01-22-2010
That might be my problem. Maybe WinDump is catching the incoming traffic but there is no application/service listening so the port isn't open and the source isn't getting a response. Have I got that right?
Hmm, so how do I open a port for listening?
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
OS: HP-UX B.11.11 U
Printer: HP 8150.
I require a font to be downloaded to the printer and used.
As documented the steps are:
1. Tell printer to accept font
2. Send the font to the printer
3. Make the font permanent
4. Select font for use
or in PCL
1. <Esc>*c90D
2.... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: mbb
0 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
i willbe very much grateful to u if u help me out..
if i simply connect pbx machine to printer by serial port RS232 then we find this view:
But i want to capture this data into database automatically when the pbx is running.The table in database will contain similar to this view inthe... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: boss
1 Replies
3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi All :
I wanted a unix command by which I could be able to print the output to a file and at the same time to a printer. Any help will be greatly appreciated.
Regards,
Ramamurthy Dasari (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rdasari
1 Replies
4. SCO
I installed an old laser printer using a print server. I can use from windows but not from unix. I set up the printer in unix as a remote printer and can ping the print server from a unix promt. I am thinking that I must open a port to the print server. Any suggestions? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: owbf
3 Replies
5. Red Hat
I need to setup a HP 4000 PCL printer - it seems out of the box - I can only can use PostScript. Any guidance is appreciated.
In the SCO world - I used HPNP with no problems. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: markb4
2 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I've looked around and am able to print landscape to a PCL 5 printer with this command:
lp -o landscape -o cpi=20 -o page-right=30 -o page-left=30
-d <printer> <file>.
Which gives me a nice 200 columns.
But, when I send the same output and the same commands to a PCL 6 printer, it comes... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tariqjamal
3 Replies
7. Red Hat
Hello all,
I need to setup a print server that listens on three separate network interfaces, and sends jobs to the corresponding print queue. Example:
192.168.69.100 - printer1 -> Out to 139.177.69.100:9100
192.168.69.101 - printer2 -> Out to 139.177.69.101:9100
192.168.69.102 - printer2 ->... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ZekesGarage
3 Replies
8. Solaris
Help!
I have to solve an urgent problem!
I have a Solaris 10 server, where I created a line of printing with the command
# /usr/sbin/lpadmin -p IL_Printer -s pv24002 -v /dev/null -m netstandard_foomatic -A write -n /usr/lib/lp/model/ppd/system/foomatic/Canon/cnl66e1.ppd.gz -o... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: poyato
0 Replies
9. SCO
I am trying to get a network printer to work that currently works from my Unix (5.0.7) server when printing text files only. When I try to print post script files like a PDF file I get all of the controls so I am not sure if I have my printer configuration setup properly in Unix
The printer... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ziggy6
1 Replies
10. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support
I am trying to get an output using the command
tcpdump -w /tmp/syn.pcap 'tcp & (tcp-syn) != 0'
But I am getting the error:
tcpdump: no suitable device found
Is there an alternate command to achieve this? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ggayathri
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
uniconfd
UNICONFD(8) System Manager's Manual UNICONFD(8)
NAME
uniconfd - a daemon program for the UniConf configuration system
SYNOPSIS
uniconfd [ OPTIONS ] MOUNT ...
DESCRIPTION
UniConf is the One True Configuration system that includes all the others because it has plugin backends and frontends. Or, less
grandiosely, it's a lightweight, distributed, cacheable tree of strings.
It supports:
o retrieving, storing, and enumerating key/value pairs (where both keys and values are strings).
o multiple backends where the actual key/value pairs are stored.
o multiple frontends for tying it to other configuration architectures.
It operates locally, and across a network, allowing you to tie multiple different applications together for distributed computing. Also,
it provides notifications in the form of callbacks, so your application can be notified if a configuration key has changed.
uniconfd is necessary when you have more than one application, or multiple instances of an application, sharing one configuration. Uni-
Conf-enabled applications contact uniconfd which provides notifications when any of their watched keys change.
You tell uniconfd which UniConf MOUNT you want it to manage. See the MOUNTS section for more information.
OPTIONS
-f Run in the foreground. Do not fork into a separate daemon process.
-d, -dd
Print debugging messages to the console. The second d increases the verbosity of the messages.
-V Print the version number and exit.
-a Require authentication on incoming connections.
-A Check all accesses against a perms moniker.
-p port
Listen on a given TCP port. The default is 4111. If port is 0, then listening on TCP is disabled.
-s port
Listen on a given TCP port wrapped in SSL. The default is 4112. If port is 0, then listening on SSL-over-TCP is disabled.
-u filename
Listen on a given Unix socket filename. This is disabled by default.
MOUNTS
Mounts are UniConf path monikers which are in the form:
/SUBTREE=GENERATORS:PATH
SUBTREE
This is the tree to manage. All trees are descended from the root tree, indicated by a bare slash (/).
GENERATORS
These are the generators used to read and write key/value pairs. You can chain them with colons. For example, the generator chain:
cache:retry:ini will cache the configuration for speed, retry persistently if the data source disappears, and store the data in an
INI-formatted file.
PATH This is the location where the data is stored. It is dependent on which GENERATORS were specified. For instance, it could be: o a
filename (ini:/var/lib/app/config.ini),
o a network address, (tcp:open.nit.ca:4111),
o or even an empty string (tmp:).
Examples:
/=tmp:
/ca/nit=ssl:open.nit.ca
/ca/nit/uniconfd=ini:/var/lib/uniconfd/uniconfd.ini
/apps=cache:retry:unix:/var/lib/apps/socket
FILES
/etc/uniconfd.conf
/var/lib/uniconf/uniconfd.ini
/var/lib/uniconf/uniconf.ini
AUTHORS
This software was written by the hackers at Net Integration Technologies. Contact us at <wvstreams-dev@lists.nit.ca>
UniConfDaemon 4.4.1 August 2004 UNICONFD(8)