Re: hopefully some help with AntiX

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Hi Willem,
I did run nmap, and with no change, I rebooted.
So the question is, is there any SSH service running.
Thanks.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Willem van der Walt" <wvdwalt@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: "K0LNY_Glenn" <glenn@ervin.email>
Cc: "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." 
<speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, August 26, 2022 5:44 AM
Subject: Re: hopefully some help with AntiX


Hi,
I checked on my ubuntu.
You should be able to do:
sudo ufw disable
It should open up your firewall and disable it so that it does not start
up when you reboot or power down.
You said:
If I turn off ufw it tells me all 1000 ports are closed with nmap.
If you still get this result after disabling ufw, then ssh is likely not
running on the machine.

Reboot will cancil the iptables commands.
It would have helped if you ran
nmap after those iptables commands to see if
there is any change.
HTH, Willem


On Thu, 25 Aug 2022, K0LNY_Glenn wrote:

> [The e-mail server of the sender could not be verified (SPF Record)]
>
> Willem,
> I was really hoping this would work.
> I had to go back and forth between rooms remembering chunks of the input
> one, and I ran it, and according to seeing AI, it gave no errors.
> So I tried to SSH into it, and connection refused, so I rebooted, and 
> tried
> again, and again, connection refused.
> If I turn off ufw it tells me all 1000 ports are closed with nmap.
> If ufw is running, nmap tells me they are all filtered.
> Glenn
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Willem van der Walt" <wvdwalt@xxxxxxxxxx>
> To: "K0LNY_Glenn" <glenn@ervin.email>
> Cc: "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux."
> <speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Thursday, August 25, 2022 3:30 AM
> Subject: Re: hopefully some help with AntiX
>
>
> Sorry, there was a typo in my nmap command, so what you did below is
> correct.
> It is tricky without speech, but you can try the following iptables
> commands on the machine.
> #Allow ssh from your network
> iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -s 10.248.1.0/24 --dport 22 -m state --state
> NEW,ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT
> #Allow outgoing ssh
> iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --sport 22 -j ACCEPT
> The iptables command should work as it is the basic command used by all
> firewall tools.
> HTH, Willem
>
>
> On Wed, 24 Aug 2022, K0LNY_Glenn wrote:
>
>> [The e-mail server of the sender could not be verified (SPF Record)]
>>
>> Well after thinking about it, I realized that I could have just put in 
>> the
>> actual IP address with nmap.
>> So I did:
>> nmap -f 10.248.1.143
>> and it quickly found antix and it said all 1000 ports have been scanned
>> and
>> they all are closed.
>> Glenn
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Willem van der Walt" <wvdwalt@xxxxxxxxxx>
>> Cc: "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux."
>> <speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>> Sent: Wednesday, August 24, 2022 4:28 AM
>> Subject: Re: hopefully some help with AntiX
>>
>>
>> Hi,
>> The Ubuntu and I think, Debian ssh server package is called ssh-server.
>> I suggest you do a portscan with nmap f
>> om another machine to see if ssh server is running.
>> It should show an open port 22 if it is.
>> Note, you must ssh into the machine as a non-root user.
>> HTH, Willem
>>
>> On Tue, 23 Aug 2022, K0LNY_Glenn wrote:
>>
>>> [The e-mail server of the sender could not be verified (SPF Record)]
>>>
>>> Well I tried using the iPhone app, seeing AI.
>>> I can't read back letter by letter using short text, which is what reads
>>> monitors the best, so I have to rely on what I hear.
>>> It appears it does not know aptitude, so I tried apt, and that command
>>> works.
>>> But I tried three different package names:
>>> openssh-server
>>> openssh
>>> and just ssh
>>> In all the returns, it said it could not find the packages, and they may
>>> exist under a different name.
>>> So unless anyone has other Debian based SSH install names, I'll be doing
>>> more research on antiX and SSH.
>>>
>>> Glenn
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>> From: "Jude DaShiell" <jdashiel@xxxxxxxxx>
>>> To: "K0LNY_Glenn" <glenn@ervin.email>; "Speakup is a screen review 
>>> system
>>> for Linux." <speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>>> Sent: Tuesday, August 23, 2022 10:50 PM
>>> Subject: Re: hopefully some help with AntiX
>>>
>>>
>>> You could try fenrir with git or pipi whichever is available.
>>>
>>>
>>> Jude <jdashiel at panix dot com> "There are four boxes to be used in
>>> defense of liberty:
>>> soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
>>> -Ed Howdershelt (Author, 1940)
>>>
>>> .
>>>
>>> On Tue, 23 Aug 2022, K0LNY_Glenn wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hello,
>>>> So I successfully got a live version of AntiX 19.5 base 386 on my
>>>> Asus701
>>>> I am having trouble getting in with SSH.
>>>> When I do speaker test on the actual netbook, it works, so I know the
>>>> audio
>>>> works.
>>>> Neither espeak test, or espeak-ng test, worked.
>>>> It is Debian based, so I did apt update and most of the following
>>>> things,
>>>> I
>>>> tried both with sudo and without.
>>>> On the computer trying to get in, it tells me connection refused.
>>>> It is on the network as antix1
>>>> Everything I read on-line suggest it should have openssh installed, but
>>>> I
>>>> ran the apt install for openssh-server -y just in case.
>>>> I tried systemctl start openssh
>>>> and I tried system restart openssh
>>>> I guess it is possible espeak-NG may not be in its repository.
>>>> Then espeeakup wouldn't be there either.
>>>> If I had speakup going on the AntiX, or an SSH connection, I could 
>>>> start
>>>> getting it going.
>>>>
>>>> Anyone have any ideas for this?
>>>> This would be good on the Asus 701, it's using Buster, which isn't that
>>>> old.Thanks for any assistance.
>>>>
>>>> Glenn
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
> 





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