look at /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny.

Jack

On Tue, 2003-08-12 at 19:11, Jo�o Candido A. Milasch Filho wrote:
> Hi! I sent this message b4 to newbie list, but I got absolute no
> answer.
> I hope someone can help me here...
> 
> Thus, I tried to run telnetd from xinetd, no success, tried to
> configure the
> listening ports to the standard ports, and got no success.
> Shorewall is not installed, iptables is empty, netstat shows listening
> entries corresponding to the service I tried to run, but i can connect
> only
> from my local machine. no friends could connect to my computer.
> 
> Thanx all!!!
> 
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> Hello all, me again!
> 
> As I sent before, I'm trying to use SSH server in home, to access on
> my
> work. But as I said b4, my work firewall is blocking almost all
> outgoing
> ports. So, i have to use SSH on the port 80. I successfully ran the
> daemon
> on the port 80. To see that, I just netstat -pln, and saw an entry
> like
> this:
> LOCAL                         FOREIGN
> 0.0.0.0:80                   0.0.0.0:0                      sshd blah
> blah
> 
> Whel, with that, I knew it was listening correctly on the port 80. So
> to try
> it out, I tried from the same machine I was running sshd to use ssh.
> So I
> did:
> 
> $ ssh -l my_user_name -p 80 127.0.0.1
> 
> It worked fine. Then I asked a friend to connect on my ssh server, and
> told'im to do:
> $ ssh -l usr_name -p 80 200.100.100.100 (where 200.100.100.100 was my
> internet IP address on that time). But he couldn't connect.
> 
> My firewall was disabled, I cleared out my lname (or something like
> that)
> but my friend was still unable to connect on my ssh server.
> 
> Anyone knows what can I do to figure out whats happening?
> 
> Regards!
-- 
Jack Coates
Monkeynoodle: A Scientific Venture...


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