[Glass] startnetldi -p does not exists anymore in 3.2.9, alternative is /etc/services?

Richard Sargent via Glass glass at lists.gemtalksystems.com
Wed Oct 21 09:32:24 PDT 2015


There is a -P option. (That's an uppercase P.)

rsargent at galbadia run2 $ startnetldi -?
startnetldi: invalid option -?
Usage: startnetldi [-h] [-d] [-g|-s] [-n] [-a account] [-l logFile]
                  [-t seconds] [-P portNumber] [-A address] [name]
  where -h    prints usage information and exits.
        -b    maximum client connection backlog (default: 64).
        -d    cause netldi to print extra information to its log file.
        -g    start netldi in guest mode.
        -s    start netldi in secure mode.
        -n    netldi will not use adhoc scripts.
        -a    all processes started by the netldi will belong to this
account.
        -l    specifies the name of the netldi log file.
        -t    number of seconds netldi will wait for child process to start.
        -v    print version and exit.
        -P    specifies the well-known port number that netldi will use.
        -A    specifies address to listen on, (up to 10 -A args accepted)
              If -A omitted, the default wildcard address ::  is listened
on.
              If -A ::  is given, then other -A arguments are ignored.
              If -A is given, and neither -A :: nor -A ::1 are specified,
then
              the loopback address ::1 is also listened on.
              The argument to -A may be a named or numeric address of a
network
              interface on this machine.
        name  is the name of the netldi to start.
              If name is not specified, netldi name is taken from
GEMSTONE_NRS_ALL
              environment variable (if available), otherwise default is
gs64ldi
              If -P omitted, 'name' is looked up in the network services
database



On Wed, Oct 21, 2015 at 9:22 AM, Mariano Martinez Peck via Glass <
glass at lists.gemtalksystems.com> wrote:

> Hi guys,
>
> I found out that the argument -p does not exist anymore in 3.2.9 and it
> doesn't seem there is a replacement. Is /etc/services the alternative and
> desired solution?
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> --
> Mariano
> http://marianopeck.wordpress.com
>
> _______________________________________________
> Glass mailing list
> Glass at lists.gemtalksystems.com
> http://lists.gemtalksystems.com/mailman/listinfo/glass
>
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.gemtalksystems.com/mailman/private/glass/attachments/20151021/7dad718c/attachment.html>


More information about the Glass mailing list