Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: firewalls and proxys
Special Forums Cybersecurity firewalls and proxys Post 14720 by Phatress on Tuesday 5th of February 2002 11:57:21 AM
Old 02-05-2002
Error misunderstanding

actually, I just want to change the firewall a little bit..you see, our school made it to where we can't do certain things and one of them they had no reason for it. I dont know if its unix or linux. Thats what I want to find out. I dont want to erase it.
 

5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Linux Firewalls

I've been considering switching my companies production firewall from FreeBSD and OpenBSD to Linux. The reason being is having so many different flavors of Unix on our production network from FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris, and Linux makes things more difficult to manage from a standardized... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mstevenson
2 Replies

2. IP Networking

Halted Firewalls by Mike Murray

Secure packet filtering on high-bandwidths fw/rtr for large business tasks. Has anyone tried this concept on openbsd? The article is posted at www.sysadminmag.com on page 27. January 2002 issue. I believe Mike has hit upon something that can be applied in the field today and prevent fw... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: dpatel
0 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Firewalls and other security measures...

One day, while using my PC with Windows XP, my router just stopped working. So, for the ability to connect to the web at that moment, I connected directly to the cable modem without my router. I noticed immediately that people were trying to hack into my computer because my personal firewall would... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Minnesota Red
2 Replies

4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Firewalls

Hi, I was doing abit of reading on firewalls when this question came up. Is there any command which sets up a firewall that will only allow packets through if they come from a port number less than 1024? How about a command which allows packets through if they are destined for a port... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sleepster
3 Replies

5. Cybersecurity

Firewalls and cryptography

As we know, firewall is designed to keep unauthorized outsiders from tampering with a computer system or network. We don't talk about computer security without cryptography. In this case, may I know,How does cryptographic protection (at the TCP/IP layers or at the application layer) affect a... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: heroine
1 Replies
PROXYMNGR(1)						      General Commands Manual						      PROXYMNGR(1)

NAME
proxymngr - proxy manager service SYNOPSIS
proxymngr [-config filename] [-timeout seconds] [-retries #] [-verbose] DESCRIPTION
The proxy manager (proxymngr) is responsible for resolving requests from xfindproxy (and other similar clients), starting new proxies when appropriate, and keeping track of all of the available proxy services. The proxy manager strives to reuse existing proxies whenever possi- ble. There are two types of proxies that the proxy manager deals with, managed and unmanaged proxies. A managed proxy is a proxy that is started ``on demand'' by the proxy manager. An unmanaged proxy, on the other hand, is started either at system boot time, or manually by a system administrator. The proxy manager is made aware of its existence, but no attempt is made by the proxy manager to start unmanaged proxies. The command line options that can be specified to proxymngr are: -config Used to override the default proxymngr config file. See below for more details about the config file. -timeout Sets the number of seconds between attempts made by the proxy manager to find an unmanaged proxy. The default is 10. -retries Sets the maximum number of retries made by the proxy manager to find an an unmanaged proxy. The default is 3. -verbose Causes various debugging and tracing records to be displayed as requests are received and proxies are started. Proxy Manager Config File The proxy manager maintains a local configuration file describing the proxy services available. This configuration file is installed in /usr/lib/X11/proxymngr/pmconfig during the installation of proxymngr. The location of the configuration file can be overwritten using the -config command line option. Aside from lines starting with an exclamation point for comments, each line of the configuration file describes either an unmanaged or man- aged proxy service. For unmanaged proxies, the format is: <service-name> unmanaged <proxy-address> service-name is the name of the unmanaged proxy service, and must not contain any spaces, for example ``XFWP''. service-name is case insensitive. proxy-address is the network address of the unmanaged proxy. The format of the address is specific to the service-name. For example, for the ``XFWP'' service, the proxy-address might be ``firewall.x.org:100''. If there is more than one entry in the config file with the same unmanaged service-name, the proxy manager will try to use the proxies in the order presented in the config file. For managed proxies, the format is: <service-name> managed <command-to-start-proxy> service-name is the name of the managed proxy service, and must not contain any spaces, for example ``LBX''. service-name is case insensi- tive. command-to-start-proxy is the command executed by the proxy manager to start a new instance of the proxy. If command-to-start-proxy con- tains spaces, the complete command should be surrounded by single quotes. If desired, command-to-start-proxy can be used to start a proxy on a remote machine. The specifics of the remote execution method used to do this is not specified here. EXAMPLE
Here is a sample configuration file: ! proxy manager config file ! ! Each line has the format: ! <serviceName> managed <startCommand> ! or ! <serviceName> unmanaged <proxyAddress> ! lbx managed /usr/bin/lbxproxy ! ! substitute site-specific info xfwp unmanaged firewall:4444 PROXY MANAGER DETAILS
When the proxy manager gets a request from xfindproxy (or another similar client), its course of action will depend on the service-name in question. For a managed proxy service, the proxy manager will find out if any of the already running proxies for this service can handle a new request. If not, the proxy manager will attempt to start up a new instance of the proxy (using the command-to-start-proxy found in the config file). If that fails, an error will be returned to the caller. For an unmanaged proxy service, the proxy manager will look in the config file to find all unmanaged proxies for this service. If there is more than one entry in the config file with the same unmanaged service-name, the proxy manager will try to use the proxies in the order presented in the config file. If none of the unmanaged proxies can satisfy the request, the proxy manager will timeout for a configurable amount of time (specified by -timeout or default of 10) and reattempt to find an unmanaged proxy willing to satisfy the request. The num- ber of retries can be specified by the -retries argument, or a default of 3 will be used. If the retries fail, the proxy manager has no choice but to return an error to the caller (since the proxy manager can not start unmanaged proxy services). BUGS
proxy manager listen port should be configurable. -timeout and -retries is not implemented in proxymngr. proxymngr does not utilize the ``options'' and ``host'' fields in the proxy management protocol GetProxyAddr request. SEE ALSO
xfindproxy (1), xfwp (1), Proxy Management Protocol spec V1.0 AUTHOR
Ralph Mor, X Consortium X Version 11 proxymngr 1.0.1 PROXYMNGR(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:53 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy