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Full Discussion: portmapper service
Operating Systems Linux SuSE portmapper service Post 302597261 by bitlord on Thursday 9th of February 2012 08:07:06 PM
Old 02-09-2012
I had to include shutting off nfs, because when I just tried to turn off rpcbind without turning nfs 1st, it would give me a warring.
When I then checked to see if rpcbind was still running after turning it off i would see it still running. So I turn off nfs 1st then turned off rpcbind and it stuck.

Thanks for your imput.
 

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RPCBIND(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						RPCBIND(8)

NAME
rpcbind -- universal addresses to RPC program number mapper SYNOPSIS
rpcbind [-dilLs] DESCRIPTION
rpcbind is a server that converts RPC program numbers into universal addresses. It must be running on the host to be able to make RPC calls on a server on that machine. When an RPC service is started, it tells rpcbind the address at which it is listening, and the RPC program numbers it is prepared to serve. When a client wishes to make an RPC call to a given program number, it first contacts rpcbind on the server machine to determine the address where RPC requests should be sent. rpcbind should be started before any other RPC service. Normally, standard RPC servers are started by port monitors, so rpcbind must be started before port monitors are invoked. When rpcbind is started, it checks that certain name-to-address translation-calls function correctly. If they fail, the network configura- tion databases may be corrupt. Since RPC services cannot function correctly in this situation, rpcbind reports the condition and terminates. rpcbind can only be started by the super-user. Access control is provided by /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny, as described in hosts_access(5) with daemon name rpcbind. OPTIONS
-d Run in debug mode. In this mode, rpcbind will not fork when it starts, will print additional information during operation, and will abort on certain errors. With this option, the name-to-address translation consistency checks are shown in detail. -i ``insecure'' mode. Allows calls to SET and UNSET from any host. Normally rpcbind accepts these requests only from the loopback interface for security reasons. This change is necessary for programs that were compiled with earlier versions of the rpc library and do not make those requests using the loopback interface. -l Turns on libwrap connection logging. -s Causes rpcbind to change to the user daemon as soon as possible. This causes rpcbind to use non-privileged ports for outgoing con- nections, preventing non-privileged clients from using rpcbind to connect to services from a privileged port. -L Allow old-style local connections over the loopback interface. Without this flag, local connections are only allowed over a local socket, /var/run/rpcbind.sock NOTES
All RPC servers must be restarted if rpcbind is restarted. FILES
/var/run/rpcbind.sock /etc/hosts.allow explicit remote host access list. /etc/hosts.deny explicit remote host denial of service list. SEE ALSO
rpcbind(3), hosts_access(5), hosts_options(5), netconfig(5), rpcinfo(8) BSD
October 19, 2008 BSD
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