From: Michele Andreoli ([email protected])
Date: Sun Feb 04 2001 - 18:55:20 CET
On Sun, Feb 04, 2001 at 09:44:42AM -0800, Bob Romprey nicely wrote:
> Although I have no wish to steer you away from muLinux, for this specific purpose I'd most heartily recommend using freesco, as, for beginning users the setup is much easier.
> www.freesco.org
>
much easier? To run an FTP server in muLinux is only matter to
answer "y" to the question "do you wish startd inetd?".
The user answer "y", with no other questions at all. After that,
FTPD and TELNETD are available to the whole universe.
=======================================================================
- Traditional Internet Services -
This setup start the "inetd" daemon, the Internet Super-server.
A lot of traditional UNIX services, managed via /etc/inetd.conf,
will becomes active. They are:
in.telnetd, in.ftpd, in.rshd, etc.
-- SRV addon required
=======================================================================
>Particularly running internal services that o
>ne wishes to be accessable from the external network.
> www.freesco.org
All services in muLinux, as in every Linux box, are accessible to
external networks. If not, there is some bug. This is NOT a muLinux
feature but a feature common to all Linux boxes, because
- thank god - every Linux box is equiped with a native TCP/IP stack.
As extras, muLinux offers also the SMB (Samba protocol) and
a complete Web front-end to its internals configuration parameters.
All that, in two floppy-disks.
I'm astonished to know that the muLinux services, rustics and not, aren't
accessible from outside.
Michele
-- In summing up, I wish I had some kind of affirmative message to leave you with, I don't. Would you take two negative messages? - Woody Allen --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
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