Hi Ignacio, apology for my English... my name is George Ginis... what you mean running/accessible via firewall and system-config-securitylevel? in XP or CentOS? and what is this? the PuTTY I have in XP or in CentOS? thank for your answer... By default CentOS doesn't have ftp, telnet, nor rlogin services running/accessible via firewall. Use an ssh client such as PuTTY. And don't forget to use system-config-securitylevel to open the ssh port. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20051106/187d2a2c/attachment.html>
On Sun, Nov 06, 2005 at 11:24:32AM +0100, George Ginis enlightened us:> apology for my English... > my name is George Ginis... > > what you mean running/accessible via firewall and > system-config-securitylevel? in XP or CentOS? and what is this? >By default, CentOS does not enable an ftp, telnet or rlogin server. In addition, it also restricts connections to those ports in the firewall, unless you changed that during install. The best way to enable access to your machine is to run the system-config-securitylevel command and allow connections to the SSH port.> the PuTTY I have in XP or in CentOS? >PuTTY is one example of an SSH client that runs on Windows. You can use this program to connect to your CentOS machine (after you have done the above). Matt -- Matt Hyclak Department of Mathematics Department of Social Work Ohio University (740) 593-1263
I resolved the problem with the PuTTY in XP. but what you mean running/accessible via firewall and system-config-securitylevel? in XP or CentOS? and what is this? can i use samba in centos? and how connect from XP? ----- Original Message ----- From: George Ginis To: ivazquez at ivazquez.net Cc: centos at centos.org Sent: Sunday, November 06, 2005 11:24 AM Subject: Hi Ignacio Hi Ignacio, apology for my English... my name is George Ginis... what you mean running/accessible via firewall and system-config-securitylevel? in XP or CentOS? and what is this? the PuTTY I have in XP or in CentOS? thank for your answer... By default CentOS doesn't have ftp, telnet, nor rlogin services running/accessible via firewall. Use an ssh client such as PuTTY. And don't forget to use system-config-securitylevel to open the ssh port. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20051106/b04e6636/attachment.html>