Linux-Networking Digest #551, Volume #10 Fri, 19 Mar 99 07:15:11 EST
Contents:
Teles 16.3c ISDN card + kernel 2.0.36 (JALinuxUser)
Cardbus ethernet ActionTec FastNet PRO 10/100 (Claudio Morgia)
Winframe & TSE Client Paasswords (Adam Williams)
Re: Intel EtherExpress Pro/10 PCI card (Vincent Cunniffe)
Re: For all you Nicrosoft lovers (Bill Anderson)
Re: Machine name themes - what do you use? (Volker Borchert)
Re: What am I missing? (Gordon Taylor)
Re: Which SMP Motherboard? (Daniel Tisserand)
Re: The truth about the Pentium III chip and ID --- **boycott info** (Tim Roberts)
Getting rid of nwserv (Alex Braber)
Re: For all you Nicrosoft lovers (doole)
Re: For all you Nicrosoft lovers (doole)
Re: For all you Nicrosoft lovers (Morely Dotes)
Re: The truth about the Pentium III chip and ID --- **boycott info** (Stuart R.
Fuller)
Re: NFS problems with Linux 2.2.x server, freebsd client (Stuart Eichert)
installed nic not initilized ("Kyle Bowerman")
Re: The truth about the Pentium III chip and ID --- **boycott info** ("Jeffrey S.
Kline")
Re: What is the best Linux to install? ("joe lerch")
Re: Can't ping localhost(127.0.0.1) and own host name from Linuxbox ("Roger
Helgesen")
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: JALinuxUser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Teles 16.3c ISDN card + kernel 2.0.36
Date: 19 Mar 1999 07:52:23 GMT
Hi,
Wonder if any of u can help me out with a little problem i'm
having with my Teles ISDN card & Linux...
I can't seem to get the kernel to recognize the interrupt
i've set for the card... here's the details..
I'm using kernel 2.0.36 and a Teles 16.3c ISA PnP card...
Here's the relevant section of my /usr/src/linux/.config :-
=========================================
CONFIG_MODULES=y
CONFIG_ISDN=m
CONFIG_ISDN_PPP=y
CONFIG_ISDN_PPP_VJ=y
CONFIG_ISDN_MPP=y
CONFIG_ISDN_DRV_LOOP=m
CONFIG_ISDN_DRV_HISAX=m
CONFIG_HISAX_EURO=y
CONFIG_HISAX_16_0=y
CONFIG_HISAX_16_3=y
CONFIG_HISAX_TELES3C=y
CONFIG_HISAX_TELESPCI=y
CONFIG_HISAX_S0BOX=y
=========================================
I've compiled the ISDN subsystem as a module and also the HiSax drivers
for Teles 16xx all as modules.
Booted up with the new kernel
Here's my /etc/isapnp.conf file :-
=========================================
(READPORT 0x0203)
(ISOLATE PRESERVE)
(IDENTIFY *)
(VERBOSITY 2)
(CONFLICT (IO FATAL)(IRQ FATAL)(DMA FATAL)(MEM FATAL)) # or WARNING
(CONFIGURE TAG2620/209717183 (LD 0
(IO 0 (SIZE 2) (BASE 0x0300))
(INT 0 (IRQ 10 (MODE +E)))
(NAME "TAG2620/209717183[0]{TELES.S0/16.3c Plug&Play}")
(ACT Y)
))
(WAITFORKEY)
=========================================
Did an "isapnp /etc/isapnp.conf" and got the following :-
========================================= lspci not found, so PCI resource
conflict not checked Board 1 has Identity bd 0c 80 07 bf 20 26 27 50:
TAG2620 Serial No 209717183 [checksum bd] TAG2620/209717183[0]{TELES.S0/16.3c
Plug&Play}: Port 0x300; IRQ10 --- Enabled OK
=========================================
OK.. no problem so far... then i did the modprobe hisax like this and
got the results as follows:-
=========================================
# modprobe hisax type=14 protocol=2 irq=10 io=0x300
ISDN subsystem Rev: 1.44.2.9/1.41.2.11/1.48.2.27/none/none loaded
Teles 16.3c: IRQ(10) getting no interrupts during init 1
Teles 16.3c: IRQ(10) getting no interrupts during init 2
Teles 16.3c: IRQ(10) getting no interrupts during init 3
HiSax: Card Teles 16.3c not installed !
Initialization of hisax failed
ISDN-subsystem unloaded
=========================================
Something's not right here... can't pinpoint exactly where it is... tried
putting the card to another PC but got the same results... MAYBE it could
be the card being faulty OR something else... hope u can help out here..
Thanx ;) ;)
============= Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ============
http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own
------------------------------
From: Claudio Morgia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.portable,comp.os.linux.hardware
Subject: Cardbus ethernet ActionTec FastNet PRO 10/100
Date: 19 Mar 1999 07:50:30 GMT
I have an ActionTec FastNet PRO 10/100 CardBus on a Mitac 5033T: with
some imagination, I guessed that it features a DEC 21143 chipset, so it
can be drived with the 'tulip_cb' driver under Linux.
I'm using linux-2.2.3 on AMD K6-2/333.
This card is recognized and powered on but in a couple of seconds
starts emitting messages like that:
eth0: 21140 transmit timed out, status f0120000, SIA 000000c6 ffff0001
fffbff7f 8ff50000, resetting...
eth0: transmit timed out, switching to 10baseT media.
It continues with these messages until I stop the pcmcia service at
all.
I had compiled the latest tulip driver 0.9 as a module for CardBus but
it does not work.
Does anybody knows how to fix the problem of media recognition? It is
some other problem behind that?
Claudiuccio
------------------------------
From: Adam Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.ms-windows.nt.admin.networking
Subject: Winframe & TSE Client Paasswords
Date: Fri, 19 Mar 1999 05:54:14 -0500
I am trying to discover what encryption method Citrix uses in it's
ICA clients when it stores the passowrds in the .ICA file. I have
verified it is not (unix)DES, LanMan, or NT-Hash. I'd like to know both
for security reasons and beacuse I think storing a file in a password is
a horrible idea but I want to give my users (on 85+ linux desktops)
single-sign on. Currently I do so by grabbing the clear text password
from a hacked XDM at logon and using one of the old Java clients that I
can pass the parameter on the command line. I'd like to use the native
Linux client and generate the ICA files at need, but to do that I need
to crypt the password into what the ICA client expects. If anyone knows
anything about encryption or is interested in assisting me PLEASE let me
know. I've fumbled about for quite awhile and haven't made much
progress.
--
====================================
Adam Tauno Williams |
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] |
|
====================================
------------------------------
From: Vincent Cunniffe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.setup,[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Intel EtherExpress Pro/10 PCI card
Date: 19 Mar 1999 07:47:00 GMT
> I saw the same type of behavior last night on my RH5.2 system. I ended
> up having to load the eepro100.o module (insmod eepro100.o), then run
> Linuxconf, verify that the Ip, GW, mask, etc were correct and exit and
> 'activate changes'.
>
> It's been running fine (I have the same type of NIC - Intel PCI) since
> then. I have to find out how/where to add the insmod eepro100.o line
> (and a couple other fs lines) so they happen automatically at boot up.
/etc/rc.d/rc3/rc.local
Regards,
Vin
------------------------------
From: Bill Anderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: For all you Nicrosoft lovers
Date: 19 Mar 1999 07:47:24 GMT
Chris Tremblay wrote:
>
> If you think that you had privacy before this, boy you live in a
> bubble. Look at cell phones, ISPs, Credit card companies, Banks.
>
> Cell phone companies can tell what block you are standing on and what
> you are saying. This info is accessible by police.
Come back from the sci-fi channel, and rejoin reality.
> ISP companies can log every email that you send out and where you
> visit on the net.
can != do
Most *ISP*s don't give a rip to track you unless they are given reason
to.
Do you have any idea what kind of storage would be required to track all
that.
get a grip.
> Credit card companies have logs of what you buy and where you buy it.
> They can sell this to other companies
For those that use credit cards this is rather obvious.
> Banks are in the same situation as credit card companies, especially
> if you have debit card access.
> Privacy is a nonissue. It is more of can you accept that this is
> there.
Spoken like a true tyrant.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Volker Borchert)
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 Mar 1999 10:43:05 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Carl Nygard
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
|> Additionally, we name disks (actually mount
|> points) after cities in that country. This helps admin since we can
|> always figure out what machine a disk is on.
To help admin still more, I name mount points <machine_name>_<device_name>,
so gaia_0h is /dev/sd0h (a.k.a c0t0d0s7) on node gaia.
--
"I'm a doctor, not a mechanic." Dr Leonard McCoy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
"I'm a mechanic, not a doctor." Volker Borchert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Gordon Taylor)
Subject: Re: What am I missing?
