Netgate Discussion Forum
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Search
    • Register
    • Login

    Inetd[273]: 19112/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
    19 Posts 7 Posters 13.8k Views
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • S
      Snille
      last edited by

      sullrich:
      Ok, reinstall I will.
      Can I still "reload" my old configuration file when I have reinstalled, or will the error come back if I do?
      I have a lot of rules entered in Alias, NAT, Rules, and the Traffic shaper. :/

      billm:
      I need the "Reflection", I'm using my own "site" allot from inside the LAN. In fact that was the "last" reasons that made me switch to pfSense in the first place. The possibility to reach my own site from the inside without having to use hostfiles on my LAN computers is great! :)

      If you can't find it, make it and share it!

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • H
        hoba
        last edited by

        Basically you should be able to reimport your config. However we are trying to sort bugs out by only accepting them if the bug happens with a fresh install AND with a configuration from scratch. The nat-reflection option is only a single flag in the config.xml, so it shouldn't bring back this problem (unless they were caused by the nat's that exist in the config.xml). Depending on how old this config.xml is (in versions) I would say give it a try and if it doesn't work recreate it from sratch  ;)

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • J
          jeroen234
          last edited by

          i don't see it here i have Reflection on
          using beta1 iso
          inetd.conf:
          ftp-proxy stream tcp nowait root /usr/lib/libexec/ftp-proxy ftp-proxy -D0 -m 55000 -M 57000 -t 180 -u proxy

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • ?
            Guest
            last edited by

            Hi everybody and a happy new year  :)

            I just started to use pfsense and I have fresh pfsense beta1 installation and I have exactly the same problem. This is my setup:

            Dual PII 300 Mhz
            128 Mb RAM
            600 Mb hard drive (yes, I know it's small but enough for now)
            3 NIC (WAN, LAN and OPT1)
            pfSense 1.0-Beta 1

            and that's all. Just a basic install without any extra configuration.

            From m0nowall website I found documentation how to configure portforwarding for bittorrent. Documentation is here:

            http://doc.m0n0.ch/handbook/thirdparty-bittorrent.html

            and that's how I did it. Bittorrent works but that error message puzzles me. This is the exact error message:

            inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
            inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address

            I tried to change reflection to disabled but that didn't help and my /etc/inetd.conf is:

            ftp-proxy stream tcp nowait root /usr/lib/libexec/ftp-proxy ftp-proxy -D0 -m 55000 -M 57000 -t 180 -u proxy

            TIA

            –
            palo

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • S
              sullrich
              last edited by

              When you see this message, please run ps awux | grep inetd and see if inetd is already running.  We may be trying to start it overtop the other running process.  Checks are there to look for this, but bugs happen.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • ?
                Guest
                last edited by

                ps awux | grep inetd

                root    6055  0.0  0.9  1436  1088  ??  INs  4:58PM  0:00.43 /usr/sbin/inetd -a 127.0.0.1 /var/etc/inetd.conf
                root    13299  0.0  0.8  1456  952  p0  RL+  11:29PM  0:00.01 grep inetd

                Is that /var/etc/inetd.conf correct ? Should it be /etc/inetd.conf ?

                ls -l /var/etc/inetd.conf

                ls: /var/etc/inetd.conf: No such file or directory

                ls -l /etc/inetd.conf

                -rw-r–r--  1 root  wheel  108 Dec 26 05:18 /etc/inetd.conf

                Btw, it happens every 10 minutes:

                Jan 1 23:18:51 inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                Jan 1 23:18:51 inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                Jan 1 23:18:51 inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                Jan 1 23:18:51 inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                Jan 1 23:08:51 inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                Jan 1 23:08:51 inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                Jan 1 23:08:51 inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                Jan 1 23:08:51 inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                Jan 1 22:58:51 inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                Jan 1 22:58:51 inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                Jan 1 22:58:51 inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                Jan 1 22:58:51 inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address

                –
                palo

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • S
                  sullrich
                  last edited by

                  @palo:

                  ps awux | grep inetd

                  root    6055  0.0  0.9  1436  1088  ??  INs  4:58PM  0:00.43 /usr/sbin/inetd -a 127.0.0.1 /var/etc/inetd.conf
                  root    13299  0.0  0.8  1456  952  p0  RL+  11:29PM  0:00.01 grep inetd

                  Is that /var/etc/inetd.conf correct ? Should it be /etc/inetd.conf ?

