Hi !
Do you know you have a directory /var/backups with a copy of
/etc/group, /etc/passwd and /etc/inetd.conf in it ?
(created by /etc/cron.daily/netbase )
Or was it only installed with the base of bo ?
This -should- help you.
if not, consider install anacron, that will ensure your cron entries
> > It is one of the removal scripts of CVS, *DO NOT* remove cvs as it will wipe
> > inetd.conf :(
> >
>
> Only to clarify this ...
> It's only valid for the versions CVS 1.9-{1,2,3} (all versions only in
> unstable). If you have one of
> these versions installed edit the cvs.postrm in
> /var/li
On Apr 20, Adrian Bridgett wrote
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> you wrote:
> > /etc/inetd.conf gets wiped out by some package, but i still haven't
> > figured it out which one is the culprit. this means that none of your
> > daemons (telnet, ftp) get started, so you can't log in remotely. i
>
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> you wrote:
> /etc/inetd.conf gets wiped out by some package, but i still haven't
> figured it out which one is the culprit. this means that none of your
> daemons (telnet, ftp) get started, so you can't log in remotely. i
> don't think netstd is the problem, but i
/etc/inetd.conf gets wiped out by some package, but i still haven't
figured it out which one is the culprit. this means that none of your
daemons (telnet, ftp) get started, so you can't log in remotely. i
don't think netstd is the problem, but i could be wrong.
--alex--
--
| I believe the moment
Hi,
I just updated netstd from 2.12 to 2.13 which seems to prevent anyone from
logging in remotely. Downgrading fixed the problem. Has anyone noticed
this and/or figured out why this problem occurs? Thanks..
J. Goldman
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