Good day to you all,
Hope you must doing good..me..oh no I am not..I've trying to log on to my network from home...but it's not letting me...I am trying to use telnet cis.hfcc.net but it's saying "connection to the host cannot to be established"????what is this...any good reason...do I have to... (2 Replies)
Hello friends,
The problem is that we have one SunOS5.7 server, while attempting telnet to that server following error is occured -
ld.so.1: login: fatal: libc.so.1: open failed: Too many open files
The login on console is possible. The inetd daemon is running. inetd.conf and services... (1 Reply)
Hello friends,
The problem is that we have one SunOS5.7 server, while attempting telnet to that server following error is occured -
ld.so.1: login: fatal: libc.so.1: open failed: Too many open files
The login on console is possible. The inetd daemon is running. inetd.conf and services... (3 Replies)
Hi,
My network layout is:
Pub LAN
|
freeBSD
|
Internal LAN
|
+ telnet srv on HP-UX 10.x box
+ other services (http, pop3, smtp, ftp)...
I've the following problem:
Inside Internal LAN I can connect myself to HP-UX telnet but from Public LAN in some place is refusing me... (5 Replies)
hi all,
i have a problem in telnet.when i am using telnet to my new aix server it takes about 5min to open.
can any one tell what i have to do.???? (5 Replies)
Dear All
I have a Sun280R server when i telnet to this server from my Laptop i got error :
Could connect to 192.168.199.10(Server IP):port 23 closed
I want to login to the server through its Db25 serial port but i used to connect to it from my laptop through USB to db9 then to Db25 so do... (1 Reply)
I have a problem where on one unix machine I can telnet all IP addresses in the host file with no connection problem and another machine has recently started to have trouble connecting with the same host IP's on just some IP addresses where it had no trouble before. Have any ideas?? (17 Replies)
Hello everyone,
I have got this following script to telnet to other UNIX boxes from one UNIX box and then run a script to count a certain paramater. The following line connects to the other box(es):
(sleep 1; echo $username; sleep 1; echo $password ; sleep 1 ; echo y; sleep 1; echo "\r" ; sleep 1... (2 Replies)
Somewhat long story:
I have a simple Perl CGI script that uses Expect to Telnet to a device and grab some data, and then spits it back to Perl for display on the Webpage.
This works for many devices I've tried, but one device just fails, it keeps rejecting the password on this device, only... (1 Reply)
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use Net::Telnet ();
my $t = new Net::Telnet (Timeout => 10,
Prompt => '/.*(#|>|\))\s*$/');
my $remote_host='home';
$t->open(Host => $remote_host, Port =>23);
$t->login('root', 'pass');
the error that I get... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: lassimanji
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
xrlogin
XRLOGIN(1) General Commands Manual XRLOGIN(1)NAME
xrlogin - start an xterm that uses ssh (or optionally rlogin or telnet) to connect to a remote host
SYNOPSIS
xrlogin [-l username] [-rlogin|-telnet] [xterm options] remote-host
DESCRIPTION
Xrlogin opens an xterm window and runs ssh, rlogin or telnet to login to a remote host.
Xrlogin automatically passes the -name argument to xterm with a value of "xterm-hostname" where hostname is the name of the remote host.
This allows the user to specify resources in their server's resource manager which are specific to xterms from a given host. For example,
this feature can be used to make all xterm windows to a given remote host be the same color or use a specific font or start up in a spe-
cific place on the screen. Xrsh(1) passes the same string so they are compatible in this regard.
Xrlogin specifies that the default title for the new xterm will be "hostname" where hostname is the name of the remote host. This and the
-name argument above can be overridden with xterm-options on the command line.
One could also use xrlogin's sister command xrsh(1) to open a window to a remote host. In the case of xrsh, the xterm would run on the
remote host and use X as the connection protocol while xrlogin would run the xterm on the local host and use rlogin or telnet as the con-
nection protocol. See xrsh(1) for a discussion of the merits of each scheme.
OPTIONS -l username
When not using -telnet, use username as the id to login to the remote host.
-rlogin
Use the rlogin protocol to open the connection. In general rlogin is preferred because it can be configured to not prompt the user
for a password. Rlogin also automatically propagates window size change signals (SIGWINCH) to the remote host so that applications
running there will learn of a new window size.
-telnet
Use the -telnet protocol to open the connection. Use of telnet provided mostly for hosts that don't support rlogin.
COMMON PROBLEMS
Make sure that the local host is specified in the .rhosts file on the remote host or in the remote hosts /etc/hosts.equiv file. See
rlogin(1) for more information.
EXAMPLES
xrlogin -bg red yoda
Start a local red xterm which connects to the remote host yoda using rlogin.
xrlogin -telnet c70
Open a local xterm which connects to the remote host c70 using telnet.
SEE ALSO xrsh(1), rlogin(1), telnet(1)AUTHOR
James J. Dempsey <jjd@jjd.com> and Stephen Gildea <gildea@intouchsys.com>.
X Version 11 Release 6 XRLOGIN(1)