On Sat, Dec 08, 2001 at 07:39:44PM +1000, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The only ones I didn't know about in this list are portmap and
XF86_SVGA. Firstly, I can't seem to find the config file for X where
you set the --nolisten parameter
From man Xserver(1)
-nolisten trans-type
On Sat, Dec 08, 2001 at 07:39:44PM +1000, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The only ones I didn't know about in this list are portmap and
XF86_SVGA. Firstly, I can't seem to find the config file for X where
you set the --nolisten parameter
From man Xserver(1)
-nolisten trans-type
Hello,
On Mon, Dec 03, 2001 at 06:14:33PM +0100, Tarjei Huse wrote:
How can I find these processes?
cd /proc
for n in [0-9]* ; do echo -n pid: $n ; cat $n/cmdline; echo; done
Hth
Robert
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On Mon, Dec 03, 2001 at 07:29:22PM +0100, Tarjei Huse wrote:
For those few pid's which return no cmdline info (for instance):
pid: 111
pid: 2
pid: 3
pid: 4
pid: 429
etc...
You can usually get some helpful info using:
cd /proc
cat pid/status
Regards,
Robert
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Hello,
On Mon, Dec 03, 2001 at 06:14:33PM +0100, Tarjei Huse wrote:
How can I find these processes?
cd /proc
for n in [0-9]* ; do echo -n pid: $n ; cat $n/cmdline; echo; done
Hth
Robert
On Mon, Dec 03, 2001 at 07:29:22PM +0100, Tarjei Huse wrote:
For those few pid's which return no cmdline info (for instance):
pid: 111
pid: 2
pid: 3
pid: 4
pid: 429
etc...
You can usually get some helpful info using:
cd /proc
cat pid/status
Regards,
Robert
Hello,
hello,
this is a work i would like to study but i fall in problem when looking for
Linux Socket Filtering Documentation.
[ snip ]---
.. through Linux Socket Filtering but it seem not to be any docs about that.
is there someone who has links to docs, examples or can suggest me
Hello,
hello,
this is a work i would like to study but i fall in problem when looking for
Linux Socket Filtering Documentation.
[ snip ]---
.. through Linux Socket Filtering but it seem not to be any docs about that.
is there someone who has links to docs, examples or can suggest me
Hello,
On Fri, Jul 20, 2001 at 12:37:27PM -0700, Jeff Coppock wrote:
Dilemna:
I want to run iptables, but I'm running stable. I have a
clean, bootable 2.4.6 kernel (took awhile, but I got it), and
then realized that the iptable package in not in stable, but
is in testing and
Hello,
In fact, the only reason mailcrypt is in contrib is that it adapts to
the patent-restricted versions of gpg/pgp software. As far as its use
with gpg, it belongs in main.
A reading of the Debian Social Contract (section 5) contains the
following concerning contrib and non-free...
Hello,
In fact, the only reason mailcrypt is in contrib is that it adapts to
the patent-restricted versions of gpg/pgp software. As far as its use
with gpg, it belongs in main.
A reading of the Debian Social Contract (section 5) contains the
following concerning contrib and non-free...
Hello,
On Tue, May 29, 2001 at 03:05:52AM +0300, killah wrote:
how, can i see the tcp port 4350 that states to be opened useing nmap
As root, you can do:
fuser -v -n tcp 4350
and:
lsof -i tcp:4350
The lsof command, if it finds anything, will return a PID as part of it's
Hello,
On Tue, May 29, 2001 at 03:05:52AM +0300, killah wrote:
how, can i see the tcp port 4350 that states to be opened useing nmap
As root, you can do:
fuser -v -n tcp 4350
and:
lsof -i tcp:4350
The lsof command, if it finds anything, will return a PID as part of it's
Hello,
On Wed, Mar 21, 2001 at 02:39:39PM -0800, William R. Ward wrote:
date { Wed Mar 21 02:00 still logged in
date | Wed Mar 21 02:00 still logged in
I'm worried that the date entries are a consequence of
some hacker
Hello,
On Wed, Mar 07, 2001 at 05:03:55PM +0100, Niklas H?glund wrote:
Hi!
Anyone know where I can find a kernel patch that restricts users so..
'who' shows only the user himself
who is not a kernel function, it's a system utility.
Something like this will work:
alias who=me=`whoami`; who
Hello,
On Sat, Jan 27, 2001 at 10:24:01AM -0600, Mohammed Elzubeir wrote:
I just changed it and removed the last ':', and now I get Permission
denied.
Failing all else, SSH should ask you for a password if you have the
server configured to allow this.
In the SSH source code, in
Hello,
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 07:59:08PM +0200, Christian Pernegger wrote:
Sep 14 19:41:44 jesus kernel: Packet log: \
input DENY eth1 PROTO=1 10.34.15.1:3 x.x.x.x:13 L=56 S=0x00 I=3405 F=0x
T=255 (#4)
For ICMP protocol packets, the number following the source address
should be the ICMP
Hello,
On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 07:59:08PM +0200, Christian Pernegger wrote:
Sep 14 19:41:44 jesus kernel: Packet log: \
input DENY eth1 PROTO=1 10.34.15.1:3 x.x.x.x:13 L=56 S=0x00 I=3405 F=0x
T=255 (#4)
For ICMP protocol packets, the number following the source address
should be the ICMP
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