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Full Discussion: Ports
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Ports Post 302315546 by Neo on Tuesday 12th of May 2009 04:42:53 PM
Old 05-12-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by rsheikh
Someone said it is not necessary to have it registered to use it.
I agree with this. I have never found it to be the case that a port, a nice name and the protocol must be in /etc/services for a process to bind to a port.

A process can bind to a port, if it has permissions, without opening /etc/services.

... at least this has always been my experience.

Having said that, it certainly does not hurt to add your requirements to /etc/services, but I don't think that will solve your problem; hence I agree with the "someone" in the quote above.
 

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PORTRESERVE(1)						   TCP port reservation utility 					    PORTRESERVE(1)

NAME
portreserve - reserve ports to prevent portmap mapping them SYNOPSIS
portreserve DESCRIPTION
The portreserve program aims to help services with well-known ports that lie in the bindresvport range. It prevents portmap (or other programs using bindresvport) from occupying a real service's port by occupying it itself, until the real service tells it to release the port (generally in its init script). It is intended that portreserve runs from an initscript of its own, and services wishing to interact with it should use portrelease. When the portreserve daemon is started, it examines the /etc/portreserve/ directory. Each file not containing "." or "~" in its name is considered to be a service configuration file, and must contain a service name (as listed in /etc/services) or a port number. UDP services may be specified by appending "/udp" to the service name, and TCP services by "/tcp". Several services may be specified, one per line. For example, /etc/portreserve/cups might contain the string "ipp" or, equivalently, "ipp/tcp" and "ipp/udp" on separate lines. For each service configuration file, a socket is created and bound to the appropriate port. A service wishing to bind to its port must first run portrelease, which instructs portreserve to release the port associated with the service. Once all the reserved ports have been released, the daemon exits. FILES
/etc/portreserve/* Service configuration files /var/run/portreserve/socket communication socket for portrelease SEE ALSO
portrelease(1) AUTHOR
Tim Waugh <twaugh@redhat.com> Author. portreserve 1 July 2008 PORTRESERVE(1)
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