oh a wise guy, eh?? nyuk nyuk nyuk nyuk! :p
On Thu, Mar 31, 2011 at 3:29 AM, Tony Molloy tony.molloy@ul.ie wrote:
On Wednesday 30 March 2011 20:35:13 Tim Dunphy wrote:
hey list!
I am attempting to shore up some centos machines (ranging from centos
5 to centos 5.4) for pci compliance by changing the port that
nlockdmgr listens on to function under a privileged port.
So what I did was try to hardcode the port by editing /etc/sysconfig/nfs
# TCP port rpc.lockd should listen on.
LOCKD_TCPPORT=1011
# UDP port rpc.lockd should listen on.
LOCKD_UDPPORT=1011
#
And /etc/modprobe.conf
alias eth1 e1000e
alias scsi_hostadapter 3w-9xxx
alias scsi_hostadapter1 usb-storage
alias eth0 e1000e
options lockd nlm_udpport=1011
options lockd nlm_tcpport=1011
and then restarting the pormap service. I've even tried restarting the
network service, but unfortunately nothing seems affected:
[root@stallion:/etc/init.d] $ rpcinfo -p
program vers proto port
100000 2 tcp 111 portmapper
100000 2 udp 111 portmapper
100021 1 udp 55394 nlockmgr
100021 3 udp 55394 nlockmgr
100021 4 udp 55394 nlockmgr
100021 1 tcp 33704 nlockmgr
100021 3 tcp 33704 nlockmgr
100021 4 tcp 33704 nlockmgr
100024 1 udp 786 status
100024 1 tcp 789 status
Does anyone have any tips on how to get this to work the way I'm asking it
to?
How about trying to restart the nfs service ;-)
Tony
regards
~
GPG me!!
gpg --keyserver pool.sks-keyservers.net --recv-keys F186197B
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