Linux-Networking Digest #464, Volume #11          Wed, 9 Jun 99 10:13:39 EDT

Contents:
  slow ppp connection on External ISDN modem (megadj)
  Re: rh 6.0 and netcfg (Greg Wildman)
  Re: IBM token-ring cards PCI (Frank Pikelner)
  Re: Playing Audio CDs Over a LAN (Jon Skeet)
  FTP half working (mike lupo)
  Re: Linux networking HELP, INTERNET HELP!!!! HELP!!! (araqnid)
  Re: Linux & Cybercafe (Maurice Kemmann)
  Help! NFS won't work (Jim & Rima)
  Re: how to setup a HSP pci modem for redhat 6.0? (Lew Pitcher)
  Updating RPM Database ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
  Re: 3com 3c900B not detected (Gilford Wimbley)
  Re: what time? (Ian Cottrell)
  Re: RH 6.0 and pump (Villy Kruse)
  Re: how to setup a HSP pci modem for redhat 6.0? (M. Buchenrieder)
  Re: Modem Recognition & Dial up Configuration - Newbie (M. Buchenrieder)
  X into another Server (Greg Wake)
  R: Routing ("Ess")
  Re: When should the server be shut down? (Greg Wildman)
  Re: X-Win32, Crack Code ?? (frank)
  Re: FTP Users ("Dean J Irvin")

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (megadj)
Subject: slow ppp connection on External ISDN modem
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 1999 22:56:10 GMT

I got an external isdn modem that works fine on windows and when I
connect from Linux i get about 50% packet loss doing a ping to my
provider. The speed is very slow... I use on windows as a regular
external modem with no driver or so. On linux it connects ok I get
chap to work fine and all seem to be ok... except the speed. I tried
using some different settins of MRU, MTU, asyncmap and so...and
nothing. Any ideas? Thanks in advance

------------------------------

From: Greg Wildman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.questions
Subject: Re: rh 6.0 and netcfg
Date: Wed, 09 Jun 1999 11:24:12 +0000

Anthony Ewell wrote:

> Hi,
>
> I can not get netcfg to run under red hat 6.0.  I get the following
> error:
>
>       File "/usr/lib/rhs/netcfg/netcfg.py", line 29, in ?
>             from rhentry import *
>                 EOFError: EOF read where object expected
>
> anyone have any ideas?
>
> Many thanks,
> --Tony
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Make sure that your /etc/conf.modules files has an alias entry for eth0.
Sometimes when the sound config utility does not detect your card it
does not replace this file for you. (may be called conf.modules.bak)

I am not sure but I think you can force the kernel to load modules (ie.
PCMCIA support ) early in the boot sequence.

Greg.



------------------------------

From: Frank Pikelner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: IBM token-ring cards PCI
Date: Wed, 09 Jun 1999 00:54:48 GMT

Mike,

Thanks for the information. We are an all token ring shop, I'll be giving
your driver a good runover in the next few  days.

Cheer,

Frank

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Frank,
>
> Check out http://www.linuxtr.net, the latest alpha driver is available
> from there.
>
> Mike
> Linux Token Ring Project
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Share what you know. Learn what you don't.


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jon Skeet)
Subject: Re: Playing Audio CDs Over a LAN
Date: Wed, 9 Jun 1999 13:17:56 +0100

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> No chance on the remote audio. The CD audio is not piped through your CPU,
> but it sent directly to the sound hardware on the source machine, meaning
> that it can't be redirected. Look for a (normally) grey wire connecting your
> CDROM to the sound card or main board (depends on the system).

I'm sure I've had this working before now, though. It was a bit of a 
joke, but here was the system:

"Client" Linux box: 386 DX/40 with a home-grown soundcard - the soundcard 
consisted of a bunch of resistors hanging off a parallel port, hooked up 
to an amp.

"Server" Linux box: 486 DX2/66 with CD-Rom

They were running a program called "netpipe" which a friend wrote, which 
basically does what it sounds like - allows you to create a pipe across 
machines.

My friend then started the cd player, and effectively piped /dev/dsp (or 
/dev/sound or something similar - not sure) from the server box to the 
client. I believe this was effectively sampling the output from the sound 
card to the speakers after all other processing was done.

It sounded awful ('cos it was only sampled at 8K or something) but it was 
just about audible.

Oh the silly things we got up to in university days...

