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Operating Systems Solaris Not able to disable finger & telnet command in Solaris 8 Post 303040572 by amity on Friday 1st of November 2019 01:45:28 AM
Old 11-01-2019
Not able to disable finger & telnet command in Solaris 8

Hi
I need to disable finger & telnet command in solaris 8

I have put the # infront of finger and telnet line in /etc/inetd.conf file. Further I have run the below command

Code:
kill -1 <process id of inetd >

But when I am running finger command it is till giving information for remote machine

--- Post updated at 10:56 AM ---

Just to add that it is showing details of user through which I am login to this server along with details of server thorugh which I login to this server.

For example:

If I currently login to host1 (Solaris 10) then login to host2 ( Solaris 8 where I am facing issue) through host1 then in finger command on host2, I am getting only local user detail through which I login to host2 along with host details

--- Post updated at 11:15 AM ---

As per my understanding we don't even need to run above kill command as finger command will only run when it is invoked through the command line as it happened when command got invoked due to that inetd command will reread the /etc/inetd.conf file and run the finger daemon and if I put the # in front of finger line in /etc/inetd.conf then it should not be invoked. But it is getting invoked. Further same thing is happring in Solaris 9 as well.

Please correct me if I am wrong

I need to disable finger command due to security reason.
 

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FINGER.CONF(5)						      BSD File Formats Manual						    FINGER.CONF(5)

NAME
finger.conf -- finger(1) alias configuration file DESCRIPTION
The optional finger.conf file is used to provide aliases that can be fingered by local and network users. This may be useful where a user's login name is not the same as their preferred mail address, or for providing virtual login names than can be fingered. Lines beginning with ``#'' are comments. Other lines must consist of an alias name and a target name separated by a colon. A target name should be either a user, a forward reference to another alias or the path of a world readable file. Where an alias points to a file, the contents of that file will be displayed when the alias is fingered. FILES
/etc/finger.conf finger(1) alias definition data base EXAMPLES
# /etc/finger.conf alias definition file # # Format alias:(user|alias) # # Individual aliases # markk:mkn john.smith:dev329 john:dev329 sue:/etc/finger/sue.txt # # Network status message # status:/usr/local/etc/status.txt # # Administrative redirects # root:admin postmaster:admin abuse:admin # # For the time being, 'sod' is sysadmin. # admin:sod SEE ALSO
finger(1) HISTORY
Support for the finger.conf file was submitted by Mark Knight <markk@knigma.org> and first appeared in FreeBSD 4.2. BSD
August 16, 2000 BSD
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