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2008-05-18
, 16:29
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Posts: 296 |
Thanked: 80 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#2
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2008-05-20
, 06:59
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Posts: 182 |
Thanked: 46 times |
Joined on Jan 2007
@ Silly-Con Valley
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#3
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The Following User Says Thank You to linuxrebel For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-05-21
, 11:38
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Posts: 6 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Apr 2008
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#4
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2008-05-21
, 19:06
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Posts: 4,930 |
Thanked: 2,272 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#5
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I have installed open-ssh on my N800, for a) I have not managed to pair it with my iGo keyboard (was a doddle to set up with N770!) and b) I needed to ftp some fonts in for sdict. It's a useful thing to have, but I am wondering whether the ssh-server running is actually going to take up resources? (Especially with regards to the MM-vanishing act, posted here.)
I can't seem to find anything in the gui to enable and disable daemons with a tick, so I figured I could just remove all the symlinks to ssh from rcX.d and from then on use /etc/init.d/ssh start / stop to run ssh selectively if required.
Is that safe? Would it work? Is it actually the ssh-server-daemon that I want to switch off, or is there a wider service, that generally listens to incoming connections that I can turn off? How much of a hassle is it to build an applet for the desktop that has a toggle and an indicator telling me whether it is running or not?
Thanks a lot for all replies!
joe
Last edited by lazy_joe; 2008-05-18 at 14:17. Reason: impatience and imprecision, as always...