Then all my PCs are root-kit'ed. 'Cause it happened regularly to me
until I rpm -e'd linuxconf.

I haven't studied the source code of linuxconf, but when I run it
*something* put back linuxconf in my inetd.conf files. Which, BTW, was
the major reason why I stopped using linuxconf.

Best regards
Gustav

Jacques Gelinas wrote:
> 
> > Now, as for the best way to disable linuxconfig, many on the list wil
> > tell you to run "rpm -e linuxconf".  That is the way I preferre to do
> > it, but you can do it the way you have discribed as well.  One thing to
> > be aware of, unless you go into linuxconf and disable web access, it
> > will put an entry back into /etc/inet.d the next time you run it.
> 
> Linuxconf has never done this. Never. The rpm installation installs the
> services in inetd.conf if missing, but Linuxconf has never done such a
> thing.
> 
> There is simply no code in linuxconf to insert itself in inetd.conf. Never
> was.

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