On Monday 07 November 2005 20:47, Ioan Nemes wrote:
> It in not the question of sshd works or, not!  In large environments,
> where you have a large number of legacy hardware (like Apollo 700,
> HP 3000, HP 7000, Solaris 2.5.1 etc., etc.), and the purpose of a UNIX
> box is other than to run a firewall, a webserver, mail-server, or
> MySQL,
> plus you have thousand + users, and clients (internal/external on
> different
> client platforms), yes it is bad not have telnetd running.  Matthew is
> quite
> right, telnet is live and will be for very long time.  It was a bad
> choice
> to be removed from the source tree.  You reduce your options.
>
> Above, I am not arguing pro/contra telnetd, or sshd!
>
> Ioan
[snip]

If you *really* need telnetd, you could always go to the attic and
pull it out.  Or get it from your 3.7 CD and figure out how to build
it.

I fail to see why you need it, however.  You can still telnet from
OpenBSD to your legacy systems, so that isn't dead.  What *is*
dead is the idea of encouraging client systems to telnet to a
modern host.  I applaud this, as I did when rlogind went away.

Telnet needs to die.  If no one will take the stance of geting
rid of it, how will it ever end?

--STeve Andre'

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