Re: [gentoo-user] basic network
Shouldn't he also setup a dhcp server like dnsmasq on the gentoo box? That's what I did, was it an overkill? raf Red wrote: luis jure wrote: hello list, i'm trying to setup my very first network at home. i have my desktop (gentoo linux) and a recently purchased laptop (still with windows XP) both connected to a switch. the switch is also connected to an adsl cable modem to the internet. both computers connect to the internet using pppoe (the isp masks up to 2 ip addresses). so far so good, but i also want to transfer files from one computer to another. which is the most convenient (meaning fastest and without additional hardware) way to do that? and how can i [learn to] configure both systems accordingly? best, lj i think you should make an alias of your network interface for your internal communication and bind samba, nfs or what you plan to use to that interface. look in the /etc/conf.d/net.example for how to make the alias if you don't know how. how to bind your samba, nfs ... to a interface is in the manuals or howto's of the programm you want to use! greetz red -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] basic network
On Tue, 2005-05-31 at 09:57 +0200, Raffaele BELARDI wrote: Shouldn't he also setup a dhcp server like dnsmasq on the gentoo box? That's what I did, was it an overkill? Well. a DHCP server would most likely be needed if you plan on automatically giving out IP addreses. But for a network of 2 pcs, it might be overkill but heck, it doesn't really matter. Makes things simpler esp when a laptop is concerned. Red wrote: luis jure wrote: hello list, i'm trying to setup my very first network at home. i have my desktop (gentoo linux) and a recently purchased laptop (still with windows XP) both connected to a switch. the switch is also connected to an adsl cable modem to the internet. both computers connect to the internet using pppoe (the isp masks up to 2 ip addresses). so far so good, but i also want to transfer files from one computer to another. which is the most convenient (meaning fastest and without additional hardware) way to do that? and how can i [learn to] configure both systems accordingly? best, lj i think you should make an alias of your network interface for your internal communication and bind samba, nfs or what you plan to use to that interface. look in the /etc/conf.d/net.example for how to make the alias if you don't know how. how to bind your samba, nfs ... to a interface is in the manuals or howto's of the programm you want to use! greetz red -- Ow Mun Heng Gentoo/Linux on DELL D600 1.4Ghz 1.5GB RAM 98% Microsoft(tm) Free!! Neuromancer 16:43:02 up 18:44, 10 users, load average: 0.67, 0.88, 0.86 -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] basic network
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 luis jure wrote: hello list, i'm trying to setup my very first network at home. i have my desktop (gentoo linux) and a recently purchased laptop (still with windows XP) both connected to a switch. the switch is also connected to an adsl cable modem to the internet. both computers connect to the internet using pppoe (the isp masks up to 2 ip addresses). so far so good, but i also want to transfer files from one computer to another. which is the most convenient (meaning fastest and without additional hardware) way to do that? and how can i [learn to] configure both systems accordingly? best, lj i think you should make an alias of your network interface for your internal communication and bind samba, nfs or what you plan to use to that interface. look in the /etc/conf.d/net.example for how to make the alias if you don't know how. how to bind your samba, nfs ... to a interface is in the manuals or howto's of the programm you want to use! greetz red -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFCm6SA87VFzvTnEtARAh5BAJsEk3h55NYBH7fiGS3wx7h+BsTNeQCeKUuq D7GCZXgu+pOgAY6QTRizajU= =M+rk -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list