Linux-Networking Digest #703, Volume #10 Thu, 1 Apr 99 12:13:42 EST
Contents:
unable to ping host (Harald)
unable to ping host (Harald)
unable to ping host (Harald)
Re: Bridging in two stages (Johannes Niess)
Re: Networking puzzle ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: diald and DNS queries ("Leopold Toetsch")
Re: Leafnode & Pine (Tom Elsesser)
Re: Machine name themes - what do you use? (Daniel Pasto)
Re: Slow ethernet LAN driving me crazy!! (Markus Wandel)
Re: Help ??? (Jason Romo)
Solution: was LPD print jobs from AIX -> LINUX failing (Zing Zing Awungshi Shishak)
Re: Strange problems with PPP and RH 5.2 ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Harald)
Subject: unable to ping host
Date: Wed, 31 Mar 1999 16:29:03 GMT
sitting on the computer and watching the ping
I can ping localhost, but not other computer in the same
network. my dear doesnt react on the ping. I must do the
Ctrl+C to abort. Then
3 packets transmitted, 0 packets received, 100% packet loss
please help me. I have only two weeks linux experience and as
you now I am german-speaker
PS.: ifconfig detect the HWaddr
Thank you
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Harald)
Subject: unable to ping host
Date: Wed, 31 Mar 1999 16:29:07 GMT
sitting on the computer and watching the ping
I can ping localhost, but not other computer in the same
network. my dear doesnt react on the ping. I must do the
Ctrl+C to abort. Then
3 packets transmitted, 0 packets received, 100% packet loss
please help me. I have only two weeks linux experience and as
you now I am german-speaker
PS.: ifconfig detect the HWaddr
Thank you
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Harald)
Subject: unable to ping host
Date: Wed, 31 Mar 1999 16:29:09 GMT
sitting on the computer and watching the ping
I can ping localhost, but not other computer in the same
network. my dear doesnt react on the ping. I must do the
Ctrl+C to abort. Then
3 packets transmitted, 0 packets received, 100% packet loss
please help me. I have only two weeks linux experience and as
you now I am german-speaker
PS.: ifconfig detect the HWaddr
Thank you
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Johannes Niess)
Subject: Re: Bridging in two stages
Date: Wed, 31 Mar 1999 18:18:48 GMT
"Wayland Reid" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hi could someone help me. I've got a network design/routing/bridging
>problem.
>I have a pair of LANs connected by a pair of linux boxes which are
>connected via wireless network cards (Proxim cards). Here is a diagram to
>explain what I mean :
>http://www.spectrumanalytic.com/~wayland/misc/wireless.gif .
>Everything works wonderfully. Right now I have the Linux box on LAN A
>setup to do IP masquerading for everything behind and including the
>wireless LAN (LAN C). This is ok. I can email, get on the web, but some
>services break, FTP notably. Since I have a block of real IP addresses
>that I use for LAN A, I'd like to use those on LAN B as well. I've tried
>to use the bridging code in the linux kernel, to no avail. Perhaps I was
>doing something wrong, perhaps not. I can give specifics if that'd be
>helpful.
>What I really want to know, I guess, is could the bridging work at all,
>since neither bridge (one on each linux machine) would see the IP's on the
>other side of the wireless link. Anyone have some pointers or tips?
I have never done masquerading myself, but something about
masquerading modules comes to my mind. The right way to do it is
splitting the network.
My solution is based on these facts:
The wireless link is slower than the wired network.
The wireless "LAN" C is only a link between 2 linux boxes.
The number of computers in network A is about the same as in network
B.
You have official IP's for every network card
A big percentage of traffic stays inside network A and B, i. e. one
server in each network.
I'd suggest subnetting. You can split your network in 2 smaller ones.
Instead of using a full class C (254 hosts) with netmask 255.255.255.0
you use netmask 255.255.255.128 (=2X 126 hosts). Network A uses IP's
lower than ...127 and network B bigger than ...129.
This is explained in the IP subnetting mini howto.
This way you send the least traffic over the wirless link. Briding
sends every broadcast over the link.
