On Wed, Dec 01, 1999 at 05:08:33PM -0700, Raphael Clancy wrote:
> Is there a quick way (on a debian 2.0 system) to block specific
> adresses from making inetd style connections (ie. ftp, telnet
> etc?) my instincts tell me that is has to do with the
> /etc/hosts.deny file. unfortunately I can't fin
*- On 2 Dec, Martin Fluch wrote about "Re: How to block access from specific
sites."
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> On Wed, 1 Dec 1999, Ethan Benson wrote:
>
>> ALL: *.microsoft.com
>> sshd: *.apple.com
>> in.ftpd: 192.168.0.5
>&g
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On Wed, 1 Dec 1999, Ethan Benson wrote:
> ALL: *.microsoft.com
> sshd: *.apple.com
> in.ftpd: 192.168.0.5
>
> are some examples, you should get a pretty decent man page with man 5
> hosts.deny if not then your man pages are broken :)
>
> (btw I don't remembe
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On Wed, 1 Dec 1999, Raphael Clancy wrote:
> Is there a quick way (on a debian 2.0 system) to block specific
> adresses from making inetd style connections (ie. ftp, telnet etc?) my
> instincts tell me that is has to do with the /etc/hosts.deny file.
> unfortunat
On 1/12/99 Raphael Clancy wrote:
Is there a quick way (on a debian 2.0 system) to block specific
adresses from making inetd style connections (ie. ftp, telnet etc?)
my instincts tell me that is has to do with the /etc/hosts.deny
file. unfortunately I can't find any info on it in the man pages,
On 02-Dec-1999 Raphael Clancy wrote:
> Is there a quick way (on a debian 2.0 system) to block specific adresses
> from making inetd style connections (ie. ftp, telnet etc?) my instincts tell
> me that is has to do with the /etc/hosts.deny file. unfortunately I can't
> find any info on it in the ma
Hi Raphael
Have u ever tried ipchains? This is a good tool for doing this, and a great
resort for making firewalls.
For example, u wanna block some packages that come from the network
192.160.50.*. So u must edit your /etc/init.d/network file, including this
lines
ipchains -A forward -s 192.160.
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