Return-Path: Message-ID: <4E46E95B.8060500@Dartmouth.edu> Date: Sat, 13 Aug 2011 17:15:07 -0400 From: Isaiah Sarju MIME-Version: 1.0 To: Vinicius Costa Gomes , linux-bluetooth@vger.kernel.org, Johan Hedberg Subject: Re: RFCOMM channel 1 behavior differences References: <4E45B5F1.4020807@Dartmouth.edu> <20110813000615.GA32541@piper> <20110813082621.GA11338@dell.Elisa> In-Reply-To: <20110813082621.GA11338@dell.Elisa> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed Sender: linux-bluetooth-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: On 8/13/11 4:26 AM, Johan Hedberg wrote: > Hi, > > On Fri, Aug 12, 2011, Vinicius Costa Gomes wrote: >> On 19:23 Fri 12 Aug, Isaiah Sarju wrote: >>> Hello, >>> >>> Does Ubuntu, linux kernel 2.6.38.10, running bluez 4.91-0ubuntu1 >>> have a special security policy for incoming rfcomm connections on >>> channel 1, and not other channels? >>> >> >> Most probably this is caused by a problem in how Ubuntu packages >> BlueZ. >> >> Could you try this: edit /etc/bluetooth/main.conf and add "pnat-server" >> to the DisabledPlugins field (perhaps you will need to uncomment that >> line). Restart bluetoothd and see if it works. > > That could be the reason, however the plugin name is "pnat" and not > "pnat-server" (pnat-server is just the adapter driver name that the pnat > plugin registers). Thank you both for the advice. Adding "pnat" to the comma separated list worked for me. main.conf now contains line: DisablePlugins = network,input,pnat What I could find on pnat-server in the archives stated that it has a use on some Nokia device. What function does the pnat plugin serve? Thank you, Isaiah