I'm not clear on this. Do you mean a login failure? Or something else, like a network issue? What happens is specific to the error, but your question is so general I have no clue what you want.
Actually I think I was pretty clear
I am on machineA. I launch this command :
Afterwards I go on machineB. Will I be able to find any trace of this telnet attempt? If so, where ?
---------- Post updated at 07:29 AM ---------- Previous update was at 07:25 AM ----------
As a side note:
There's no communication problem between these 2 machines. I can have a succesfully telnet command from machineA to machineB on a different port. I can also ssh between these 2 machines. My only problem is when the respective process on machineB does not listen on port 80. When that happens (and I detect that woth a telnet from machineA) will I be able to find the trace of that telnet attempt on the destination machine (machineB) ?
PPS:
I do not want to find out why the telnet command fails. I only want to know how/where can I trace these failed telnet attempts on the destination machine (machineB).
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LEARN ABOUT OSF1
telnetrc
telnetrc(4) Kernel Interfaces Manual telnetrc(4)NAME
telnetrc, .telnetrc - Specifies setup commands for a telnet session
SYNOPSIS
$HOME/.telnetrc
DESCRIPTION
The .telnetrc file contains the setup information for a telnet session. It is a hidden file in your home directory and must be readable by
the user logging in.
The file can consist of multiple entries for each remote host to which a user can connect. A remote host entry consists of multiple lines.
The first line is the name of a remote host. The subsequent lines must begin with blank spaces, and contain telnet subcommands. These sub-
commands are processed as though they were typed in manually. Lines beginning with a number sign (#) are comment lines. See telnet(1) for
a complete list of telnet subcommands.
To specify subcommands that apply to all systems, create an entry, using the word "DEFAULT" as the system name, and specify the telnet sub-
commands in the subsequent lines.
EXAMPLES
The following shows a sample .telnetrc file:
# Beginning of telnetrc file # Default subcommands that apply to all systems DEFAULT
environ undefine USER # First system entry system1
set echo
toggle crlf # Second system entry system2
set echo
mode line
toggle crlf
FILES
User-customized telnet startup values.
RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: telnet(1). delim off
telnetrc(4)