Linux-Networking Digest #245, Volume #10         Thu, 18 Feb 99 22:13:39 EST

Contents:
  Re: MS Explorer 4.0 for Unix [LONG] (Bill Anderson)
  Re: HTML and/or Java email client for LInux??? (Dave Edick)
  Re: Machine name themes - what do you use? (Barry Keeney)
  modem, ppp, problems ("Ahmed Aden")
  Problem with NFS (Desmond Coughlan)
  Surveillance ... tee! hee! (Desmond Coughlan)
  Re: 3c509 + 3c59x = Barfff ("Oliver Cronk")
  Re: MS Explorer 4.0 for Unix [LONG] ("Preston Crawford")
  NFS user mapping via NIS (Christian Kristukat)
  Re: Machine name themes - what do you use? (Miguel Cruz)
  Re: firewall/realaudio (Luca Filipozzi)
  Re: IPsec and Linux ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
  Cable modem with Linux Router Project & Fireplug Edge Router - help with wierd 
ports! (Paul Doherty)
  Re: MS Explorer 4.0 for Unix [LONG] (Hokan)
  Re: samba 2.0.2 (Alexandre Maret)
  user web pages (D E G)
  Re: modem, ppp, problems ("K.A. Steensma")
  Re: Setup xntp? (PDSC)
  Re: Help me. I can not setup network. (Tom Taylor)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Bill Anderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: 
alt.os.linux,alt.linux,linux.redhat,linux.redhat.misc,comp.windows.x.kde
Subject: Re: MS Explorer 4.0 for Unix [LONG]
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 23:17:25 +0000

Rowan Volvo wrote:
> 
> In article <7a0ogd$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> Alexander Viro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >OK, it's time for flame, kids.
> 
> < --snip-- > been pissed about this for a long time, have we?
> 
> >engine/style chosen by client. Get a decent textbook and read it (if you can
> >read, that is).
> >
> 
> I'll bite, suggestions ?
> 
> >>As for having a fscking idea of HTML, who in their right mind, that is a
> >>serious web page creator, hand-writes HTML anymore?
> >

You should keep in mind that *most* gui tools do not actually write
decent html, let alone html that fits the standard. Most of them emulate
the stucture of a document, using all sorts of nasty, space-wasting
elements.

Clean html loads faster.
FWIW, I prefer to use vim for writing html. It is easier than the
unwashed gui-nauts are led to believe, which is fine with me. I can get
more done using vi than using FP, HS, etc.. I have them, I don't use
them anymore. 

Either you 'hand-write' html, or you do not write html period. There is
no in between. Saying you write html, and using a wysiwys gui, is like
saying you write a program by dragging some images in place in, say, VB.

Bill

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dave Edick)
Crossposted-To: 
alt.os.linux,comp.os.linux.misc,comp.os.linux.setup,comp.lang.javascript,comp.lang.java.advocacy
Subject: Re: HTML and/or Java email client for LInux???
Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 02:05:57 GMT

Sheesh.  I figured SOMEONE would have given a useful answer by now...
It's not like he's asking for something exotic.

Go to www.freshmeat.net and type "web mail" in the search window.
You'll get at least a half dozen of them.  


On 18 Feb 1999 22:41:38 GMT, Kersi Mehta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:



Let me rephrase...I want to create a simple user interface for a user
group.
Since they all know/trust/love web browsers, I am putting some basice
utilties,
including hopefully an email client on a browser window.

Any ideas?

Cyrus


--
/Dave Edick/  dedick at home dot com.
or remove the hates.spam part from the header


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Barry Keeney)
Crossposted-To: 
vmsnet.networks.misc,microsoft.public.windowsnt.domain,comp.unix.solaris,comp.os.os2.networking.server,comp.os.ms-windows.nt.admin.networking,comp.infosystems.www.servers.unix,comp.protocols.tcp-ip.domains
Subject: Re: Machine name themes - what do you use?
Date: 18 Feb 1999 23:44:31 GMT

Stuart Summerville ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
: Hi peoples,

: Just curious to know what themes you use for machine names on your
: local networks. I've heard of or used some of the following: animals,
: fruits, alcoholic beverages, artists, movie stars, & musicians. What
: about you? I'm sure there's some birarre ones being used out there....

   How about 70's porn stars :^)

--
Barry Keeney
Chaos Consulting
email [EMAIL PROTECTED]

------------------------------

From: "Ahmed Aden" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: modem, ppp, problems
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 21:10:53 -0500

when I go into minicom and enter 'atdt(ISP access#)', it handshakes and then
I get the logon: and password: prompts, where I put in my info. After that,
it says 'Entering ppp session
                                       your ip address is: x.x.x.x
                                      mtu is 1006'

If I open up another log terminal window, I have absolutely no internet
functionality, I can't ping, telnet, surf, nothing. Are there any files that
i should look into, does anybody think it's a bad modem? Please e-mail me
along with crossposting to newsgroup, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



------------------------------

From: Desmond Coughlan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Problem with NFS
Date: 19 Feb 1999 03:15:22 +0100

I have a problem with NFS.  I have a small 3-node LAN at home.  My
girlfriend uses her laptop with Win98, and stores her personal files
on the laptop HDD, but mainly on /home/annie.

When she goes into Explorer, and tries to drag the contents of this
directory onto the Briefcase, to keep them updated, Windows tells her
that she can't do so, as the drive (i.e., Y, her personal directory)
is not available !!  This, despite the fact that she can see the drive
and all the files on it ... 

I'm going to start working with Samba in the next few days, which
*should* ease matters, but I'd be interested in any ideas as to why
this happens ...   :-(

Ta.
-- 
Desmond Coughlan                |Restez zen ... Linux peut le faire
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[website under construction]

------------------------------

From: Desmond Coughlan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Surveillance ... tee! hee!
Date: 19 Feb 1999 03:11:20 +0100

I have a question to put to the group.  Is it possible to increase the
amount of monitoring on network traffic within Linux (SW 3.5)?

I have sent all messages to tty8, but that's not enough.  Is there any
way to monitor all traffic on the LAN, even when it's a packet sent
from a Win98 machine on the LAN?  

Also, I want to allow some friends access to my server in the form of
shell accounts.  How can I ensure that I am notified immediately if
and when they telnet in?

Thanks.
-- 
Desmond Coughlan                |Restez zen ... Linux peut le faire
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[website under construction]

------------------------------

From: "Oliver Cronk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.linux.install
Subject: Re: 3c509 + 3c59x = Barfff
Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 01:32:53 -0000

I think you mean RJ-45 not RJ-41!



J. Ken Zur wrote in message ...
>Question....
>How does one tell the driver to use the 3c509 AIU, or the RJ41 interface?
>The driver picked my BNC and I am using the RJ41. Help!!!!!! I'd really
love
>to get this interface up and running.
>
>
>Thanks in advance
>
>
>aasland wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>>Good news! I got a response from Donald Becker, here's what he wrote:
>>
>>> I compiled them into the kernel, so that counts as built-in, right?
>>
>>Yup.
>>
>>> However, they do show up in kerneld.
>>
>>Hmmm, what do you mean by that?
>>
>>Anyway, you should put the following line in /etc/lilo.conf:
>>   append = "ether=0,0,eth1  ether=0,0,eth2  ether=0,0,eth3"
>>
>>Note: some old versions of LILO were picky about spaces, so put in two (as
>>above).
>>
>>Alternately, you can use the 3c509 driver as a module.
>>
>>
>
>
>



------------------------------

From: "Preston Crawford" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,linux.redhat.misc,comp.windows.x.kde
Subject: Re: MS Explorer 4.0 for Unix [LONG]
Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 22:21:59 -0700

Hokan wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>Fragmented "standard"?  Are you aware that there are web standards?
>http://www.w3.org/ develops and maintains them, with help from Netscape,
>Microsoft and many others.  The current, unfragmented HTML standard can
>be found here: http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/

Why the need to be a smart ass??? Of course I know there is a standard. And
if you are a real developer then you realize how realistic that standard is.
You can't develop to that standard. You have to develop to the browsers on
the market, unfortunately. So yes the standard is fragmented, the real-world
(not fantasy world) standard that real web developers in a real working
environment have to live with.

Preston



------------------------------

From: Christian Kristukat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: NFS user mapping via NIS
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 22:59:34 +0000

Hi,

I asked this some weeks ago, but nobody answered. Maybe a new
SUBJECT-line helps :)

I want to export the users home directories on the NFS/NIS server to
several machines. But I can't get user id mapping to work. The exports
manpage says, that "it may not be sufficient to  simply specify the NIS
domain here; you may have to take additional actions....", so this line

/home/ 192.168.10.*(rw,map_nis=NISDOMAIN)

may not be enough. Any idea? Apart from NFS NIS works fine.

nfsd on the server side always says something like this:

Feb 18 23:36:26 semmeln nfsd[10688]: nis_lookup(nobody) RPC failure on
NIS operation 
Feb 18 23:36:26 semmeln nfsd[10688]: ruid(192.168.10.1,65534) = -2 
Feb 18 23:36:26 semmeln nfsd[10688]: ugid_get_entry(0x8065ff8, 65534) 
Feb 18 23:36:26 semmeln nfsd[10688]: ^Iresult = 0x806aa58 

Desperatly seeking for help!

C.

-- 
                                                 .
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]                         =======
http://www.hoc.net/semmel                     ||| |||
PGP key on request

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Miguel Cruz)
Crossposted-To: 
vmsnet.networks.misc,microsoft.public.windowsnt.domain,comp.unix.solaris,comp.os.os2.networking.server,comp.os.ms-windows.nt.admin.networking,comp.infosystems.www.servers.unix,comp.protocols.tcp-ip.domains
Subject: Re: Machine name themes - what do you use?
Date: 19 Feb 1999 02:24:20 GMT

Stuart Summerville <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Just curious to know what themes you use for machine names on your
> local networks. I've heard of or used some of the following: animals,
> fruits, alcoholic beverages, artists, movie stars, & musicians. What
> about you? I'm sure there's some birarre ones being used out there....

I've started to use "things you can buy at a hardware store". So there's
hammer, grommet, drillbit, 2x4, yardstick, and so on. Every once in a while
I have to go out to Home Depot for more ideas.

miguel


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Luca Filipozzi)
Subject: Re: firewall/realaudio
Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 19:40:12 -0800

[This followup was posted to comp.os.linux.networking and a copy was sent 
to the cited author.]

In article <Pine.LNX.3.95.990218101827.26134B-
[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> i've been to the realaudio firewall page but no help.
> 
> I have my pentium machine hiding behind a 486 masquerade box (192.168.1.1)
>  I'm trying to secure up both machines, but am starting with the gateway
> machine.
> 
> I need to receive real audio thru the gateway, to my pentium (192.168.1.2)
> Assuming i start with no firewall rules, and set default policies to deny, 
> what rules do i have to add?
> 
> From my (little) knowledge i guess there has to be (a) forwarding rule(s).
> In the past i have run a blanket masquerade rule, like
> ipfwadm -F -a m -S 192.168.1.0/24 -D 0.0.0.0/0
> I'd rather rules that only specifically allow real audio packets to my
> internal pentium machine.
> 
> However, i don't know what in/out rules i need to allow the 486 to
> receive/send packets for the internal network machine.
> 
> Any help (reply via email) would be much appreciated.
> 
> TIA
> 
> Rodney Hendricks
> 
> 
you need to install the ip_masq_raudio module if you are using ip 
masquerade
-- 
Luca Filipozzi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: IPsec and Linux
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 05:19:37 GMT

We are shipping a Linux IPSec client that uses IPSec to connect to our
IntraPort VPN servers.  Same general idea as the Contivity box, but with
broader client support, legacy protocol support (via GRE), and no hard
drives...

More info at http://www.compatible.com/

Matt McConnell

In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
  Stephen Carville <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I would like to implement IPSec between Linux w 2.0.36 kernel and a Nortel
> (Baynet) Contivity 2000 "Extranet" switch.  I have DL'ed the freeswan v0.91
> code but this appear to be a linux only solution which I cannot use.  Has
> anyone been able to successfully talk form a linux box to a commercial
> IPsec switch like the Contivity 2000?  Ideally, the solution would be a
> user space application like stunnel or ssh (Neither of which works with the
> Baynet hardware) but I can recompile a kernel if necessary :-)
>
> --
> Stephen Carville
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> ----------------------------------------------------
> Management: The art of hiring intelligent, skilled individuals and then
> ignoring their advice.
>

============= Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ============
http://www.dejanews.com/       Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own    

------------------------------

From: Paul Doherty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Cable modem with Linux Router Project & Fireplug Edge Router - help with 
wierd ports!
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 02:24:18 GMT

I have a working @Home cable connection through a 486/80 32MB Linux
router running on the Edge router floppy.  Normal traffic goes through
just fine (http, smtp, ftp, etc).  The problem comes in with games and
the default behavior of this friewall/router solution.  It is geared
towards security and defaults to deny everything and then let in things
on an as specified basis.  I would like this to be reversed - accept
everything in both directions and allow me to lock down individual ports
as needed.  This is how my previous Cisco 766 ISDN router worked (using
PAT - little brother to full-blown NAT - same function essentially; lets
multiple machines hide behind one valid IP).  I had no problems with
BattleZone or Quake2 or any other games with the Cisco but this Linux
router just refuses to play BattleZone.  I can enter the Internet lobby,
connect to the server, see active games, click join game, see the
players in the game, pick a tank and then try to launch and whamo - it
bangs on the connect a while (longer than it should or ever has) and
evetually just sits there forcing me to ALT-TAB to the desktop and do a
CTRL-ALT-DEL to kill the BattleZone task as the game will never launch. 
I have experimented with the userin.txt and portfw.txt files and have
issued some "ipchains" commands in an attempt to work around this.

The lines I have put into /etc/userin.txt (commented out all others):

tcp             -d PUBLICIP 00000:65535
udp             -d PUBLICIP 00000:65535
icmp            -d PUBLICIP 00000:65535
tcp             -s PUBLICIP 00000:65535
udp             -s PUBLICIP 00000:65535
icmp            -s PUBLICIP 00000:65535

The way I'm understanding this, this should open up all ports in the
range of 0-65535 for all protocols.  Does this look right?

I have also experimented with the ipchains command.  I noticed that an
"ipchains -L" command would list a lot of default behaviors apparently
setup to filter out "unwanted" traffic.  I used an "ipchains -F" to
flush all settings out completely and the issued:

ipchains -A forward -s 10.1.1.0/24 -j MASQ -b

This sets up a bi-directional rule that *should* allow all protocols to
go in both directions (be MASQ forwarded to original host) but it
doesn't seem to matter much.  In fact with nothing but that rule
established I can do normal tasks just fine (like the post I'm writing
right now is being done in this mode).  Anyone have an idea why this
rule would allow normal traffic but *still* not allow game traffic to
get back and forth?  Seeing as I already have security inside the LAN
(PDC) I am not very concerned with that and would rather have the thing
wide open to the net, and *then* lock down ports that are potentially
troublesome (like udp 138/139 used to be on Win boxes).  What am I doing
wrong???

------------------------------

Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 20:24:16 +0000
From: Hokan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,linux.redhat.misc,comp.windows.x.kde
Subject: Re: MS Explorer 4.0 for Unix [LONG]

Preston Crawford wrote:
> 
..snip..
> through the web. Some people focus on graphical appeal and produce beautiful
> pages that may not conform to the somewhat fragmented "standard" but appeal
> to their audience.
> 
..snip..

Fragmented "standard"?  Are you aware that there are web standards? 
http://www.w3.org/ develops and maintains them, with help from Netscape,
Microsoft and many others.  The current, unfragmented HTML standard can
be found here: http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/

------------------------------

From: Alexandre Maret <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: samba 2.0.2
Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 00:59:17 +0100

RTFM

http://www.bibsyst.no/samba/docs/FAQ/#39

  alex

Joe Ringer wrote:
> 
> I was trying to upgrade my samba installation from 2.0.0 to 2.0.2 but bomb
> with:
> 
> Compiling locking/shmem_sysv.c
> Compiling passdb/passdb.c
> gcc: Internal compiler error: program cc1 got fatal signal 6
> make: *** [passdb/passdb.o] Error 1
> 
> Any ideas? I've got a Slackware setup (kernel: 2.0.36 and gcc 2.7.2.3).

------------------------------

From: D E G <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: user web pages
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 00:53:02 -0500

i know this is supposed to be really simple, but i'm having major
problems seting up user web pages (ie www.../~user =
/home/user/public_html). i'm running apache on rh5.2

here is an excerpt from my access.conf file:
<Directory /home/*/public_html>
Order allow,deny
Allow from 128.59.
Options Indexes Includes ExecCGI FollowSymLinks
AllowOverride None
</Directory>

whenever i try to access the page i get:
Forbidden

You don't have permission to access /~user/ on this server

(and yes i do have the proper permissions set on the files)

anyone have any ideas?

tia.

D E G
--

Remove "_nospam_" to reply.
Sorry for the inconvenience, but desperate times call for desperate
measures.



------------------------------

From: "K.A. Steensma" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: modem, ppp, problems
Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 03:05:55 GMT

Your modem is operating just fine.  If you are trying to get a ppp link up and
running with your ISP, you should not be using minicom.  I just found a very
good script file that will set up just about any kind of ppp link that you
need.  BTW your ISP provider is using a prompted link (not PAP or CHAP).  Count
yourself a little lucky.  I will e-mail you the 'pppsetup' file.  Keith

Ahmed Aden wrote:

> when I go into minicom and enter 'atdt(ISP access#)', it handshakes and then
> I get the logon: and password: prompts, where I put in my info. After that,
> it says 'Entering ppp session
>                                        your ip address is: x.x.x.x
>                                       mtu is 1006'
>
> If I open up another log terminal window, I have absolutely no internet
> functionality, I can't ping, telnet, surf, nothing. Are there any files that
> i should look into, does anybody think it's a bad modem? Please e-mail me
> along with crossposting to newsgroup, [EMAIL PROTECTED]


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (PDSC)
Subject: Re: Setup xntp?
Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 00:26:49 GMT

Just wondering - I too have xntpd running but the system clock never
gets updated - what am I doing wrong?



On Tue, 16 Feb 1999 01:00:41 GMT,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Mellor) wrote:

>I'm running xntp3-5.93-4 rpm, which should be all you need.  Its the one that
>ships with RedHat.
>
>Here is my /etc/ntp.conf file, which has been essentially unchanged for a long
>time:
>#
># Undisciplined Local Clock. This is a fake driver intended for backup
># and when no outside source of synchronized time is available. The
># default stratum is usually 3, but in this case we elect to use stratum
># 10. Since the server line does not have the prefer keyword, this driver
># is never used for synchronization, unless no other other
># synchronization source is available. In case the local host is
># controlled by some external source, such as an external oscillator or
># another protocol, the prefer keyword would cause the local host to
># disregard all other synchronization sources, unless the kernel
># modifications are in use and declare an unsynchronized condition.
>#
>server 127.127.1.0     # local clock
>fudge  127.127.1.0 stratum 10  
>
>#
># Drift file.  Put this in a directory which the daemon can write to.
># No symbolic links allowed, either, since the daemon updates the file
># by creating a temporary in the same directory and then rename()'ing
># it to the file.
>#
>driftfile /etc/ntp/drift
>multicastclient                        # listen on default 224.0.1.1
>broadcastdelay 0.008
>
>#
># Authentication delay.  If you use, or plan to use someday, the
># authentication facility you should make the programs in the auth_stuff
># directory and figure out what this number should be on your machine.
>#
>authenticate no
>
>#
># Keys file.  If you want to diddle your server at run time, make a
># keys file (mode 600 for sure) and define the key number to be
># used for making requests.
>#
>keys           /etc/ntp/keys
>trustedkey     12345
>requestkey     12345
>controlkey     12345
>
># Reference Sites -- check http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills/ntp/clock2.htm
>server 132.246.168.80  # timefreq.phy.nrc.ca           # stratum 2 Ottawa
>#server        128.100.103.252 # tick.utoronto.ca              # stratum 2 Toronto
>server 128.100.100.128 # tock.utoronto.ca              # stratum 2 Toronto
>server 128.100.102.201 # chime.utoronto.ca
>server 142.3.100.15    # timelord.uregina.ca           # stratum 2 Regina
>server 199.212.17.50   # www2.cmc.ec.gc.ca             # stratum 2 Quebec City
>server 24.2.9.33       # proxy.ktchnr1.on.wave.home.com        # Rogers-kw
>peer   24.112.108.39   # cr918730-a.cambr1.on.wave.home.com    # Tony Lill
>peer   24.112.104.63   # cr154328-a.ktchnr1.on.wave.home.com   # Jeff Voskamp
>peer   204.138.110.1   # omega.metrics.com             # Tom Haapinen
>peer   198.73.192.2    # deka.mks.com                  # MKS
>peer   192.75.213.193  version 2 # xenitec.xenitec.on.ca       # Ed Hew
>
>Note that the local clock is set up as a stratum 10 server, NOT the default (and
>wrong) RedHat value of startum 1.  Check out the ntp home site for the current
>list of available servers at each stratum, and be intelligent about some of the
>local sites to peer with.
>
>Does that help you?
>
>In article <7a9vc7$2dj$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>|>   Anybody got any idea how to setup xntp? There don't seem to be any man
>|> pages on it. I downloaded the latest ntp rpm, but it won't install because of
>|> conflicts with xntp, which I think is older, but not sure.
>|> 
>|> H.
>|> 
>|> -----------== Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ==----------
>|> http://www.dejanews.com/       Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own    
>
>-- 
>John Mellor     Kitchener, Ontario, Canada    http://www.kitchener.com/mellor/
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]      http://www.mellor.kw.net/
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]    [EMAIL PROTECTED]     [EMAIL PROTECTED]     [EMAIL PROTECTED]


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Tom Taylor)
Subject: Re: Help me. I can not setup network.
Date: 18 Feb 1999 05:46:52 GMT

Intel EtherExpress Pro 10+ must be setup with the Softset2 program which also 
tests the NIC for functionallity.  You can obtain it from the Intel support web 
site (don't know URL).  It's a DOS program so you will need to boot into DOS 
(floppy boot works okay here).

Tom

In article <7aftgi$3ea$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
>
>Yesterday, I tried to install linux slakware v 3.3.0.
>I could install this successfully. But I can't the network part - linux did
>not found the ethernet card.
>
>I have a EtherExpress Pro 10+ of Inter for ISA bus.
>
>What can I do? Please Help Meeeee.
>
>


------------------------------


** FOR YOUR REFERENCE **

The service address, to which questions about the list itself and requests
to be added to or deleted from it should be directed, is:

    Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

You can send mail to the entire list (and comp.os.linux.networking) via:

    Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Linux may be obtained via one of these FTP sites:
    ftp.funet.fi                                pub/Linux
    tsx-11.mit.edu                              pub/linux
    sunsite.unc.edu                             pub/Linux

End of Linux-Networking Digest
******************************

Reply via email to