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Operating Systems AIX NAGIOS Service not able to open port on AIX 7.1 Post 303022626 by wibhore on Tuesday 4th of September 2018 12:22:33 PM
Old 09-04-2018
NAGIOS Service not able to open port on AIX 7.1

I have an AIX 7.1 LPAR where Nagios agent was installed for monitoring. The issue is that when I start the nagios service (ncpa_listener), it starts but does not open the 5693 port it requires for communication. On all other LPARs the service opens the port and is listening. I tried reinstalling the agent. Sometimes, when I try to stop the service it goes into a stopping state and has to be killed forcefully. The oslevel is 7100-05-01-1731. The LPAR has about 120GB of memory and 6 CPUs as entitled capacity. This is an Oracle DB DR server. Please let me know if more details are required.

I tried to see if there is anything using the port using netstat -an | grep 5693. I also checked the services file to see if any service is already using this port, but there was nothing in both cases.

------ Post updated at 12:22 PM ------

I just wanted to add one more thing. If I do a "telnet localhost 5693", I don't get a telnet prompt. But on all other LPARs, the telnet connects and gives a prompt. I can't seem to think of a reason why the service should not be able to open an unused port.
 

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PORTRESERVE(1)						   TCP port reservation utility 					    PORTRESERVE(1)

NAME
portreserve - reserve ports to prevent portmap mapping them SYNOPSIS
portreserve DESCRIPTION
The portreserve program aims to help services with well-known ports that lie in the bindresvport range. It prevents portmap (or other programs using bindresvport) from occupying a real service's port by occupying it itself, until the real service tells it to release the port (generally in its init script). It is intended that portreserve runs from an initscript of its own, and services wishing to interact with it should use portrelease. When the portreserve daemon is started, it examines the /etc/portreserve/ directory. Each file not containing "." or "~" in its name is considered to be a service configuration file, and must contain a service name (as listed in /etc/services) or a port number. UDP services may be specified by appending "/udp" to the service name, and TCP services by "/tcp". Several services may be specified, one per line. For example, /etc/portreserve/cups might contain the string "ipp" or, equivalently, "ipp/tcp" and "ipp/udp" on separate lines. For each service configuration file, a socket is created and bound to the appropriate port. A service wishing to bind to its port must first run portrelease, which instructs portreserve to release the port associated with the service. Once all the reserved ports have been released, the daemon exits. FILES
/etc/portreserve/* Service configuration files /var/run/portreserve/socket communication socket for portrelease SEE ALSO
portrelease(1) AUTHOR
Tim Waugh <twaugh@redhat.com> Author. portreserve 1 July 2008 PORTRESERVE(1)
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