Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris How to define a port in solaris 8 Post 302071748 by Reza Nazarian on Monday 24th of April 2006 10:12:15 AM
Old 04-24-2006
How to define a port in solaris 8

Dear experts
I need to define a port with number 15291 in my solaris8 Workstation to be able to comunicate from my ps with an installed software on the workstation. How and where should I define this port in solaris8 workstation.
Very Best Regards
Reza
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Solaris 8 to many open port

hi all, My OS is solaris 8 with core system installation only. so far everything works fine. by i do some testing from my xp pc as client to nmap and scan opening port to my solaris. the result as below: Initiating SYN Stealth Scan against 10.10.10.10 at 16:25 Discovered open port 21/tcp on... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: hezry79
3 Replies

2. Solaris

port on solaris 10

when i connecting an usb device to a ubuntu box. i know its on /dev/ttyUSB0 port from dmesg. and i can do simple command with minicom connect to the port. however when i connecting the same usb device to solaris 10 platform and i do dmesg. i get Oct 31 14:50:02 karma usba: USB 1.10 device... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: conandor
7 Replies

3. Solaris

Port/IP Forwarding in Solaris 10.0

Hi, I am looking out a way to forward all UDP traffic coming on ports 3001,3002,3003 and 3004 on server 10.2.45.200 to corresponding ports of server 10.2.45.197. I am using Solaris 10.0. -bash-3.00$ uname -a SunOS airtelussd2 5.10 Generic_127127-11 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-V445 Is... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: vikas027
6 Replies

4. Solaris

Solaris Port Monitoring

I would like to know if it is possible to read from an I/O Port in solaris. I need to monitor the parallel port of 1 PC and save all the incoming and outgoing messages. I use a SPARC Solaris running Solaris 2.5.1. I have seen a driver for x86 based systems but none for SPARC. Any help on how to... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: devjay
8 Replies

5. Solaris

ip and port forwarding in Solaris 10

Hi; I have the following issue: I have a Solaris server running an old applications which connects to an http server in other server at certain port. The thing is that the http server has changed its ip and port and the addres in the app is hard coded and touching the app by now is out of the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ppereira
0 Replies

6. Solaris

Open port on Solaris 10

Hi All, I am installing Infosphere (ETL tool) on solaris 10. One of the requirement is to open multiple ports for different apps that will be installed. I ran netstat -n | grep 9080 (,etc) but that did not return anything. I have attached the requirement. Can anyone guide me about how to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sumeet
3 Replies

7. Solaris

Solaris 10: How to just open a port - nothing else

Hi there, I tried just open a port but I failed ;-( # telnet localhost 9876 That should work so I did ... # vi /etc/services myport 9876/tcp # my port # svcadm restart inetd -> New pid, see ps - ef | grep inet # netstat -an | grep 9876 No port 9876 is waiting ;( #... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: System
4 Replies

8. Solaris

How to find port number wwn of particular port on dual port HBA,?

please find the below o/p for your reference bash-3.00# fcinfo hba-port HBA Port WWN: 21000024ff295a34 OS Device Name: /dev/cfg/c2 Manufacturer: QLogic Corp. Model: 375-3356-02 Firmware Version: 05.03.02 FCode/BIOS Version: BIOS: 2.02; fcode: 2.01;... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sb200
3 Replies

9. Solaris

Solaris 10/eai port

When I attempt to telnet from a remote host or local to the eai port of server B I get the following error. ***ERROR: You must be admin to run this script You are root. Connection to localhost closed by foreign host. But, I'm logged in as admin in both instances. Has anyone experienced... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: palu1124
0 Replies
ports(7)						 Miscellaneous Information Manual						  ports(7)

NAME
ports, port_names - Device (tty and lp) names for serial and parallel ports SYNOPSIS
Default Serial Ports: /dev/tty00 /dev/tty01 (not present on a single-port system) Parallel Port: /dev/lp0 DESCRIPTION
AlphaStation and AlphaServer systems provide one or two 9-pin serial communication ports. These ports are usually labelled 1 (COMM1) and 2 (COMM2), but they may be identified by different icons. Using the appropriate serial cable and terminator, you can connect a serial printer, external modem, or character-cell terminal to a serial port. Most AlphaStation and AlphaServer systems also provide one parallel port, for use with a parallel printer. When you add a device to your system, the installation documentation may instruct you to map the device pathname to the port. These devices are located in the /dev directory. For serial-line ports, the two default device pathnames are: This pathname always maps to 1, COMM1, the lowest port number, an icon for a terminal console, or the only serial port (on a single-port system). This pathname always maps to 2, COMM2, the next numbered port, or (if one serial port is labeled with an icon for a terminal console) the remaining serial port. If your system hardware has been extended to include additional serial ports, the pathnames /dev/tty02, /dev/tty03, and so forth, may also be available to you. However, most systems have only /dev/tty00 and /dev/tty01 as the device pathnames for serial ports. The one parallel port on an AlphaStation or AlphaServer may be labeled with the word printer or a printer icon. On some systems, the paral- lel port may not be labeled. The device pathname for the parallel port is /dev/lp0. Currently, Tru64 UNIX does not fully support parallel printers, so fewer devices are connected to this port as compared to serial ports. If you are connecting a terminal console to your system, it must be connected to the serial port mapped to /dev/tty00. For other serial devices, it does not matter which of the serial ports you choose for the connection. For example, suppose you are setting up a system that has two serial ports, labeled 1 and 2. You intend to use a serial-line terminal rather than a workstation monitor as the system console and also want to connect a serial-line printer to the system. In this case, you must connect the terminal to the port labeled 1 (with the device pathname /dev/tty00). Therefore, you must connect the printer to the remaining port labeled 2 (with the device pathname /dev/tty01). If, for the same type of system, you intend to use a workstation monitor as the system console, it does not matter which serial port you use for a serial-line printer or modem. In other words, you can connect the printer to either port 1 (with pathname /dev/tty00) or port 2 (with pathname /dev/tty01). When prompted to enter a /dev/tty** pathname by the lprsetup script or the Print configuration tool in the CDE Application Manager, you would specify /dev/tty00 if you connected the printer to port 1 or /dev/tty01 if you connected the printer to port 2. See the System Administration manual for more information on setting up consoles (including remote consoles) and printers. See the modem(7) reference page for more information on setting up modems. SEE ALSO
Commands: lprsetup(8) Devices: ace(7), modem(7) System Administration delim off ports(7)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:41 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy