I wrote:
> And if I want to run different daemons on the same port number of different
> IP addresses? Or the same daemon but with different command-line
> arguments? I don't know any way to use ipfwadm to do that, and it was my
> primary objective.
"John D. Hardin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> replied:
> Dave Wreski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote about my inetd patches:
> > They never got included for a good reason. This functionality is already
> > available by using ipfwadm to block access to ports to wish to restrict.
>
> And if I want to run different daemons on the same port number of differen
Dave Wreski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote about my inetd patches:
> They never got included for a good reason. This functionality is already
> available by using ipfwadm to block access to ports to wish to restrict.
And if I want to run different daemons on the same port number of different
IP addre
> >Does anyone know how to configure telnetd and/or ftpd to listen only on
> > a specific interface on a machine with multiple interfaces? I want to be
> > able to ftp/telnet into IP address 'foo' but not into address 'baz' (both
> > on the same RedHat 5.0 box).
>
> I did this sort of thing
Brian Landers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Does anyone know how to configure telnetd and/or ftpd to listen only on
> a specific interface on a machine with multiple interfaces? I want to be
> able to ftp/telnet into IP address 'foo' but not into address 'baz' (both
> on the same RedHat 5.0 box)
Hi all:
Does anyone know how to configure telnetd and/or ftpd to listen only on
a specific interface on a machine with multiple interfaces? I want to be
able to ftp/telnet into IP address 'foo' but not into address 'baz' (both
on the same RedHat 5.0 box).
I did not see anything in the telnetd