Date: Fri, 19 Mar 99 06:46:22 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
>Greetings
>
>I am trying to resetup my Linux box for internet access. I rearanged
>my hard drives so that now I have a removable "trayed" hard drives.
>Now I am trying to get things setup again. It's been 2 years since I
>have messed with my point to point protocol.
>
>I "have" reread the PPP howto. but I seem to be missing something.
>The system will dial, access, and log in. But I can't ping anything.
>I type "ifconfig" and there will be NO ppp0 device.
>
>Below is all that I have modified to get to where I am now to include
>a portion of the /var/log/messages file. I have intentionally omitted
>my user name and password.
>
>What am I missing?
>
Maybe Softnet's IP in your hosts file. (/etc/hosts)
--
Gordon Taylor [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: Daniel Tisserand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.hardware
Subject: Re: Which SMP Motherboard?
Date: 19 Mar 1999 07:54:40 GMT
Hefin,
Our current system is dual P2/350MHz on a SuperMicro P6DBS board, runs
great. We are using the intel pro/100, it also is great. We run a
distributed Oracle database and not a lick of problems. Averaging over
10GB/wk between the servers without a problem.
The local
university has 6 linux servers, including a full feed news server, all
using the intel card on dual
pentium/233s and have not had one problem. Very stable.
Good luck,
Daniel
On Tue, 16 Mar 1999, Jason McKnight wrote:
> I must agree with the other posters. I have an ASUS P2B-DS and have had
> no troubles with it. I don't have any Celeron's :) but I would if it was
> my system at home. I have 2 PII450's and it is a sweet system.
>
> Hefin James 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
>
>
>
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Tim Roberts)
Crossposted-To:
comp.lang.perl.misc,comp.lang.python,comp.lang.tcl,comp.mail.sendmail,comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.ms-windows.advocacy
Subject: Re: The truth about the Pentium III chip and ID --- **boycott info**
Date: 19 Mar 1999 07:31:31 GMT
John Lehmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Kano wrote:
>>
>> Oh come on. Many other standard devices (ethernet cards, for example)
>> have their
>> own unique serial numbers that software can use at will. Get over it.
>>
>
>Yes - but ethernet mac cards are only broadcast over the lan, not over
>the net (except by Office98, of course).
The POINT here is that it is exactly as easy to embed my unique MAC address
in an Internet transaction as it is to embed my unique Pentium-III CPU ID
in an Internet transaction. Any software which will go to the trouble to
fetch the unique CPU identifier and send it over the network to identify me
could just as easily be written TODAY to use a MAC address for exactly the
same purpose. The CPU identifier is not significantly different in concept
from the MAC address, and yet there has not been a hue and cry to boycott
NIC manufacturers.
>And what do you mean get over it??? This kind of personal information
>is valuable. Business are willing to pay for it. This kind of
>behavior IS DOWNRIGHT THEFT!!!
But whatever they could do with a CPU ID, they are probably already doing
with a MAC address. It is just as good as a unique identifier. "Get over
it" is exactly the right attitude.
--
- Tim Roberts, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Providenza & Boekelheide, Inc.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Alex Braber)
Subject: Getting rid of nwserv
Date: Fri, 19 Mar 1999 10:43:02 GMT
I am new to Linux and I installed the Novell emulator. Fact is that I
don't have any NW-servers so when booting my machine is 'waiting' for
any response (I think). Could someone tell me how to remove this
emulator or setting the timeout to less than 1 minute?
TIA,
Alex
Alex Braber
Constructive Netherlands BV
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (doole)
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: For all you Nicrosoft lovers
Date: 19 Mar 1999 07:59:19 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Tim Dean <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> apparently said this:
>
>surely 'why not?' is an equally appropriate question here... and in many
>cases you could replace the word 'need' with 'want' which is just as
>valid.
>
If I'm a cop and I'm under all of those pressures and trying to get to
some pervert, I don't give a crap what you want; I'm just trying to
get the job done. Maybe I look in the wrong place once in a while. If
I knew in advance where to look, we wouldn't be having these problems.
And if I'm not a cop (and I'm not) I WANT him/her to get the job done.
Don't you? I don't "want" the cops to be up against any more than they
already are.
Sorry, but I'm right.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (doole)
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: For all you Nicrosoft lovers
Date: 19 Mar 1999 07:59:51 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>>Doesn't make sense.
>??you think people in a free society dont cherish there personal privacy??
