Unfortunately, neither of those being platform-independent, it's somewhat unlikely that this will be supported under Java...
PK
-----Original message----- From: Bruno Wolff III bruno@wolff.to Sent: Fri 05-10-2012 13:22 Subject: Re: iptables fubared? To: Patrick Kobly patrick@kobly.com; CC: "Community support for Fedora users" users@lists.fedoraproject.org;
On Fri, Oct 05, 2012 at 12:50:30 -0600, Patrick Kobly patrick@kobly.com wrote:
He's running JBoss... Java apps won't drop privs. Non-root can't bind to 80,
so he gets JBoss to bind to 8080 then redirects.
Yuck. There are other ways to do that. I think the systemd route is probably the way to do it in current Fedora: http://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.socket.html
But inetd or tcp-server (and probably other things) could also be used.
Huh, weirdly I didn't see any of these messages until the last one. Is the list fubared? Or maybe someone replied privately by mistake?
On 10/5/2012 12:49 PM, Patrick Kobly wrote:
Unfortunately, neither of those being platform-independent, it's somewhat unlikely that this will be supported under Java...
PK
-----Original message----- From: Bruno Wolff III bruno@wolff.to Sent: Fri 05-10-2012 13:22 Subject: Re: iptables fubared? To: Patrick Kobly patrick@kobly.com; CC: "Community support for Fedora users" users@lists.fedoraproject.org;
On Fri, Oct 05, 2012 at 12:50:30 -0600, Patrick Kobly patrick@kobly.com wrote:
He's running JBoss... Java apps won't drop privs. Non-root can't bind to 80,
so he gets JBoss to bind to 8080 then redirects.
Yuck. There are other ways to do that. I think the systemd route is probably the way to do it in current Fedora: http://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.socket.html
But inetd or tcp-server (and probably other things) could also be used.
On Fri, 2012-10-05 at 17:25 -0700, Mark Space wrote:
I didn't see any of these messages until the last one. Is the list fubared?
Messages aren't always delivered in order, especially if they end up travelling through different routes. Because of that, some of them can get seriously delayed. Especially when they pass through services which apply very low priorities, or a lot of spam checking, to list mail.