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Full Discussion: telnet with a certain route
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting telnet with a certain route Post 302603659 by Corona688 on Thursday 1st of March 2012 04:14:30 PM
Old 03-01-2012
The network controls the route, not you, and that includes your application; so what makes your application special enough to have particular routing arranged for it? That is the question. Since it's probably not magic either, it likely uses either the destination or the port number to decide where it goes. It might also be something stranger like TCP type-of-service or other unusual TCP options.

I'd attempt a connection on the port your application uses, which may be enough.
Code:
telnet hostname portnumber </dev/null

 

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DUMP_SOCKDFR(8) 					      System Manager's Manual						   DUMP_SOCKDFR(8)

NAME
dump_sockdfr - Display contents of frozen route file for SOCKS server SYNOPSIS
dump_sockdfr [infile] DESCRIPTION
dump_sockdfr reads in a frozen route file for the SOCKS server and produces a listing of its contents on the standard output. The argument is optional; if omitted, /etc/sockd.fr is assumed. The frozen route file is produced by make_sockdfr and is essentially the memory image of the parsed route file. Using the frozen route file can reduce the start-up delay of the SOCKS server program since it no longer has to parse the file contents. When the SOCKS server starts, it always looks for the frozen route file /etc/sockd.fr first. If that file is not found, it then tries to use the plain-text route file /etc/sockd.route. If you use frozen route file, you must remember to run make_sockdfr every time after you modify the plain-text file or the SOCKS server will continue to use the frozen version of a previous route file. FILES
/etc/sockd.fr, /etc/sockd.route SEE ALSO
make_sockdfr(8), sockd.fr(5), sockd.route(5) AUTHOR
Ying-Da Lee, yingda@esd.sgi.com or yingda@best.com May 6, 1996 DUMP_SOCKDFR(8)
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