rpm -e telnet

If a telnet offend thee pluck it out.  I suppose that won't stop the
service but it will stop it from starting up again.

-Brady

> On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 07:00, Mike Partyka wrote:
> > Hello,
> > 
> > Was wondering if anyone could answer a question that I have had for some time now.
> > 
> > In redhat your run level appropriate start scripts 
> > (rc.0, rc.1,rc.3,etc) are located in /etc/rc.d/rc.x, where x is your run-level. On my fairly bare-bone redhat installation, there are only about 18 start scripts in rc.3, but i am sure there are other daemons/services running, than are listed in this directory. I have checked my rc.local but are there other places i can check and if necessary stop certain daemons/services i don't want/need running?
> > 
> > One more ?, looking in my /etc/services, almost nothign is pounded out, but yet telnet for example doesn't answer, where ultimately are these services turned on/off?
> 
> First of all, there is a command-line front-end to the startup scripts
> called 'chkconfig'. 'chkconfig --list' will show all configured services
> on your machine, and their status as to whether they are to
> automatically launch at boot or not, and also which runlevels they are
> to run under. You can just enter 'chkconfig' to get a listing of
> available options, but it is able to add new services, change the
> current runlevel config of existing services, and also delete existing
> services.
> 
> As to your telnet question, several services run under the blanket of
> inetd (in RedHat 8 they have changed to xinetd, which is both more
> powerful and flexible). xinetd is configured through its files in /etc,
> with one master file (with just a few default rules) xinetd.conf, plus a
> whole directory of additional specific files in /etc/xinetd.d/, one file
> per service. If you want to find telnet, look in /etc/xinetd.d/ for a
> file called telnet.


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