Le 23 juil. 04, à 19:30, Andre Garzia a écrit :


On Jul 23, 2004, at 2:23 PM, Frank D. Engel, Jr. wrote:

If they are running a firewall of some sort, is the port open?

Frank,

the port is open. They are firewalled but I manage to connect to an HTTPd daemon running at 3014 why shouldn't I be able to connect to MySQL daemon at the same port?

If i don't understand wrong what you are thinking about, take care, Andre, about the fact that each port is binded to the first app witch opened a socket to it (aka, the port will be unavailable for the second app as long as any opened sockets to the first one have not been closed.


Do firewalls are good enought to distinguish between http traffic and mysql traffic?

The main job of the firewall is to block the incoming requests to unauthorised ports.


I thought in the end it was all packet data and no one could make any sense out of it... :D

Before trying MySQL Daemon, I tried launching a webserver set to the default MySQL port just to see if they could connect, and yes, they could. Then I just keept working and now they can't connect to the Daemon... I think that or the firewall policies changed in the meantime or that the connection is timing out for their connection hellish slow. Can the MySQL connection with Rev fail due to timeout?

Probably not but, i'm not a MySQL user...

Best, Pierre

Cheers andre

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Andre Alves Garzia  2004
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