Re: telnet,rsh,rexec

2004-02-01 Thread pa3gcu
On Sunday 01 February 2004 17:35, Ravi Kumar Munnangi wrote: > hi users, > > My system IP is 172.31.19.22. > When I try to telnet to my system, I get > >Trying 172.31.19.22... > Connected to localhost.localdomain (172.31.19.22). > Escape character is '^]'. > Connection closed by foreign host.

Re: telnet,rsh,rexec

2004-02-01 Thread Steven Smith
>Trying 172.31.19.22... > Connected to localhost.localdomain (172.31.19.22). That doesn't look promising; localhost.localdomain should be 127.0.0.1. What does /etc/hosts look like? Steven Smith, [EMAIL PROTECTED] pgp0.pgp Description: PGP signature

Re: telnet,rsh,rexec

2004-02-01 Thread Ray Olszewski
At 08:35 AM 2/1/2004 -0800, Ravi Kumar Munnangi wrote: hi users, My system IP is 172.31.19.22. When I try to telnet to my system, I get Trying 172.31.19.22... Connected to localhost.localdomain (172.31.19.22). Escape character is '^]'. Connection closed by foreign host. Can any one guess the

Re: Telnet servers ...

2003-01-07 Thread Ken Moffat
On Tue, 7 Jan 2003, Jamie Risk wrote: > I downloaded, compiled and am now using (via xinetd) the telnet daemon > from GNU's Inetutils. In RH distributions, I noticed the daemon takes on > the name "/sbin/in.telnetd" (or something very similar) whereas the > inetutils > telnet daemon takes on the n

Re: Telnet

2002-05-24 Thread Tom Beer
> > I'll bear in mind that it's insecure. > Just use ssh, same feeling, same style and a little more secure. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

Re: Telnet

2002-05-24 Thread cr
Thanks all the people who told me what Telnet is! In fact after the first off-list reply explaining what Telnet is, I successfully telnetted last night. It felt *exactly* like logging on to a local dial-up bulletin board in the old days. (And I logged on as 'new', as instructed). I'll b

Re: Telnet

2002-05-23 Thread Richard Adams
On Thursday 23 May 2002 13:02, cr wrote: > This probably sounds ridiculous to you all, but what's Telnet (as in > "Telnet to www.goodstuff.org") and what application (in Gnome or KDE?) > could I use to do it?I've used browsers/ftp/mailreaders/newsgroups but > so far as I know never 'telnett

RE: Telnet

2002-05-23 Thread Little, John
telnet is a terminal communications program. used to open a terminal session on a remote system. telnet is a command you can use on the commandline ie : [u51847@penguin u51847]$ telnet kidst500 kidst500 is a system on our local network that supports telnet sessions. You usually have to have a