                  Nope.

                  ls -la /var/etc/inetd.conf

                  -rw-r–r--  1 root  wheel  17949 Dec 31 23:15 /var/etc/inetd.conf

                  @palo:

                  ls -l /var/etc/inetd.conf

                  ls: /var/etc/inetd.conf: No such file or directory

                  ls -l /etc/inetd.conf

                  -rw-r–r--  1 root  wheel  108 Dec 26 05:18 /etc/inetd.conf

                  Btw, it happens every 10 minutes:

                  Jan 1 23:18:51 inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                  Jan 1 23:18:51 inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                  Jan 1 23:18:51 inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                  Jan 1 23:18:51 inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                  Jan 1 23:08:51 inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                  Jan 1 23:08:51 inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                  Jan 1 23:08:51 inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                  Jan 1 23:08:51 inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                  Jan 1 22:58:51 inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                  Jan 1 22:58:51 inetd[6055]: 19000/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                  Jan 1 22:58:51 inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address
                  Jan 1 22:58:51 inetd[6055]: 19001/tcp: bind: Can't assign requested address

                  –
                  palo

                  Every 10 minutes!?  I don't see how this is possible.  Do you not have any redirects in place?

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • J
                    jeroen234
                    last edited by

                    in /var/etc there is no inetd.conf

                    ls -la /var/etc/

                    total 30
                    drwxr-xr-x  3 root  wheel  512 Jan  2 03:44 .
                    drwxr-xr-x  12 root  wheel  512 Dec 27 09:54 ..
                    -rw-r–r--  1 root  wheel    17 Jan  2 03:44 defaultdomain.conf
                    -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel    55 Jan  1 15:44 dhclient_wan.conf
                    -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  321 Jan  1 15:44 dhcpd.conf
                    -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  103 Jan  1 15:44 hosts
                    -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  5115 Jan  1 15:44 lighty-webConfigurator.conf
                    drwxr-xr-x  2 root  wheel  512 Dec 27 10:12 mpd-vpn
                    -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel    43 Jan  2 03:44 nameserver_vr0
                    -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel    43 Jan  2 03:44 nameservers.conf
                    -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  192 Jan  2 03:44 resolv.conf
                    -rw-------  1 root  wheel    0 Jan  2 03:44 sasyncd.conf
                    -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel    0 Jan  1 15:44 slbd.conf
                    -rw-rw-rw-  1 root  wheel  850 Dec 29 23:08 snmpd.conf
                    -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  836 Jan  1 15:44 syslog.conf

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • ?
                      Guest
                      last edited by

                      Today I recreated that bittorrent portforwarding rule which I made yesterday and it seems that problem is gone. I don't have any idea what might cause that error message but everything seems to work ok right now. Well, I still don't have /var/etc/inetd.conf file but if everything works, I don't care.

                      –
                      palo

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • D
                        Dakhor
                        last edited by

                        I got the same error on a fresh installation of 1beta. Disabling reflection didnt help - deleting all NAT and Firewall rules didnt help ( didnt reboot though ). Finally I made a new  NAT port forward rule ( and the auto firewall at the same time ) AND rebooted the system. Problem went away…

                        The only thing that I did differently the first time was that after creating the port forward rule...

                        1 - I forgot that I needed UDP protocoll too so edited the NAT rule AND firewall rule to include that.
                        2 - Edited them again a second time to remove ip and ad an Alias instead.

                        How about the other guys who got this error message and then made it go away by making a fresh new rule. Maybe there is a bug with EDITING rules. I will try and mess with it some more tomorrow to see if I can get the error back. Need to hit the sack now though :)

                        /DaK/

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • S
                          sullrich
                          last edited by

                          This is hopefully fixed in beta 2.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • D
                            Dakhor
                            last edited by

                            Now im getting something like this when running torrent software "inetd[348]: accept (for 19000): Software caused connection abort" but I suspect this is cuz I have forwarded one port only and torrents want a number of them to work well…

                            Anyway I wanted to ask what log readers you guys are using?

                            /DaK/

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • S
                              Snille
                              last edited by

                              I also (still, after a clean install and setting up all the rules again) get the same error.
                              inetd[366]: accept (for 19000): Software caused connection abort

                              Are you sure this is due to only forwarding one port for torrent even when the torrent program says it only needs one?

                              If you can't find it, make it and share it!

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • S
                                sullrich
                                last edited by

                                Click System -> Advanced -> Disable Reflection

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • S
                                  Snille
                                  last edited by

                                  Isn't the "reflection" the function in the firewall that let "me" (inside the lan) surf to my own dns name without having to actually go out and back in again (or to be in need of a host file, or an internal DNS)?

                                  Anyway, is this a serious error? Or just an annoying thing filling up the log? :)

                                  If you can't find it, make it and share it!

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • S
                                    sullrich
                                    last edited by

                                    Yes that is the function that allows you access it from internal.  It looks like something is connecting and aborting the connect often.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • First post
                                      Last post
                                    Copyright 2025 Rubicon Communications LLC (Netgate). All rights reserved.