Hi,
As far as I know. Nmap
only scans for ports it knows. And anyways, you don't need to scan
anything.
Just list what ports that
is listening on your computer:
netstat -aep | grep
LISTEN | grep tcp
Håkon
Fra: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 8. juni 2005 23:37Til:
Hi
Thanks for your reply. I found the error: I had to change
/var/qmail/assign paths from /home to /var - I had to do the same for
all pat's in /var/vpopmail/domains/domain.com/user/vpasswd
Then I could log in after deleting the vpasswd.cdb file.
I guess you have no script witch would do that au
Similar to a question posted by Anton Butsyk on June 2nd, I would like
to know if it's possible to setup POP authentication to be either the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] OR just username.
We just migrated a client over from a Sendmail install to a
debian-3.1+netqmail-1.05+vpopmail-5.4.10 install. vpopmail w
Ken Schweigert wrote:
Similar to a question posted by Anton Butsyk on June 2nd, I would like
to know if it's possible to setup POP authentication to be either the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] OR just username.
We just migrated a client over from a Sendmail install to a
debian-3.1+netqmail-1.05+vpopmail-5.
On 6/9/05, Rick Macdougall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ken Schweigert wrote:
>
> >Similar to a question posted by Anton Butsyk on June 2nd, I would like
> >to know if it's possible to setup POP authentication to be either the
> >[EMAIL PROTECTED] OR just username.
> >
> >We just migrated a client
Ken Schweigert wrote:
On 6/9/05, Rick Macdougall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Ken Schweigert wrote:
Now that everything is setup and running fine, we're finding that all
the users (300 or so) were configured to login with just username. To
make it more complicated, the help desk has alr