Paal Marker wrote:
> debian 3.0r2 kernel 2.2.20
You probably really want to consider upgrading to a 2.4 kernel.
Debian 3.0r2 supports linux-2.4.18 with security patches.
> I have installed telnetd, and it is running.
You probably also want to install telnetd-ssl instead. It does not
really cha
Paal Marker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> When telneting the box I get into the login, asked for username. When
> entering a valid username I get this message:
> "System bootup in progress -please wait"
You probably have an "/etc/nologin" file (containing this text you
see) that wasn't deleted b
On Fri, 18 Jun 2004 08:46:41 +0200, Paal Marker wrote
> debian 3.0r2 kernel 2.2.20
> I have got some workstations inside a network, and I will need
> telnet access to them.
>
> I have installed telnetd, and it is running.
>
> When telneting the box I get into the login, asked for username.
> W
On Fri, 18 Jun 2004 05:12:00 -0400, Carl Fink <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Anyone eavesdropping on your network can read your telnet account name and
> password from the traffic, since they're sent in clear. Now, if the network
> is entirely switched that becomes harder
But not too much har
On Fri, Jun 18, 2004 at 10:53:21AM +0200, Paal Marker wrote:
> Well, telnet is the default inside our network, so I wanted to stick to
> it. As the debian-box is inside the local nets firewall and each box has
> a strict local firewall, security is not a real issue.
Yes it is.
Anyone eavesdrop
Paal Marker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Paul Johnson wrote:
>
>>Paal Marker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>>>I have installed telnetd, and it is running.
>>
>>Why not just use ssh? It just drops in and works, and is a lot more
>>flexable and secure than telnet.
>>
> Well, telnet is the default
Paul Johnson wrote:
Paal Marker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
I have installed telnetd, and it is running.
Why not just use ssh? It just drops in and works, and is a lot more
flexable and secure than telnet.
Well, telnet is the default inside our network, so I wanted to stick to
it. As t
Paal Marker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have installed telnetd, and it is running.
Why not just use ssh? It just drops in and works, and is a lot more
flexable and secure than telnet.
--
Paul Johnson
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Linux. You can find a worse OS, but it costs more.
pgp6yJGxoXvgP.pgp
On Fri, 2004-06-18 at 08:46, Paal Marker wrote:
> debian 3.0r2 kernel 2.2.20
> I have got some workstations inside a network, and I will need telnet
> access to them.
>
> I have installed telnetd, and it is running.
why ohh why are you using telnet when you can use ssh ?
i know it was not a an
debian 3.0r2 kernel 2.2.20
I have got some workstations inside a network, and I will need telnet
access to them.
I have installed telnetd, and it is running.
When telneting the box I get into the login, asked for username. When
entering a valid username I get this message:
"System bootup in pro
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