You end up with these routing tables:
network B:
gateway: wired card on linux box in network B
linux box in network B (and "C"):
default route: wireless card
ip forwarding enabeled
wireless card:
private IP (192.196.0.1)
netmask 255.255.255.0
linux box in network A (and "C")
wireless card:
private IP (192.196.0.2)
netmask 255.255.255.0
ip forwarding enabeled
If you have a internet connection in A: default route: provider's
router
network A:
gateway: provider's router
With fixed IP's (no DHCP) you have to configure every computer. If
your link is fast enough: try masquerading.
Johannes Niess
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Networking puzzle
Date: Thu, 01 Apr 1999 15:54:49 GMT
Here I go again... answering my own question...
I actually got things to work the way I wanted them to last night.
I set the following in smb.conf (again)
domain master = yes
preffered master = yes
os level = 4
After rebooting both systems.........
Win98 saw linux as the domain master, and stopped sending out those domain
requests that were triggering diald.
AND... when I dial in to my work network (from the Win98 PC) I was able to see
all the computers on the network in Net Hood.
I think the problem was that I did not reboot the linux box after changing the
"domain master" settings. I did do a 'kill -HUP 1', but that didn't seem to
reset everything.
After I rebooted the linux system, then rebooted the Win98 system, all is
working as I hoped.
Ed
In article <7dtml8$5uh$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I am relatively new to linux, so be gentle...
> That said...
>
> I have successfully set up a simple home network.
> I have a linux server with shares and a printer shared via samba.
> PPP and IP Masquerading works fine so I can dial my ISP, and my attached Win98
> PC can surf to it's hearts content. Telnet, ftp, etc., etc., all working
> internally and externally. All relatively painless.
>
> The puzzle... I recently installed diald, and all appeared to be working
> fine. Then I noticed diald was dialing out approximately every 15 minutes.
> I searched the news groups, and found that lots of people had the same
> problem, and also found many recommendations for solutions.
>
> I added "ignore" rules to the standard.filter file for netbios-ns,
> netbios-ssn, and netbios-dgm for tcp and udp. This did not correct the
> problem. Running diald in debug 1 mode told me that the service causing
> diald to dial was "domain". Can't ignore domain requests... that's the first
> thing your web browser sends out when requesting a web page.
>
> I was able correct THIS problem by setting the linux system to be the "domain
> master" in smb.conf.
>
> But here is my situation.
> I want to be able to dial in to my work network, and be able to browse the
> network there. If I have my linux system set as the master browser, none of
> the computers at work show up in Network Neighborhood. If I DON'T have the
> linux box set up as master browser, I DO see all the computers at work AND my
> linux shares and printer in Network Neighborhood.
>
> BUT! As I stated before, if the linux box is NOT the master browser, diald
> dials out every 15 minutes or so. I assume this is because my Win98 system
> at home delegates itself to be the master browser, and being so, it sends out
> some sort of "domain check" every so often which triggers diald.
>
> I though I could get around this by having the linux box set as domain master
> in smb.conf, and setting the os level. I read that an os level greater
than
> 2 will beat a Win95 or Win98 machine, and an os level greater than 32 will
> beat NT. The server at my work is an NT box, so I thought if I set the level
> to say 4, the linux box would be the master browser while not connected to
> work, but when I log in the NT box will take over and I will be able to see
> the computers at work in Net Hood.
>
> Is the master browser NOT dynamic like this? i.e. Once Windows has
> established a master browser, can it not be changed until reboot.
>
> If that is the case, then that would explain why I can browse both home and
> work networks, if the Win98 machine is using itself as the master browser.
>
> Is there a way to tell, from windows, who the master browser is?
>
> Note: I am dialing directly from my Win98 PC into the network at work, not
> from the linux system. But I can dial my ISP from linux and use
Masqurade.
> I just can't do both at the same time since the two systems are sharing a
> phone line. One thing I have not tried is dialing in to work on the linux
> system.
>
> Looking for clues here... some sort of magic configuration I guess.
> I think you can tell that I've done my homework here. Now I need the help of a
> guru.
>
> Ed
>
> -----------== Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ==----------
> http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own
>
============= Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ============
http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own
------------------------------
From: "Leopold Toetsch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.protocols.smb,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: diald and DNS queries
Date: Thu, 1 Apr 1999 15:16:35 +0200
Mike Jagdis wrote in message ...
>In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Ronald Hovens wrote:
>>sit. 1 after starting my laptop, that connects to my ethernet
>>sit. 2. when I look at network neighbourhood and click on the linuxbox
>>icon on my laptop
>>sit. 3 when I take a look at the printer queue of the printer that is
>>connected to the Linux box and is usable from the Win98 laptop thru
>>samba.
>All together now... "BECAUSE ITS WINDOWS!"
No, IMHO this is not the reason. I have a dial on demand connection (per
ISDN), samba, reading mail with M$ outlook express ...
I had ocassionaly unwanted dialups but never with situations 1-3 above. I
think there is some misconfiguration.
Check \windows\hosts or \winnt\system32\drivers\etc\hosts on you windows
machine.
On the Linuxbox check /etc/hosts and /etc/resolv/conf.
>>Does running a DNS server on my own
>>linux box resolve this problem?
>No, but if you point Windows at that instead of your ISP and have
>your local server forward requests externally it gives you a useful
>point to trace DNS queries.
Yes, it helped me.
After putting all IPs in the hosts-file I had still DNS-lookups when opening
outlook express. I did setup a caching nameserver (just following the
DNS-Howto),works fine now, and I don't have any unwanted dials anymore.
And as above reply says, if you still have dial outs, you can easily trace
what's going on.
leo
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Tom Elsesser)
Subject: Re: Leafnode & Pine
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 01 Apr 1999 12:36:40 GMT
On Stardate Thu, 01 Apr 1999 03:46:57 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Tom
Elsesser) wrote:
|->Hi,
|-> I am trying to get Pine to recognize my local machine running
|->leafnode as the nntp server. Pine is looking for a .newsrc file, but
|->leafnode doesn't generate one AFAIK. I can't seem to figure the right
|->combination for Pine to do this. Can anyone help me with this?
|->
|->Thanks,
Some more info. In Pine setup, if I list the machine name as the nntp
server, nothing happens when I try to (A)dd a group, "no groups to
choose from" is message I get. If I put in the IP address as the nntp
server and try to (A)dd a group, Pine errors with "connection timed
out". Adding the port (119) after the IP or machine name changes
nothing.
Later
--
Tom
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Daniel Pasto)
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
Subject: Re: Machine name themes - what do you use?
Date: 31 Mar 1999 22:44:15 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Vincent S. Kluth ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> We use bird names. If you're clever, you can name your BEEFY systems
> with names like "eagle" and "hawk", and your wimpy systems "dove", etc.
> Annoying users get "dodo" and "loon".
> I despise naming computers with numbered acronyms, eg.
> unix1
> unix2
> unix3
> etc.
We started using general aviation aircraft. At the time we had a
group of five or six and three of us had our pilot's licenses or were
working on it:
Grumman (as in Tiger, Cheetah, Traveler, Goose, etc, not military)
Cessna (The Microsoft of general aviation)
Piper
Rutan (well, RV-6 didn't sound like a good name)
Mooney
Maule
Bede
Wright
Cirrus (assuming they start delivery the SR-20 sometime soon)
Unfortunately we became the victim of a war among sys admin groups and
can no longer use interesting or consistent names. I guess that's a
problem working for a large company. Now we're stuck using three different
naming conventions depending on which data center we use:
1) division and last 2 IP octets, like it012345
2) arcane code for platform, location, etc, and sequential
number, like svaw1056 or ntaa0073
3) a list of names someone got somewhere, with no meaning and
assigned in alphabetical order:
damen, davies
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Markus Wandel)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Re: Slow ethernet LAN driving me crazy!!
Date: 1 Apr 1999 15:11:15 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
brian moore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>(And, yes, you can see assymetric failures with bad twisted pair cables,
>since one pair is Tx and one is Rx, the system with the icky Rx pair
>will have problems receiving, though less problems sending.)
Permit me to add that in my experience, many if not most 10baseT cables
are bad. The pairing of pins on an RJ45 connector is
1,2
3,6
4,5
7,8
of which 10/100baseT use 1,2 and 3,6. A lot of cables, though are wired with
the twisted pairs hooked up to 1,2 / 3,4 / 5,6 / 7,8. This happens to work
for some fairly nontrivial lengths and 10baseT but it is WRONG and can cause
problems, and of course they will be asymmetrical ones because one direction
is in fact on a twisted pair.
