Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris Unable to open remote connections Post 302130927 by mokkan on Wednesday 8th of August 2007 10:21:37 AM
Old 08-08-2007
checked the firewall rules. Try to do iptables -F and give it a try.

Also, check the port using nmap

nmap hostname
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators

Unable to open thread

I am unable to open the mimesender thread. I get the following message when clicking on https://www.unix.com/showthread.php?p=33233#post33233 : (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dangral
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Unable to delete an open file

I am working on a unix server. I killed all the processes with my id on the machine. After that I tried to delete a file, I got an error:- file not removed.Text File busy. Deletion of directory prompted:- Directory not empty. Can anyone help me regarding this...??? Thanks, Vikas (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: vikasrout
11 Replies

3. Linux

Securing remote connections

Hi all, I have a couple of questions I've been searching on internet but I didn't find a suitable solution. The aim is that I'd like to access to my home Linux (an 8.04 Ubuntu) from outside. I already achieved with ssh, but I'd like to secure as much as I can. These are questions: The... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: AlbertGM
2 Replies

4. BSD

Remote connections unable after power falls

Hi everyone: I have a server used for testing running FreeBSD, last weekend we had power cuts in my job and our server was constantly rebooting. since then the network connections are very slow, it's almost impossible establish a remote connection with the server, however running any... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: edgarvm
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Unable to open a file in perl

Not able to open a file using this code why not? use strict; use warnings; my $file = "verInfo.txt"; unless(open FILE, $file) { # Die with error message # if we can't open it. die "\nUnable to open $file\n"; } my $line = <FILE>; print $line; close FILE; (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: srijith
7 Replies

6. Solaris

Unable to open Crontab

Hi, I have 2 solaris server. I can able to open to see cron entry by using crontab -l in one of the server. I cant able to open another server. How to check if crontab is fixed in that server. If not then how to make a crontab in that server. Please advice. Thanks, Mani ----------... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Mani_apr08
1 Replies

7. Ubuntu

Unable to open Gtalk.

Hello friends. I am currently using Ubuntu 9.10. Its having a lot of features. I have a problem in this operating system that is unable to open Gtalk. Could i get the information to use Gtalk in Ubuntu 9.10. Please reply me. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: andrepitt77
1 Replies

8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Threshold for open connections

Hey guys, We've been having issues on one of our CentOS 6 servers and one of the java programs that runs on it. As the software hasn't caused issues in the past, I'm wondering if its a problem with the CentOS server. Basically, the software drops it's tcp connection and won't reconnect,... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: jimbob01
5 Replies

9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

See AIX server remote connections

Good morning, Is there any command to view remote conxiones an AIX server? Thank you very much and best regards. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: systemoper
1 Replies
SA-CHECK_SPAMD.RAW(1)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				     SA-CHECK_SPAMD.RAW(1)

NAME
sa-check_spamd - spamd monitoring script for use with Nagios, etc. SYNOPSIS
sa-check_spamd [options] Options: -c secs, --critical=secs Critical ping response threshold -h, -?, --help Print usage message -H hostname, --hostname=hostname Hostname of spamd service to ping -p port, --port=port Port of spamd service to ping --socketpath=path Connect to given UNIX domain socket -t secs, --timeout=secs Max time to wait for a ping response -v, --verbose Verbose debug output -V, --version Output version info -w secs, --warning=secs Warning ping response threshold DESCRIPTION
The purpose of this program is to provide a tool to monitor the status of "spamd" server processes. spamd is the daemonized version of the spamassassin executable, both provided in the SpamAssassin distribution. This program is designed for use, as a plugin, with the Nagios service monitoring software available from http://nagios.org. It might be compatible with other service monitoring packages. It is also useful as a command line utility or as a component of a custom shell script. OPTIONS
Options of the long form can be shortened as long as the remain unambiguous (i.e. --host can be used instead of --hostname). -c secs, --critical=secs Critical ping response threshold in seconds. If a spamd ping response takes longer than the value specified (in seconds) the program will exit with a value of 2 to indicate the critical status. This value must be at least as long as the value specified for warning and less than the value specified for timeout. -h, -?, --help Prints this usage message and exits. -H hostname, --hostname=hostname The hostname, or IP address, of the spamd service to ping. By default the hostname localhost is used. If --socketpath is set this value will be ignored. -p port, --port=port The port of the spamd service to ping. By default port 783 (the spamd default port number) is used. If --socketpath is set this value will be ignored. --socketpath=path Connect to given UNIX domain socket. Use instead of a hostname and TCP port. When set, any hostname and TCP port specified will be ignored. -t secs, --timeout=secs The maximum time to wait for a ping response. Once exceeded the program will exit with a value of 2 to indicate the critical status. The default timeout value is 45 seconds. The timeout must be no less than 1 second. This value must be greater than the values specified for both the critical and warning values. -v, --verbose Display verbose debug output on STDOUT. -V, --version Display version info on STDOUT. -w secs, --warning=secs Warning ping response threshold in seconds. If a spamd ping response takes longer than the value specified (in seconds), and does not exceed the critical threshold value, the program will exit with a value of 1 to indicate the warning staus. This value must be no longer than the value specified for critical and less than the value specified for timeout. EXIT CODES
The program will indicate the status of the spamd process being monitored by exiting with one of these values: 0 OK: A spamd ping response was received within all threshold times. 1 WARNING: A spamd ping response exceeded the warning threshold but not the critical threshold. 2 CRITICAL: A spamd ping response exceeded either the critical threshold or the timeout value. 3 UNKNOWN: An error, probably caused by a missing dependency or an invalid configuration parameter being supplied, occurred in the sa-check_spamd program. SEE ALSO
spamc(1) spamd(1) spamassassin(1) PREREQUISITES
"Mail::SpamAssassin" version 3.1.1 or higher (3.1.6 or higher recommended) AUTHOR
Daryl C. W. O'Shea, DOS Technologies <spamassassin@dostech.ca> LICENSE
sa-check_spamd is distributed under the Apache License, Version 2.0, as described in the file "LICENSE" included with the Apache SpamAssassin distribution and available at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 perl v5.14.2 2014-02-14 SA-CHECK_SPAMD.RAW(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:27 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy