<snip>the d is for daemon, a process which runs inside the machine and 
provides a service</snip>

t is for telnet
        it's insecure and bad
s is for secure
        the shell that must be had
d is for daemon
        the way that things are run
f is for firewall
        that blocks connect-ions

I'm sorry, it's Friday after all and your comment about d made me think 
of the old Cookie Monster Favorite, C is for cookie. I hope the list can 
forgive me.



Rodolfo J. Paiz wrote:

> At 4/19/2002 09:59 AM -0500, you wrote:
> 
>> I am new to the Linux World and trying to understand the language 
>> spoken here.
> 
> 
> You're going to read *lots* of documentation and man pages, but you'll 
> be fine. The effort is certainly worth it.
> 
>> I have  just installed RH 7.1  running Apache and I am having problems 
>> using telnet and puTTY.
>> Does a telnet daemon need to be running to used ssh?
>> If I try to telnet to my IP address I get "can not open connection to 
>> ...address....
>> If I use putty ip address a window flashes and goes await
>> or I get "connection closed by remote host".
> 
> 
> Telnet is a program to supply a remote terminal to someone; so is ssh. 
> However, telnet sends everything (including your username and password) 
> in the clear, where anyone sniffing the network can see *everything* you 
> type whereas ssh (which stands for Secure SHell) encrypts the entire 
> transaction so that everything you type is nearly impossible to 
> intercept or decrypt.
> 
> Hence, use telnet only when you really truly have to and when you're in 
> an internal trusted network. But given that ssh has some other neat 
> features, everyone will strongly recommend to you that you try to use 
> ssh everywhere. They are independent; telnet does not need to run (or 
> even be installed) for ssh to work and vice versa.
> 
> That being said, the most common package for SSH capability (included 
> with RedHat) is openssh. Your Linux box must have the openssh and 
> openssh-server packages installed, plus (optionally) the openssh-client 
> package. Once the packages are installed, as root issue the commands:
> 
> # service sshd start
> # chkconfig --level 2345 sshd on
> 
> The first will start sshd (the d is for daemon, a process which runs 
> inside the machine and provides a service), and the second will make 
> sure that sshd is started when you change runlevels or reboot.
> 
> You also want to make sure that you do not have a firewall blocking that 
> traffic. Do you have a firewall configured at all?
> 
> Let us know whether you get this working, or provide more detail and ask 
> very specific questions.
> 
> 


-- 
Matthew Boeckman                        (816) 777-2160
Manager - Systems Integration           Saepio Technologies
== 
                                                ==
/earth is 98% full ... please delete anyone you can.



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