i believe its "dhclient" in ubuntu. You'll need to us sudo or su to root.
Check "ifconfig -a". Look for your ethernet port, usually its eth0. It will
tell you if it got an ipaddress/subnet.

On Sun, Dec 6, 2009 at 10:29 PM, epic93 <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> On Dec 6, 5:28 pm, Dan <[email protected]> wrote:
> > At 6:09 PM -0800 12/5/2009, epic93 wrote:
> >
> > >I have a g3 350mhz imac. I have had it for about a year now running
> > >linux, and just recently (as my emac had gone down) I re installed OS
> > >9.
> >
> > Mac OS 9.0, 9.1, 9.2, 9.2.1, or 9.2.2?
> 9.0 when I had it
> >
> > >For some reason, I was not able to get on the network. We have a
> > >lan with a wireless router and I plugged it into an ethernet port on
> > >the router (It has a few on back for a small wired workgroup) I tried
> > >everything I could with the settings for OS 9
> >
> > TCP/IP control panel, set it for DHCP.  Save the settings.  Then
> > either wait up to 5 minutes for the DHCP cycle to trigger or reboot.
> Tried that. It failed.
> >
> > >and eventually, believing that perhaps Linux was a more network
> > >oriented operating
> > >system, installed kubuntu. This failed to get on the LAN as well
> >
> > Open Transport uses a port of Mentat/TCP.  In its day it was the
> > superior networking stack.  As I recall, it even outperformed the
> > implementations in Unix and Linux.
> >
> > >and now I have no idea what to do.
> >
> > Check the router's log to see why it's not connecting.
> > Check the log in Linux to see why it's not connecting.
> >
> > Make sure your router is configured to accept a DHCP client on that
> > ethernet port.
> It is.
> >
> > >I even tried plugging it into another ethernet switch, which failed
> > >to see it as well.
> >
> > Perhaps the ethernet port is blown?  See if you can start AppleTalk.
> > It won't start if the NIC doesn't talk back correctly.
> When I had OS 9 on it it started.
> Now it seems linux can recognize it, but something isn't right. I'm
> beginning to think this is a software issue, rather than a hardware
> issue. And considering that it used to work on a wired only LAN (with
> an emac on a five port workgroup switch, which went itself into this
> very same router). I'm suspecting something is up with the router or
> my network configurations
> >
> > Perhaps the ethernet cable is foo?
> tested it. it's good.
> >
> > - Dan.
> > --
> > - Psychoceramic Emeritus; South Jersey, USA, Earth.
>
> How would I go about configuring DHCP in the terminal? I want to use
> the terminal with linux for speed and fun, no gui, but network
> configuration is one of those things I only learned how to do in the
> GUI. And KDE won't initialize.
>
> P.S. I seem to now recall having this work on the LAN before, but I am
> pretty certain that was before we got High speed internet.
>
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