From: Brent Herring [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2003 12:33 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Changing the security level configuration to allow port 53
(DNS)
Ok. It's kinda big. You're right. It's not listening which seems to be
my problem. named is not
me the full netstat
-an
-Original Message-
From: Brent Herring [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2003 11:13 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Changing the security level configuration to allow port
53
(DNS)
I forgot to mention that I'm using TinyDNS. All appears to
I still didn't see it listening on any port. Show me the full netstat -an
-Original Message-
From: Brent Herring [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2003 11:13 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Changing the security level configuration to allow port 53
(DNS
rver configured to be a zone slave?
-Original Message-
From: Brent Herring [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2003 10:21 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Changing the security level configuration to allow port 53
(DNS)
I need assistance in allowing my Redhat 9.0 se
the security
level configuration to allow port 53 (DNS)
I need assistance in allowing my Redhat 9.0 server to allow DNS traffic on
port 53.
I have RedHat 9.0 installed and everything is fine except I can't seem to
change the security level configuration to allow traffic on port 53.
I need assistance in allowing my Redhat 9.0 server to allow DNS traffic on
port 53.
I have RedHat 9.0 installed and everything is fine except I can't seem to
change the security level configuration to allow traffic on port 53. Other
services (httpd(80), ssh(22), etc.,) are worki
On Mon, 2003-06-16 at 23:42, tirumal b wrote:
> hello
>
>I have installed redhat linux 8.0(Psyche).During
> the installation i set no firewall but when i see it
> in the security level after installation the level is
> high by default. I change my option to medium and
&g
hello
I have installed redhat linux 8.0(Psyche).During
the installation i set no firewall but when i see it
in the security level after installation the level is
high by default. I change my option to medium and
selected customize option and selected some of the
services to be allowed.I
rote:
> Hi,
>
> I've been trying to change the security level from High to Medium. But,
> even though I'm logged in as root when I open up the tool to see if my
> changes are there it always shows the Level as High.
>
> Does anyone know how to allow changes to the securi
rote:
> Hi,
>
> I've been trying to change the security level from High to Medium. But,
> even though I'm logged in as root when I open up the tool to see if my
> changes are there it always shows the Level as High.
>
> Does anyone know how to allow changes to the securi
that config tool can't read the settings u have made before. u need to
check /etc/sysconfig/iptables or ipchains to verify the settings.
Also, u can use:
iptables -L
ipchains -L
cheers.
On Sat, 2003-02-15 at 06:39, Joel Lopez wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I've been trying to change
Joel Lopez wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I've been trying to change the security level from High to Medium. But,
> even though I'm logged in as root when I open up the tool to see if my
> changes are there it always shows the Level as High.
If your using ipchains or Linux 7
> I've been trying to change the security level from High to Medium. But,
> even though I'm logged in as root when I open up the tool to see if my
> changes are there it always shows the Level as High.
>
> Does anyone know how to allow changes to the security level?
>
again etc.
I know the behavior above is confusing but that's how it is. It freaked me
too.
Terry
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On
Behalf Of Joel Lopez
Sent: Friday, February 14, 2003 2:40 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Security Level Configur
Hi,
I've been trying to change the security level from High to Medium. But,
even though I'm logged in as root when I open up the tool to see if my
changes are there it always shows the Level as High.
Does anyone know how to allow changes to the security level?
thanks,
Joel
--
r
Michael
As far as I am aware, I didn't do anything. Do these entries look odd
then?
Regards
Ashley
On Mon, 2003-02-03 at 13:01, Michael Schwendt wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On 04 Feb 2003 17:39:12 -0500, Ashley Kitson wrote:
>
> > http://127.0.0.1:901 works!!
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On 04 Feb 2003 17:39:12 -0500, Ashley Kitson wrote:
> http://127.0.0.1:901 works!! brilliant
>
> However, in case this is helping anyone else my /etc/hosts file contains
>
> 192.168.1.102 Prospect3
> 192.168.1.100 Prospect2
> 192.168.
Nick
Thanks for the help. The eth0 address is what I know as my local
machine address. As you can see from a reply to Michael, the loopback
address works as well (http://127.0.0.1:901).
