Re: OT: CVS [WAS: Re: [gentoo-user] Need help discovering what's using a port (for cvsd)] SOLVED

2010-06-16 Thread Michael Sullivan
On Fri, 2010-03-05 at 09:43 -0600, Paul Hartman wrote:
 On Thu, Mar 4, 2010 at 5:54 PM, Michael Sullivan msulli1...@gmail.com wrote:
  On Thu, 2010-03-04 at 17:30 -0600, Paul Hartman wrote:
  On Thu, Mar 4, 2010 at 5:02 PM, Michael Sullivan msulli1...@gmail.com 
  wrote:
   netstat: no support for `AF IPX' on this system.
   netstat: no support for `AF AX25' on this system.
   netstat: no support for `AF X25' on this system.
   netstat: no support for `AF NETROM' on this system.
  
  
   I assume these are kernel options, but without knowing specific symbol
   names, I'm not sure how to compile them into the kernel.  Can anyone
   give me any advice on this situation?
 
  I think if you don't have support for those protocols the chances of a
  program using them is probably zero. :) FWIW i get the exact same
  messages. I don't think it is meaningful.
 
  I use a similar command (omitting all the unix sockets stuff): netstat
  -lnp --inet
 
  With regard to your original problem, try to edit the cvsd.conf and
  specify an actual IP address to listen on (instead of 0.0.0.0 or * or
  however it is defined there) and see if that helps.
 
 
  Now I've got the server running, but I can't connect to it:
 
  mich...@camille ~ $ cvs login
  Logging in to :pserver:mich...@carter.espersunited.com:2401/root
  CVS password:
  cvs [login aborted]: connect to
  carter.espersunited.com(192.168.1.2):2401 failed: Connection refused
 
 Hmm, does cvsd use inetd? maybe it needs to be added to allowed port
 list or something like that.
 
This line in the config file:

Listen 127.0.0.1  2401

needed to be changed to this:
Listen 192.168.1.2 2401

And now it works





Re: OT: CVS [WAS: Re: [gentoo-user] Need help discovering what's using a port (for cvsd)]

2010-03-05 Thread Paul Hartman
On Thu, Mar 4, 2010 at 5:54 PM, Michael Sullivan msulli1...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Thu, 2010-03-04 at 17:30 -0600, Paul Hartman wrote:
 On Thu, Mar 4, 2010 at 5:02 PM, Michael Sullivan msulli1...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
  netstat: no support for `AF IPX' on this system.
  netstat: no support for `AF AX25' on this system.
  netstat: no support for `AF X25' on this system.
  netstat: no support for `AF NETROM' on this system.
 
 
  I assume these are kernel options, but without knowing specific symbol
  names, I'm not sure how to compile them into the kernel.  Can anyone
  give me any advice on this situation?

 I think if you don't have support for those protocols the chances of a
 program using them is probably zero. :) FWIW i get the exact same
 messages. I don't think it is meaningful.

 I use a similar command (omitting all the unix sockets stuff): netstat
 -lnp --inet

 With regard to your original problem, try to edit the cvsd.conf and
 specify an actual IP address to listen on (instead of 0.0.0.0 or * or
 however it is defined there) and see if that helps.


 Now I've got the server running, but I can't connect to it:

 mich...@camille ~ $ cvs login
 Logging in to :pserver:mich...@carter.espersunited.com:2401/root
 CVS password:
 cvs [login aborted]: connect to
 carter.espersunited.com(192.168.1.2):2401 failed: Connection refused

Hmm, does cvsd use inetd? maybe it needs to be added to allowed port
list or something like that.



OT: CVS [WAS: Re: [gentoo-user] Need help discovering what's using a port (for cvsd)]

2010-03-04 Thread Michael Sullivan
On Thu, 2010-03-04 at 17:30 -0600, Paul Hartman wrote:
 On Thu, Mar 4, 2010 at 5:02 PM, Michael Sullivan msulli1...@gmail.com wrote:
  netstat: no support for `AF IPX' on this system.
  netstat: no support for `AF AX25' on this system.
  netstat: no support for `AF X25' on this system.
  netstat: no support for `AF NETROM' on this system.
 
 
  I assume these are kernel options, but without knowing specific symbol
  names, I'm not sure how to compile them into the kernel.  Can anyone
  give me any advice on this situation?
 
 I think if you don't have support for those protocols the chances of a
 program using them is probably zero. :) FWIW i get the exact same
 messages. I don't think it is meaningful.
 
 I use a similar command (omitting all the unix sockets stuff): netstat
 -lnp --inet
 
 With regard to your original problem, try to edit the cvsd.conf and
 specify an actual IP address to listen on (instead of 0.0.0.0 or * or
 however it is defined there) and see if that helps.
 

Now I've got the server running, but I can't connect to it:

mich...@camille ~ $ cvs login
Logging in to :pserver:mich...@carter.espersunited.com:2401/root
CVS password: 
cvs [login aborted]: connect to
carter.espersunited.com(192.168.1.2):2401 failed: Connection refused

My .cvspass looks kinda weird too:
mich...@camille ~ $ cat .cvspass
/1 :pserver:mich...@carter.espersunited.com:2401/root Ah0 %0]y?

Is this right?