Although Linux does not always have a "firewall", it may be set up tightly enough that it keeps everything out anyway, which seems to be the case with Debian for me until my son taught me a thing or two after some judicious modifications to the initial configuation. Try sniffing your ports to see if you have successfully opened 9200 with something like nmap . Depending upon which Linux distro you have, opening port 9200 will be done differently and being pretty new to Linux myself, it may take someone who has yours to tell you how to do that.
On Monday 04 April 2005 02:25 pm, Mark Street wrote: > On Sunday 03 April 2005 17:02, Nancy Anthracite wrote: > > Which version of CPRS are you running? Do you have the right permissions > > so Linux isn't killing you? Did you look at chapter 2 carefully and try > > Well, 1.0.25.28 is the version. How could Linux kill me? It may well be > the death of me.... Linux. Don't tell me I have wasted the last 11 years > of my life on it only to perish. > > > all of the tricks and check that the Windows firewall isn't up as well as > > whatever software firewall you are running on your Windows side and you > > have the router right. This sounds like a security/firewall thing, not > > like a CPRS/VistA program thing to me. > > No firewall on the client, No firewall rules for the internal network. > > Turned off firewall code on the server, still no go. > > I will go back to my configuration.... it must be me. Damn, there is > definitely a learning curve happening here. -- Nancy Anthracite ------------------------------------------------------- SF email is sponsored by - The IT Product Guide Read honest & candid reviews on hundreds of IT Products from real users. Discover which products truly live up to the hype. Start reading now. http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=6595&alloc_id=14396&op=click _______________________________________________ Hardhats-members mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/hardhats-members