Regards
Ashley
On Mon, 2003-02-03 at 12:25, Nick Lindsell wrote:
> At 17:06 04/02/2003 -0500, you wrote:
>
Michael
http://127.0.0.1:901 works!! brilliant
However, in case this is helping anyone else my /etc/hosts file contains
192.168.1.102 Prospect3
192.168.1.100 Prospect2
192.168.1.101 Prospect1 localhost
192.168.1.101 Prospect1.Prospect
Prospect 2 and 3 were entered b
At 17:06 04/02/2003 -0500, you wrote:
Nick
I don't recall seeing that IP address anywhere. Where might I find it?
From a command line:-
"ifconfig" - you're probably looking for the eth0 device if you have only
one network card.
hih
nick@nexnix
Regards
Ashley
> Use the IP address of the
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On 04 Feb 2003 16:28:38 -0500, Ashley Kitson wrote:
> However .. Now instead of Mozilla telling me I cannot connect when I
> type in the http://localhost:901/ url I get an alert message stating
> that 'The operation timed out when attempting to contac
Nick
I don't recall seeing that IP address anywhere. Where might I find it?
Regards
Ashley
> Use the IP address of the samba server instead of localhost.
> This will also allow you access from other machines so you don't
> have to run X on the server.
>
> hih
> nick@nexnix
>
--
redhat-l
At 16:28 04/02/2003 -0500, you wrote:
However .. Now instead of Mozilla telling me I cannot connect when I
type in the http://localhost:901/ url I get an alert message stating
that 'The operation timed out when attempting to contact
www.localhost.com' This is progress of sorts I guess :-)
Any id
Bret
Thanks for that. I had to force rpm to de-install using --notriggers
--noscripts but it did clear samba out. I've now re-installed and 'rpm
-qa|grep samba' now gives
samba-2.2.5-10
samba-common-2.2.5-10
samba-client-2.2.5-10
samba-swat-2.2.5-10
I then did
chkconfig smb on
chkconfig sw
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On 04 Feb 2003 13:00:40 -0500, Ashley Kitson wrote:
> samba-common-2.2.5-10
> samba-2.2.7a-1
> samba-client-2.2.5-10
>
> so it's mixed up! What now?
As "root" user:
rpm --erase samba --nodeps
up2date --nox samba-swat
The 2.2.7a-1 package is no
On Tue, 2003-02-04 at 12:00, Ashley Kitson wrote:
> Bret
>
> Thanks. here is output
>
> samba-common-2.2.5-10
> samba-2.2.7a-1
> samba-client-2.2.5-10
>
> so it's mixed up! What now?
>
OK
keep in mind I am not an up2date user and there may be a better way to
do this using the tool.
This sh
Bret
Thanks. here is output
samba-common-2.2.5-10
samba-2.2.7a-1
samba-client-2.2.5-10
so it's mixed up! What now?
Kind Regards
Ashley
On Sun, 2003-02-02 at 16:28, Bret Hughes wrote:
>
> New point of view with no 8.0 experience.
>
> First, what does rpm think you have
>
> what does
>
> r
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On 03 Feb 2003 20:57:52 -0500, Ashley Kitson wrote:
> > This is not true for Red Hat's samba-swat packages. There the server
> > line points to /usr/sbin/swat. Whatever you did, you damaged the
> > xinetd config files in several places.
>
> Whatever
On Mon, 2003-02-03 at 19:57, Ashley Kitson wrote:
> Michael
>
>
> You miss the point. here is a timeline:
>
> 1/ RH6.2 Loaded sometime back
> 2/ Machine nuked
> 3/ RH 8.0 loaded including Samba
> 4/ RH autoupdate updates Samba to 2.2.7
> 5/ I get around to using it, configure Samba to run manual
Michael
> This is not true for Red Hat's samba-swat packages. There the server
> line points to /usr/sbin/swat. Whatever you did, you damaged the
> xinetd config files in several places.
Whatever I did, was done under strict direction from the install
directions from the RH8 install guide and fol
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On Fri, 31 Jan 2003 17:20:19 -, Ashley Kitson wrote:
> Thanks for persevering. I ran the tail on messages as suggested. It
> turned out that the server= line in the /etc/xinetd.d/swat file is
> pointing to something that doesn't exist (it reads
Michael
Thanks for persevering. I ran the tail on messages as suggested. It turned
out that the server= line in the /etc/xinetd.d/swat file is pointing to
something that doesn't exist (it reads server=/etc/xinetd/swat i.e. itself).
