Linux-Networking Digest #442, Volume #10 Wed, 10 Mar 99 02:13:38 EST
Contents:
Re: Which SMP Motherboard? (Allen)
Ether16 LAN Card from Linksys (garv)
Re: Perl scripts in NT ("GA")
Re: smbmount vs Win98 network neightboor ("GA")
Re: DHCP Core Dumps! (Brian Walker)
Re: For all you Nicrosoft lovers (Miguel Cruz)
Re: Hacker Attack and identd
Network Monitoring! ("Mark Cornhill")
Re: setting DISPLAY variable (John Strange)
Re: HOW TO USE DNSa for a NET and DNSb for all the others? (Gregory G. Woodbury)
Re: HOW TO USE DNSa for a NET and DNSb for all the others? (Gregory G. Woodbury)
Re: Ether16 LAN Card from Linksys ("Mike")
Re: Write permisions on Directories created through Samba (Jnb27)
Software RAID (Roger Harstein)
Linux as a Samba client: smbmount problems (Roger Harstein)
win98 configuration...help please (Jnb27)
Re: Netgear FA310TX Full Duplex question (Doug S)
How to measure dialup connection speed ("Eriksson")
Re: [Fwd: NIS + NFS] (Edwin Lim)
Samba 2.0.3-Browse Master (Malay Shah)
Linux VPN routing problem (Jim Morris)
Re: Linux as a router to replace school NT4 box? (Savas Pavlidis)
Re: Linux Dial on Demand (Glenn Butcher)
Re: A problem with routing ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: ppp problems
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Allen)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.hardware
Subject: Re: Which SMP Motherboard?
Date: 10 Mar 1999 02:19:21 GMT
From what I've read in these news groups, the Ultra2SCSI may still be a
little "Bleeding edge" to have mature support under Linux yet (much of the newer
RAID stuff may fall into this category too?), and if you don't really need the
Ultra2 support, you may find that the price/performance ratio better with a Tyan
1836 DLUAN, which doesn't have built-in video, but does have the Intel
EtherExpress Pro 100 (82558), and AIC-7895.
(from Tyan's website?) w/apologies...
New! 32-bit AGP!
100MHz SDRAM Support!
Dual Intel Pentium� II Support
Maximum Memory Capacity to 1GB RAM
Six PCI, 1 ISA, 1AGP Slots
Onboard Creative Vibra 16XV Audio
Onboard LM79/LM75 system management
Onboard Dual Channel Ultra Wide SCSI
(AIC-7895)
Onboard Ethernet (10/100 Intel)
Power Recovery After Interrupt
PC98 compliant ES modes
The Intel board is a dual-Xeon board that will support up to 2 Gb of RAM, but if
you are going to to be pushing that limit, then you might wish to start
considering a 64 bit platform any way? Linux will support up to 2 Gb of RAM (3
w/ a kernel kludge), but Linux makes more efficient use of hardware than
anything from Microsoft, so it will probably still be faster on a dual slot 1
system than NT on a dual Xeon. Their server management software doesn't list
Linux among it's compatibles, but maybe the SCO Unix version is binary
compatible?
BTW, I'm running an old dual PPro supermicro w/ (only) 256 Mb of ram for
light/educational use, but no hardware problems :-)
If this is to replace an existing system, then profile it and find out
where your bottlenecks are/will be before you spend the $$, and lurk--new driver
support is comming out for Linux constantly.
On Mon, 08 Mar 1999 15:23:32 +0000, Hefin James <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>Hi all,
>
>I'm currently specifying a machine for a major Linux based server
>project.
>Has anybody using the Intel L440GX+ motherboard?
>It has a Adaptec AIC7896 U2W and UW channels, and a graphics card on
>board, which is supported by Linux.
>
>It also has Intel EtherExpress PRO 100+ chip onboard but it uses the
>Intel 82559 chip which is not mentioned in the eepro100.c driver. Has
>anybody else got this card? and more importantly does it work?
>
>What SMP motherboard you running?
>
>Cheers,
>Hefin
Allen
(email addy; user ID portion has a numeral one in place of word
onespoiler, and of course, delete the bogus secondary domain of nospam.)
PC/hardware Guru, and Linux Newbie--(how DO you exit vi?)
------------------------------
From: garv <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Ether16 LAN Card from Linksys
Date: Tue, 09 Mar 1999 18:40:27 -0800
Having trounle getting connected with the
Linksys Model LNE2000.
New at this.
Any help appreciated.
Thanks.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: "GA" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Perl scripts in NT
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 02:23:48 GMT
Here's what I did:
- install ActivePerl for Windows
- name the perl script file with a ".pl" extension (which is associated with
the Perl executable).
That's all there was to it.
Brent Corbin wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>Can anyone tell me how to get Perl scripts to work on an NT Server?
>
------------------------------
From: "GA" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: smbmount vs Win98 network neightboor
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 02:25:09 GMT
The samba server doesn't have to be the browse master (I have an NT machine
as browse master).
flinx wrote in message <7njF2.191$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>Try smbclient -L machine-name from your favorite shell. It will list the
>shares on machine-name and also show you a list of other machines on the
>network. This might only work if you samba server is the browse master, not
>quite sure about that one.
>
>flinx
>
>
>J�r�me Tollet wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>>Hello,
>>I would like to use my smbmount like the network neighboor under win98 :
>>when i use smbmount, i must tell //machine/service. Under win98, i can
>>browse all the machines on the network !
>>Is it possible under linux ?
>>thanks for help
>>jerome tollet
>>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>
>>
>
>
------------------------------
From: Brian Walker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: DHCP Core Dumps!
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 02:53:47 GMT
What kind of DHCP server are you connecting to? I've had the same
problem when trying to connect to a Multinet DHCP server running under
OpenVMS. Same setup, RH5.2 and dhcpcd .70, I don't think the ethernet
card matters. Also, when I plug it into my network at home with a linux
DHCP server, it works fine. Hrm...
Brian
"John L. Papp" wrote:
>
> I just got ASDL and installed RedHat 5.2 with ethernet support. The
> kernel has no problem locating the NIC at the correct I/O and IRQ
> value. However, DHCP fails at boot. When I run the daemon from the
> command line (/sbin/dhcpcd), I get a core dump. The NIC is a 3COM
> EtherLink III 3c509B-TPO 10BaseT. I am currently using the 3c50x driver
> pre-compiled in the kernel. I have no problem running the system out of
> NT and 98 and all the green lights are on telling me there is a
> connection when I try from Linux. Since I am getting a core dump, I
> think I might have an installation problem. The installed version is
> dhcpcd-0.70-2. Kernel is 2.0.36-0.7.
>
> Any help would be appreciated.
>
> --
> John L. Papp
> Aerospace Engineer/System Administrator
> Computational Fluid Dynamics Research Laboratory
> e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> web: www.cfdrl.uc.edu/~jpapp/
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Miguel Cruz)
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: For all you Nicrosoft lovers
Date: 10 Mar 1999 02:51:59 GMT
Markos Berndt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> What you need here is one good class-action lawyer.
>
> Is Jackie available "Kramers attorny in Seinfeld" :)
You installed Linux on that machine? Who told you to install Linux? I didn't
tell you to install Linux! Did I tell you to install Linux?
miguel
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ()
Subject: Re: Hacker Attack and identd
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 04:41:03 GMT
What do you using windows 95, how come you not cover your self
do not open telnet use tcp_sucker, and firewall
and do not install anything on your firewall machine except firewall
block,cut,rap, all the ports, I got a Realtech Nics Remove the No.14
line from botom of the coper board, then no_way promicis mode.
I had a same thing when I was 16, now fucking no_fuck_in_way.
if some on can hack Fbi then they can Hack me !
Hony be care_full , animals out there.
jscott..
On Thu, 25 Feb 1999 11:48:29 -0500, Cory Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I recently had a hacker attack. One of the things I noticed was that
>durring my attack, I had MANY identd logs in my messages log. What are
>they? How was identd used to attack my machine, and then the many
>networks that were attacked from my machine? (Many unhappy net-admins
>mailed me about this). I saw between 50 and 100 identd logs from
>different hosts, many of them being in Italy. Unfortunately, my system
>was mostly destroyed in the process, but I still have the log files to
>look at.
