Craig;
I'm sure the system reboots. All I have to do is walk in to the other room
and watch it.
You very well may have a point about a firewall utility. I do have one
installed. I'll have to check into that more. Same for the log files.
I've read about NX but have never tried it. For me VNC seems to work,
performance wise, over a relatively fast connection. It was simple to setup,
meaning I already figured out how to do it, and tunneling it through ssh.
You may not have seen the problem, that's why I posted the question on the
list, hoping somebody else had slayed the dragon and can tell me how it was
done so to speak. 8-))
Thanks for the pointers on what to look at.
Regards;
Leland C. Scott
KC8LDO
"There is only one boss. The customer.
And he can fire everybody in the
company from the chairman on down,
simply by spending his money somewhere
else."
-Sam Walton
----- Original Message -----
From: "Craig White" <craigwhite@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "KC8LDO" <kc8ldo@xxxxxxxx>; "Community assistance, encouragement, and
advice for using Fedora." <fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2009 12:59 AM
Subject: Re: F11 iptables can't disable
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
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