01-20-2010
Yes , you would do that. However, anyone one with admin priviledges can still turn them on using svcadm enable. If you do not wish that to happen, I suppose you check the /etc/services file and comment the relevant services that you don't need
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SERVICES(5) BSD File Formats Manual SERVICES(5)
NAME
services -- service name data base
DESCRIPTION
The services file contains information regarding the known services available in the DARPA Internet. For each service a single line should
be present with the following information:
official service name
port number
protocol name
aliases
Items are separated by any number of blanks and/or tab characters. The port number and protocol name are considered a single item; a ``/''
is used to separate the port and protocol (e.g. ``512/tcp''). A ``#'' indicates the beginning of a comment; subsequent characters up to the
end of the line are not interpreted by the routines which search the file.
Service names may contain any printable character other than a field delimiter, newline, or comment character.
INTERACTION WITH DIRECTORY SERVICES
Processes generally find service records using one of the getservent(3) family of functions, or using getaddrinfo(3). On Mac OS X, these
functions interact with the DirectoryService(8) daemon, which reads the /etc/services file as well as searching other directory information
services to determine service name, protocol, and port information.
FILES
/etc/services
SEE ALSO
getservent(3), getaddrinfo(3), DirectoryService(8)
HISTORY
The services file format appeared in 4.2BSD.
4.2 Berkeley Distribution June 5, 1993 4.2 Berkeley Distribution