On Thu, 2007-10-11 at 12:24 -0400, Matthew Saltzman wrote: > On Thu, 2007-10-11 at 10:01 -0400, Tony Nelson wrote: > > At 3:39 AM +0000 10/11/07, Matthew Saltzman wrote: > > >I'm trying to get my scanner running as a network service so remote > > >machines can use it, but I've run into a snag. So my questions: > > > > > >- Does anyone have a good HOWTO for this? > > > > > >- In particular, there seems to be a connection tracker module for sane, > > >but if I add ip_conntrack_sane to the modules list in > > >/etc/sysconfig/iptables-config, the modules fail to load when I restart > > >iptables. What am I missing as far as that step? > > > > Do you have any evidence that ip_conntrack_sane exists? The only mention > > on Google is someone who couldn't find it (if I made sense of the > > translation from Chinese). > > I'm not even sure where to look. ip_conntrack_netbios_ns and > ip_conntrack_amanda load fine. The only files with similar names I can > find are > /lib/modules/<version>/kernel/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_netbios_ns.ko > and /lib/modules/<version>/kernel/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_amanda.ko, > but there is > a /lib/modules/<version>/kernel/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_sane.ko. So > if those files are related to those modules, the answer should be yes. > > If not, then I really don't understand how the iptables modules thing > works at all. Well, in retrospect it seems like an obvious thing. Loading nf_conntrack_sane works just fine. In fact, for many of the modules, you can have iptables load ip_conntrack_<service> or nf_conntrack_<service>. I suppose that's a backward compatibility thing where "nf" is the new form and "ip" is the old, but for sane, the old form doesn't work. On to figure out the rest of this. > > > > > I see a hack using ipt_recent. Eww. > > > > You could always roll your own from the other examples. (I wonder if there > > is a configurable conntrack module? It seems that there could be, but I'd > > have to read the various modules to be sure.) > > I could also just take down the firewall (or open all unprivileged > ports), but I was hoping not to have to do anything that drastic. > > > > > > > >- Is there a way to get a Windows client to use a scanner served by a > > >Linux machine over the net? > > > > Googling makes me think "yes, of course", but I haven't tried it. > > Thanks. -- Matthew Saltzman Clemson University Math Sciences mjs AT clemson DOT edu http://www.math.clemson.edu/~mjs -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list