The log message shows that the server doesn't exist. That got m
On Friday 31 January 2003 09:07, Ashley Kitson wrote:
> Matthew
>
> etc/xinetd.d/swat is configured as
>
> #chkconfig: 35 20 80
> #description: SWAT
>
> service swat
> {
> disable = no
> port = 901
> socket_type = stream
> wait = no
> only_from = localhost
> user = root
>
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On Fri, 31 Jan 2003 11:01:38 -, Ashley Kitson wrote:
> The 2 comment lines were the ones suggested when I read the man page
> for chkconfig (as I didn't know what it was until then).
No. The chkconfig man page doesn't suggest to add anything like
line - no joy.
Kind Regards
Mr Ashley Kitson
- Original Message -
From: "Michael Schwendt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, January 31, 2003 10:14 AM
Subject: Re: RH8.0 - Altering Security Level
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> H
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Hash: SHA1
On Fri, 31 Jan 2003 09:07:37 -, Ashley Kitson wrote:
> etc/xinetd.d/swat is configured as
>
> #chkconfig: 35 20 80
> #description: SWAT
>
> service swat
> {
> disable = no
> port = 901
> socket_type = stream
> wait = no
> onl
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On Fri, 31 Jan 2003 09:16:18 -, Ashley Kitson wrote:
> I got a
>
> /etc/rc.d/init.d/iptables program
> /lib/iptables folder with lots of .so files in it
> /sbin/iptables program
>
> but no /etc/sysconfig/iptables file
>
> This on RH8.0 newly in
I got a
/etc/rc.d/init.d/iptables program
/lib/iptables folder with lots of .so files in it
/sbin/iptables program
but no /etc/sysconfig/iptables file
This on RH8.0 newly installed. Any ideas as to what I should be editing?
Thanks.
Kind Regards
Mr Ashley Kitson
> On Thu, 30 Jan 2003, Ricky De
anuary 31, 2003 12:44 AM
Subject: Re: RH8.0 - Altering Security Level
> On Fri, 31 Jan 2003, Ashley Kitson wrote:
>
> > I think I have my system open at the moment (which is a risk except I'm
> > hidden behind a cable router) and still cannot connect to SWAP using
>
On Thu, 30 Jan 2003, Ricky Deitemeyer wrote:
> What files do I have to edit to change the security settings on my
> Redhat 8.0 box? I'm trying to set up samba, but as it is, I can't even
/etc/sysconfig/iptables
--
"Of course I'm in shape! Round's a shape, isn't it?"
--
redhat-list mailing
First restart the service via ... service samba restartamzy
___Get the FREE email that has everyone talking at http://www.mail2world.com
On Fri, 31 Jan 2003, Ashley Kitson wrote:
> I think I have my system open at the moment (which is a risk except I'm
> hidden behind a cable router) and still cannot connect to SWAP using
SWAT?
> http://localhost:901/. localhost is set in
On Thu, 30 Jan 2003, Robert Adkins wrote:
> Doug,
>
> I have run into the same issue. When I make changes using the "Security
> Level tool" and then close that tool. The settings stick. However, if the
> machine is shutdown (for any reason) or that application i
Ricky
Bingo. having exactly the same problem. Red-hat couldn't care less as
I am just a prole user and their support for 'personal' edition seems to
extend to 'can you see the prompt'.
Anyway, flame out of the way, I know this much:
The Security Level and Lokkit ut
Doug,
I have run into the same issue. When I make changes using the "Security
Level tool" and then close that tool. The settings stick. However, if the
machine is shutdown (for any reason) or that application is opened once
more, the security settings go back the way
30, 2003 3:35
PMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: RH8.0 - Altering
Security Level
What files do I have to edit to
change the security settings on my Redhat 8.0
box? I'm trying to set up samba,
but as it is, I can't even get localhost to accept
my connection. The
firewall
What files do I have to edit to change the security settings
on my Redhat 8.0 box?
