Linux-Networking Digest #246, Volume #10 Fri, 19 Feb 99 00:13:41 EST
Contents:
port 80 redirects ("null packet")
Intel Etherexpress pro/10 install? ("David Gibbs")
Re: Red Hat 5.2 SMTP Server ("Dagar")
Please Help! ("Glen")
Re: Redhat 5.2 and PPP ("Dagar")
Re: Samba Setup ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: Need NIC Recommendation for Stock RH5.1 (Paul Drake)
Re: PCI modems in linux? ("Eugene")
Terminal Emulation: Televideo 955 Client? ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
SMC 1992 (Signal Rate 10 MHz) vs. 3COM Etherlink III ("Alex Silov")
Re: modem, ppp, problems (Andrew Mason)
Re: Surveillance ... tee! hee! (Desmond Coughlan)
Linux rh as router (Chris spavins)
Re: OS/2 says NET8191 logging into Samba domain (Brian Landy)
Re: Whats the difference between Proxy and DHCP? ("Eugene")
Re: Machine name themes - what do you use? (Jens Haug)
Re: linux networking questions (Developpement)
Re: Machine name themes - what do you use? ("Carl Taylor")
Re: Machine name themes - what do you use? (Ken Weaverling)
Re: Machine name themes - what do you use? ("Carl Taylor")
OS/2 says NET8191 logging into Samba domain (Ken)
Re: Compaq NetFlex-3/P (PCI network adaptor) ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: Multiple NICs. Possible? How? (Edward J Kalenda)
Success with Linksys, routing question (John Johnson)
Please ====> Offline browsing and CGI running <==== Thanks ("Nuno Fel�cio")
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: "null packet" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: port 80 redirects
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 06:01:01 GMT
I have a linux rh5.1 machine (kernel 2.0.34) machine running ip
masquerading. I have the command....
/sbin/ipautofw -A -r tcp 80 81 -h 192.168.200.2
in my rc.local file for forwarding all traffic from the internet on port
80-81 (the 81 is arbitrary) to the web server located at 192.168.200.2 on my
internal network. the only problem is it doesn't work. again, what i want
to do is forward all port 80 requests on my linux ip masq machine into my
internal box and back out... any ideas? thanks in advance.
jay
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: "David Gibbs" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat.install,comp.os.linux.help,comp.os.linux.questions
Subject: Intel Etherexpress pro/10 install?
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 21:22:10 -0600
Folks:
I'm having a devil of a time getting RH 5.2 to work with my EtherExpress
Pro/10 NIC.
If I do an insmod eepro, I get a seg fault.
I've tried with PNP on and off. When it's on, I use ISAPNP to configure the
card.
It *USED* to work fine when I was using a mongrel Slackware 3.6 distro.
Any suggestions?
david
--
| Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
| WWW: http://www.midrange.com/david
|
| ... A man can move mountains, a world can be turned,
| and the greatest of distances easily spanned,
| When the strength that's invested in making a fist
| is transformed into shaking a hand
|
| - DMRoth
------------------------------
From: "Dagar" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Red Hat 5.2 SMTP Server
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 19:25:35 -0800
>I'm mistaken --- it connects and works although it takes 60+ seconds
>to do so..... Does any one have any ideas as to why?
It sounds like a DNS problem. Your server is having trouble resolving your
lan's hostnames. Did you set up your linux box as real nameserver (not
caching as is standard for RH 5.2) for your lan? Are your /var/named/* files
all correctly written, with reverse DNS working too? Try typing
"/usr/bin/nslookup" to see if your system can even find your nameserver, and
if it works right. If not, you need to learn about DNS. There is
documentation for this already on your system. See the file
/usr/doc/HOWTO/DNS-HOWTO.
------------------------------
From: "Glen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Please Help!
Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 21:30:45 -0800
Can anyone tell me the steps that i need to do to set a machine running
linux redhat 5.2 to act as a router for my win9x network and media one cable
modem. I understand that with mediaone, the nic in my computer with the
cable modem is the only card that can access the internet because they lock
the modem to that cards ip address. What i am looking for is for someone to
tell me all of the settings for the machines on the network and any necesary
software such as sysgate or wingate. I would be willing to give any one
software that i have as a thank you. If you have Icq we can link up for the
trade? My linux machine is allready running, and is a 486/120 with 64 mb
ram. Slow, but hopefully adequate for this purpose. I know a moderate
ammount about windows, but very little about linux. Anyways, I would
appreciate any help that I could recieve on this subject.
------------------------------
From: "Dagar" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,alt.os.linux.dial-up
Subject: Re: Redhat 5.2 and PPP
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 19:40:17 -0800
Rocky Dean wrote in message <36cc49b2.0@news>...
>I installed Redhat 5.2 on 2 different machines. I had it install dialup
>support. when i type dmesg, I see that PPP loaded correctly. I edited the
>ppp-on script to use my modem port. I can dial out fine with minicom, but
>can't connect to my ISP with it. when I try to run ppp-on, nothing happens.
But of course ps won't tell you anything useful. What does your system log
say? Do this:
Switch to another virtual console, su to root, and type in 'tail -f
/var/log/messages'. Switch back to your first virtual console and run the
ppp-on script. Switch back to the second virtual console and see what gets
written to the log. Then post what it says here. But I'll bet you a virtual
beer that it's a permissions problem with either pppd, chat or both.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Samba Setup
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 06:53:36 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
jimterm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Admittedly, I am a Linux "newbie/wannabe". I have installed Linux on a
> test
> machine. I want to eventually use it as a server to Win95/98
> computers.
>
> I have successfully installed Red Hat Linux 5.2. My Win98/95 machines
> can see that "Linuxserver" is there in the Network Neighborhood. But
> when I try to access it - I get a dialogue box asking me to login to
> "\\Linuxserver\IPC$" - which tells me I haven't got some parameter set
> right, probably a "share".
>
> "Testparm" says everything is ok.
>
> Any suggestions, help or other sources will be greatly appreciated.
>
>
probably you need to have the same users, w/ same passwords, on both machines
============= Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ============
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------------------------------
From: Paul Drake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Need NIC Recommendation for Stock RH5.1
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 06:13:44 GMT
> synthetic wrote:
>
> I would like to solicit comments on the best NIC(pci) to install in a
> stock RH5.1 box.
For RH5.2, I used a 3Com 900 and an Intel EtherExpress Pro 100+
(fast ethernet on the inside LAN). Both are Tier One - no problems.
from buy.com the pair was around $90 with shipping included. I have
enough aggrevation in my job to not want to fight with NIC's.
Paul
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: "Eugene" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: PCI modems in linux?
Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 03:43:30 GMT
AFAIK all PCI modems are winmodems
Doug wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>Can a PCI modem be used in linux? If so how? Something called a modem
>enumerator is installed in windows along with the modem itself and i
>dont know what that is. Its creative modmeblaster DI5630 v.90. Its
>being used as PnP right now but there are jumpers on it I dont have the
>manual so im trying to find out if com and irq can be hard set..
>Thanks for any help and please email me a response if possible at
>ratchet at tir dot com
>Doug
>
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Terminal Emulation: Televideo 955 Client?
Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 02:47:28 GMT
Where I work there's a modified telnet program that requires a Televideo 955
client to be viewed correctly. There is a win32 client for it. Linux has
that type in /etc/termcap, but that's just for what it sends to clients,
right? Is there a way to set up to set up Linux as a tvi955 client?
-Uberhund
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------------------------------
From: "Alex Silov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: SMC 1992 (Signal Rate 10 MHz) vs. 3COM Etherlink III
Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 23:12:20 PST
Don't laugh at my subject line, folks.
Recently, I decided to go MediaOne (cable modem). They
recommend an ethernet card named 3COM Etherlink III. But I
got an old one when I was in grad school. I don't even know
its model. On the board, it's printed "SMC (C) 1992, Signal
Rate 10 MHz". I haven't got chance to use this card since
I left school 3 years ago. But it worked fine.
I don't follow the development of ethernet card (and the
networking stuff in general). My question is: is there a big
deal of 3COM Etherlink III over my old SMC? MediaOne offers
the 3COM Etherlink III card for $50.