It's hard to check if your cable is one of the "bad ones" unless you can see
enough of the wires though the connector. A twisted pair is usually a solid
colour and white wire with stripes of the solid colour.
I've seen 20-30ft runs of "bad" cable work fine for 10baseT but you never know.
Markus
------------------------------
From: Jason Romo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.help,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Help ???
Date: Thu, 01 Apr 1999 10:26:07 -0600
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
If you want people from the internet to beable to access your web server
you will have to have your ISP put your
domainname with your IPaddress.
if you do an:
nslookup yourdomainname is should look like this:
[root@jromo spool]# nslookup www.romos.net
Server: is2.proxy.fedex.com
Address: 146.18.173.70
Name: www.romos.net
Address: 24.95.99.185
Adrian wrote:
> I have tried setting up a webserver using RH5.2. Everything seems to be
> running fine except that i dont know how to setup the servername so that
> pple can connect to my linux box (eg. 'www.adrian.com') I tried by
> keying in the ip address using netscape and it works, but it fails when
> i tried to key in 'www.adrian.com'
>
> I am new to Linux and do not know much of the commands.
> Can anyone teach me how to setup the server name ?
> Do i have to make any changes to the httpd.conf file ?
>
> Pls advice
> Thanks
>
> (ps:my email is [EMAIL PROTECTED])
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Zing Zing Awungshi Shishak)
Crossposted-To: comp.unix.aix
Subject: Solution: was LPD print jobs from AIX -> LINUX failing
Date: 1 Apr 1999 11:44:24 -0500
Thanks to all who responded to my problem.
I was having problems printing two documents from AIX in quick succession to
a remote queue on a redhat 5.0 system.
I found out the problem was that AIX (oslevel 4.3.2.0) was sending
5 digit job numbers in the cfA header. The lpr-0.33 code in linux
assumes only 3 digit numbers per RFC1179.
It happened that the 3 digits were the same and the second document
never printed because it didn't have a control file.
I don't like this quick fix but, in lpr-0.33/lpd/recvjob.c, you can
comment out the line "strcpy(cp + 6, from);" and you'll be able to
receive the 5 digit cfA headers aix is sending out and thus won't have
a clash in filenames in the spool directory.
again thanks,
zing
p.s. I've sent out an email to ibm.
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Strange problems with PPP and RH 5.2
Date: Thu, 01 Apr 1999 16:41:01 GMT
> I suspect that the other end got tired of waiting for you.
>
> You also do not have ppp debugging on
> put
> debug
> inot /etc/ppp/options, and put the line
> daemon.* /var/log/messages
> inot /etc/syslog.conf.
> and do a killall -1 syslogd
> so youcan see what pppd is trying to do.
>
Thanks for the quick reply. I'm including the message when it worked and when
it doesn't. This morning I was able to connect about 3 times and after that I
haven't been able to connect. I didn't change any config files.
Thanks in advance
Bob
Here's the debug messages when it WORKS:
Apr 1 08:18:18 linux2 named[287]: starting. named 8.1.2 Thu Sep 24 02:47:08
EDT 1998 ^[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/bs/BUILD/src/bin/named Apr 1
08:18:19 linux2 named[287]: cache zone "" (IN) loaded (serial 0) Apr 1
08:18:19 linux2 named[287]: master zone "0.0.127.in-addr.arpa" (IN) loaded
(serial 1997022700) Apr 1 08:18:19 linux2 named[287]: listening on
[127.0.0.1].53 (lo) Apr 1 08:18:19 linux2 named[287]: listening on
[192.168.1.1].53 (eth0) Apr 1 08:18:19 linux2 named[287]: Forwarding source
address is [0.0.0.0].1025 Apr 1 08:18:19 linux2 named[288]: Ready to answer
queries. Apr 1 08:18:19 linux2 named[288]: sysquery:
sendto([198.41.0.10].53): Network is unreachable Apr 1 08:18:33 linux2
