Linux-Networking Digest #383, Volume #11 Thu, 3 Jun 99 04:13:32 EDT
Contents:
Re: problems printing to intel NetportExpress PRO/100 print server with (Dann
Church)
Re: can you identify protocol 88? (Malware)
Re: Port numbers (Malware)
RH 6.0 and a Eicon Diehl Diva 2.0 ISDN T/A (Wienux)
SQUID ("TURBO1010")
Running a server behind masqueraded connect? ("Matt Goebel")
linux pppd version 2.2pl0 and chap md5 ? (Fabien Mounier)
Re: open port for internet phone ("Greg")
Re: New at networking, need help... (Nicholas E Couchman)
Re: What is this for?!?! ("Brian")
Newbie Ethernet questions (Daryl Smith)
About two lan card...... ("Sang")
Forward between 2 nic cards (Jeremy)
Re: Problem Getting Mail ... Please Help ! (Michael Powe)
'Sticky' static IP address (Eric Fowler)
Re: tcp/ip transfer rate (Mark Hahn)
Re: Automatically emailing IP address? (Ding-Jung Han)
Before I screw up the internet.... (Christopher R. Barry)
Please help me with Qmail (Tero Niemi)
Re: Firewall not routing (Bob G)
Mars_Nwe & real netware servers ("Pete Stoves")
Re: RH 6.0 and a Eicon Diehl Diva 2.0 ISDN T/A ("Kjoe")
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Dann Church <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To:
comp.os.linux.hardware,redhat.networking.general,redhat.config,linux.redhat.misc,intel.networking_and_communications.network_print_products
Subject: Re: problems printing to intel NetportExpress PRO/100 print server with
Date: Wed, 02 Jun 1999 22:32:04 -0600
Brian,
Really depends on whether the print server is running a BSD-style printing
daemon. To test, you could do the following:
telnet <print server> 515
If you get "connection refused," then there is probably nothing listening
on that port (the BSD printing port) and you'll have to find some software
from Intel to setup your printing. Another route would be if the other
machines had a BSD printing daemon, you could set up a print queue to one
of them and let it (the other machine) forward the request on.
Good luck!
--Dann Church
Brian Brodsky wrote:
> I am running RedHat 5.2 linux on a Intel Pentium III. We have other
> machines in our network that can print to our Intel NetportExpress
> PRO/100 print server with no problems. However I cannot seem to get
> our Linux servers to print to the print server. I have a Cannon
> LPB-1260 laser printer attached to the print server which is a HP
> compatible printer.
>
> I am able to ping the print server from my linux system just fine.
>
> Here is my /etc/printcap file:
> netlsrptr|netlsrptr|netlsrptr-on-parallel-port-1:\
> :rm=209.69.52.131:\
> :rp=LPT1_TEXT:\
> :mx#0:\
> :sh:\
> :sd=/var/spool/lpd/netlsrptr:
>
> If I issue a /usr/sbin/lpc status command after trying to send a print
> job here are the results:
> netlsrptr:
> queuing is enabled
> printing is enabled
> 1 entry in spool area
> waiting for netlsrptr to become ready (offline ?)
>
> If I issue an lpq -Pnetlsrptr command I get these results:
> waiting for netlsrptr to become ready (offline ?)
> Rank Owner Job Files Total
> Size
> 1st root 13 (standard input) 1191
> bytes
>
> The printer has paper and is online. If I print from my workstation or
> another server I do not have problems.
>
> Any help with my problem would be greatly appreciated.
>
> Brian
------------------------------
From: Malware <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: linux.dev.diald,comp.protocols.ppp
Subject: Re: can you identify protocol 88?
Date: Wed, 02 Jun 1999 22:26:44 +0200
Hi Mark,
you wrote:
> However, I can't find any reference to protocol 88.
This number does stand for EIGRP a routing protocol which is IIRC a
propitary one by Cisco. You would have found atleast the name of the
protocol at
http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/protocol-numbers.
Malware
------------------------------
From: Malware <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Port numbers
Date: Wed, 02 Jun 1999 22:21:03 +0200
Hi Mark,
you wrote:
> I would like to find a list of what each port is 'normally' used for (eg
See
http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/port-numbers
for authoritive information.
Malware
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Wienux)
Subject: RH 6.0 and a Eicon Diehl Diva 2.0 ISDN T/A
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 1999 06:03:37 GMT
Hiya all,
I have installed RH 6.0 and a Eicon Diehl Diva 2.0 ISDN T/A and i
don't kow how to configure it sow i can dial to my isp.
If anyone can give me a start it would be very much appreciated.
I have installed RH6.0 almost completely, and have Gnome started
automaticaly.
Do i need any extra things ??? like drivers ??? i heard something
about a "Hisax" driver but that was in a howto from 1996 sow is that
still used or do i need something else ???
Thanx in advance
MANIAC
------------------------------
From: "TURBO1010" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: SQUID
Date: Wed, 2 Jun 1999 21:50:53 -0700
What is squid, and what's it used for?
------------------------------
From: "Matt Goebel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Running a server behind masqueraded connect?
Date: Thu, 3 Jun 1999 01:18:35 -0400
Reply-To: "Matt Goebel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
What I'm trying to do is run a game server on a Windows machine. I know
this can be done, but I'm not sure what are the commands needed. As far as
I can tell both ipfwadm and ipmasqadm should work. I'm using ipmasqadm, but
commands for either would be helpful. I've managed to get all the games I
want to play working online but I can only connect to other games not create
them. I expected that. I've tried both portfw and autofw, but neither
seems to work for me.
------------------------------
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup,comp.protocols.ppp
From: Fabien Mounier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: linux pppd version 2.2pl0 and chap md5 ?
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 1999 05:23:38 GMT
I have recently tried to setup a connection to a new isp and while my
connectscripts with those who use login authentication continue to work
perfectly well, I have trouble with this one :
As far as I understand, from the debug output, the isp wants me to
authenticate myself using chap, I have put my login, the providername and
the password in cleartext tab-seperated into the chap-secrets file and I
have set the corresponding user- and remotename-values in the options file
and even added -pap for good luck. One thing worth mentioning is the fact
that the assigned user-id contains a @.
I am using pppd version 2.2pl0 compiled into the kernel 2.0.35.
Jun 2 20:45:54 arwen pppd[1137]: Connect: ppp0 <--> /dev/modem
Jun 2 20:45:54 arwen pppd[1137]: sent [LCP ConfReq id=0x1 <mru 1500><magic 0xea8f>
<pcomp> <accomp>]
Jun 2 20:45:54 arwen pppd[1137]: rcvd [LCP ConfReq id=0x1 <mru 1522><asyncmap
0xa0000> <auth chap md5> <magic 0xd761f728> <accomp> < 11 04 05
f2> < 12 02> < 13 09 03 00 80 d3 6d da 00>]
Jun 2 20:45:54 arwen pppd[1137]: sent [LCP ConfRej id=0x1 <auth chap md5>< 11 04 05
f2> < 12 02> < 13 09 03 00 80 d3 6d da 00>]
Jun 2 20:45:54 arwen pppd[1137]: rcvd [LCP ConfAck id=0x1 <mru 1500><magic 0xea8f>
<pcomp> <accomp>]
Jun 2 20:45:54 arwen pppd[1137]: rcvd [LCP ConfReq id=0x2 <mru 1522><asyncmap
0xa0000> <auth chap md5> <magic 0xd761f728> <accomp>]
Jun 2 20:45:54 arwen pppd[1137]: sent [LCP ConfRej id=0x2 <auth chap md5>]
same pattern continues id=0x3 --> id=0xa
Jun 2 20:45:55 arwen pppd[1137]: rcvd [LCP ConfReq id=0xb <mru 1522><asyncmap
0xa0000> <auth chap md5> <magic 0xd761f728> <accomp>]
Jun 2 20:45:55 arwen pppd[1137]: sent [LCP ConfRej id=0xb <auth chap md5>]
Jun 2 20:45:55 arwen pppd[1137]: rcvd [LCP TermReq id=0x1 02]
Jun 2 20:45:55 arwen pppd[1137]: sent [LCP TermAck id=0x1]
Jun 2 20:45:57 arwen pppd[1137]: sent [LCP ConfReq id=0x1 <mru 1500>
<magic 0xea8f> <pcomp> <accomp>]
Jun 2 20:46:24 arwen last message repeated 9 times
Jun 2 20:46:27 arwen pppd[1137]: LCP: timeout sending Config-Requests
I think that I am not very far from a working connection, but something
still seems to go terribly wrong and your help is truly appreciated ; I
will post a summary to comp.os.linux.networking when I get this one going.
Best regards
--
Fabien Mounier
------------------------------
From: "Greg" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: open port for internet phone
Date: Wed, 2 Jun 1999 17:43:24 -0400
Take a look here
http://doncaster.on.ca/~lnevo/masq/chat.html
Greg.
Gerald Ng <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:96f53.39446$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Good day all,
>
> I am running a LAN with a linux box being the server, running IP
> masquerading. One of my nodes need to use an internet phone software
behind
> the firewall, which requires a port to be opened. Any help would be much
> appreciated!!
>
> Thanx in advance,
> Gerald
>
>
------------------------------
From: Nicholas E Couchman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: New at networking, need help...
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 1999 04:58:11 GMT
Ryan,
Root accounts are automatically set up when you install a Linux flavor.
This means it doesn't matter if you want a root account or not, you're going
to get one. As far as having each individual computer hold account info,
yes, do it. Otherwise you will have to logon to one console and telnet to
the machine holding the account info, which can be a pain, so hold your own
account info on each machine.
I can't be of much help as far as DNS. I have my own DNS server, and
it's a life saver, but I am running it under WinNT, and I do know all of my
IP addresses on my network, so I can't be of much help there.
--Nick
Ryan Chouinard wrote:
> Hey everyone. Sorry to trouble you all with this post, but I am totaly
> new to networking. Anyway, here is my question:
>
> I plan on connecting 5 workstations and 1 acting as a 'server' in an
> isolated ethernet using coax cable. What do I need to do to set up the
> workstations and 'server', and what about the root account? I mean,
> will each workstation have a root account, or will the server have the
> only root account? In fact, will the workstations hold any account info
> at all? (These may be stupid questions to you, but remmbeer, I'm new!)
> And finally, how do I set up a DNS on the server so the users don't have
> to memorize IP addresses?
>
> If anyone can help, please do! I can be reached by posting to this
> newsgroup, email at [EMAIL PROTECTED], and ICQ to UIN 19541653.
> I need this info pretty quick, so if you can help, I would REALLY
> appreciate it.
>
> Thank you,
>
> Ryan Chouinard
------------------------------
From: "Brian" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.mail.sendmail,alt.os.linux.slackware
Subject: Re: What is this for?!?!
Date: Wed, 02 Jun 1999 21:46:53 GMT
It is the lockfile for POP3 mail files.
It prevents mail files from being destroyed during
simultaneous upload/download. On occasion, W95/8 mail
systems do not complete the mail download and the lock stays
in place, preventing further download. Just delete the lock
file and all will be well, until the next time.
Best regards,
Brian
David Lewis wrote in message
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>The files in /var/tmp/.pop. Sometimes, not always, when a
user gets his
>email via POP3. It puts a file with his username on it in
that directory.
>The file contains his messages. On the client end, the
check locks up and
>he never gets anything.
>
>What is that directory for?
>Why is he not getting anything?
>
>
>
>--
>1+ residential LD, 6.9 cents - http://LD.net/6.9/dlewis
>
>
------------------------------
From: Daryl Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.sys.ibm.hardware.networking
Subject: Newbie Ethernet questions
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 1999 00:28:27 +0000
I am going to be moving my family on campus this fall to continue my
education.Family housing is hard-wired to the university network via a
building by building ethernet setup. The only information I have so far
is: 10BaseT - 10MB/s - Twisted pair - RJ-45 connector. My main computer
is a dual boot box with Win95 and Linux RedHat 5.0(I will be installing
6.0 in a couple of weeks). I have two questions. 1) What is my best bet
for purchase of an NIC ( high probability of working with both operating
systems-reasonable price ). 2) Since my 13 year old is already teaching
himself programing, I need to find the most practicle (inexpensive)
method of networking his computer with mine. TIA
------------------------------
From: "Sang" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: About two lan card......
Date: Thu, 3 Jun 1999 13:47:18 +0800
There are two lan cards in my computer and I try to setup them.
But something happens that I counld get these card infomation by command
"ifconfig".
I couldn't ping to anyother address but my senond card address.Before(Just
one lan card in my
computer) that I could ping to anywhere.
Could somebody tell me what happens and how to solve this situation??
Please give me some opinion or methers to solve.
Thanks very much!!
Linux -- Slackware (kernel 2.0.36)
And I have edit below files:
/etc/lilo.conf # detect two cards both of the same time
(append="ether=irq0,io0,eth0 ether=irq1,io1,eth1")
/etc/rc.d/rc.inet1 # configure two cards (ifconfig .....) add to
routing table ( /sbin/route add .......)
------------------------------
From: Jeremy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Forward between 2 nic cards
Date: Wed, 02 Jun 1999 17:53:42 -0500
Hi! You have probably hear this one before, I am sure I could figure it
out after spending a lot of time, but instead of re-inventing the wheel,
I ask this question,..
What I would like to do is insert a Linux box in-between a NT server
and a WIN95 box. Connect from the main hub to the first nic card on the
Linux box and connect the second nic to the WIN95 box. (I only have one
network connection available) If what I am trying to do is stupid, let
me know. I will have two IP's one for each box, but can I forward
everything threw the Linux Box and make it look nonexistent. to the
WIN95 Box (everything is TCP/IP ) Of course I could use a mini-hub, but
that is not as fun. ;-) Thanks!
Jeremy
------------------------------
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux.slackware
Subject: Re: Problem Getting Mail ... Please Help !
From: Michael Powe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 02 Jun 1999 23:46:27 -0700
=====BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE=====
Hash: SHA1
>>>>> "Desmond" == Desmond Coughlan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Desmond> Hi all, I still can't get my e-mail. This morning, I ran
Desmond> fetchmail -v as normal, and saw five messages arriving as
Desmond> normal. I then went into Emacs, and activated RMAIL. No
Desmond> new messages. I telnetted to port 110 of my ISP's
Desmond> mailserver, and saw that the messages were gone.
Desmond> The question is: where have these messages gone? Why
Desmond> have they not been delivered to my mailbox? Can I get
Desmond> them back?
Well, they may have gone to the Scary Place and in that case, no, you
can't get them back. You should check your sendmail aliases to make
sure that you have an address for "undeliverable" mail. I'm guessing
that the envelopes of the incoming mails were not parsed into a
deliverable address & so they went to Hades. I hate it when that
happens.
After I "upgraded" from fetchmail 2.2 to 4.4, I had the same problem.
I "fixed" it by using this in my .fetchmailrc:
mda "/usr/sbin/sendmail -oem michael"
Unfortunately, this hoses the From_ line, so then every mail looks
like it came from me. I had to add a recipe to my .procmailrc to fix
it:
:0 fhw
| formail -I "From " -a "From "
mp
- --
Michael Powe [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Portland, Oregon USA http://www.trollope.org
"There are certain rights that a woman loses when she becomes a
wife." -- Farrah Fawcett
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Comment: Encrypted with Mailcrypt 3.5.1 and GNU Privacy Guard
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------------------------------
From: Eric Fowler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat.ppp
Subject: 'Sticky' static IP address
Date: Wed, 02 Jun 1999 16:57:18 -0700
I am bringing up a Red Hat 5.0 box, configured as a PPP client,
connecting to an ISP (Rocky Mtn Internet Ink) which I have formerly
connected to with WinNT. My machine has a static IP address, which I
bought from my ISP, which is 166.93.73.253. I have been having problems
with the connection, and when I used ifconfig, it reported my static IP
address as 166.72.93.253, which is WRONG (note the typo: 73 --> 72). I
assume I somehow mis-typed the IP address when I was first configuring
the box.
OK, simple : fix the IP address. Problem is, how? When I try to run
ifconfig to change it without first making the connection, it says
"device does not support op" or something like it. If I connect first,
then change, my connection is hosed - dns barfs, which at least works if
the IP address is wrong. The bad IP address is sticky somehow, because
it comes back after I reboot and reconnect.
How do turn the d*mn thing OFF? I have done 'xarg grep -l <IP ADDRESS>
<FILE-LIST>' and have not found it ...
--
Eric Fowler
sockeye [at] rmii [dot] com
Vivez sans temps mort!
(Live without dead time)
-Situationist International
=================================
------------------------------
From: Mark Hahn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: tcp/ip transfer rate
Date: 2 Jun 1999 20:15:55 GMT
Flavio Curti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> it seems, that the transfer rate is too low. at max. i have 5.2kb/s.
what rate are you expecting? isdn is only around 7 KB/s, no?
> then i started iptraf, to monitor my connection. i saw that the get of a
> ftp-file (size 810kb) transferred about 960kb. is this normal ??? this
> makes about 10% of every package is header... too high ???
depends on what MTU you have set. if you're using 576, for instance,
10% is about right (especially if you consider acks, etc.) if you're
using 1500, it sounds high.
> plz reply to newsgrp...
that's obnoxious.
------------------------------
From: Ding-Jung Han <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Automatically emailing IP address?
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 1999 02:12:04 -0400
Gernot Fink wrote:
>
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> Nicholas E Couchman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I don't know about the automailing thing, but I do know of programs called
> > IP posters. Put the program on your computer, and as soon as an IP address
> > is assigned, it will post it on a certain web page. I'm not exactly sure
> > where to find it, but you can try http://www.linuxberg.com. They should
> > have something.
> > --Nick
> >
> > Ding-Jung Han wrote:
> >
> >> Hi I'm trying to find a way to automatically email the IP address to a
> >> school machine once my PPP connection is established. Is that possible?
> >> Or can I make a 'dynamic' webpage telling the IP address of my home
> >> Linux box?
>
> Insert this line in /etc/ppp/ip-up
>
> ifconfig|mail -s your_ip name@host
>
> (sendmail must be running)
>
> You can use awk to cut the raw ip.
>
> >>
> >> Any comment is appreciated,
> >>
> >> Ben
> >
>
> --
> garfield
After playing with awk (first time) I've learned how to do this --
thanks for the useful hint! ;-)
My /etc/ppp/ip-up.local
---
echo "My IP=`ifconfig | awk '/ppp0/ {PPP=1} ; /inet addr/ { if (PPP==1)
print $2 }' | awk -F: '{print $2}'`" > /etc/my_ip
sudo -u ben mail -s "Ben's IP on `date`" [EMAIL PROTECTED] <
/etc/my_ip
---
Ben
------------------------------
Subject: Before I screw up the internet....
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Christopher R. Barry)
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 1999 07:11:41 GMT
I've been reading the NET-3 HOWTO, The Linux Network Administrator's
Guide and (though I'm done now) the Ethernet Howto. I've got my cheap
Realtek NE-2000 clone compiled in and working now and
/etc/init.d/network (Debian Potato) configured (I think).
Now if I set my IP address to 192.168.0.1 and log on to the internet
am I going to lose? I understand that once my local LAN is working I
must either register an IP for the network or set up IP-masq for the
other computers to use the internet, but if I set up the network as
stand-alone with 192.168.xx.xx addresses and then connect to the
internet using PPP with this Linux box (HAL) like I am right now, will
my local LAN work fine, and my PPP connection work fine? Will I screw
anything up?
What happens if you accidentally use a wrong IP number? Do you get
fined or a phone call from your ISP?
My /etc/init.d/network:
#! /bin/sh
ifconfig lo 127.0.0.1
route add -net 127.0.0.0
ifconfig eth0 192.168.0.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 up
route add -net 192.168.0.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 eth0
My /etc/hosts:
127.0.0.1 HAL localhost
192.168.0.1 HAL localhost
192.168.0.2 TRILOGY
My /etc/networks
localnet 127.0.0.0
loopnet 127.0.0.0
localnet 192.168.0.0
Thank you,
Christopher
------------------------------
From: Tero Niemi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.help,comp.os.linux.admin,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Please help me with Qmail
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 1999 10:18:56 +0300
I try to send from [EMAIL PROTECTED] to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
alias.fi's mail is handled by aatami.alias.fi. aatami's mail works just
fine and in
eeva I can send to everywhere else but @alias.fi. This is what I get:
Hi. This is the qmail-send program at eeva.alias.fi.
I'm afraid I wasn't able to deliver your message to the following
addresses.
This is a permanent error; I've given up. Sorry it didn't work out.
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Sorry. Although I'm listed as a best-preference MX or A for that host,
it isn't in my control/locals file, so I don't treat it as local.
(#5.4.6)
--- Below this line is a copy of the message.
Return-Path: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Received: (qmail 790 invoked from network); 3 Jun 1999 07:14:41 -0000
Received: from eeva.alias.fi ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
by eeva.alias.fi with SMTP; 3 Jun 1999 07:14:41 -0000
Sender: root
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 1999 10:14:41 +0300
From: Tero Niemi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.51 [en] (X11; I; Linux 2.2.8 i586)
X-Accept-Language: en
MIME-Version: 1.0
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Testing
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
This is a test message.
------------------------------
From: Bob G <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Firewall not routing
Date: Wed, 02 Jun 1999 23:40:28 GMT
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> I have a private network IP 10.0.0.x (hopefully) connected to the
> internet trough a Linux firewall with 2 network cards.[...]
> On a client PC of the private network, I can ping the Linux firewall
> on both cards, but if I try to ping a different external IP I won't
> reach it. [...]
Sounds like you're getting through masq and routing if you can ping the
internal interface. You could turn logging on in your masq rules
(ipfwadm or ipchains) and watch your system log as you ping from the
client and see what the source IP shows as (tail -f /var/log/messages).
Meanwhile, don't over look the CLIENT configuration. If you're using NAT
(masq) then it should point to the Linux box as the default gateway. I
expect this is the problem. DNS etc. can still point to the "outside"
addresses at your ISP, but the default gw should be the box doing masq.
The HOWTOs give some more client configuration tips as well. Good luck!
- Bob
------------------------------
From: "Pete Stoves" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Mars_Nwe & real netware servers
Date: Wed, 2 Jun 1999 14:28:08 +0100
Is it possible or has anybody been successful in running Mars alongside a
genuine NetWare server ?
I have set-up IPX & can connect to the existing NetWare server.
I have set-up (I think) Mars and it shows on the slist on the linux box.
I cannot see the mars server from any other workstation.
Can anybody point me in the right direction ?
Your help would be appreciated
------------------------------
From: "Kjoe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: RH 6.0 and a Eicon Diehl Diva 2.0 ISDN T/A
Date: Thu, 3 Jun 1999 09:57:03 +0200
the code in the kernel is for some odd reason version 2.8 and a working
version of the hisax for eicon should be 3.0 or more. what you do is
download ftp://ftp.suse.com/pub/isdn4linux/v2.1/isdn-tar.gz
and copy include and driver dir into your kernel dir. compile hisax as
module, use isapnp to configure your eicon card (pci isnt supported yet) and
you should be up and running.
Wienux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:7j46mh$nr7$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hiya all,
>
> I have installed RH 6.0 and a Eicon Diehl Diva 2.0 ISDN T/A and i
> don't kow how to configure it sow i can dial to my isp.
> If anyone can give me a start it would be very much appreciated.
>
> I have installed RH6.0 almost completely, and have Gnome started
> automaticaly.
>
> Do i need any extra things ??? like drivers ??? i heard something
> about a "Hisax" driver but that was in a howto from 1996 sow is that
> still used or do i need something else ???
>
> Thanx in advance
>
> MANIAC
>
>
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