>
>Any help?
>
------------------------------
From: "Mark Cornhill" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Network Monitoring!
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 16:26:08 +1100
Hi There,
Does anyone know of a network monitoring system for Linux? I would like to
monitor the following:
ftp, smtp, pop3, server load, disk space, ping etc..
If anyone has any clues please let me know.
Thank you in advance.
--
======================================================================
Mark Cornhill
Wolf Computer Solutions Voice +61 246 476055
Unit 4/17 Graham Hill Rd Fax +61 246 461172
Narellan NSW ICQ UIN 1886656
Australia 2567
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.wolf.net.au
======================================================================
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Strange)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.x,comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.help
Subject: Re: setting DISPLAY variable
Date: 9 Mar 1999 18:40:27 GMT
Ok, on the campus machine you have to set the DISPLAY = the client machine.
Here at work I have to
export DISPLAY=DIALIN_PORT_43:0.0
to get the display back to my client. Since the dialin port is variable
I have to finger $LOGNAME to a file and grep it for the DIALIN string.
Cher-Wah Tan ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
: i'm trying to start emacs, which is residing on my campus's server,
: while using linux as my client. but it says something about cannot
: display. i guess i need to set the DISPLAY variable to some value.
: could someone help?
: thanks a bunch!
: --
: am i the only die-hard linux advocate with a tatooed pengium on my arm?
--
While Alcatel may claim ownership of all my ideas (on or off the job),
Alcatel does not claim any responsibility for them. Warranty expired when u
opened this article and I will not be responsible for its contents or use.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Gregory G. Woodbury)
Subject: Re: HOW TO USE DNSa for a NET and DNSb for all the others?
Date: 10 Mar 1999 05:06:22 GMT
Stefano Bottigiola <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> shaped electrons to say:
> I wonder how can I force my linux box to use a certain DNS for a
>certain network and another for the remaining addresses.
>I mean:
>
>if address is from A.0.0.0
> use as DNS A.0.0.1
>otherwise
> use as DNS B.C.D.E
>
>The problem is that I don't want that a query for a DNS is sent to the
>other.
>
>Oh... another thing I already have a cache-only DNS running on the linux
>server.
Having a dual-horizon DNS is realtively easy with the recent versions of
BIND, since one can tie specific instances of a running BIND to a particular
internet address or interface.
However, in order to do this properly, one can't really use the
"caching-only" servers that are distributed with RedHat and others.
You'll have to set up a minimally functional DNS that forwards non-local
requests to the different name servers you've selected.
Look for information on "listen on" in recent BIND documentation.
I actually use a dual-horizon DNS at work in conjunction with a firewall
so that the "outside world" doesn't get the internal names, and the internal
net can have full access to the world.
--
Gregory G. "Wolfe" Woodbury `-_-' Owner/Admin: wolves.durham.nc.us
ggw at wolves.durham.nc.us U Errant co-moderator of:
soc.religion.unitarian-univ
"The Line Eater is a boojum snark." Hug your wolf. (Thanks Peter.)
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Gregory G. Woodbury)
Subject: Re: HOW TO USE DNSa for a NET and DNSb for all the others?
Date: 10 Mar 1999 05:07:37 GMT
Stefano Bottigiola <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> shaped electrons to say:
> I wonder how can I force my linux box to use a certain DNS for a
>certain network and another for the remaining addresses.
>I mean:
>
>if address is from A.0.0.0
> use as DNS A.0.0.1
>otherwise
> use as DNS B.C.D.E
>
>The problem is that I don't want that a query for a DNS is sent to the
>other.
>
>Oh... another thing I already have a cache-only DNS running on the linux
>server.
Having a dual-horizon DNS is realtively easy with the recent versions of
BIND, since one can tie specific instances of a running BIND to a particular
internet address or interface.
However, in order to do this properly, one can't really use the
"caching-only" servers that are distributed with RedHat and others.
You'll have to set up a minimally functional DNS that forwards non-local
requests to the different name servers you've selected.
Look for information on "listen on" in recent BIND documentation.
I actually use a dual-horizon DNS at work in conjunction with a firewall
so that the "outside world" doesn't get the internal names, and the internal
net can have full access to the world.
--
Gregory G. "Wolfe" Woodbury `-_-' Owner/Admin: wolves.durham.nc.us
ggw at wolves.durham.nc.us U Errant co-moderator of:
soc.religion.unitarian-univ
"The Line Eater is a boojum snark." Hug your wolf. (Thanks Peter.)
------------------------------
From: "Mike" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Ether16 LAN Card from Linksys
Date: Tue, 9 Mar 1999 22:22:51 -0500
Try : http://www.linksys.com/support/solution/nos/linux.htm
HRH,
Mike
garv wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>Having trounle getting connected with the
>
>Linksys Model LNE2000.
>
>New at this.
>
>Any help appreciated.
>
>Thanks.
>
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jnb27)
Subject: Re: Write permisions on Directories created through Samba
Date: 10 Mar 1999 05:50:35 GMT
try chmod ug+rwx <file_name>
goodluck
joey g.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Roger Harstein)
Subject: Software RAID
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 04:52:33 GMT
I have a would-be 26 Gig software raid 5 setup that is giving me huge
amounts of grief. I finally got the raid structure built by
installing the raid-tools package (mdtools doesn't cut it any more,
apparently). However, now I am running into a problem putting the
ext2 filesystem on the array. The drive is just too dang big and
mke2fs craps out. Anyone know of a work-around for this?
System: RedHat 5.2, kernel 2.2.2
Thanks,
Roger
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Roger Harstein)
Subject: Linux as a Samba client: smbmount problems
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 04:49:04 GMT
Boy, the samba documentation seems to be completely chaotic when
dealing with smbmount. The howtos, man pages, command-line help, even
the samba books can't agree on what the proper syntax is.
Anyway, I can use smbclient to attach my Linux box to an OS/2 warp
share. That works fine. However, when trying to use smbmount to add
the OS/2 share to a local mount point, I keep running into trouble.
Pointers, anyone?
Roger
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jnb27)
Subject: win98 configuration...help please
Date: 10 Mar 1999 05:56:04 GMT
i use redhat 5.1 and i'm having problem connecting my win98 client to the
linuxbox
i can see the linux box from my network nieghborhood but once i click on it, it
will ask for a password.
i tried the same user name from my win95 and it works, i can see the shared
directories..no problem
can someone help me please...
regards
joey g.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Doug S)
Subject: Re: Netgear FA310TX Full Duplex question
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 03:50:29 GMT
On 9 Mar 1999 06:31:43 GMT, Stephen Anderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>I am running the 2.2.2 kernel. I have compiled support for the
Netgear card into the kernel (not module) via the tulip driver
provided on the netgear diskette. I am trying to figure out how to
instruct the card to switch to full-duplex mode. The card works fine
at full-duplex under my alternative W95 boot. I have tried using the
following on my boot disk:
>
>
>
>LILO: linux ether=0,0,5,eth0
>
>
>
>Unfortunately, the card stayed in half duplex mode. I am using
loadlin to normaly launch Linux, so if I could figure out what
parameters to pass the kernel, I could append it to my loadlin.bat.
Any help you could give would be greatly appreciated!
>
>
>
>Steve
>
>------------------ Posted via SearchLinux ------------------
> http://www.searchlinux.com
Hi Stephen--
If the card is connected to a hub, you can't run FD. You'll need to
use a switch for that.
But if you are connected to a switch that is configured for FD
operation, or if you are connected via a crossover cable to another
card capable of FD, you'll want to check out the Tulip information
site at http://www.bmen.tulane.edu/~siekas/tulip.html.
Have fun!
Doug
=========================================
The email & reply-to addresses in this post's headers are not real.
If you need to e-mail me, my real address is:
dee oh you gee ess @ c3net . net (Read aloud and type what you say.)
------------------------------
From: "Eriksson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: How to measure dialup connection speed
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 04:59:56 +0100
I connect to my ISP with a 56k modem. I tried several of the possible
numbers my ISP is offering. Only one seems to be working (That is not the
same number I use when I dail from my win98 comp.. Although I'm using the
same modem)
But anyway.. How can you tell the connection speed with Linux??
