Daniel de los Reyes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> So it looks like it's licq the one using this port:
[...]
> So how come nmap reports nterm? Does nmap not work right?
IMHO, nmap just checks some kind of database and finds TCP 1026
associated with a service called "nterm".
moritz
--
Mor
El Fri, Feb 09, 2001 at 05:11:58PM +0100, Moritz Schulte dijo:
-| Daniel de los Reyes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
-|
-| > telnet does connect to port 1026
-|
-| Ok. Connect to the port. Then, while the connection is established,
-| try 'fuser 1026/tcp' as root. This should tell you the correspond
Daniel de los Reyes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> telnet does connect to port 1026
Ok. Connect to the port. Then, while the connection is established,
try 'fuser 1026/tcp' as root. This should tell you the corresponding
pid for the process listening on this port. Then, check with 'ps aux |
grep '
El Fri, Feb 09, 2001 at 02:14:46PM +0100, Moritz Schulte dijo:
-| Daniel de los Reyes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
-|
-| > I got this from nterm:
-|
-| You mean from a portscanner (looks like nmap)?
-|
-| > 1026opentcpnterm
-| >
-| > I have no entry for nterm nor port 1026
Daniel de los Reyes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I got this from nterm:
You mean from a portscanner (looks like nmap)?
> 1026opentcpnterm
>
> I have no entry for nterm nor port 1026 in /etc/inetd.conf nor
> /etc/services..
>
> whay is this nterm thing?
Try to connect to
I got this from nterm:
1026opentcpnterm
I have no entry for nterm nor port 1026 in /etc/inetd.conf nor /etc/services..
whay is this nterm thing?
--
__
Daniel de los Reyes
S2-Selling Soluciones
Valencia Spain
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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