Size: 1259
Comment:
|
Size: 1256
Comment:
|
Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
Line 30: | Line 30: |
It means that your system supports IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses. Simply get rid of the {{{imap-IPv4}}} instance from above (or add the {{{disable = yes}}} flag to the instance) and reload xinetd. | It means that your system supports IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses. Simply get rid of the {{{imap-IPv4}}} instance above (or add the {{{disable = yes}}} option to the instance) and reload xinetd. |
xinetd configuration guide
The IPv6 support in xinetd started at release 2.1.8.8.pre*.
How can I configure a service to run over IPv6?
You can enable IPv6 support by adding a new service instance with the flags=IPv6 option, e.g:
service imap { id = imap-IPv4 flags = IPv4 socket_type = stream protocol = tcp wait = no user = root server = /usr/sbin/imapd } service imap { id = imap-IPv6 flags = IPv6 socket_type = stream protocol = tcp wait = no user = root server = /usr/sbin/imapd }
Help! I did as you wrote above and get 'bind failed (Address already in use' messages from xinetd
It means that your system supports IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses. Simply get rid of the imap-IPv4 instance above (or add the disable = yes option to the instance) and reload xinetd.
In Linux 2.6.* IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses are supported by default. You can disable (but you shouldn't) IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses by the command
# echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv6/bindv6ony