On Sun, 26 Oct 2003, Michael Holt wrote:
I´ve got another msec question. I was working on a different
computer on my lan and hadn´t put it´s id in my hosts file on my
server yet. I was lazy and didn´t feel like getting on a system
which had access (for ssh that is) so I was trying
On Sunday 26 October 2003 09:33 am, Michael Holt wrote:
Good morning,
I´ve got another msec question. I was working on a different
computer on my lan and hadn´t put it´s id in my hosts file on my
server yet. I was lazy and didn´t feel like getting on a system
which had access (for ssh that
Bill Mullen mused:
I don't run telnet (naturally g), but I'd guess that access to
it is
probably controlled by xinetd, rather than by /etc/hosts.allow. If
that's
the case, you'll have an /etc/xinetd.d/telnet[d] file where this
sort of
thing can be configured. After you've made any changes
Bryan Phinney mused:
I would guess that something is either not configured correctly,
you have
installed some software that has changed the default settings, or
you are
hitting a different machine than you think you are hitting. I
have tried
this on my web server which is also set to msec