-> I have a couple of questions regarding inetd (and other things)
->
-> 1) Is possible to control what interfaces the services in inetd bind to?
xinetd is the answer.
-> 2) is possible to specify either
-> a) what interfaces a particular user can log in through or
-> b) what ip ad
On Mon, Dec 11, 2000 at 11:33:38PM -0600, Damian Menscher wrote:
> Well, since you asked there is no punctuation. Ideally, I would
You could do this:
13:49 ~ $ makepasswd --char=10 --string='^39foobar,' --count=3
^3ff,ao3^,
^aobrr9bbo
o,o,339oo9
--
* netgod opens his mailbox and immediate
Damian Menscher wrote:
>
> On Mon, 11 Dec 2000, Ethan Benson wrote:
>
> > tell what is so damn insecure about these?
> >
> > $ while true ; do makepasswd --chars=12 ; done
> > t2nWXiWynAU8
> > qdesULEdwzLG
> > g3YfAxqxLG1d
>
> Well, since you asked there is no punctuation.
Is there anythin
On Mon, 11 Dec 2000, Ethan Benson wrote:
> tell what is so damn insecure about these?
>
> $ while true ; do makepasswd --chars=12 ; done
> t2nWXiWynAU8
> qdesULEdwzLG
> g3YfAxqxLG1d
Well, since you asked there is no punctuation. Ideally, I would
like to see control characters in passwords.
On Mon, Dec 11, 2000 at 10:28:53AM -0700, Myles Green wrote:
>
> Huh? WTF are you smoking? There's no binary stuff there, just a _good_
> mix of upper and lower case plus numbers and other keyboard symbols.
want to bet smart ass?
$ cat /dev/urandom | od -s8 -An
æÅãHÓà «Ï
Üäþ1èvp'·¤Äß
WÚ¬:ÐVÂa¡
On 11/12/2000 at 10:28 -0700, Myles Green wrote:
> Huh? WTF are you smoking? There's no binary stuff there, just a _good_
> mix of upper and lower case plus numbers and other keyboard symbols.
>
> $ cat /dev/urandom | od -s8 -An
> $3,y3?es
> w3[Am'4j.
> )w{'375u
> l]TqFCG3
> V}gJR'CKQ
> NLUy1~,C:
On Monday 11 December 2000 10:15, Ethan Benson wrote:
> > On Mon, Dec 11, 2000 at 10:04:43AM -0700, Myles Green wrote:
> > On Monday 11 December 2000 04:29, David Purton wrote:
> > > this stems from the lack of imagination used by my dad in
> > > password picking...
> >
> > I use the following to
On Mon, Dec 11, 2000 at 10:04:43AM -0700, Myles Green wrote:
> On Monday 11 December 2000 04:29, David Purton wrote:
>
> > this stems from the lack of imagination used by my dad in password
> > picking...
>
> I use the following to generate passwords:
>
> cat /dev/urandom | od -s8 -An
>
> It mi
On Monday 11 December 2000 04:29, David Purton wrote:
> this stems from the lack of imagination used by my dad in password
> picking...
I use the following to generate passwords:
cat /dev/urandom | od -s8 -An
It might take a minute or so before it starts spitting out potential
passwords and yo
On Mon, Dec 11, 2000 at 09:59:17PM +1030, David Purton wrote:
> > > 2) is possible to specify either
> > > a) what interfaces a particular user can log in through or
> > > b) what ip addresses a particular user can log in from?
> >
> > Sure. ssh and telnet (bad!) logins can be restricted t
On Mon, 11 Dec 2000, Philipp Schulte wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 11, 2000 at 09:34:04PM +1030, David Purton wrote:
>
> > 1) Is possible to control what interfaces the services in inetd bind to?
>
> I don't thik I understand what you want. Are you talking about a
> server which has several interfaces
On Mon, Dec 11, 2000 at 09:34:04PM +1030, David Purton wrote:
> 1) Is possible to control what interfaces the services in inetd bind to?
I don't thik I understand what you want. Are you talking about a
server which has several interfaces and you want i.e. smtp to be
reached through eth0?
> 2)
Hello,
I have a couple of questions regarding inetd (and other things)
1) Is possible to control what interfaces the services in inetd bind to?
2) is possible to specify either
a) what interfaces a particular user can log in through or
b) what ip addresses a particular user c
13 matches
Mail list logo