-- 
Jon Skeet - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.pobox.com/~skeet/

------------------------------

From: mike lupo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: FTP half working
Date: Mon, 07 Jun 1999 20:58:58 -0400

I am using IPFWADM on my linux machine. It's my firewall to the internet
from my internal network.  What the problem is is that when I try to FTP
from my internal network I can see the directories...but anything that
uses port 150, like "ls" I can't get anything returned to me.  Same
thing when I attempt to do a "get" .

Can anyone help
Thanks

Mike


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (araqnid)
Subject: Re: Linux networking HELP, INTERNET HELP!!!! HELP!!!
Date: 8 Jun 1999 21:47:22 +0100


In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Mr. Ozette Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I cannot use the Linux box to browse the internet (even though the Win98
>box can via the internet connection on the Linux box).  What could be
>causing this problem?
>
>I can't ping anywhere.  I thought it could be my resolv.conf but I think
>I've set it up correctly.  What could prevent me from ping'ing at the
>very least.

So, pinging a numerical address doesn't work either, then? (You'll
learn the IP address of your provider's interface in time :})

Hm, what other ipchains rules have you set up?

SRH
-- 
Steve Haslam      http://www.arise.demon.co.uk/      [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Debian GNU/Linux Maintainer                               [EMAIL PROTECTED]
there's something cold in the way you touch me
it's just the feeling you'd be better without me                      [mesh]

------------------------------

From: Maurice Kemmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.uu.comp.os.linux.questions,comp.os.linux.development.system
Subject: Re: Linux & Cybercafe
Date: Wed, 09 Jun 1999 14:20:00 +0200

Hi !

MicroNg schrieb:

> I'm thinking of putting linux as the surf engine (with program like
> netscape communicator for linux)
> however, how to limit the access that so the user can only access the
> browser but NOT any other
> program ? ( to access other program, for eg for the webmaster to shutdown
> the computer, an passcode
> is required).
> 
> any idea ?

You can configure the windowmanager without any xterm. So the users are
not able to start any other program. On the desktop you offer only the
browser. Login should be via xdm !
That's it i think !

Maurice

------------------------------

From: Jim & Rima <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Help! NFS won't work
Date: Tue, 08 Jun 1999 20:57:05 -0400

I'm trying to get NFS working between two Redhat 5.2 boxes (client and
server).  This is for a network testbed that's on a completely isolated
network; I just want to test NFS throughput on the testbed.  The client
and server have 4 or 5 routers between them and are on different
subnets.  Everytime I try to connect with the client I either get a 'RPC
timeout' message or permission denied because the server says I'm an
unauthorized user.  This is reflected in the server's log; on almost
every mount attempt it states that I'm an unauthorized user.

I'm trying to mount the NFS volume (which is /home and which I've made
world-writable just to make sure it's not a directory permissions thing)
as root, during boot and manually after boot.  I read somewhere that the
UID and GID of the user's must be the same; well, root is root, UID=0,
GID=0 on both machines. I've tried putting the client's IP address in
the hosts.allow file ('portmap: 10.10.10.2', and other variations), but
this still doesn't seem to work.

In addition I'm running portmap, nfsd, mountd, nfsfs, and autofs on both
machines (whether or not they both need them).  The fstab and export
files look OK; I'm using IP addresses instead of hostnames since we
don't have DNS on our testbed.

Can anyone help me out?  Thanks.


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Lew Pitcher)
Subject: Re: how to setup a HSP pci modem for redhat 6.0?
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 09 Jun 1999 12:00:58 GMT

On Tue, 8 Jun 1999 23:40:37 +0800, "percy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>as title, thanks

<facetious>
You get the Linux drivers from the modem's manufacturer,
add them to your modprobe/insmod/kerneld setup, and you're
flying.

What? You say that the modem manufacturer doesn't have any
Linux drivers? Oh. That's too bad.

OK. Here's what you do...  Call up the manufacturer of the
modem and ask them to either (a) release a driver for Linux, or
(b) release *all* the relevant specifications (hardware/software/etc.)
so that someone else can write a driver.

What? The modem manufacturer declined to release either driver
or specs? Oh.  That's too bad, too.

I guess you can always go out and buy a modem that's supported
by it's manufacturere.
</facetious>

HSP (aka HCF aka "controllerless" aka "software controller"
aka "software UART" aka WinModem) modems aren't supported in
Linux due to the various manufacturer's lack of interest.

Sorry.



Lew Pitcher
System Consultant, Integration Solutions Architecture
Toronto Dominion Bank

([EMAIL PROTECTED])


(Opinions expressed are my own, not my employer's.)

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Updating RPM Database
Date: Mon, 31 May 1999 14:14:16 GMT

Hi All,

        I have REDHAT 5.2 running on my machine, today I downloaded new version
of 'glib-1.2.3' from GNU site, compiled it and installed to the
respective directories. But when I checked RPM database using the
command 'rpm -qa | grep glib' it is showing old version i.e
'glib-1.0.6'. I tried the command 'rpm --rebuilddb' but in vain. Pls.
can anybody tell me how update rpm database.

Thanks in Advance
Ravindra.R


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Share what you know. Learn what you don't.

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Gilford Wimbley)
Subject: Re: 3com 3c900B not detected
Date: Wed, 09 Jun 1999 01:56:38 GMT

On Tue, 08 Jun 1999 16:02:49 GMT, "Rodrigo Figueiredo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

>Hi,
>
>I've recently installed RH 6.0 on a Pentium 100 64Mb and I have the above
>mentioned 3com card which is used to connect to cable service @home. The
>card is:
>
>3com Etherlink XL TPO 10 Mb Ethernet NIC (3c900B-TPO)
>
>or at least this is what Windows shows. From Windows setup info I got:
>
>IRQ:11
>Mem: e0400000-e040007f
>I/O Range: 6100-617f
>
>@home service here (Shaw Cable/Toronto) is DHCP.
>
>Linux boot doesn't recognize the card. I tried  to activate it with
>linuxconf, using eth0 and the 3c95x driver; no success. I get the msg "eth0
>initialization delayed" or something similar. The following info was given
>by
>lspci:
>
>00:09.0 Ethernet controller: 3Com Corporation: Unknown device 9004 (rev 04)
> Subsystem: Unknown device 10b7:9004
> Control: I/O+ Mem+ BusMaster+ SpecCycle- MemWINV- VGASnoop- ParErr-
>Stepping- SERR- FastB2B-
> Status: Cap+ 66Mhz- UDF- FastB2B- ParErr- DEVSEL=medium >TAbort- <TAbort-
><MAbort- >SERR- <PERR-
> Latency: 10 min, 48 max, 32 set, cache line size 08
> Interrupt: pin A routed to IRQ 11
> Region 0: I/O ports at 6100
> Region 1: Memory at e0400000 (32-bit, non-prefetchable)
> Capabilities: [dc] Power Management version 1
>  Flags: PMEClk- AuxPwr- DSI- D1+ D2+ PME-
>  Status: D0 PME-Enable+ DSel=0 DScale=0 PME-
>
>As far as I understand from the BIOS the PCI/PNP options are set to
>automatic detection. I appreciate very much if someone could help me
>with this.
>
>TIA
>
>Rodrigo
>
>
>
I use that same card with no problems whatsoever.  I recompiled my
kernel with no modules, and just selected the drivers for the two
ethernet cards that I actually have, and then I added append
statements to lilo to get them *both* recognized at bootup.  I don't
know why yours doesn't work, however.  I am just writing to encourage
you that it *should* work.  One thing-- I am using redhat 5.2


Oh, I just reread your post.  This is not a 95xx card! it is a 3c900!
It uses something called the vortex driver or something.  You are
probaably using the wrong driver.

good luck!
GW


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Ian Cottrell)
Subject: Re: what time?
Date: 9 Jun 1999 01:56:43 GMT

percy ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
: hello all,
:   Every time , i start my linux box . it's clock is wrong. I use date -s
: xx:xx to set up it. but next time , linux box start ... the clock is
: wrong....
: 
: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Use 'clock --systohc' to set your hardware clock to the system time (after
you've set the system time with 'date -s xx:xx').  You might have to
'man hwclock' to get the correct man page, but it's all there.
Good luck.........Ian

-- 
============================================================================
Ian Cottrell                   office email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Chief, Internet Services     personal email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Department of Justice                office: (613) 941-5233
284 Wellington Street
Ottawa, ON, Canada
============================================================================

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Villy Kruse)
Subject: Re: RH 6.0 and pump
Date: 9 Jun 1999 14:36:12 +0200

In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Brian Swenson x4327  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I just installed RH 6.0 onto a machine and am having trouble getting the
>networking right.  By running the 'pump -i eth0 --status' command I can
>see that I'm getting a good IP address, netmask, host and domain names
>from the dhcp server, however the system hostname and domain name are
>never updated.  The 'hostname' command returns localhost@localdomain and
>any processes that need that host info (samba, fetchmail, etc.) fail and
>won't run.  Any help would be greatly appreciated.



The redhat system will ask the DNS server for the hostname corresponding
to the IP number it received, and with that information it will set the
hostname.  Thus it expects to find a DNS server on the net and it expects
that names are defined for all the potential IP numbers managed by the
DHCP server.

The domain names is supposed to go into the /etc/resolv.conf file,
if the DHCP server also send you a DNS server IP number.  If the DHCP
server never sends a DNS server address then the client don't have the
information required to set up a /etc/resolv.conf.

I don't think the hostname from the DHCP server is used for anything.

Villy

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (M. Buchenrieder)
Subject: Re: how to setup a HSP pci modem for redhat 6.0?
Date: Wed, 9 Jun 1999 11:40:20 GMT

"percy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

>as title, thanks

a) Open window
b) Make sure noone's around
c) Shutdown system
d) Open case
e) Unplug PCI modem card
f) Throw away , using the window from a) 
g) Buy an external real modem (serial)
h) Enjoy

Michael
-- 
Michael Buchenrieder * [EMAIL PROTECTED] * http://www.muc.de/~mibu
          Lumber Cartel Unit #456 (TINLC) & Official Netscum
    Note: If you want me to send you email, don't munge your address.

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (M. Buchenrieder)
Subject: Re: Modem Recognition & Dial up Configuration - Newbie
Date: Wed, 9 Jun 1999 11:43:12 GMT

"Mark A. Gilbert" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

>Compaq Presario 1625 AMD Laptop
       ^^^^^^^^^

>I have a K56Flex v.90 ITU standard Modem 
         
No, you don't . If Compaq told you so, give the Presario back
to your vendor and demand a refund.

>and am trying to figure out how
>to get it working working!

>Does anybody know if this is a win-modem?
[...]

It is. All Presario models have built-in winmodems. Hopeless.
Buy a PCMCIA real modem. See www.deja.com and/or comp.os.linux.portable
for details.

Michael
-- 
Michael Buchenrieder * [EMAIL PROTECTED] * http://www.muc.de/~mibu
          Lumber Cartel Unit #456 (TINLC) & Official Netscum
    Note: If you want me to send you email, don't munge your address.

------------------------------

From: Greg Wake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: X into another Server
Date: Wed, 09 Jun 1999 09:57:03 +0800
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sorry, I am a relatively new user to Linux/X, apologies if this is a
relatively simple
question.

I have another server on our network, SCO, which runs X, and I would
like to try and
setup a CTRL-ALT-Funtion key combination to switch between my local X
and the
remote X.

Is this possible?  If so, can anyone give me a quick rundown as to what
to look for to
do this?

Any help most appreciated.

Greg
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


------------------------------

From: "Ess" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: R: Routing
Date: Wed, 9 Jun 1999 15:35:29 +0200

Ok. Find installation for diald and read HOW-TO of this section.

Best work

Max

Andrew Chipping <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hi, I have a LAN set-up using Linux RedHat 5.2 as the "Server" machine,
> I have Ip forwarding and masquerading set-up up, which i think is
> working ok, but what Im not sure of is setting up routing just through a
> modem with Dial on Demand - Ive read the man pages and the newsgroup
> history - Any help would be great
>
>
> Cheers David
>
> "Two sure ways to tell a sexy male; the first is, he has a bad memory.
> I forget the second."



------------------------------

From: Greg Wildman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: When should the server be shut down?
Date: Wed, 09 Jun 1999 13:36:00 +0000

Joe O'Connell wrote:

> Just installed a linux server (RH 5.2) on a host of a 10-node LAN.  The host
> is a new Dell PowerEdge 1300, and it's used only as a file server for the
> LAN.  The LAN operates only during business hours, M-F 8 to 5.  At other
> hours, the LAN computers are shut down.  Question:  when should the server
> host be shut down:  every day after working hours (for 15 hours), Friday
> night for the weekend (for 60+ hours), or never?
>
> Interested in the experience/recommendations of network managers using
> Linux.

Unless there is a special reason like security, I would leave it on. My Linux
server has been running 4 months without a reboot now.

Greg.



------------------------------

From: frank <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.setup,hk.comp.os.linux,tw.bbs.comp.linux
Subject: Re: X-Win32, Crack Code ??
Date: Wed, 09 Jun 1999 10:03:36 +0800

XWin32 4.1.1 In XWin32.EXE Version 4.1.1 (size = 826880 bytes) At Offset 21380
(hex) Find: A1 A0 D2 4A 00 81 EC 00 01 00 00 3D 85 38 00 00 Change with: 33 C0
A3 A0 D2 4A 00 81 EC 00 01 00 00 E9 99 00 00 00 At Offset 46200 (hex) Find: 8B
0D A0 D2 4A 00 A1 84 BB 4A 00 8B D1 Change with: B8 01 00 00 00 5F 5E 5B C3



Fong's wrote:

> You are right!!
> But can I using X-window or Linux to control other Linux/Sun machine
> remotely?
>
> Fong's
>
> Fong's <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:7ja7j4$kq66@rain...
> > You are right!!
> > But can I using X-window to control other Linux/Sun machine remotely?
> >
> > Fong's
> >
> > A. Vohra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> > news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > > Cracking X win32 would be illegal.
> > >
> > > I will suggest you try Mi/X X server see
> > > http://www.microimages.com/freestuf/mix/
> > > It will work from PC & Mac
> > >
> > > And VNC as well
> > >
> > > A.Vohra
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > "Adam C. Emerson" wrote:
> > >
> > > > In comp.os.linux.networking Fong's <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > > Do the How to Crack the X-Win32 V.4.12
> > > > > http://www.starnet.com/product.htm
> > > >
> > > > > That can Runing the X-Window on the Win95 & NT platform..
> > > > > Is great , but no code can only work for one hour & cannot Login
> many
> > > > > machine at same time....
> > > >
> > > > > Hackers!! Help!!
> > > >
> > > > What, prithee has this to do with Linux?
> > > >
> > > > Besides, hackers don't go around cracking things except under unusual
> > > > circumstances.  Programming is much more interesting than breaking
> > > > copy-protection (however stupid copy-protection may be).  Why
> > > > don't you go over to alt.2600, where you can get all the phreaks,
> > > > crackers, and three-leet warez-doods you want.
> > > >
> > > > --
> > > > Remove absolutelynospamorI'llkillyou from the following triple
> > > > symmetric-cipher encoded (apple, commodore, trs-80), rot13'd,
> > > > diagnoal email address to email me.
> > > >
> > > > -----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----
> > > > Version: GnuPG v0.9.5 (GNU/Linux)
> > > > Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org
> > > >
> > > > jAwEBAEDIWMVbxVRwhLJwQ10a1Q7ygHnIpoB5YMo7vweRY/nc4qYRbIHTaO8lnbV
> > > > uoWiebrFTuOBhZgtObE6luy8tLBDo6wvKo1rL8ZlTcXWvSb5vWUzVF8RqHSt8bMw
> > > > 7od0GEs1yCF/kdjxDx8hmI29v+lEYQ9m9rAUo5wuXGS8vkY2XphDdU2f1AV7yOiV
> > > > p9N2BwrZYNEa8aLEApIaVTpmoXW3nWV+TI73T1VnRTHl/AhOYK1kpzPLBPi9DlW1
> > > > v/XCn5SYIWZLZPsKbzXps70VkAYg+ytUQcbT3bJGvuLu6gNDNe/po+2+aqkk+rhZ
> > > > HaWvOF2IEKrHSIszZiFJ3Bo2Ing4v+0OB4An/8/DpmoiHo/70W9fpkfE5kqiLGnS
> > > > iuMaZ7JvGL2XIdNmNcBmPxlK4VgCyJtoYY0x6fhBlVoA+uQKZxjtgIaDq9NhNnTu
> > > > oAwJrLyeGCL5eBDf4EYBvReivNcNnv9GqffoOwvZBWQjnHWb/p2NAyuF9frnLEXu
> > > > 5n9B+xgfOAgJ7pz5X8i0Ok9+Eh/SQQ0exu9HJ760aa9ncEuzYFd6rbg55CTC4Uj2
> > > > /neumF0KRX3P1KQQ89/SU/x3X59rwAJsvNNUjQt1ereu9uLv1D5BYQ+gHSPvPA==
> > > > =OUeJ
> > > > -----END PGP MESSAGE-----
> > >
> >
> >


------------------------------

From: "Dean J Irvin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: FTP Users
Date: Wed, 9 Jun 1999 08:15:24 -0500

The last ISP I worked thought the same way at first (they can't mess up
anything), however, they certainly can steal every last username and spam
your customers if they do (which happened) so chroot is the way to go

Just my two cents

Dean Irvin

Nicholas E Couchman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Even if your users are able to view the whole machine, they won't have
> permissions to write to anything, and they can't execute anything via an
FTP
> port, so you are still fairly secure.
> --Nick
>
> Waterfront Internet Service wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > I run an ISP and have setup Redhat Linux as my mail and user pages
server.
> > When a user logs into their home directory using their username and
password
> > they have access to the whole linux machine. I want to stop them from
being
> > able to leave their home directory. Any ideas?
> >
> > Regards,
> >
> > Steve
>



------------------------------


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