On Tue, 2009-12-15 at 00:32 -0500, KC8LDO wrote: > Tim; > > I understand that. > > When I ask to stop a service it should stop, period. I shouldn't see the GUI > telling me its still running. Doing this for ip6tables it works as expected. > You stop it, it stops and the GUI says so. Disable it, its disabled, and the > GUI shows that too. And it stays disabled and not running when you reboot > the machine. > > Now do that with iptables. First it won't stop. Then I tried the CLI route, > which totally flushed out any rules. The service was disabled through the > GUI too. Rebooting the machine the service is shown as disable but running, > duh! Using the CLI I see a bunch of rules are loaded, again, @#$%! This > should not happen. If I configured a service to be disabled it should stay > that way, and not run, after a reboot. > > Clicking on the "Customize" menu item, in the Service Configuration GUI > tool, only run levels 2 though 5 are listed and all show the service as > disabled for those run levels. That's for both ip6tables and iptables. > > So why does ip6tables work differently from iptables? In my mind they should > configure and work the same way from the administrator's point of view. > > If it makes a difference, and I found with getting a pop-up dialog box > asking for root's password, it makes a difference if I'm at a directly > connected console or accessing the box using VNC, which is how I normally > work on them. With the last several releases of Fedora its gotten buggy in > this regard. I've have to resort to modifying the menu entries to open > various apps in a terminal window using (su -c "application-here) work > around to get a chance to switch to root privileges to do things. This is > really getting old. The prior releases seemed to work rather well with this > issue, not anymore. Don't other people running headless boxes using VNC > notice this? ---- I don't run Fedora as servers - perhaps someday I might but I tend to use RHEL or CentOS for various reasons, and the only time I have run Fedora 'headless' was part of K12LTSP but this comes to mind... - FreeNX is much more effective for me than VNC server - it's possible that you have something other than 'iptables service' starting iptables rulesets at startup. Did you install firestarter or some other iptables manager? - I personally have NEVER seen a 'service' that is listed as off for all run levels start the service after a reboot. Maybe it could happen but I have never seen it and I've been doing RHL/RHEL/CentOS/Fedora a long time on a lot of systems. So I would start asking some questions... - are you sure the system is actually rebooting? - have you checked the syslogs (/var/log/messages)? for hints/clues about service startups? - have you checked the syslogs/audit logs for SELinux interference? Craig -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines