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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers I would like to know Would you run the ‘identd’ daemon on UNIX servers? Post 97975 by RTM on Friday 3rd of February 2006 02:24:45 PM
Old 02-03-2006
Inetd runs on all the Solaris servers I'm on - due to SVM having entries in the /etc/inetd.conf. It doesn't run on Fedora laptop (since there is no such daemon).

What exactly are you trying to ask? inetd provides the server process for Internet standard services. Most of these services are commented out on Solaris servers for security reasons. Yet some entries are still needed (if you have a ftp server, commenting out ftp would cause your server to be useless in the role it plays).
 

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

NAME
timedsetup - Performs initial setup of the time server daemon (timed). SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/timedsetup DESCRIPTION
The timedsetup command is an interactive script that can be used to perform initial time service configuration for your system. By default, timed does not start at boot time. The timedsetup script asks if you want the timed daemon to be started at boot time, and prompts you for any options to pass to the timed daemon whenever it is invoked. The script then starts the timed daemon. For more information on the timed options, see the timed(8) reference page. Note The timed daemon is provided for compatibility. Tru64 UNIX also provides support for the Network Time Protocol (NTP) through the xntpd daemon. Compaq recommends you use NTP for time synchronization. If your system is configured to run NTP, the timedsetup command passes the -E and -M options to the timed daemon by default. If you plan to run both the timed daemon and NTP, you should configure NTP first. RESTRICTIONS
In configurations with two or more hosts each connected to the same two or more subnetworks, only one of the host can run the timed with the -M option. FILES
Specifies the command pathname The timed startup and shutdown script Specifies timed parameters pertinent to a specific system SEE ALSO
Commands: timed(8), xntpd(8) timedsetup(8)
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