Thanks,
Alex
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
------------------------------
From: Andrew Mason <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: modem, ppp, problems
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 22:08:06 -0500
Ahmed,
You're going about ppp the hard way. In order to make it work like that
you also have to initiate pppd on your machine before you make the
connection to the ISP. It's much easier to prepare a couple of scripts
to do all of this for you. Check out /usr/doc/ppp*/scripts/ for some
sample scripts. You should have a ppp-on, ppp-off, and ppp-on-dialer at
least. These scrpts need to reside in /etc/ppp/ and you should edit them
to include your information.
/Andrew Mason
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]
--
*******************************
Web: www.lakeshore.net/~amason/
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*******************************
------------------------------
From: Desmond Coughlan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Surveillance ... tee! hee!
Date: 19 Feb 1999 04:56:22 +0100
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Luca Filipozzi) writes:
[snip]
> make everyone use bash and modify /etc/profile so that it does a
> echo $LOGNAME has logged on | write root
Excellent ... but if the person is on a Win98 machine, and only uses
the Linux box as a fileserver, and router ..?
--
Desmond Coughlan |Restez zen ... Linux peut le faire
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[website under construction]
------------------------------
From: Chris spavins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Linux rh as router
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 09:22:37 +0200
I am using a Linux box as the gateway to the internet for LAN and as a
nameserver. I am able to ping any site from this server. When I set up
an NT machine on the LAN to use the Linux server as router and
nameserver I am able to resolve names and if I try to visist a web site
from a browser, the site is found but I am not able to make a connection
to the server. I would assume that the problem lies in the set up of the
firewall or masquerading which I am doing on the Linux server. Is there
any way in which I can log the packets on either side of the firewall.
--
Chris Spavins
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Brian Landy)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.os2.networking.server,comp.protocols.smb
Subject: Re: OS/2 says NET8191 logging into Samba domain
Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 00:40:39 GMT
On Thu, 18 Feb 1999 00:12:21 -0800, Ken <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I set up my Samba server (1.9.18p10, RH5.2) to act as the domain logon
>server for my LAN, with OS/2, NT, and Win9x clients. I use the domain
>logon from OS/2 Warp 4 and can successfully run the logon script.
>However, after the script runs, I get the message "NET8191: Your home
>directory could not be set up.\nThe command completed successfully." I
>do have a home directory on the server, plus a profiles directory. I
>don't really care whether a share gets mounted, as I already do that in
>the logon script, but I'd like to know the reason for the message. Can
>anyone who knows OS/2 requester internals report what this message
>really means?
OS/2 servers don't share the home directory at server startup, they
share them at user logon. It is the job (AFAIK) of the requester to
contact the PDC/BDC, find out where the home directory is, and contact
that server and ask it to share the home directory. Samba doesn't
support that function, so the client errors out. I believe you should
get the same message logging into an NT domain as well.
Brian Landy
------------------------------
From: "Eugene" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Whats the difference between Proxy and DHCP?
Date: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 03:39:00 GMT
what's the difference between an apple and an orange?
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jens Haug)
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 13:47:27 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
We call our server ILikeToCrossPostToAHundredNewsGroups.
The clients are called MeToo, MeThree, F'up2 and *plonk*.
Jens
------------------------------
From: Developpement <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: linux networking questions
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 09:17:06 +0100
Hi Allen
It seems you have some pci problem...
You may try to see in BIOS setup if the ide controller is correctly set.
Try to see if your second ethernet card IRQ is not shared with another device (list
all boot
messages). It appears that the pci irq sharing is not always correctly handled by my
linux box
(depends on device type).
Just to make a more precise diagnostic, can you post or mail the result of the command
"cat
/proc/pci"
Patrick
------------------------------
From: "Carl Taylor" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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 04:46:04 GMT
Reply-To: "Carl Taylor" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Good grief, the problem isn't with NT or the Alpha's it must be the way
they set them up. I have an NT server which has been up for 256 days
currently and the last time it was taken was to do a memory upgrade, not
for a crash.
--
Carl Taylor
IT Manager Australia
Crown Worldwide Movers
Opinions expressed are personal and in
no way reflect upon my employer.
Dennis Clarke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in article
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
> I'm giggling. I spent the afternoon at a company that is having
> stability problems with their DEC Alpha based NT boxes. I asked them
> what the uptime was like and they kinda shrugged and said about six to
> seven hours at a time. No kidding. I suggested scrapping them and
> putting in Solaris based Sun boxes and they looked at each other and
> then said - "We can't administer unix".
>
> I said "What could be worse, a set of servers that crash three times a
> day - OR - a server that you look at once every week and then
> call in someone to do administration for you - remotely. Meanwhile your
> users and management are happy cause your email system hasn't stopped
> working. You have uptime measured in months?"
>
> You can guess the answer. People are learning - slowly - but they are
> learning.
>
> Dennis
>
> Michael Paci wrote:
>
> > In article <ejYGuOoW#[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Shaun
> > Conrad" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > >There's quite a few mythological characters, so you
> > >probably won't run out too fast.
> >
> > Here's another mythical character: missioncriticalNTbox
> >
> > I'm laughing if nobody else is...
> >
> > mike paci
>
> --
> Your computer needs a hobby! Join the distributed RC5-64 decryption!
> Go to http://www.distributed.net/ for the fastest computer on earth!
>
>
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Ken Weaverling)
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 23:00:18 -0500
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
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
Native American Indian tribes -- at least easily spelled ones (except for
my workstations like havasupai and hualapai).
Unfortunately, someone came out with a web server named Apache but we were
already running NCSA web server on hopi.dtcc.edu and not apache.dtcc.edu
-- which runs the news server so now Apache runs on hopi and Inn news
software runs on apache. Arrgggh....
I have a really neat Hopi dawa hanging in my office. Always starts a
conversation. It's amazing how many "Americans" don't know a thing about
the aboriginal residents of North America.
Hell, I can't even get them to pronounce them correctly. Some people still
call Hopi "hoppy" and Navajo "Nava-Joe." :-(
--
Ken Weaverling (weave @ dtcc.edu) WHOIS: KJW
Manager of Computer Support and Applications
Delaware Technical & Community College
------------------------------
From: "Carl Taylor" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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 04:49:11 GMT
Reply-To: "Carl Taylor" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
A Star trek name would be an obvious one for a server running UniCentre TNG
--
Carl Taylor
IT Manager Australia
Crown Worldwide Movers
Opinions expressed are personal and in
no way reflect upon my employer.
Steve Trask <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in article
<7ahnrb$ot5$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
> We have used Star Trek names on a few systems. We have a file server
named
> "BORG" (it assimilates everything), and "ENTERPRISE" as its the main
server.
>
> Steve
>
> Rod MacBain wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
> >"sven the hairy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> spake thusly:
> >
> >>Spices: Mint, thyme, Curry, Dil, Basil, etc...
> >>
> >>>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....
> >>>
> >>>Stu.
> >>>
> >>>
> >
> >How come nobody uses penguin names - it seems a natural for linux
> >boxes. You know - King, Emperor, Gentoo, Rockhopper, Adele.
> >
> >Rod
> >
> >
>
>
>
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 00:12:21 -0800
From: Ken <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: OS/2 says NET8191 logging into Samba domain
Crossposted-To: comp.os.os2.networking.server,comp.protocols.smb
I set up my Samba server (1.9.18p10, RH5.2) to act as the domain logon
server for my LAN, with OS/2, NT, and Win9x clients. I use the domain
logon from OS/2 Warp 4 and can successfully run the logon script.
However, after the script runs, I get the message "NET8191: Your home
directory could not be set up.\nThe command completed successfully." I
do have a home directory on the server, plus a profiles directory. I
don't really care whether a share gets mounted, as I already do that in
the logon script, but I'd like to know the reason for the message. Can
anyone who knows OS/2 requester internals report what this message
really means?
--
Ken
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.well.com/user/shiva/
http://www.e-scrub.com/cgi-bin/wpoison/wpoison.cgi (Death to Spam!)
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Compaq NetFlex-3/P (PCI network adaptor)
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 08:21:46 GMT
Hi
Dont get panic. Their is a driver for your network card. After complete
installation you need to just execute "insmod tlan" at the prompt. Then
configure your system by giving "netconf" at the prompt. Just select the
"Basic Host Information" from the main menu and fill in the details such as
IP address , Subnet mask , net device eth0 and kernel module as tlan. Then
select the "Routing and gateways" option from the main menu and fill in the
details of Gateway and also without fail enable the Routing.
Send in the feed back to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Waiting for your reply.
Regards
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Jason Fell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> No drivers at all for this.
> I have the same problem on my Compaq Deskpro 6233, doesn't look like any
> support is forthcoming, that is until compaq realize that Linux is the
> way to go
>
> other suggestions - write one
>
> go penguins!!!!
>
> Tobias Anderberg wrote:
>
> > Hi!
> >
> > Any clues to get this hog going in Linux. There isn't a device driver
> > for it in kernel 2.0.36, pehaps that has changed in 2.2.x?
> >
> > /tobias
>
>
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------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Edward J Kalenda)
Subject: Re: Multiple NICs. Possible? How?
Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1999 21:40:37 GMT
On 30 Jul 1998 14:47:46 GMT, Jim DeVries <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>I was hoping to add a second ethernet adapter to my box since our
>mostly-ipx network isn't (and won't be) routing IP to a new segment.
>The kernel finds one of the cards (both are 3C5X9) and assigns it
>to eth0. How do I create eth1? I've handled the irq/ioport stuff.
>The first card was port 210, irq 5, and worked fine. I added a card
>at port 220, irq 12, and with both cards in, it is the card assigned
>to eth0.
>
>Jim DeVries
I hope someone already solved this for you, but I see no followups so
I'm going to throw my $0.02 in, just in case.
You need to tell the kernel to recognize the extra NIC at boot time.
In my /etc/lilo.conf I have the line:
append = "ether=10,0x300,eth0 ether=11,0x200,eth1"
This tells the kernel where to probe for the NICS and forces interface
names to specific cards to avoid naming surprises. Depending upon your
particular NIC, you may need to give more or less information. All I
needed was the interrupt and the base IO port.
If you can't get this to work by substituting your values, let me know
and I'll try to find the document where I found this solution. I did
all this years ago and can't remember where I found it.
------------------------------
From: John Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Success with Linksys, routing question
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 07:27:46 GMT
With all the problems seen here, I thought a short success story might
be nice.
I bought a LINKSYS Fast Ethernet Network Starter Kit today at CompUSA,
model no. FENSK04. It includes two LNE100TX cards (PCI), a four port
hub,
and two 15' Cat 5 cables. It was the only box on the shelves that said
"Ready to run
with....Others...Linux" Installation in my wife's Win95 machine was a
breeze.
Installation in my Linux box was a breeze once I figured out that I
needed to use
the tulip driver. After a couple of hours I had Samba working well.
Another
couple of hours and I had downloaded the MIX X server for Win95, and was
running KFM and xterms on my wife's PC under Win95. Cool.
Overall a good experience. No IRQ settings, no base address settings.
Plug-n-Play
actually was just that, this time.
Now a routing question. Whenever I connect to my ISP, I'm no longer able
to
communicate between the PCs. Eg. I can ping her PC all day, but if I
connect using
diald, ifup, etc. then I'm no longer able to ping her computer, and hers
can't
ping mine. After dropping the link with the ISP, my pinging begins
working
again. Any suggestions ? I've tried routes until I'm blue in the face.
It's like
whatever route pppd adds becomes the only route in or out of the box.
Thanks in advance,
JJ
------------------------------
From: "Nuno Fel�cio" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Please ====> Offline browsing and CGI running <==== Thanks
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1999 08:28:22 -0000
I don't have a LAN. I'm using linux in a single PC, allways offline.
In this conditions, if I have a user A that has some HTML and CGI in his
area, can I use user B to "offline browsing" user A pages, including CGI
(maybe like WEB SERVER for windowz)
I need this for testing my "Site" that i'm creating, including testing CGI .
Thanks
Please reply to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
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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
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