On Mon, Nov 05, 2007 at 08:30:01PM +1100, hce wrote: > On 11/5/07, Andrew Sackville-West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Mon, Nov 05, 2007 at 03:37:05PM +1100, hce wrote: > > > On 11/5/07, Andrew Sackville-West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > ... > > > > > > > > in debian services are started with an init script stored in > > > > /etc/init.d/ and linked to various runlevels in /etc/rc[S123456].d/ > > > > > > I've checked in /etc/init.d, there is no tftp, nor tftpd. I did > > > installed by "apt-get install tftp" and "apt-get install tftpd". Where > > > are those scripts? Or did I installed wrong tftp packages? > > > > looks like you probably did install the wrong package. > > > > Useful bits: > > > > dpkg -L tftpd > > $ dpkg -L tftpd > Package `tftpd' does not contain any files (!) >
please provide dpkg -l tftpd and apt-cache policy tftpd > This is stange and I am confused, how can calling "apt-get install > tftpd" get nothing?? Without seeing the actual session where you did this, its hard to say. > > Indeed, from packages.debian.org and the package description, looks > > like tftpd expects to start form inet.d, so you'd have to put the > > proper entries in inet.d.conf and will not see the daemon running > > unless someone's actually connected. > > Well, my inetd.conf contains following tftp: > > tftp dgram udp wait nobody /usr/sbin/tcpd /usr/sbin/in.tftpd /srv/tftp > > How to start/stop/restart the intd? depends on which inetd you have installed. ls /etc/init.d/ | grep inet and then /etc/init.d/<results of above> start/stop/restart as required. A
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