I’m trying to set up samba, but as it is, I can’t even get localhost to accept my connection. The firewall/security setting is stuck at ‘high’
and when I attempt to change it via the gnome Security Level
On Tue, Nov 19, 2002 at 11:31:32PM -0800, Rick Johnson wrote:
> Actually on my RH 8.0 boxes, iptables starts BEFORE the network is brought
> up - so you're good to go.
>
> in /etc/rc.d/rc3.d you have the following:
>
> S08iptables
> S10network
>
> That brings up iptables first :-)
Well I'll be
> Hi Rick, Thank you!
> This is a nice clean solution. It integrates so well with the existing
> system thats its almost like someone designed it that way :-)
>
> Does anybody know if there is a "gap" in coverage between the time the
> network is started up and the time the iptables rules bec
On Tue, Nov 19, 2002 at 11:15:47AM -0800, Rick Johnson wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> |
> | I just set up iptables on my cable cnxn (Works great!), and one of the
> | items left sort of open was exactly where the iptables rules should be
> | placed in order to have them run at startup time.
>
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On Tue, 19 Nov 2002 13:13:15 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 19, 2002 at 09:54:43AM -0500, Matthews, John wrote:
> > I believe firewall rules are sometimes kept in
> > /etc/sysconfig/firewall, so you might want to read the contents of
>
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
| On Tue, Nov 19, 2002 at 09:54:43AM -0500, Matthews, John wrote:
|
|>I believe firewall rules are sometimes kept in /etc/sysconfig/firewall, so
|>you might want to read the contents of that file too and ensure you don't
|>have
On Tue, Nov 19, 2002 at 09:54:43AM -0500, Matthews, John wrote:
> I believe firewall rules are sometimes kept in /etc/sysconfig/firewall, so
> you might want to read the contents of that file too and ensure you don't
> have rules being set there.
I just set up iptables on my cable cnxn (Works grea
PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Security level
> is that: by default my security level (of the firewal) is hight, but
> when i
> change the value to no security or median security it doesnt change (he
ask
> me if i want to change the config i select ok, but when i open it again it
> leve
isn't
showing you the current state.
Good luck,
-Original Message-
From: Tiago Andre [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, November 19, 2002 5:48 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Security level
Hello there...
I have install the redhat 8.0 in my computer as a server
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On Tue, 19 Nov 2002 10:47:42 +, Tiago Andre wrote:
> I have install the redhat 8.0 in my computer as a server, but facing a
> problem... when i try to configure my firewal, it doesnt change, what
> i mean is that: by default my security
> is that: by default my security level (of the firewal) is hight, but when i
> change the value to no security or median security it doesnt change (he ask
> me if i want to change the config i select ok, but when i open it again it
> level is again high)
try (as root): serv
Hello there...
I have install the redhat 8.0 in my computer as a server, but facing a
problem... when i try to configure my firewal, it doesnt change, what i mean
is that: by default my security level (of the firewal) is hight, but when i
change the value to no security or median security it
On Tue, 5 Nov 2002, Wang Guojiang wrote:
> configuration again, it is still set to High. I tried at least 10 times
> now using exact same methods as described in the Customization Guide.
It *does* save it. It's just that every time you re-open the dialog, it
resets all fields to the defaults. Ve
I installed Linux 8.0 on my i86 machine with
security level set to High. Now I want to modify the setting so that it will not
block all ports. I used the security level configuration to change to
"customize" to open up WWW and some other TCP ports. It allows me to chan
change the Security Level Configuration from High to
> Medium or No Firewall, it always stay at High no matter what I do. I
> even reinstalled RH Linux 8.0 on the same machine, explicitly picked "No
> Firewall" option during the installation. I eventually ended up with
> "Hig
I downloaded RH Linux 8.0 from one of the mirror sites a few weeks ago.
I installed it on my desktop (P4 - 1.8GHz processor). The installation
(Server installation) went smoothly. It seems to work well except that
when I attempt to change the Security Level Configuration from High to
Medium
It seems to work
> well except that when I attempt to change the Security Level
> Configuration from High to Medium or No Firewall, it always stay at
> High no matter what I do. I even reinstalled RH Linux 8.0 on the same
> machine, explicitly picked "No Firewall" opti
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