On Thu, Jul 21, 2016 at 11:36:03AM +1000, Justin Steven wrote:
> I'm a bit fuzzy on enabling/disabling services in light of the move to
> systemd.
> I don't think smbd is handled by systemd yet so you can't use systemctl to
> disable it (hopefully someone will correct me if I'm wrong).
You can. I
On Thu, 21 Jul 2016 12:37:57 + (UTC)
Thiago Zoroastro wrote:
> Hi
> I just installed samba to begin learning him. But I realized that I
> don't need it in my personal system. My Debian systems are installed
> in pendrives and boot them in any computer, so I can study them when
> I want. If I
Hi
I just installed samba to begin learning him. But I realized that I don't need
it in my personal system. My Debian systems are installed in pendrives and boot
them in any computer, so I can study them when I want. If I decide leaving 445
IP port opened, so I prefer uninstalling Samba when not
Hi.
On Thu, 21 Jul 2016 01:09:36 + (UTC)
Thiago Zoroastro wrote:
> Hi there, I would like you sorry me if I wrote the English wrong in some
> place.
>
> I realized that my Debian systems are with 445's IP ports opened. How I could
> to block permanently this and any other IP port
On Thu, Jul 21, 2016 at 01:09:36AM +, Thiago Zoroastro wrote:
> Could I to know what the package that's installed and opening this IP port
> opened?
You can find out using netstat or ss.
```
% sudo netstat -antp | grep 445
tcp0 0 0.0.0.0:445 0.0.0.0:* LI
Hi there, I would like you sorry me if I wrote the English wrong in some place.
I realized that my Debian systems are with 445's IP ports opened. How I could
to block permanently this and any other IP port when I wish?
I've blocked with an Iptables command but I would like a way to block forever.
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