Wow! Even /etc/services from Mac OS/X (in turn taken from FreeBSD) has many more entries.
[id-est:ws/trunk/wiretap] lego% sed 's/#.*//; s/[ \t]+//;' /etc/services | grep -v -c '^$' 8059 [id-est:ws/trunk/wiretap] lego% sed 's/#.*//; s/[ \t]+//;' ../../../nmap-4.20/nmap-services | grep -v -c '^$' 2273 This has no (c) notice so I believe we we can use it. On 8/7/07, Ulf Lamping <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Luis EG Ontanon schrieb: > > nmap-services is much richer I guess... > > > No, it's not ;-) > > After I've stripped both files from header and footer comments: > > nmap-services has 2286 lines (all of them entries) > port-numbers has 14992 lines (about half of them comments) > > So the official IANA port-numbers files has roughly three times more > entries than the nmap one. Ok, you could argue that the nmap one > probably contains more entries seen "in the wild". > > > Well, the profinet entries I was looking for (port 34962 and following) > is only in the IANA port-numbers file. > > > The only question that remains for me is the copyright of the IANA file. > Can we simply copy over that file or do we have a license problem with it? > > > Regards, ULFL > > P.S: Of course, we could merge both files into one, but there will be a > lot of duplicates. I leave that as an exercise for the interested reader > ;-) > > _______________________________________________ > Wireshark-dev mailing list > [email protected] > http://www.wireshark.org/mailman/listinfo/wireshark-dev > -- This information is top security. When you have read it, destroy yourself. -- Marshall McLuhan Propertarianism joined to capitalist vigor destroyed meaningful commercial competition, but when it came to making good software, anarchism won. -- Eben Moglen _______________________________________________ Wireshark-dev mailing list [email protected] http://www.wireshark.org/mailman/listinfo/wireshark-dev
