Re[2]: [newbie] Noob question of the day

2004-07-21 Thread Justin Grote
On 7/21/2004 at 8:20 AM, Hoyt Bailey ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: HB Ok now I know more than I did do you know of a reference that lists all HB ports and their use? IANA maintains a listing of the well known port numbers, a short description, and who registered them at

Re[2]: [newbie] Noob question of the day

2004-07-21 Thread Justin Grote
HB Ok now I know more than I did do you know of a reference that lists all HB ports and their use? Whoops, forgot my favorite one: http://ports.tantalo.net/ It's searchable and includes a lot of unofficial port usages. __ Justin Grote Network Architect, CCNA JWG

Re[2]: [newbie] Noob question of the day

2004-07-18 Thread Justin Grote
HB Ok I don't pretend to understand but mine are different can you explain HB the relevance: HB [EMAIL PROTECTED] hoyt]$ nmap localhost -p 0-65535 HB WARNING: Scanning port 0 is supported, but unusual. HB Starting nmap 3.50 ( http://www.insecure.org/nmap/ ) at 2004-07-17 08:26 HB CDT HB

Re[2]: [newbie] Noob question of the day

2004-07-12 Thread Justin Grote
EH So, if i have xinetd and sshd running, is that duplicating services? Only if your xinetd configuration has sshd enabled under xinetd. If not, you can run xinetd and sshd simultaneously (since, like I said, xinetd is basically just a wrapper for services, and if sshd isn't enabled, it won't

Re[2]: [newbie] Noob question of the day

2004-07-12 Thread Justin Grote
MLE Xinetd is best for low-volumn, fast loading services, not high volumn MLE services. For a high trafic web site, xinetd would actualy use more MLE resources the runnig Apache in the stand alone mode. MLE One reasion for the delay is that xinetd checks /etc/hosts.allow and MLE /etc/hosts.deny

Re[2]: [newbie] Noob question of the day

2004-07-10 Thread Justin Grote
On 7/7/2004 at 10:13 PM, EE ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: E What is xinetd? xinetd is an enhanced version of inetd (internet daemon), which is basically a wrapper for other internet daemons. You can use xinetd to run FTP, BIND, Apache, etc. The benefit as opposed to standalone is that since

Re: Re[2]: [newbie] Noob question of the day

2004-07-10 Thread JoeHill
On Sat, 10 Jul 2004 18:19:29 -0600 Justin Grote disseminated the following: wrapper ...speaking of wrapping, any way you could keep the line wrap under 80 columns? Easier to read for all involved. Otherwise, very informative, thanks! -- JoeHill RLU #282046 / www.orderinchaos.org 20:51:11 up

Re[2]: [newbie] Noob question of the day

2004-07-07 Thread Justin Grote
On 7/7/2004 at 7:39 PM, Michael Holt ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: MH ? chkconfig --list will tell you all the services you have running; it MH just puts the xinetd stuff at the bottom of the list. Thanks, and if 'xinetd' isn't running? I remember being advised to shut that down also quite

Re: Re[2]: [newbie] Noob question of the day

2004-07-07 Thread Chris
On Wednesday 07 July 2004 09:12 pm, Justin Grote wrote: On 7/7/2004 at 7:39 PM, Michael Holt ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: Alternatively, you can type: nmap localhost -p 0-65535 at the bash prompt (assuming you have it installed, urpmi nmap if not). and it will tell you what ports you have