/Martin
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Edwin Lim)
Subject: Re: [Fwd: NIS + NFS]
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 05:47:16 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Roberto P.Martins Jr. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>To Linux clients see the folders shared by Samba they can mount the
>Samba shares using smbfs, but smbmount do not allow users other than
>root to mount them and common users will never have the root password!
>Anyone knows how to do that?
Have you tried the setuid bit on smbmount? And make sure that root
owns smbmount, of course...
chmod u+s `which smbmount`
chown root `which smbmount`
Cheers,
Edwin Lim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 973-360-7058 fp b033
------------------------------
From: Malay Shah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Samba 2.0.3-Browse Master
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 04:03:02 GMT
Hi, I'm running Samba as a domain browse master for a tunnelled network
and it seems to be working great, with wins support enabled, but i'm
running into one problem, when a machine at one of the other
localmaster's turns off, it doesn't update the domain browse list on the
browse master nor does it update the localmaster. Is there a way for
Samba to broadcast updates at an interval, or update the domain browse
list so the other local masters receive updates? Thanks.
Malay Shah
Please email responses to my email address also, thanks.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jim Morris)
Subject: Linux VPN routing problem
Date: 10 Mar 1999 00:09:25 -0600
Hi all.
I've spent the last 24 hours doing virtually nothing but try to get a
"Virtual Private Network" going between two LAN's that are connected
to the Internet via Linux systems, using IP Masquerading. Both LAN's
use Private IP's, BTW. I've pretty much exhausted the VPN Mini-HOWTO,
with only partial success. I've also tried using the IP "tunneling"
kernel modules in Linux 2.0.36.
Ok, here's the deal. Using the techniques outlined in the "VPN Mini
HOWTO" I have been able to setup a ppp-over-ssh tunnel between the
two Linux systems. The Linux systems can both ping the ethernet LAN
address of the remote Linux box. However, ICMP packets for any other
address on the remote LAN makes it to the remote Linux system, but is
never apparently routed onto the remote. According to tcpdump, the
ICMP packets come on ppp1 - the ssh-tunneled PPP connection. They
never go out on the eth0 interface though.
So its really as if something is not right in the routing setup. Here
are the nitty gritty details now:
Linux server A Linux server B
---------------- --------------------
Ethernet Addr. 192.168.0.1 192.168.1.1
Network address 192.168.0.0 192.168.1.0
Internet access Diald Diald
PPP Tunnel addr 192.168.3.1 192.168.3.2
Linux Server A Routing table
==============================
Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface
192.168.2.2 * 255.255.255.255 UH 1 0 0 sl0
all-ones * 255.255.255.255 UH 0 0 2 eth0
168.121.1.1 * 255.255.255.255 UH 0 0 0 ppp0
192.168.3.2 * 255.255.255.255 UH 0 0 0 ppp1
192.168.0.0 * 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 73 eth0
192.168.1.0 192.168.3.2 255.255.255.0 UG 0 0 4 ppp1
127.0.0.0 * 255.0.0.0 U 0 0 73 lo
default * 0.0.0.0 U 0 0 105 ppp0
default * 0.0.0.0 U 1 0 14 sl0
Linux Server B Routing table
==============================
Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface
192.168.2.2 * 255.255.255.255 UH 1 0 0 sl0
ts1.ro.com * 255.255.255.255 UH 0 0 0 ppp0
192.168.3.1 * 255.255.255.255 UH 0 0 1 ppp1
192.168.1.0 * 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 52 eth0
192.168.0.0 192.168.3.1 255.255.255.0 UG 0 0 0 ppp1
127.0.0.0 * 255.0.0.0 U 0 0 12 lo
default * 0.0.0.0 U 0 0 94 ppp0
default * 0.0.0.0 U 1 0 1 sl0
Note that the "sl0" and "ppp0" interfaces on both ends are the Internet
connection, managed by diald.
If anyone can tell me why the above setup will not route packets from a machine in the
192.168.0.0 network to the 192.168.1.1 network, I will be eternally grateful!
Thanks!