>
Of course they do (and should) and it shouldn't be abused, either.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Morely Dotes)
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: For all you Nicrosoft lovers
Date: 19 Mar 1999 08:00:16 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>But I say it again, why would you care what they read - UNLESS of
>course, you were committing a crime. No one wants to answer that
>question directly, for some stupid reason.
Let me try this one, then: Are you screwing your 10-year-old cousin?
Don't want to answer that, and the very fact that anyone would even ask pisses
you off?
Now you know how people feel when *their* privacy is invaded.
>You send loads of your private information to the IRS, and willingly.
Who does? The IRS gets the bare minimum from me required to comply with
the law.
>Why the hell isn't anyone complaining about THAT?
Who's not complaining? I write my congresscritters regularly. If it were up
to me, the IRS would be disbanded, income tax abolished and outlawed, and
Microsoft's management would be sacrificed to Finagle.
>Doesn't make sense.
Then you aren't asking the right questions.
--
"Opt-out is a cop-out." - Jerry Bookter
[ No "courtesy copies" via e-mail, please. ]
This message was tested on small, cute, furry animals
who cried piteously while it was being read to them.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Stuart R. Fuller)
Crossposted-To:
comp.lang.perl.misc,comp.lang.python,comp.lang.tcl,comp.mail.sendmail,comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.ms-windows.advocacy
Subject: Re: The truth about the Pentium III chip and ID --- **boycott info**
Date: 19 Mar 1999 07:35:32 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Greg Gershowitz ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
:
: Someone tell my why this is such a big deal? Every unix box in
: existance has a unique ID. It's the hostid.
Well, there's a command called "hostid", and it makes a function call to
"sethostid" and/or "gethostid". However, it is not required that they return
unique values. For example, my Linux box (Cyrix processor) returns a number
that converts back to my IP address. That IP address may vary from time to
time. Some Digital UNIX boxes I just tried all return 0 for hostid. Some Sun
boxes return unique (at least unique between the few I looked at) values, and
they are not related to the IP address. However, the Sun boxes do not
constitute "every unix box in existance[sic]".
Stu
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Stuart Eichert)
Crossposted-To: comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc
Subject: Re: NFS problems with Linux 2.2.x server, freebsd client
Date: 19 Mar 1999 07:59:29 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Leslie Mikesell ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
: In article <7cekkt$6di$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
: >In article <7ccpn2$maq$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Leslie Mikesell) wrote:
: >> Does anyone have NFS working right with a Linux 2.2.x kernel on
: >> the server, and freebsd clients? It appears to mount and
: >> read operations work. Some writes work but others fail. Things
: >> like a 'cp -R' of a directory tree leaves mostly 0-length files.
: >> Did I miss something or is this just broken?
: >
: >I would venture a guess that it's broken, like previous releases have been.
: Doesn't anyone else use it in a mixed configuration?
-Yes I have a linux 2.2.0 kernel box, serving directories to a
freebsd 3.0.0 client via nfs.
: >Any particular reason you're using exactly the _opposite_ configuration than
: >what would probably be optimal?
-my freebsd 3.0.0 machine is a research box and the linux machine
serves the freebsd 3.0 cds to it if I trash it(note the research box has
no cdrom). As well I serve the distfiles for the ports collection to it
via nfs. I have never had a problem with this.
: I'm not, yet. I want to move a cvs repository shared by several machines
: to a more suitable drive that happens to be on a Linux box.
: >FreeBSD is better at heavy-load networking
: >than Linux (by far), and would make a *much* faster NFS server. Linux is
: >better at running heavy applications (by far), and would (probably -- I
: >assume you're using NFS for *something*) make a *much* more useful NFS
: >client.
: Speed is not a real issue in this instance, but reliability is.
: >The fact that you're using FreeBSD clients for NFS makes me worry that those
: >client boxes might be web servers. Please, for the love of God, tell me it
: >isn't so.
: No, I do have some vhosts for test purposes that access parts of the
: production server via nfs, but I wouldn't do it where speed matters.
: Apache's 'ProxyPass' and mod_rewrite with the [p] directive makes
: it easy enough to get things from remote servers transparently and
: the performance is great.
