-<P>Allowing telnet connections is quite simple. Firstly you need to add a line in /etc/services to allow connections to a port number, like this ....
-<P>
-<BLOCKQUOTE><CODE>
-<PRE>
-spdlogin 8000/tcp # spider anonymous login port
-</PRE>
-</CODE></BLOCKQUOTE>
-<P>Then add a line in /etc/inetd.conf like this ....
-<P>
-<BLOCKQUOTE><CODE>
-<PRE>
-spdlogin stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /spider/perl/client.pl login telnet
-</PRE>
-</CODE></BLOCKQUOTE>
-<P>
-<P>This needs to be added above the standard services such as ftp, telnet etc. Once this is done, you need to restart inetd like this ....
-<P>
-<BLOCKQUOTE><CODE>
-<PRE>
-killall -HUP inetd
-</PRE>
-</CODE></BLOCKQUOTE>
-<P>
-<P>
-<P>Now login as <EM>sysop</EM> and cd spider/perl. You can test that spider is accepting telnet logins by issuing the following command ....
-<P>
-<BLOCKQUOTE><CODE>
-<PRE>
-client.pl login telnet
-</PRE>
-</CODE></BLOCKQUOTE>
-<P>You should get a login prompt and on issuing a callsign, you will be given access to the cluster. Note, you will not get a password login. There seems no good reason for a password prompt to be given so it is not asked for.
-<P>
-<P>Assuming all is well, then try a telnet from your linux console ....
-<P>
-<BLOCKQUOTE><CODE>
-<PRE>
-telnet localhost 8000
-</PRE>
-</CODE></BLOCKQUOTE>
-<P>
-<P>You should now get the login prompt and be able to login as before.
-<P>
-<H2><A NAME="ss2.3">2.3 Setting up node connects</A>
-</H2>
+# the list of regexes for messages that we won't store having
+# received them (bear in mind that we must receive them fully before
+# we can bin them)