--
/---------------------------------------------------\
| Jim Morris | Email: J i m @ M o r r i s . n e t |
| | j m o r r i s @ r o . c o m |
\---------------------------------------------------/
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Savas Pavlidis)
Subject: Re: Linux as a router to replace school NT4 box?
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 06:26:31 GMT
You can use IPRoute, a small program that was shareware. Previous
shareware copies exists on net, and you can look at www.mischler.com
for more info and data.
Hardware requirements are 286 or better, and it runs under DOS. DOS
and iproute + packet drivers for the specific ethernet cards you are
using can fit in one floppy. It does support also NAT, dynamic dialup,
packet filtering, ftp and telnet deamon for remote administration.
I have used it and it is superb and extremely easy to configure.
------------------------------
From: Glenn Butcher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Linux Dial on Demand
Date: Tue, 09 Mar 1999 20:33:20 -0700
I think they're in the DNS-HOWTO - instructions on configuring a caching
DNS server that runs only when the link is up. Involves creating
separate resolv.conf.local, resolv.conf.connect files and copying the
appropriate one to resolv.conf when the link goes up and down
(/etc/ppp/ip-up and /etc/ppp/ip-down scripts). It wasn't until I did
this that my link stayed down unless needed. Putting your local ip-name
pairs in a hosts file on each computer will also help.
Glenn Butcher
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> I have a small 486, running as an ISDN router for a small subnet in my home
> office. I have reserved static IP addresses from my ISP.
>
> The router is set up with kernel 2.2.2, with ppp running in dial-on-demand
> mode. Everything works fine on the front.
>
> The problem is, that when I try to access one of the computers on the subnet,
> from another using telnet (or whatever), the router dials and makes the
> connection to the ISP, *even though I am accessing a local address*. Even
> worse, if the link is down for any reason, then I am unbale to telnet to any
> other machines on the local network (It connects, and waits indefinately for
> the PPP link to come up).
>
> Subnet is xxx.xxx.113.225 through xxx.xxx.113.239, subnet mask 255.255.255.240
> Default gateway xxx.xxx.113.225 - (i.e. the router)
>
> Please help, this is costing be a fortune!
>
> Cheers
>
> Richard Turnbull [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Tel +65 252 0287
>
> -----------== Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ==----------
> http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: A problem with routing
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 1999 06:16:28 GMT
I'will bite, I dont know a great deal about all this anymore , but I would
suggest running winroute on that nt box if you are not willing to setup
all this under linux. Myself I use a linux box as the router & gateway to the
outside world.
good luck !
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Wed, 03 Mar 1999 13:53:49 GMT, "Jeffrey J. Monahan"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >I have a small network at home it consists of 1 NT 4.0 Server, 1 Linux
> >Slakware box, and an insignificant WFW 311. Now the problem is I have an
> >ISDN line on the NT box and a modem on the Linux box. The ISDN I use for
> >work and the modem is to my ISP for personnal stuff. On the Linux box I can
> >only see the local machines and the internet through my ISP unless I use the
> >proxy server on the NT box then I can browse the Internet through the ISDN.
> >But I would like to be able to telnet to a HP 9000 at work but I can't .
> >
> >I'm not sure where the actual problem lies, I'm assuming it's on the NT box
> >not able to route the telnet session through the proxy. But I'm not sure.
> >Any help would be a great help.
> >
> >
> >Thank you
> >Jeff
> >
> NT cannot route telnet or ping or anything other then http throught
> the proxy. you neet a port replicator/redirector in NT ($$$) or set
> up the isdn in linux and set up ipmask. this would solve all the
> problems. NT, linux and the wfw311 will see the internet then through
> however you connecte through linux.
>
> tng
>
>
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From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: ppp problems
Date: 10 Mar 1999 04:31:38 GMT
If you are running Windows on the same machine and you don't power down
completely, you'll get that message. Don't know if that helps, but that's
what happens to me.
Bob
sleb wrote:
> hey everyone,
> last night my modem spit out some error in /var/log/messages. i've never
> seen it before so any help in figuring it out would be appreciated.
after
> pppd initializes, i get an i/o error, tcgetattr (5). help please? i
> couldn't figure it out.
> sleb
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