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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? New Forum Post 51922 by norsk hedensk on Saturday 5th of June 2004 05:36:30 PM
Old 06-05-2004
well i wont let it become a "trash can" as you put it, Smilie . haha so dont worry about that.

i was just thinking of pm's right before i read your post, and even though i like pm's on other boards, i think it wouldnt be a good idea. ive had people IM me before on my AIM screen name asking for help and i had to deny it to them because i wanted to follow the rules here.

and an addition to the rules up top that neo posted, no technical unix related questions allowed here. we want this to remain a searchable knowledge base. since the off topic forums wont (is this still the case?) be included in searches it wouldnt benefit anyone in the future. and itll be un organized so browsing through the forums wouldnt be good either. also posts here are gonna be deleted after some time, so again another reason why tech q and a should stay in the technical forums.
 

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

NAME
talkd, ntalkd - The remote communications server for the talk command SYNOPSIS
talkd ntalkd DESCRIPTION
The talkd server notifies a user or callee when a client or caller wants to initiate a conversation. The talkd daemon sets up the conver- sation if the callee accepts the invitation. The caller initiates a conversation by executing the talk command and specifying the callee. The callee accepts the invitation by executing the talk command specifying the caller. The talkd daemon listens at a socket for a LOOK_UP request from a local or remote talk client. On receiving a LOOK_UP request, talkd scans its internal invitation table for an entry that pairs the client (the local or remote talk process) with a caller. If an entry exists in the talkd daemon's international invitation table, the talkd daemon assumes that the client process is the callee. The talkd daemon returns the appropriate rendezvous address to the talk process for the callee. The callee process then establishes a stream connection with the caller process. If an entry does not exist in the invitation table, the talkd daemon assumes that the client process is the caller. The talkd daemon then receives the client process's ANNOUNCE request. When talkd receives the ANNOUNCE request, talkd broadcasts an invitation on the console of the remote host where the callee is logged in, unless the caller specifies a particular tty. At approximately 1-minute intervals, talkd rebroadcasts the invitation until either the invitation is answered by the callee or the call is canceled by the caller. Debugging messages are sent to syslogd(8). For further information on the files used by this daemon, see the syslogd command. FILES
Specifies the command path Defines Internet socket assignments Contains data about users who are currently logged in NOTES
The Tru64 UNIX version of talkd uses the talk 4.3BSD protocol. This command is sometimes referred to as ntalkd. It is not compatible with 4.2BSD versions of talk. RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: inetd(8), syslogd(8), talk(1) delim off talkd(8)
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