darren kirby wrote:
quoth the Michael Sullivan:
How would I find out what port named runs on (so I could open that port
on my firewall)?
Port 53, see /etc/services
-d
Alternately, as root execute netstat -pant
--
mike kenny
Linux Registered User #381724
LPI ID# 80080
"Hell, there are no r
On Fri, 2005-12-16 at 10:54 -0800, kashani wrote:
> Michael Sullivan wrote:
> > How would I find out what port named runs on (so I could open that port
> > on my firewall)?
> >
>
> port 53 udp/tcp
>
> However if your DNS server is internal I don't see why you'd need to
> open anything on the fi
Michael Sullivan wrote:
How would I find out what port named runs on (so I could open that port
on my firewall)?
port 53 udp/tcp
However if your DNS server is internal I don't see why you'd need to
open anything on the firewall.
kashani
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gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
quoth the Michael Sullivan:
> How would I find out what port named runs on (so I could open that port
> on my firewall)?
Port 53, see /etc/services
-d
--
darren kirby :: Part of the problem since 1976 :: http://badcomputer.org
"...the number of UNIX installations has grown to 10, with more expect
On 12:25 Fri 16 Dec , Michael Sullivan wrote:
> How would I find out what port named runs on (so I could open that port
> on my firewall)?
>
grep domain /etc/services
Bill Roberts
pgpOJ7bTpeoWj.pgp
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On Dec 16, 2005, at 6:25 pm, Michael Sullivan wrote:
How would I find out what port named runs on (so I could open that port
on my firewall)?
It normally runs on port 53, unhelpfully labelled "domain" in
/etc/services (a file which is otherwise & normally useful for
grepping).
Stroller.
How would I find out what port named runs on (so I could open that port
on my firewall)?
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