Hey Thedore,
Saturday, February 23, 2002, 11:44:39 PM, you wrote:
> What is wrong here ?
> Is this a reverse lookup error ?
> Feb 21 11:30:01 albert sshd[21141]: warning: /etc/hosts.allow, line 18:
> can't verify hostname: gethostbyname(WC-44-75.washcoll.edu) failed
> Feb 21 11:35:29 albert ssh
What is wrong here ?
Is this a reverse lookup error ?
Feb 21 11:30:01 albert sshd[21141]: warning: /etc/hosts.allow, line 18:
can't verify hostname: gethostbyname(WC-44-75.washcoll.edu) failed
Feb 21 11:35:29 albert sshd[21163]: warning: /etc/hosts.allow, line 18:
can't verify hostname: gethostby
Hey Thedore,
Saturday, February 23, 2002, 11:44:39 PM, you wrote:
> What is wrong here ?
> Is this a reverse lookup error ?
> Feb 21 11:30:01 albert sshd[21141]: warning: /etc/hosts.allow, line 18:
> can't verify hostname: gethostbyname(WC-44-75.washcoll.edu) failed
> Feb 21 11:35:29 albert ss
What is wrong here ?
Is this a reverse lookup error ?
Feb 21 11:30:01 albert sshd[21141]: warning: /etc/hosts.allow, line 18:
can't verify hostname: gethostbyname(WC-44-75.washcoll.edu) failed
Feb 21 11:35:29 albert sshd[21163]: warning: /etc/hosts.allow, line 18:
can't verify hostname: gethostb
On Thu, 15 Feb 2001, Jeremy C. Reed wrote:
> But is this the Debian way? What will happen when I upgrade lpr package?
i'd be more than very surprised if any automatic script would modify
any conf file i write or modify. then again, you never know what those
scripts will do, but they strongly sho
On Thu, 15 Feb 2001, Tamas TEVESZ wrote:
> On Thu, 15 Feb 2001, Jeremy C. Reed wrote:
>
> > Does anyone know of the a lpd debian package (or the correct Debian
> > way) to use lpd with tcp_wrappers support (hosts_option(s5))?
>
> you can just simply tell tcpd to run it, sg like
>
> lpd stream
On Thu, 15 Feb 2001, Jeremy C. Reed wrote:
> But is this the Debian way? What will happen when I upgrade lpr package?
i'd be more than very surprised if any automatic script would modify
any conf file i write or modify. then again, you never know what those
scripts will do, but they strongly sh
On Thu, 15 Feb 2001, Jeremy C. Reed wrote:
> Does anyone know of the a lpd debian package (or the correct Debian
> way) to use lpd with tcp_wrappers support (hosts_option(s5))?
you can just simply tell tcpd to run it, sg like
lpd stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /usr/sbin/lpd args
tweak
I have lpd running on a publically-available server.
Currently, it is secured with just /etc/hosts.lpd.
I have seen an lpd that I can run with a "-i" switch to use via inetd. But
it looks like the lpd from Debian (lpr 0.48-1) doesn't have this option.
(I am interested in running via inetd so I ca
On Thu, 15 Feb 2001, Tamas TEVESZ wrote:
> On Thu, 15 Feb 2001, Jeremy C. Reed wrote:
>
> > Does anyone know of the a lpd debian package (or the correct Debian
> > way) to use lpd with tcp_wrappers support (hosts_option(s5))?
>
> you can just simply tell tcpd to run it, sg like
>
> lpd strea
On Thu, 15 Feb 2001, Jeremy C. Reed wrote:
> Does anyone know of the a lpd debian package (or the correct Debian
> way) to use lpd with tcp_wrappers support (hosts_option(s5))?
you can just simply tell tcpd to run it, sg like
lpd stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /usr/sbin/lpd args
tweak
I have lpd running on a publically-available server.
Currently, it is secured with just /etc/hosts.lpd.
I have seen an lpd that I can run with a "-i" switch to use via inetd. But
it looks like the lpd from Debian (lpr 0.48-1) doesn't have this option.
(I am interested in running via inetd so I c
That would be how you can see - add an entry to hosts.deny that denies
the address you'll be testing from, restart the service in question, and
try to access it.
Thanks,
Shawn
> Hello John and All,
> Thank you for the reply.
> How can I tell if my services are set up for tcp
Hello John and All,
Thank you for the reply.
How can I tell if my services are set up for tcp wrappers?
I remember I used to run wrappers a couple years back on a Redhat machine,
but I would have to compile each program to be used with wrappers and
specify in inetd.conf that they were wrapped. It
That would be how you can see - add an entry to hosts.deny that denies
the address you'll be testing from, restart the service in question, and
try to access it.
Thanks,
Shawn
> Hello John and All,
> Thank you for the reply.
> How can I tell if my services are set up for tcp
Hello John and All,
Thank you for the reply.
How can I tell if my services are set up for tcp wrappers?
I remember I used to run wrappers a couple years back on a Redhat machine,
but I would have to compile each program to be used with wrappers and
specify in inetd.conf that they were wrapped. It
On Thu, Sep 07, 2000 at 07:51:26AM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hello All,
> I have a general question about TCP wrappers.
> I know that they "wrap" rservices and somehow enhance security, but I am
> rather unsure of what they actually do physically and where to g
Hello All,
I have a general question about TCP wrappers.
I know that they "wrap" rservices and somehow enhance security, but I am
rather unsure of what they actually do physically and where to get more
info on what services it is best to have wrapped. Any info on TCP wrappers
is much a
On Thu, Sep 07, 2000 at 07:51:26AM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hello All,
> I have a general question about TCP wrappers.
> I know that they "wrap" rservices and somehow enhance security, but I am
> rather unsure of what they actually do physically and where to g
Hello All,
I have a general question about TCP wrappers.
I know that they "wrap" rservices and somehow enhance security, but I am
rather unsure of what they actually do physically and where to get more
info on what services it is best to have wrapped. Any info on TCP wrappers
is much a
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