"Mike Kercher" <mike@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:6115482898C59848B35DB9D491C9A28E08BFA3@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > >> Thanks for the pointer. Indeed, I was missing the > trailing . after > >> my FQDN in my revers file. I have updated my reverse files, and > >> nslookup is resolving better, but still not further ahead. > >> > >> My reverse file: 3.168.192.in-addr.arpa now contains the > following line: > >> 103 IN PTR eric.test.com. > >> > >> > >> If I try nslookups now, my results are as follows: > >> > >> # nslookup 192.168.3.103 > >> Server: 192.168.1.67 > >> Address: 192.168.1.67#53 > >> > >> 103.103.168.192.in-addr.arpa name = eric.test.com. > >> > >> # nslookup eric.test.com > >> Server: 192.168.1.67 > >> Address: 192.168.1.67#53 > >> > >> Name: eric.test.com > >> Address: 192.168.3.103 > >> > >> > >> So from that, it seems as though the DNS / rDNS are properly > >> configured, does it not? Similarly, I have both the forward and > >> reverse domain name on the DNS server as the nslookups show. > >> However, I still get the same error > >> msg: > >> Jan 14 17:46:50 apollo atftpd[15905]: Connection refused from > >> 192.168.103.103 > > AAA > > Correct? -----||| > > Whoops - cut & paste typo. That line is supposed to read: > Jan 14 17:46:50 apollo atftpd[15905]: Connection refused from > 192.168.3.103 > > Can you post your complete hosts.allow and hosts.deny files? Not much to them actually: /chroot/tftpd/etc/hosts.allow: # # hosts.allow This file describes the names of the hosts which are # allowed to use the local INET services, as decided # by the '/usr/sbin/tcpd' server. # in.tftpd : eric.test.com : allow /chroot/tftpd/etc/hosts.deny: # # hosts.deny This file describes the names of the hosts which are # *not* allowed to use the local INET services, as decided # by the '/usr/sbin/tcpd' server. # in.tftpd : ALL : deny Again, I have concerns that I might be missing something in my chroot jail, but when I change my hosts.allow file to read the following, it works fine. in.tftpd: 192.168.3.103 : allow So I am utterly and totally confused. I keep thinking that there must be something DNS related that I need in the chroot jail that I am missing. I do have a /chroot/tftpd/etc/resolv.conf with the nameserver entry that points to the DNS server, and all files in my /chroot/tftpd/etc dir are world readable. I also have a /chroot/tftpd/etc/hosts file (that is pretty much empty - just a line for 127.0.0.1). # ls -l /chroot/tftpd/etc -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 148 Jan 14 17:53 hosts -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 417 Jan 14 17:37 hosts.allow -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 370 Jan 13 12:13 hosts.deny -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1267 Jan 12 21:43 localtime -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1686 Jan 12 15:50 nsswitch.conf -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 86 Jan 14 17:52 resolv.conf -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 20373 Jan 12 15:47 services Is there anything else I need that I am missing? Either config file or lib? Any suggestions of things I can try? Thanks, Eric _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos