Linux-Networking Digest #56, Volume #11 Thu, 6 May 99 03:13:33 EDT
Contents:
Re: Suse 6.0 networking problem Help please (mike)
AMD K6 as a heavy web server??? ("stephen")
Re: HELP: How to connect Linux box to IPX box? ("Michael Gibson")
Re: ppp upgrade & ppp over minicom (Clifford Kite)
Re: Samba still making progress BUT slowly. (Robin Jackson)
Re: Redhat 6.0... the good, the bad, and the ugly (David Smith)
Re: connecting two networks w/o a router?? (Barry Margolin)
Re: AMD K6 as a heavy web server??? (Frank Bauer)
Re: connecting two networks w/o a router?? (Leslie Mikesell)
SAMBA: problems with credentials (Christof Ameye)
Re: Setting Linux up to pass thru Wingate proxy ("Rinaldi J. Montessi")
answer -> Re: samba and Win98 ("Arq Dennis")
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: mike <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.linux.hardware
Subject: Re: Suse 6.0 networking problem Help please
Date: Thu, 06 May 1999 04:21:10 GMT
See if I understand this correctly, If I change the system bios, then
that change will affect each operating system I currently have on my
multiboot. But doesn't this affect the pnp capabilities for each device?
Mike
ddresden wrote:
>
> A start
>
> In the ifconfig text you are showing no RX or TX packets - a dead line. Your
> card is starting without errors and setting speed to 10mb. I'd first assume
> the card is OK. I assume you are correct about the router A.B.C address and
> your A.B.C address being the same and the same subnet mask 255.255.255.0. If
> so are the lights blinking on the back of your NIC and if the router has a
> LAN activity light is it blinking or on when your system starts.
> 1. No activity lights - try new cable first
> 2. Still no activity lights - try changing your system bios to ISA instead
> of PNP for IRQ 9. Did that reflect on startup in ifconfig. Still no
> activity - change NICS
>
> mike wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
> >Hi
> >
> >Thank for taking the time to read this, maybe you can help
> >
> >
> >My problem is seeing the rest of the network world. I can ping my own
> >address but can't ping the router address or beyond. There are no error
> >message printed to screen. so It probably is working to how I
> >configured it but I don't know how I've configured it incorrectly.
> >
> >
> >
> >I've include most of files and outputs listed at back of book. I've
> >tried to follow the Linux NET-3-HOWTO info when the original setup
> >didn't work.
> >
> >Things that are a little different than out of the box.
> >
> >1 - I'm using a matrox millenium g200 card and decided to try XiG
> >xserver. It works and the default window flavor seems to be KDE. Yast
> >appears to work but changes did seem to stick on reboot, ooorrrrr, I
> >didn't do something to get changes to 'stay'.
> >
> >2 - so i started using command line configuration commands such as
> >ifconfig and route -add.
> >
> >still no success.
> >
> >so basically my network info for my workstation is as follows
> >host A.B.C.H
> >ISP router A.B.C.1
> >mask 255.255.255.0
> >domain S.W.home.com
> >
> >eth0 card is 3com 905 10/100 # one of my concerns is that the card is
> >set correctly for 10Mb use
> >
> >This machine is a amd k2-6 333 cpu with a lilo boot that has a win 95
> >option. I'm sending email from the win95 ios and network connectivity
> >works.
> >
> >So either I've set some switch on that shouldn't be. I noticed in
> >.config that many things are activated that I have even addressed, maybe
> >there is a conflict.
> >
> >My goal for this machine is to use as a workstation. If this helps.
> >
> >Please tell me what else you need to trouble shoot the problem.
> >
> >ifconfig shows
> >
> >lo Link encap:Local Loopback
> > inet addr:127.0.0.1 Bcast:127.255.255.255 Mask:255.0.0.0
> > UP BROADCAST LOOPBACK RUNNING MTU:3584 Metric:1
> > RX packets:4 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
> > TX packets:4 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
> > collisions:0
> >eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:60:97:1B:D9:AF
> >inet addr:A.B.C.H Bcast:A.B.225.255 Mask:255.255.255.0 UP
> >BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
> > RX packets:0 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
> > TX packets:0 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
> > collisions:0
> > Interrupt:9 Base address:0xd800
> >
> >
> >route -n shows
> >
> >Kernel IP routing table
> >Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use
> >Iface
> >
> >A.B.C.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 1
> >eth0
> >127.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 U 0 0 1
> >lo
> >0.0.0.0 A.B.C.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 1
> >eth0
> >
> >netstat shows ( I'm not sure the columns are aligned correctly)
> >
> >Active Internet connections (w/o servers)
> >Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address
> >State
> >Active UNIX domain sockets (w/o servers)
> >Proto RefCnt Flags Type State I-Node Path
> >unix 2 [ ] STREAM 3520 /dev/log
> >
> >unix 2 [ ] STREAM CONNECTED 3519
> >unix 2 [ ] STREAM 3484 /dev/log
> >unix 2 [ ] STREAM CONNECTED 3483
> >unix 2 [ ] STREAM 3386 /dev/log
> >unix 2 [ ] STREAM CONNECTED 3385
> >unix 1 [ ] STREAM 3301
> >unix 2 [ ] STREAM 3220 /dev/log
> >unix 2 [ ] STREAM CONNECTED 3219
> >Active IPX sockets
> >Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign
> >Address State
> >Activate AX.25 sockets
> >Dest Source Device State Vr/Vs Send-Q Recv-Q
> >Activate NET/ROM sockets
> >User Dest Source Device State Vr/Vs Send-Q
> >Recv-Q
> >
> >
> >tail of messages from last boot up
> >
> > Apr 30 09:45:00 C492548-A /USR/SBIN/CRON[411]: (root) CMD ( test -x
> >/usr/lib/cron/run-crons && /usr/lib/cron/run-crons )
> >Apr 30 09:45:27 C492548-A init: Switching to runlevel: 6
> >Apr 30 09:45:35 C492548-A kernel: Kernel logging (proc) stopped.
> >Apr 30 09:45:35 C492548-A kernel: Kernel log daemon terminating.
> >Apr 30 09:45:36 C492548-A exiting on signal 15
> >Apr 30 09:46:30 C492548-A syslogd 1.3-3: restart.
> >Apr 30 09:46:31 C492548-A kernel: klogd 1.3-3, log source = /proc/kmsg
> >started.
> >Apr 30 09:46:31 C492548-A kernel: Inspecting /boot/System.map
> >Apr 30 09:46:31 C492548-A kernel: Loaded 5086 symbols from
> >/boot/System.map.
> >Apr 30 09:46:31 C492548-A kernel: Symbols match kernel version 2.0.36.
> >Apr 30 09:46:31 C492548-A kernel: Loaded 4 symbols from 2 modules.
> >Apr 30 09:46:31 C492548-A kernel: sysctl: ip forwarding off
> >Apr 30 09:46:31 C492548-A kernel: 3c59x.c:v0.99H 11/17/98 Donald Becker
> >http://cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov/linux/drivers/vortex.html
> >Apr 30 09:46:31 C492548-A kernel: eth0: 3Com 3c905 Boomerang 100baseTx
> >at 0xd800, 00:60:97:1b:d9:af, IRQ 9
> >Apr 30 09:46:31 C492548-A kernel: 8K word-wide RAM 3:5 Rx:Tx split,
> >autoselect/MII interface.
> >Apr 30 09:46:31 C492548-A kernel: Media override to transceiver type 0
> >(10baseT).
> >Apr 30 09:46:31 C492548-A kernel: Enabling bus-master transmits and
> >whole-frame receives.
> >Apr 30 09:46:35 C492548-A lpd[129]: restarted
> >Apr 30 09:46:37 C492548-A /usr/sbin/cron[143]: (CRON) STARTUP (fork ok)
> >Apr 30 09:46:56 C492548-A login[145]: ROOT LOGIN on `tty1'
------------------------------
From: "stephen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: AMD K6 as a heavy web server???
Date: Wed, 5 May 1999 21:13:48 -0700
Hello
Anyone using an AMD K6 in their web server?
What is your configuration and how is the
performance under heavy load compare to
Intel?
Thanks
Stephen
------------------------------
From: "Michael Gibson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: HELP: How to connect Linux box to IPX box?
Date: Thu, 6 May 1999 00:12:23 -0400
First off, why do you want to use IPX? IP is much more suited to Linux and
works perfectly fine for "filesharing". I recommend checking out the Samba
home page:
http://www.samba.org
Samba is an SMB (aka Microsoft compatible) file server suite for Unix/Linux.
It works beautifully with Windows and looks just like an NT server over the
network.
If you really do need to use IPX there are several ways to get it going
depending on which distribution you're using. In most cases you will simply
need to load a kernel module for it. But then you need to use a fileserver
for IPX. I'm not familiar with any but I think there's a "Marz?" package
that makes Linux look like a Novell server.
Good luck.
-M
Aspiring Linux User wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>
>Howdy, I am trying to figure out how to connect a dedicated Linux
>laptop to a desktop using Win98 w/ IPX/SPX protocol. The purpose here
>is for filesharing, as the laptop does not have a CD, so I need to
>install via network from the desktop.
>
------------------------------
From: kite@NoSpam.%inetport.com (Clifford Kite)
Subject: Re: ppp upgrade & ppp over minicom
Date: 5 May 1999 21:53:43 -0500
James Lee ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
: I try the simplest option in a file as follows (of course, according
: to what you said above, this will not suid... but nevermind, I'm
: testing this under root).
: exec /usr/sbin/pppd modem crtscts /dev/modem 38400 asyncmap 20A0000 \
: $LOCAL_IP:$REMOTE_IP noipdefault defaultroute connect $DIALER_SCRIPT
This looks good, except I'd change the asyncmap to "asyncmap 0" since
it's lower overhead and it should work for you.
: The above is just for testing, I should use the options file instead.
: I have tried removing asyncmap, but there is no difference, so nevermind.
: The chat script (chat1) is also quite simple (modified from the sample):
: exec /usr/sbin/chat -v \
: TIMEOUT 3 \
: ABORT '\nNO DIALTONE\r' \
: ABORT '\nNO CARRIER\r' \
: ABORT '\nBUSY\r' \
: ABORT '\nNO ANSWER\r' \
: ABORT '\nRINGING\r\n\r\nRINGING\r' \
: '' \rATZ \
: 'OK-+++\c-OK' ATH0 \
: TIMEOUT 30 \
: OK 'ATW2L1' \
: OK ATDT$TELEPHONE \
: CONNECT '' \
: name:--name: $ACCOUNT \
: word:--word: $PASSWORD \
: elesys 'ppp default'
: The above doesn't put much into it.... my modem manual says no special
: init strings required.
=========================================================================
#! /bin/sh
exec /usr/sbin/chat -v \
TIMEOUT 3 \
ABORT 'NO DIALTONE' \
ABORT 'NO CARRIER' \
ABORT BUSY \
ABORT 'NO ANSWER' \
ABORT RINGING \
'' ATZ \
'OK-+++\c-OK' ATH0 \
TIMEOUT 30 \
OK ATW2L1 \
OK ATDT$TELEPHONE \
CONNECT '\c' \
name:--name: $ACCOUNT \
word:--word: $PASSWORD \
'>' 'terminal download' \
'>' 'ppp default'
=========================================================================
The modified chat script above may help you connect. It's essentially
the one you posted that has been cleaned up a little, the expect prompts
changed, and a new line added - I think that the new prompts and extra
line will work for you.
I also have reason to believe that you can use CHAP authentication with
the system you are dialing into. Here's a script that you might want
to try out:
=========================================================================
#! /bin/sh
exec /usr/sbin/pppd connect 'sleep 1 && /usr/sbin/chat -v \
ABORT "NO DIALTONE" ABORT BUSY ABORT "NO CARRIER" ABORT "PROTOCOL: NONE" \
"" ATZ OK\\r ATDT*70,xxx-xxxx CONNECT\\s \\c' /dev/modem 115200 debug \
crtscts modem asyncmap 0 defaultroute mtu 552 noipdefault name UserName
=========================================================================
The only other thing needed is a /etc/ppp/chap-secrets file this with
the single line:
UserName * YourPassword
You do need to fill in the number "xxx-xxxx", your username "UserName",
and your password, "YourPassword" in both the script and chap-secrets.
: This didn't work well, so later I added the init string from minicom:
: OK 'AT S7=45 S0=0 L1 V1 X4 &c1 E1 Q0 W2' \
: in place of ATW2L1 (chat2).
Sometimes AT&F is more appropriate than ATZ, unless you've tuned the user
stored profile and know that it's good.
: The success rate between atdt and connect three nights (before ppp
: starts sending ppp frames) ago:
: chat1: 1/5
: minicom: 5/5
: chat2: 2/5
: I have since upgraded the kernel to 2.2.5, ppp 2.3.7,
: and the problem seems to continue, but I need to do more testing to be
: sure.
The file /var/log/messages may have chat messages that can help to
understand what happens in the chat dialogue. The file /var/log/debug
may have pppd messages that can help to understand what happens in the
PPP link negotiations. These message log files may be different for
your distribution, and /etc/syslog.conf will show your just what log
files are configured. If you still have trouble connecting with chat
then the chat and pppd messages in these should be included in subsequent
posts.
--
Clifford Kite <kite@inet%port.com> Not a guru. (tm)
/* Those who can't write, write manuals. */
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Robin Jackson)
Subject: Re: Samba still making progress BUT slowly.
Date: Thu, 06 May 1999 07:20:34 +0100
In article <7gnluv$4vf$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Luc Wastiaux" <lucw@*flashmail*.com> wrote:
>Subject: Re: Samba still making progress BUT slowly.
>From: "Luc Wastiaux" <lucw@*flashmail*.com>
>Organization: Club-Internet (France)
>Date: Tue, 4 May 1999 22:40:34 +0200
>Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.networking
>
>
>Robin Jackson wrote in message ...
>>I can now see my Linux box (at least as a guest).
>
>
>What was your problem?
>I can't see the linux computer under win95.
>someone told me I have to install netbios over TCPIP but
>I can only install netbios over IPX.
Heaven alone knows as I tried so many things then suddenly it was there???
Robin
------------------------------
From: David Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Redhat 6.0... the good, the bad, and the ugly
Date: Wed, 05 May 1999 21:33:12 -0700
same here :>)
Erik wrote:
>
> >>Where is everyone getting RH6.0? I thought it wasn't available until the
> >>10th May....
> >
> >Nope been out at least a week by now.
> >www.redhat.com and all its mirrors. The pressing shops probably will not
> >be shipping for another week however.
>
> I got a confirmation that cheapbytes shipped my RH6 CD today.
>
> Erik
------------------------------
From: Barry Margolin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.protocols.tcp-ip
Subject: Re: connecting two networks w/o a router??
Date: Thu, 06 May 1999 05:18:59 GMT
In article <7gr7mn$16t$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Azfar Kazmi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Thanks for your reply.
>
>I would be running squid on that linux box. Thats not a problem. Even having
>two networks on two interfaces [eth0 and ppp0] is not a problem. Its quite
>normal and simple.
>
>Problem occurs when my DNS [the same linux box] resolves my domain to that
>static /24 IP [while requesting clients are on /16.] For example, on my WinNT
>workstation, whose DNS is 192.168.1.1, I do a nslookup www.mydomain.com. This
>box goes to my DNS [say 192.168.1.2] and queries www.mydomain.com. That DNS
I'm confused, is the DNS (Domain Name Server) address 192.168.1.1 or
192.168.1.2? Or are you using "DNS" as an abbreviation for "IP address"?
>says it is on 210.x.x.x. Now, that WinNT client can not, ofcourse, connect to
>that box [different networks!] This is what I am willing to determine. Will I
>use a route that says that for anything 210.x.x.x default gateway is
>192.168.1.2?
Since Squid is a proxy server, your client machines will send all their
HTTP connections to the Linux box (using the proxy configuration in the
browser), rather than trying to connect to 210.x.x.x. So you don't need a
route to it.
--
Barry Margolin, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
GTE Internetworking, Powered by BBN, Burlington, MA
*** DON'T SEND TECHNICAL QUESTIONS DIRECTLY TO ME, post them to newsgroups.
Please DON'T copy followups to me -- I'll assume it wasn't posted to the group.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Frank Bauer)
Subject: Re: AMD K6 as a heavy web server???
Date: Thu, 6 May 1999 07:37:21 +0200
we use AMD K6-2-350 MHz Processor for our File and Database-Server (of
course it works also as DOC-Server - Apache, HTDIG andso on)
CPU AMD K6-2-350
256 MB SDRAM
Asus P5A-B (AT-Board cause AT-Case)
AGP-graphicscard (for saving PCI Slots)
Intel etherexpress pro+ 100
ipc vortex gdt 6518RD scsi cache raid controller with 32 MB cache (but we
would upgrade it to 128 MB in the future)
2x 4.5 GB U2W IBM HDD for system (mirrored)
5x9.1 GB U2W IBM HDD for data (raid-5 with 1 hot-fix disk)
i have only the comparing between this and our old server with Intel P-II
333 MHz and 128 MB SDRAM and without RAID, but under our use (database,
files and so on) it would be faster about 30 - 40 %.
BUT!!!!
for an web server it would be better if it had much ram as possible and fast
disks as possible. the cpu is only important if much cgi-scripts or
perl-scripts would run, or if the webserver is connect to e.g. an oracle
database on the same server.
BUT-2!!
amd is much cheaper than intel..... especially amd k6-3 against intel p
III....
HTH
Frank
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Leslie Mikesell)
Crossposted-To: comp.protocols.tcp-ip
Subject: Re: connecting two networks w/o a router??
Date: 6 May 1999 01:36:51 -0500
In article <7gonj2$pbi$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Azfar Kazmi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Here is the scenerio:
>
>I am going to set a Linux box that would be connected to the Internet through
>a dedicated dialup. It will have a static [class C] IP address on ppp0
>interface. It will be running almost all TCP/IP services including DNS.
>
>This box will be physically a pat of our ethernet that has class B addresses.
>
>My question is that if I make this Linux box DNS resolv mydomain.com to
>C-class then ethernet users won't be able to connect. If I make it to resolve
>mydomain.com to B-class then, ofcourse, I will be a dead man. As this DNS
>server has to be the primary NS for my domain.
>
>My qyestion is that if my ethernet has B-class and Linux box has C, then can I
>connect from ethernet clients to Linux box without a router? Can only adding a
>couple of routes on Linux solve the problem?
>
>[There is a solution of this that to put another DNS in between that resolves
>to Linux box's ethernet address while primary DNS will keep resolving to
>actual C-class. But this solution requires an additional box.]
>
DNS names map to IP addresses so you have to assign a name for each
interface. There are some missing pieces here. Are the ethernet
addresses 'Internet legal' and do you expect to do normal routing
to the internet for the whole ethernet through the ppp connecton?
If so, the routing will allow either side to connect transparently
to either interface so you can assign the same name to both. If
this is your only route to the internet you would assign the
IP address of the linux ethernet interface as everything else's
default gateway. On the Linux box you would assign the correct
netmask to the route for your local ethernet and set the default
to the ppp interface. The DNS server can be authoratative for
all your addresses and visible from both interfaces.
If, however, the ethernet addresses are private and you intend to
use proxy servers or NAT for the ethernet machines then the DNS
will only be usable internally. Only the ppp interface address
can be known to the rest of the world so you might as well let
your ISP provide the visible DNS for it. You would still configure
your DNS the same way, just don't register it with the internic.
It will answer your machines with the internal addresses and no one
else will query it. If you are running NAT on the linux box you
would still configure the others to use it as the default route.
If you run proxies then you have to configure the applications on
each machine to use them.
Les Mikesell
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: Christof Ameye <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: SAMBA: problems with credentials
Date: Fri, 30 Apr 1999 13:00:18 +0200
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hello,
I just downloaded samba 2.0.3, compiled, installed and is running. We
are using a solaris machine (not linux in this case) and have NT 4.0 sp3
clients. I configured the whole via swat. I use password encryption,
but everytime I give a valid login and password , I get on the client
(tried with any) the following error: " \\computname is not accessible.
The credentials supplied conflict with an existing set of credentials."
Trying an invalid password gives "Incorrect password or unknown
username." So the problem is not any settings related with passwords.
Any idea what the problem can be ? Reading FAQ's or HOWTO's simply did
not help.
--
\\\\\|/////
\ /
( @ @ )
======================oOOo=(_)=oOOo=======================
Christof Ameye *** ALCATEL Telecom ***
Department: WE41 de Villermontstraat 38
Phone: +32-3-450 3097 B 2550 Kontich
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Belgium
==========================================================
------------------------------
From: "Rinaldi J. Montessi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Setting Linux up to pass thru Wingate proxy
Date: Thu, 06 May 1999 00:10:21 -0400
"David L. Courtney" spake:
>
> >
> > I am running Wingate 3.0 on a win98 machine. I recenlty put linux on my
> > other machine. I am trying to set linux up so that it can access the internet
> > thru the wingate server. But I can't seem to even find out where to start.
> >
> > Wingate, AFAIK, provides its own client software. Don't think there is
> a client for *nix. You might see what's on their website. HTH.
Wingate is useless once Linux enters the picture. If you want to share
the internet access with the win98 machine, use the linux box to connect
and use ipfwadm. You'll get the Wingate message that it can't find the
server, click ok and the connection will continue without it.
--
Rinaldi -
------------------------------
From: "Arq Dennis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: answer -> Re: samba and Win98
Date: Wed, 5 May 1999 22:40:40 -0700
I posted this the other day, but i guess i did not get enough sleep and sent
it back to myself...
anyhow..
It's a miracle what a couple of hours of sleep and some reading can do.
While reading through the Linux docs(more like the samba docs) I found out
that msoft disables plain text password. The change is simpe.
I suggest reading Win95.txt or equivalent doc for a full understanding.
Don't play with the win registry if you don't know what you are doing. To
summarize Win95.txt all that is required is putting in a registry key in the
win98 registry entry path,
/HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE/System/CurrentControlSet/Services/VxD/VNETSUP
creat a new Dword entry and Rename the entry from "New Value #1" to:
EnablePlainTextPassword
then set the value to 1.
Linux also provides a Win95_PlainPassword.reg file that you can just double
click on, and whala it does it for you.
Oh yea, don't forget to reboot the Win98 machine.
thanks for the tips,
ARQ.
--==[bolMyn]==-- wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>Hmm, not such a thing. My Windows 98 client works just fine with my SAMBA
>server. Roving profiles work just great so everything is fine here. You
don't
>have to change anything in the registry to make it work... :-)
>
>Thomas Matzen wrote:
>
>> hi there,
>>
>> win98 is now using crypted passwords which are not working with
>> samba. there have to be made changes in the win98 registry than it
>> works (dont ask me where).
>>
>> thomas
>>
>> Arquimedes Dennis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb in im Newsbeitrag:
>> eiBW2.3893$[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> > Help...
>> >
>> > I recently ungraded my win95 to win98(or loose98) and i can no longer
>> login
>> > to samba. The network password dialog box comes up, i enter the
password i
>> > have always used and get a password incorrect.
>> > The system was working correclty in win95.
>> >
>> > any ideas???
>> >
>> >
>> > ARQ.
>> >
>> >
>
>--
>Bolek,
>
>URL: http://www.bolek.com
>e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>
------------------------------
** FOR YOUR REFERENCE **
The service address, to which questions about the list itself and requests
to be added to or deleted from it should be directed, is:
Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
You can send mail to the entire list (and comp.os.linux.networking) via:
Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux may be obtained via one of these FTP sites:
ftp.funet.fi pub/Linux
tsx-11.mit.edu pub/linux
sunsite.unc.edu pub/Linux
End of Linux-Networking Digest
******************************