ifup-ppp: pppd started for ppp0 on /dev/modem at 115200 Apr 1 08:18:33
linux2 pppd[454]: pppd 2.3.5 started by root, uid 0 Apr 1 08:18:34 linux2
chat[459]: abort on (BUSY) Apr 1 08:18:34 linux2 chat[459]: abort on (ERROR)
Apr 1 08:18:34 linux2 chat[459]: abort on (NO CARRIER) Apr 1 08:18:34
linux2 chat[459]: abort on (NO DIALTONE) Apr 1 08:18:34 linux2 chat[459]:
abort on (Invalid Login) Apr 1 08:18:34 linux2 chat[459]: abort on (Login
incorrect) Apr 1 08:18:34 linux2 chat[459]: send (ATM0^M) Apr 1 08:18:34
linux2 chat[459]: expect (OK) Apr 1 08:18:35 linux2 chat[459]: ATM0^M^M Apr
1 08:18:35 linux2 chat[459]: OK Apr 1 08:18:35 linux2 chat[459]: -- got it
Apr 1 08:18:35 linux2 chat[459]: send (ATDTXXX-XXX-XXXX^M) Apr 1 08:18:35
linux2 chat[459]: expect (CONNECT) Apr 1 08:18:35 linux2 chat[459]: ^M Apr
1 08:19:01 linux2 chat[459]: ATDTXXX-XXX-XXXX^M^M Apr 1 08:19:01 linux2
chat[459]: CONNECT Apr 1 08:19:01 linux2 chat[459]: -- got it Apr 1
08:19:01 linux2 chat[459]: send (^M) Apr 1 08:19:02 linux2 chat[459]: expect
(ogin:) Apr 1 08:19:02 linux2 chat[459]: 50666/ARQ/V90/LAPM/V42BIS^M Apr 1
08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]: ^M Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]: Apr 1
08:19:17 linux2 last message repeated 23 times Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2
chat[459]: TNT1.LNH.RCN.NET T-Server ^M Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]: ^M
Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]: ^M Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]: Login:
Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]: -- got it Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2
chat[459]: send (myusername^M) Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]: expect
(ord:) Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]: myusername^M Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2
chat[459]: Password: Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]: -- got it Apr 1
08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]: send (mypassword^M) Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2
chat[459]: expect (~) Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]: ^M Apr 1 08:19:17
linux2 chat[459]: Entering PPP Session.^M Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]:
IP address is 209.122.252.105^M Apr 1 08:19:17 linux2 chat[459]: MTU is
1006.^M Apr 1 08:20:02 linux2 chat[459]: alarm Apr 1 08:20:02 linux2
chat[459]: send (^M) Apr 1 08:20:02 linux2 chat[459]: send (^M) Apr 1
08:20:02 linux2 chat[459]: timeout set to 5 seconds Apr 1 08:20:02 linux2
pppd[454]: Serial connection established. Apr 1 08:20:03 linux2 pppd[454]:
Using interface ppp0 Apr 1 08:20:03 linux2 pppd[454]: Connect: ppp0 <-->
/dev/modem Apr 1 08:20:03 linux2 pppd[454]: sent [LCP ConfReq id=0x1
<asyncmap 0x0> <magic 0x96b4e319> <pcomp> <accomp>] Apr 1 08:20:04 linux2
pppd[454]: rcvd [LCP ConfAck id=0x1 <asyncmap 0x0> <magic 0x96b4e319> <pcomp>
<accomp>] Apr 1 08:20:06 linux2 pppd[454]: rcvd [LCP ConfReq id=0x1 <mru
1006> <asyncmap 0xa0000> <pcomp> <accomp> < 11 04 03 ee> < 13 09 03 00 c0 7b
80 17 6a>] Apr 1 08:20:06 linux2 pppd[454]: sent [LCP ConfRej id=0x1 < 11 04
03 ee> < 13 09 03 00 c0 7b 80 17 6a>] Apr 1 08:20:06 linux2 pppd[454]: sent
[LCP ConfReq id=0x1 <asyncmap 0x0> <magic 0x96b4e319> <pcomp> <accomp>] Apr
1 08:20:06 linux2 pppd[454]: rcvd [LCP ConfReq id=0x2 <mru 1006> <asyncmap
0xa0000> <pcomp> <accomp>] Apr 1 08:20:06 linux2 pppd[454]: sent [LCP
ConfAck id=0x2 <mru 1006> <asyncmap 0xa0000> <pcomp> <accomp>] Apr 1
08:20:07 linux2 pppd[454]: rcvd [LCP ConfAck id=0x1 <asyncmap 0x0> <magic
0x96b4e319> <pcomp> <accomp>] Apr 1 08:20:07 linux2 pppd[454]: sent [IPCP
ConfReq id=0x1 <addr 192.168.1.1> <compress VJ 0f 01>] Apr 1 08:20:07 linux2
pppd[454]: rcvd [IPCP ConfReq id=0x1 <compress VJ 0f 01> <addr 10.65.28.11>]
Apr 1 08:20:07 linux2 pppd[454]: sent [IPCP ConfAck id=0x1 <compress VJ 0f