: Les Mikesell
: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
***********************************************************************
* Stuart Eichert BSE Comp. Sci. Eng. '99 *
* [EMAIL PROTECTED] BSEcon Wharton School '99 *
* www.stwing.upenn.edu/~seichert/ MSE Tcom. & Networking '99 *
* University of Pennsylvania *
* Secretary of Dining Philosophers *
* University Scholar *
***********************************************************************
------------------------------
From: "Kyle Bowerman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.hardware
Subject: installed nic not initilized
Date: 19 Mar 1999 08:02:14 GMT
I have installed a 3c509 in a slackware box successfully
but the link light on the hub and the card are down.
I have installed two 3c509 in another box and am very familiar with setting
them up.
In the box in question I have configured eth0 and can see my mac address so
I know the device is working and when I boot in w95 it
works fine. When I install the module the lights never come up.
but I see the 3c509 in /etc/proc/interrupts and /etc/proc/ioports.
Is there a way I can debug the device. The problem must be in a low layer
because I can ping the loop back and the device address but nothing outside
the box.
Does anyone have any insight?
Thanks in advance
Kyle Bowerman
------------------------------
From: "Jeffrey S. Kline" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To:
comp.lang.perl.misc,comp.lang.python,comp.lang.tcl,comp.mail.sendmail,comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.ms-windows.advocacy
Subject: Re: The truth about the Pentium III chip and ID --- **boycott info**
Date: 19 Mar 1999 07:35:30 GMT
I just have to step on this one a moment...
Where did you learn computers??? Do you know what "hostid" is really, and
its use and implications??? Do you know about demons, zones, and domains????
I have one of probably 1628904823e4 host ID's on my server only because I
use the same IP as the ones stated in 3 different RFC's about internal
private networks...
Is this over your head yet???
You cannot identify my boxes, any of them, from any of the rest of them out
there in the world. Then there's the story about "Dynamic" IP's which opens
the doors and windows some more on this.... Wanna keep going with this??!!!
The Intel thing is a whole different bag of worms entirely.
Jeff
Greg Gershowitz wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>
>Someone tell my why this is such a big deal? Every unix box in
>existance has a unique ID. It's the hostid. What's it for?
>Licensing, mostly. Of course unix licensing is far more mature than
>for windows. Heck, even a 486 can be made to cough up a hostid. Of
>course, I don't know of any cases where that hostid get transmitted to
>a vendor, but what's to stop it from happening?
>
>-Greg G
>
>--
>-Greg "TORCHA" Gershowitz
>-DG3X's own Extreme Icon
>To Reply: See the organization line
>Spam sucks. Fuck you spammers. Have a Nice Day.
>http://www.geocities.com/Area51/5207
------------------------------
Crossposted-To:
alt.os.linux,alt.os.linux.slackware,comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.misc,comp.os.linux.redhat,comp.os.linux.setup
From: "joe lerch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: "joe lerch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: What is the best Linux to install?
Date: Fri, 19 Mar 1999 06:33:54 -0500 (EST)
>Anyway..... what is the subscription option and
>why should I get it?
The subscription price is cheaper, and you receive the latest releases
automatically. It is also a great way to show your support.
joe
joe
(please remove "nospam" from email address)
------------------------------
From: "Roger Helgesen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Can't ping localhost(127.0.0.1) and own host name from Linuxbox
Date: Fri, 19 Mar 1999 13:00:53 +0100
I'v knew that, but not what to do with it !!
TNX.
Regards
Roger Helgesen
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Leopold Toetsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
>Hi,
>Roger Helgesen wrote in message <7ct66i$sjj$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>>I have no clue to what I'v done.
>>
>>My linux box was working fine, and while a was doing som tweaking( I guess
>>not. he he) I'v fuc.. up my system.
>>After a restboot I could no longer ping myselft.
>> I can't ping localhost, hostname or own IP address. (I can ping this
>box
>>from other box'es on the network)
>> I'v figured out that the localhost route is gone. And when I check out
>>the Interface section of the Network configutator (X- windo) the 'lo'
>>interface is inactive.
>>
>>Thr route table look like this :
>>#####
>>Kernel IP route table
>>Destination Gateway Genmask Flags
>>Metric Ref Use Iface
>>192.168.0.0 * 255.255.255.255 U
>>0 0 6 eth0
>>default salhus.ht-salhus 0.0.0.0 UG
>>0 0 14 eth0
>>
>You don't have a loopback device:
># ifconfig lo 127.0.0.1
># route add -host 127.0.0.1 lo
>
># /etc/hosts:
>127.0.0.1 localhost loopback
>192.168.0.1 blabla
>
>s. NET-3-HOWTO-5.html
>
>leo
>
------------------------------
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