktop or
top, after I've connected to the 'Net? I picked the options where PMF does not
start up at boot, but upon a successfull ppp connection.

Thanks!

-- 
 
   /\
   DarkLord
   \/




RE: [newbie] PMFirewall question...

2000-11-13 Thread Eric Becker

Type ipchains -L to see if pmfirewall is running.  If there's a whole bunch
of rules listed...then it's working.  If it just says:

Chain input (policy ACCEPT):
Chain forward (policy DENY):
Chain output (policy ACCEPT):

If it just says that, and nothing else...then it ain't working.  You may
have to manually run /etc/rc.d/init.d/pmfirewall.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Ronald J. Hall
Sent: Monday, November 13, 2000 2:19 PM
To: Mandrake Newbie Mailing List
Subject: [newbie] PMFirewall question...

Okay, I'm currently using ipchains/PMFirewall. My question is, since I
*think*
I've got everything installed correctly (the script said it installed OK),
should I not be able to see PMFirewall running, using something like ktop or
top, after I've connected to the 'Net? I picked the options where PMF does
not
start up at boot, but upon a successfull ppp connection.

Thanks!

--

   /\

DarkLord
   \/