isn't the file for doing this standard.filter or whatever filter file you
specified in your diald.conf.
Just my two cents
Keith
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux http://www.linux.org
On Fri, 19 Feb 1999, Olaf Schulz wrote:
> Hallo Marcio Rosa da Silva,
> am Wed, 17 Feb 1999 11:45:25 -0300 (EST), schriebst Du zum Thema idle time:
>
> >I read all documentation I found about diald and couldn't find how to set
> >the idle time. I want to set after how seconds of inactivity the line must
> >go down.
>
> Have a look at the diald.conf that came with your diald.
> I found mine in /usr/doc/packages/diald/contrib/isdn4linux/etc/diald.conf
>
> You do not simply have one idle time but it depends from the type of the
> "connection": tcp or udp and which service (www, domain-request, ftp, ...).
>
> search for all lines with an "accept" in the beginning and look at the number
> which is the third word. This is the idle time for the type of packet defined
> here in seconds.
> these lines are also called "rules" (anyone correct me, please, if I understood
> this wrong).
>
> So the rules are applied in the order they appear in diald.conf .
> If no rule any longer leads to an idle time (all packets are timed out) diald
> will close the connection (unless you've "forced" the line up).
>
> Olaf
>
>
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