On Thu May  3 13:41:12 2001 Ron Deen wrote...
>
>The /etc/wplns file contains the logical names of the WP's on your system. The
>/etc/aplns contains (you might have guessed) the logical names of the AP in you
>system.
>If you have only AP's and WP's you would normally use the letterbug as the
>logical name.
>If you have AW's you have a problem: the AW containss a logical AP AND a logical
>WP and only one can be be letterbug name. This is why you may see "strange "
>names on you system. Some time you can have a letterbug AW0101 which will have
>aplns: AW0101 and wplns: AWWP01 for instance.
>

        Ah, I went and looked on another system with an AW, I see what you are
        tlaking about. However when I worked on the script i _ASSUMED_ that
        this name was generated autmaticly, and would follow a pattern, silly
        me :-(

        Thanks.

-- 
Stan Brown     [EMAIL PROTECTED]                                    843-745-3154
Charleston SC.
-- 
Windows 98: n.
        useless extension to a minor patch release for 32-bit extensions and
        a graphical shell for a 16-bit patch to an 8-bit operating system
        originally coded for a 4-bit microprocessor, written by a 2-bit 
        company that can't stand for 1 bit of competition.
-
(c) 2000 Stan Brown.  Redistribution via the Microsoft Network is prohibited.

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