Re: [gentoo-user] web-browser out port

2005-04-12 Thread Robert G. Hays
Ok, the short answer is... You need to figure out what outside-target ports you need to be able to reach and open up the outbound for them, and EITHER: (1) how to tell your programs that do so what ports to use,, OR (2) open up outbound-only above, say, 1050. Depending on what tool(s) you use

Re: [gentoo-user] web-browser out port

2005-04-12 Thread Joseph
On Tue, 2005-04-12 at 14:09 -0500, Andrew Gaffney wrote: > Joseph wrote: > > Is there a standard port the web-browser connection is going OUT (to > > internet) on? > > You might want to read up on how TCP/IP works. Outgoing connections are made > on > a random (well, not random, but not exactly p

Re: [gentoo-user] web-browser out port

2005-04-12 Thread Andrew Gaffney
Joseph wrote: > Is there a standard port the web-browser connection is going OUT (to > internet) on? You might want to read up on how TCP/IP works. Outgoing connections are made on a random (well, not random, but not exactly predictable) port >1024. All ports <=1024 are restricted for root's use o

RE: [gentoo-user] web-browser out port

2005-04-12 Thread Dave Nebinger
> Is there a standard port the web-browser connection is going OUT (to > internet) on? No. Any unprivileged port is available for use as an outgoing connection and they are assigned by the OS. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list

[gentoo-user] web-browser out port

2005-04-12 Thread Joseph
Is there a standard port the web-browser connection is going OUT (to internet) on? -- #Joseph -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list