> -----Original Message----- > From: centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx > [mailto:centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Johnny Hughes > Sent: Tuesday, September 06, 2005 6:55 AM > To: CentOS ML > Subject: RE: LDAP/iptables > > On Tue, 2005-09-06 at 06:31 -0400, Thomas E Dukes wrote: > <snip> > > Ooops, I found the typo, too. Fixed it but still won't connect. > > > > > > > > Have you tried rebooting? (I know, I know :) Sometimes system > > > updates can cause subtle issues from time to time. Maybe > something > > > is goofy with the network on your machine. Have you been starting > > > and stopping the network service? Can you ping localhost? I have > > > seen some linux boxes (been a while, > > > though) forget about how to talk to localhost and it caused all > > > sorts of weird behavior. > > > > Yes, I have rebooted but to no avail. Also, I can ping > 'localhost', > > 'palmettodomains.com', '127.0.0.1' and '10.10.0.1'. I still can't > > figure why I can't telnet to one of those using port 389. > > > > You can't connect to port 389 because you are not listening on port > 389 :) > > Until a netstat (or lsof) shows you are listening on port > 389, you will not be able to connect to it. > > > > > > > As a shot in the dark, are you running with selinux enabled? > > > It has caused many a subtle problem in which a configuration that > > > should "just work" has failed to work. Try running > setenforce 0 and > > > then restarting ldap. I run my machines with selinux=0 on > the kernel > > > line in grub.conf > > > > No, I don't run selinux. > > > > Make doubly sure ... look at the file /etc/sysconfig/selinux > and set the > line: > > SELINUX=Disabled Hi Johnny, Mine is located at /etc/selinux/config. It is set to disabled. Also, I have selinux=0 in my grub.conf. I really appreciate everyones help on this. Thanks!! > > then reboot >