On 3/2/08, Adrian Levi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 02/03/2008, hce <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > I changed to "audo", it sitll does not work. But, if I start dhclient > > manually, it works fine. I checked ps, there was a dhclient3 running. > > Could that cause the problem? How can I config /etc/init.d to make the > > dhclient running? > > > dh-client is requiret to fetch a dhcp address for you, it should be running. > below is my /e/n/interfaces file > =========================================== > # This file describes the network interfaces available on your system > # and how to activate them. For more information, see interfaces(5). > > # The loopback network interface > auto lo > iface lo inet loopback > > # The primary network interface > auto eth0 > iface eth0 inet dhcp > =========================================== > If you want to use dhcp make sure that it looks exactly like this.
Yes, my interfaces looks exactly like this. And, it works if I run the dhclient manually. > > > AFAIK ssh depends on openssh-client and openssh-server so you should be > > > fine. > > > > The ssh client running fine. It can ssh to other linux box where the > > sshd is running, but other linux box cannot ssh to it as there is no > > sshd running on the Debian. > > > > I searched Intenert find a ssh script and copied it to the > > /etc/init.d. The instruction says to call "update-rc.d -f ssh defaults > > 20", then run "/etc/init.d/ssh start". But, I could not find > > update-rc.d in my Debian box, is there alternative to make a runlevel > > links manually for ssh defaults 20? > > > Woo, slow down. Stop and think a minute. Debian is one of the easiest > and trouble free distributions to run, if a package is installed all > the required scripts are installed as well. > Have you tried running: > #/etc/init.d/ssh start > What did it return, was that script there to begin with? Did you check > to see if openssh-server is installed as Andrei suggested? The client > and server are in different packages. You may have the client > installed but not the server. > If you type in > starbuck:~# apt-get install openssh-server > > You should get a response like below if the server is installed: > > Reading package lists... Done > Building dependency tree... Done > openssh-server is already the newest version. > 0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded. > > Attack one problem at a time and create a new thread in debian-user > for each new problem. Give us time to help you before trying things > that will make the end result harder to achieve or introduce new > faults. Thanks Adrian, it works now after installing the openssh-server. Thank you. Kind Regards, Jim -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]