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Today's Topics:
1. CESA-2005:307 Moderate CentOS 4 ia64 kdelibs - security update (Pasi Pirhonen) 2. CESA-2005-307: Moderate CentOS 3 i386 kdelibs - security update (Tru Huynh) 3. CESA-2005-307: Moderate CentOS 3 x86_64 kdelibs - security update (Tru Huynh) 4. CESA-2005:044-01: Moderate CentOS 2 i386 XFree86 security update (John Newbigin) 5. CESA-2005:307-01: Moderate CentOS 2 i386 kdelibs security update (John Newbigin) 6. CEBA-2005-0406-1 CentOS 4 i386 and x86_64 glade2 - bugfix update (Johnny Hughes) 7. CEBA-2005-169: CentOS 4 i386 and x86_64 up2date - bugfix update (Johnny Hughes) 8. CESA-2005:307 Moderate CentOS 3 s390(x) kdelibs - security update (Pasi Pirhonen)
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Message: 1 Date: Wed, 6 Apr 2005 22:58:09 +0300 From: Pasi Pirhonen upi@iki.fi Subject: [CentOS-announce] CESA-2005:307 Moderate CentOS 4 ia64 kdelibs - security update To: centos-announce@centos.org Message-ID: 20050406195809.GK11443@core.upi.iki.fi Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory CESA-2005:307
https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2005-307.html
The following updated files have been uploaded and are currently syncing to the mirrors:
files: kdelibs-3.1.3-6.10.ia64.rpm kdelibs-devel-3.1.3-6.10.ia64.rpm
source: kdelibs-3.1.3-6.10.src.rpm
hi, is there anyway to monitor vstpd connections to my computer? like a utility like ftpwho? Also how would i kick off current users connected to my server.
Bank wrote:
hi, is there anyway to monitor vstpd connections to my computer? like a utility like ftpwho? Also how would i kick off current users connected to my server.
__
I'm not aware of any "easy to use" monitor. Kicking off current users is as easy as:
/etc/rc.d/init.d/vsftpd stop/start/restart
Cheers,
C
Each vsftpd user will have their own process on the server. You could list them with a:
ps -aef | grep vsftpd
And optionally, kill any process you wish to terminate the corresponding connection.
Andrew
Chris Mauritz wrote:
Bank wrote:
hi, is there anyway to monitor vstpd connections to my computer? like a utility like ftpwho? Also how would i kick off current users connected to my server.
__
I'm not aware of any "easy to use" monitor. Kicking off current users is as easy as:
/etc/rc.d/init.d/vsftpd stop/start/restart
Cheers,
C
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
You can also run lsof -i :21 to see all the connections, username connected, and process id.
Andrew Hull wrote:
Each vsftpd user will have their own process on the server. You could list them with a:
ps -aef | grep vsftpd
And optionally, kill any process you wish to terminate the corresponding connection.
Andrew
Chris Mauritz wrote:
Bank wrote:
hi, is there anyway to monitor vstpd connections to my computer? like a utility like ftpwho? Also how would i kick off current users connected to my server.
__
I'm not aware of any "easy to use" monitor. Kicking off current users is as easy as:
/etc/rc.d/init.d/vsftpd stop/start/restart
Cheers,
C
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos