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By default, the daemon and clients are set to use port 1529. Add the line
support 1529/tcp # GNATS |
to your ‘/etc/services’ file. If you want a different service name, configure GNATS with
--enable-gnats-service=servicename |
In your ‘inetd.conf’ file, add the line
support stream tcp nowait gnats /usr/local/libexec/gnats/gnatsd gnatsd |
adjusting the path accordingly if you used configure options to make
changes to the defaults. To make inetd
start spawning the
GNATS daemon when connected on that port, send it a hangup signal
(HUP
).
Some operating systems have replaced inetd
with the more modern
xinetd
. Instead of editing ‘inetd.conf’, you should create
the file ‘/etc/xinetd.d/support’, containing something like the
following:
service support { disable = no socket_type = stream protocol = tcp wait = no user = gnats server = /usr/local/libexec/gnats/gnatsd } |
If you specified a different service name when running configure
,
you need to give the file the same name as the service name, and you
need to adjust the service
line above. If the --prefix
or
--exec-prefix
options were passed to configure
, adjust the
server
line above, and if you used the --enable-gnats-user
option, adjust the user
line.
Then restart xinetd
to make the new configuration current.
If you use an Internet superserver different from inetd
or
xinetd
, please refer to its documentation for information how
to configure it.
At this point, you will probably want to set the access permissions of the different hosts that are going to be accessing your databases. The access permissions can currently only be set on a global scale (that is, across all the databases on a GNATS server). The location and name of the global host access configuration file can be set during the pre-build configure as shown above, but by default the file is ‘/usr/local/etc/gnats/gnatsd_host.access’. It lists the hosts allowed to access your server, and what their default access levels are. Each line in the file denotes one server, or one part of a network domain. There are three fields on each line, but only two are currently used. To grant all hosts from the domain site.com edit access, use this line:
site.com:edit
If you run a GNATS web interface or similar tool on the same machine as the server is running on, you probably want to grant localhost edit access:
localhost:edit
If you are using Kerberos, the ‘gnatsd_host.access’ file shows the sites that don’t require Kerberos authentication.
The third field might in the future be used for things like controlling what categories, submitter-id’s PRs, etc., can be accessed from that site. Access attempts that are denied are logged to the syslog messages file (‘/var/adm/messages’ on many systems).
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This document was generated by Chad Walstrom on March 3, 2015 using texi2html 1.82.