Dear friends..
Our project has a module that runs on handheld devices. Through the handheld we telnet to solaris where the application actually runs. I noticed that after starting a session through the handheld, if i go out of range or if i remove and replace the battery in the handheld, the... (1 Reply)
{
sleep 2
echo "$user"
sleep 2
echo "$password"
sleep 2
echo " ls"
sleep 10
echo "exit"
}| telnet $server
I have a machine x and i have executed the above script on machine 'x'.
i entered the... (6 Replies)
The situation:
a Unix system (UnixWare 7.1.3) to which are connected other systems;
various p.c. on the LAN that they connect Unix to the system via TelNet.
The problem:
I need to intercept the address IP of the p.cs. connected via telnet to the Unix system.
Particularly, I have to know the... (2 Replies)
In either case using ksh or tcl, how can I check that I have a successfule telnet session and am being prompted with a tacacs login prompt ?
:confused:
DOIT () {
sleep 2
echo "<tacacs name >"
sleep 1
echo "<password>"
echo "en"
sleep 1
echo "<enable password>"
echo "term length 512"... (0 Replies)
How can I disconnect an existing telnet session? The host is a serial port server with multiple ports. The users login using the host's name and a port, i.e. telnet host01 1235.
Thanks. (14 Replies)
Our network administrators implemented some sort of check to kill idle sessions and now burden is on us to run some sort of keep alive. Client based keep alive doesn't do a very good job. I have same issue with ssh. Does solution 2 provided above apply for ssh sessions also? (1 Reply)
Hi,
I search the way to limit, for a group on a AIX 5.3, one telnet session by user (Simultaneous).
I search a lot in /etc/security but the only way found is with the pam authentication that i not use.
No solution found also in smit menu...
Thanks for your help. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: feilong
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
tcpconnect
TCPCONNECT(1) General Commands Manual TCPCONNECT(1)NAME
tcpconnect - general TCP/IP client
SYNOPSIS
tcpconnect [-irv] [-l localaddr] host port
DESCRIPTION
tcpconnect creates a TCP/IP connection to a server running on the machine host, listening to port port. It then reads standard input and
sends to the remote server, and data received from the server is printed to standard output. When end-of-file is reached on both standard
input and the TCP/IP connection, tcpconnect terminates.
OPTIONS -i Terminate at end-of-file on standard input; don't wait for the server to close the connection.
-r Terminate when the remote server closes the connection; don't wait for end-of-file on standard input.
-v Verbose mode. Prints a message to standard error when the connection has been established.
-l addr:port
Bind the local end-point of the connection to IP address addr, TCP port port. Either the IP address or the port, but not both, may
be left out, meaning that the operating system gets to choose that part by itself.
SEE ALSO tcplisten(1), telnet(1), tcpbug(1).
BUGS
The names of the options are not yet finalized, and may change at a future release.
1997 April 13 TCPCONNECT(1)