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Full Discussion: port 111
Special Forums Cybersecurity port 111 Post 19519 by LivinFree on Friday 12th of April 2002 01:45:13 AM
Old 04-12-2002
On FreeBSD, you should check your /etc/inetd.conf file to make sure that all the services you don't want has a # at the front of the line.
Then, edit the /etc/rc.conf and let (I think) portmap=NO

Actually, I have an OpenBSD box that I don't run any services but sshd - I have disabled both portmap and inetd.

The easiest way to clear this up may be to reboot, unless you want to try to kill everything thats running that you just turned off.

Check again to see what ports are open, and keep adjusting and researching until it's how you want it!

Also, you figure out what process is opening port 1433 and 1533 for sure is to use "lsof", a wonderful free tool that may already be installed on your system.
 

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rstatd(1M)																rstatd(1M)

NAME
rstatd - kernel statistics server SYNOPSIS
log_file] DESCRIPTION
is an RPC server that returns performance statistics obtained from the kernel. The utility prints this information (see rup(1)). invokes through (see inetd(1M)). Options recognizes the following options and command-line arguments: Log any errors to the named log file, log_file. Errors are not logged if the option is not specified. Information logged to the file includes date and time of the error, the host name, process ID and name of the func- tion generating the error, and the error message. Note that different services can share a single log file because enough information is included to uniquely identify each error. Exit after serving each RPC request. Using the option, the security file can control access to RPC services. Exit only if o dies (see portmap(1M)), o another registers with or o becomes unregistered with portmap. The option is more efficient since a new process is not launched for each RPC request. Note, this option is the default. AUTHOR
was developed by Sun Microsystems, Inc. SEE ALSO
rup(1), inetd(1M), portmap(1M), inetd.conf(4), inetd.sec(4), services(4). rstatd(1M)
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