Rob Hudson wrote:
When I run "netstat -pant", I do not see the opened ports, only 22, 25, 80, and 993. Which makes me think "filtered" means something. According to the nmap manpage, "Filtered means that a firewall, filter, or other network obstacle is covering the port and preventing nmap from determining whether the port is open." I haven't yet set up a firewall so it's not that.
Are you running iptables? That would explain it. Portsentry is another program that filters ports.
Portsentry is not installed. I have iptables installed, but have yet to set up rules for it: # iptables -L Chain INPUT (policy ACCEPT) target prot opt source destination
Chain FORWARD (policy ACCEPT) target prot opt source destination
Chain OUTPUT (policy ACCEPT) target prot opt source destination
I had portsentry on my old FreeBSD box, so maybe this one is one I should look at emerging. Thanks for the reminder. :)
I don't see any inet or xinet in my /etc directory. Does Gentoo put those somewhere else or not use it?
xinetd is not part of the base Gentoo install. If you didn't emerge it yourself, you don't have it.
I don't have xinetd, then.
-Rob _______________________________________________ EUGLUG mailing list [email protected] http://www.euglug.org/mailman/listinfo/euglug