01> <addr 10.65.28.11>] Apr 1 08:20:07 linux2 pppd[454]: rcvd [IPCP ConfNak
id=0x1 <addr 209.122.252.105>] Apr 1 08:20:07 linux2 pppd[454]: sent [IPCP
ConfReq id=0x2 <addr 209.122.252.105> <compress VJ 0f 01>] Apr 1 08:20:07
linux2 pppd[454]: rcvd [IPCP ConfAck id=0x2 <addr 209.122.252.105> <compress
VJ 0f 01>] Apr 1 08:20:07 linux2 pppd[454]: local IP address
209.122.252.105 Apr 1 08:20:07 linux2 pppd[454]: remote IP address
10.65.28.11
Here's the messages when it does NOT work:
Apr 1 11:06:49 linux2 ifup-ppp: pppd started for ppp0 on /dev/modem at 115200
Apr 1 11:06:50 linux2 pppd[460]: pppd 2.3.5 started by root, uid 0
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: abort on (BUSY)
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: abort on (ERROR)
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: abort on (NO CARRIER)
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: abort on (NO DIALTONE)
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: abort on (Invalid Login)
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: abort on (Login incorrect)
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: send (ATM0^M)
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: expect (OK)
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: ATM0^M^M
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: OK
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: -- got it
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: send (ATDTXXX-XXX-XXXX^M)
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: expect (CONNECT)
Apr 1 11:06:51 linux2 chat[465]: ^M
Apr 1 11:07:18 linux2 chat[465]: ATDTXXX-XXX-XXXX^M^M
Apr 1 11:07:18 linux2 chat[465]: CONNECT
Apr 1 11:07:18 linux2 chat[465]: -- got it
Apr 1 11:07:18 linux2 chat[465]: send (^M)
Apr 1 11:07:18 linux2 chat[465]: expect (ogin:)
Apr 1 11:07:18 linux2 chat[465]: 50666/ARQ/V90/LAPM/V42BIS^M
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]: ^M
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]:
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 last message repeated 23 times
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]: TNT4.LNH.RCN.NET T-Server ^M
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]: ^M
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]: ^M
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]: Login:
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]: -- got it
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]: send (myusername^M)
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]: expect (ord:)
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]: myusername^M
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]: Password:
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]: -- got it
Apr 1 11:07:33 linux2 chat[465]: send (mypassword^M)
Apr 1 11:07:34 linux2 chat[465]: expect (~)
Apr 1 11:07:34 linux2 chat[465]: ^M
Apr 1 11:07:34 linux2 chat[465]: Entering PPP Session.^M
Apr 1 11:07:34 linux2 chat[465]: IP address is 209.122.204.218^M
Apr 1 11:07:34 linux2 chat[465]: MTU is 1006.^M
Apr 1 11:08:19 linux2 chat[465]: alarm
Apr 1 11:08:19 linux2 chat[465]: send (^M)
Apr 1 11:08:19 linux2 chat[465]: send (^M)
Apr 1 11:08:19 linux2 chat[465]: timeout set to 5 seconds
Apr 1 11:08:19 linux2 pppd[460]: Serial connection established.
Apr 1 11:08:20 linux2 pppd[460]: Using interface ppp0
Apr 1 11:08:20 linux2 pppd[460]: Connect: ppp0 <--> /dev/modem
Apr 1 11:08:20 linux2 pppd[460]: sent [LCP ConfReq id=0x1 <asyncmap 0x0>
<magic 0xe0cc96ad> <pcomp> <accomp>]
Apr 1 11:08:53 linux2 last message repeated 11 times
Apr 1 11:09:08 linux2 last message repeated 5 times
Apr 1 11:09:10 linux2 pppd[460]: Modem hangup
Apr 1 11:09:10 linux2 pppd[460]: Connection terminated.
Apr 1 11:09:11 linux2 pppd[460]: Exit.
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