Appendix B. Running Network Services

Because Fedora and RHEL can provide so many different kinds of services (serving Web pages, printers, files, and other resources), it's not always easy to find all the components you need to use those services. Let's say you install all server software packages with Fedora or RHEL. How do you know which servers will start up automatically and which will need special configuration to work? Where do you start to look for configuration files, start-up scripts, and daemon processes? How do you know if your firewall configuration is blocking access to the services?

This appendix provides a quick reference to the network services that come with Fedora and RHEL. It offers an overview of the services described in detail in other chapters. You can use this appendix to help you remember how to get services working or as a guide to help you debug a service that needs fixing.

Note

Any services your computer offers to users who can reach it over a network pose a potential security threat. Refer to Chapter 14 for information on security, as well as the sections in the book that describe configuration of each feature in detail.

Checklist for Running Networking Services

As computer security issues increase with the rising onslaught of computer crackers and viruses, operating systems (such as Fedora or RHEL), in regards to the services they provide, are moving toward more security rather than more ease-of-use. Simply installing server software is no longer enough ...

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