In message <20030128222210.GA84278@pit.databus.com>, Barney Wolff writes:
On Wed, Jan 29, 2003 at 03:50:34AM +0545, Joe Abley wrote:
On Wednesday, Jan 29, 2003, at 01:25 Asia/Katmandu, Joe Abley wrote:
On FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD and Darwin/Mac OS X (the only xterms I happen to have open right now) this is not the case, and has not been for some time. I presume, perhaps na?vely, that other operating systems have done something similar.
This is not right. Guess I was typing "man" in the wrong xterms.
FreeBSD (4.x, 5.x) listens to the network by default (and can be persuaded not to with a "-s" flag). NetBSD (1.6) does the same.
You were right the first time, at least for FreeBSD. The "-s" flag is applied by default - see /etc/defaults/rc.conf . Not quite as idiot-proof as a compiled-in default, but way better than defaulting to listening.
The same is true of NetBSD 1.6; look in the same place. --Steve Bellovin, http://www.research.att.com/~smb (me) http://www.wilyhacker.com (2nd edition of "Firewalls" book)