On Thu, Nov 20, 2008 at 02:43:30PM -0800, Gary Yang wrote: > Many thanks for your explanation. I hope I understand what you said. I deleted /etc/xinetd.d/git-daemon. Then, I tried to git pull. But, I got connection refused. git uses port 9418. Should I request IT Admin to open the port 9418 for me? You'll need port 9418 open, yes; but since it's an unprivileged port (1024 or higher), you can use it as a regular user and don't need IT intervention unless you have some firewall set up which they need to override for you. > git pull git://git.mycompany.com/pub/git/u-boot.git HEAD > git.mycompany.com[0: 10.66.4.168]: errno=Connection refused > fatal: unable to connect a socket (Connection refused) It's possible, and likely simpler, to use git-daemon directly, instead of having it be managed by inetd; especially for initial debugging, I'd recommend getting that working before trying to determine if you're having issues with inetd configuration: to do so, just run git-daemon with all the same arguments except for --inetd. You said you deleted the xinetd config, but that's only relevant if your machine actually uses inetd as its super-server. You should do 'ps -A | grep inetd' (which will match either inetd or xinetd), and see which one is running. If it's inetd, you should be all set, and the issue doesn't look like inetd (assuming you sent it a signal to reload its config file). If on the other hand xinetd is running, you need to use the xinetd config file, and fix the server_args to look like the arguments which exist in the inetd file. Again, you need to signal xinetd at this point to reload its configuration. Based on the linux kernel version you're reporting, I'm guessing you have some sort of Red Hat based system, which uses xinetd to the best of my knowledge. > Another question, I got no output of "netstat | grep 9418". It means no program runs at port 9418 at the public repository machine. Is it correct? > > netstat | grep 9418 netstat translates IP addresses to dns names, and ports to service names by default; so, given the line listed in /etc/services, this will show '0.0.0.0:git' or something. Also, it lists established connections, not listening sockets, by default. I'd recommend spending some time with the man page if you're going to use it to debug your setup. Deskin Miller -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html