Linux-Networking Digest #733, Volume #11         Wed, 30 Jun 99 15:14:01 EDT

Contents:
  Re: Why not C++ (Greg Comeau)
  Re: MASQ: failed TCP/UDP checksum ("Irene ah!")
  Re: How to setup client Proxy ("Terence Parker")
  MODEM NOT WORKING ("Anand C R (Oracle Apps Consultant)")
  Very Slow Network - 'pings' out of sequence ("Alex")
  Re: Why not C++ (Greg Comeau)
  Re: PPP connection problem, Really need help. (Johann)
  Re: Samba & guest account ??? (Nicholas E Couchman)
  Re: Why not C++ (Greg Comeau)
  Samba-Problem: login-scripts (Carsten Kemper)
  Re: Bay Networks Netgear Support (CaroKat)
  Re: Setting Linux up as a proxy server (Jeff Fox)
  Re: many many many TX errors on ifconfig. ("Pat Crean")
  VPN across a Linux Firewall ("Dan Reaka")
  Re: Apache "redirect" question ("Anders Rundegren")
  Re: Does any body have a copy of their smb.config file (Nicholas E Couchman)
  Problem with kppp ("Sebastian")
  How reset network card setting on the fly? ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
  Re: Setting up Xisp (Tom Herman)

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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Greg Comeau)
Crossposted-To: 
comp.os.linux.development.apps,comp.os.linux.development.system,comp.lang.c++
Subject: Re: Why not C++
Date: 30 Jun 1999 14:23:07 -0400
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Isaac) writes:
>On 29 Jun 1999 00:47:32 -0700, Nathan Myers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>Precisely.  The books grew, chapter by chapter, as the language 
>>did.  They give most space to earlier features, and treat the 
>>later, probably more important, features as afterthoughts.
>>
>Hmm.  Your arguments (and Matts) are quite persuasive.  I don't 
>think the books I use are quite this flawed.  I think the info on
>how to use templates is in there, but since I'm not using them
>heavily, my perspective on their importance is skewed. 

The overwhelming majority (9x%) of books are complete fossil fuel.
This brings the number of really good books close to zero.
Don't underestimate your author just because they've done so to you :)

- Greg
-- 
       Comeau Computing, 91-34 120th Street, Richmond Hill, NY, 11418-3214
     Producers of Comeau C/C++ 4.2.38 -- New Release!  We now do Windows too.
    Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] / Voice:718-945-0009 / Fax:718-441-2310
                *** WEB: http://www.comeaucomputing.com *** 

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

From: "Irene ah!" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: MASQ: failed TCP/UDP checksum
Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 00:11:48 +0800


Malware,

Thanks! but I don't know how to do it, how to disablign the VJ, please tell
me.

Irene ah!
(
    )
(

>Hi Irene,
>
>you wrote:
>> MASQ: failed TCP/UDP checksum from x.x.x.x
>> last message repeated x times
>
>If you have a PPP-interface try to resolve by disabling the VJ
>compression on the link.
>
>
>Malware



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

From: "Terence Parker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: How to setup client Proxy
Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 00:15:04 +0800

If you are on a dial-up, it is most likely that you do not need any Proxy
server setting in order to run the program so if I were you I would leave
that alone. But if you must set something, then what you do is you enter
your proxy server in the settings - such as 'proxy.asiaonline.net' port
'8080' - or whatever. You should have been given these settings when you got
your account details. If you don,t and Seti@Home works properly - then I
suggest you don't bother.

I don't suppose you' d be scanning the same ET block over and over again
anyway.

Terence Parker.


> I have a pice of software I am trying to run and
> I need to have a Proxy entry setup.  It says that
> if I have a Proxy set up in my enviroment it will
> use it.  They say the syntax is HTTP_PROXY=
> but I have no idea where to put it.
>
> The app I am trying to run is SETI@HOME version
> 1.2.  My proxy server uses port 8080.




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

From: "Anand C R (Oracle Apps Consultant)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: MODEM NOT WORKING
Date: Tue, 29 Jun 1999 12:48:09 -0400
Reply-To: "Anand C R (Oracle Apps Consultant)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


From: Anand C R (Oracle Apps Consultant) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: MODEM NOT WORKING
Date: Tuesday, June 29, 1999 12:46 PM

    I have a Zoom/FaxModem 56k-pci (model 2925) but for some strange reason
it doesn't work. I heard that some Winmodems don't work with linux. I paid a
high price for this, would be very disappointed to hear that it won't work
with my Linux .........

Any help is greatly appreciated........

Thanks
Anand







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

From: "Alex" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Very Slow Network - 'pings' out of sequence
Date: Tue, 29 Jun 1999 17:44:46 +0100

I have two linux boxes on my network - identical in hardware and software
setup. (99% sure) But one of them is very slow at communicating with other
machines over the network. Pinging the other linux box usually results in
every third packet being 3 seconds later than all other packets, and so also
out of sequence.  (Sometimes its OK, sometimes its worse) As you can
imagine, ftp & telneting to and from the machine is practically unusable.
It's a mystery. Any ideas on the problem ? Thanks.
Alex.



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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Greg Comeau)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.development.apps,comp.os.linux.development.system
Subject: Re: Why not C++
Date: 30 Jun 1999 13:55:43 -0400
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

In article <7l73qd$km0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Nathan Myers) 
writes:
>Paul Jackson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>Nathan Myers wrote:
>>|> [Those saying C++ is] slower than (e.g.) C are just spreading FUD.
>>
>>But really, I think you missed my primary point:  ...
>>In short, attempts to consider the 'speed of a language' outside
>>the context of the app and the programmer (and others would
>>add - the compiler maturity), are in themselves a form of FUD.
>
>FUD has been, is, and will be.  
>Yet, competence is still a far scarcer commodity than CPU cycles.

Indeed.  And so undermines the argument that a simpler language
is always more efficient (for the programmer, for runtime, etc ).

- Greg
-- 
       Comeau Computing, 91-34 120th Street, Richmond Hill, NY, 11418-3214
     Producers of Comeau C/C++ 4.2.38 -- New Release!  We now do Windows too.
    Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] / Voice:718-945-0009 / Fax:718-441-2310
                *** WEB: http://www.comeaucomputing.com *** 

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

From: Johann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: PPP connection problem, Really need help.
Date: Tue, 29 Jun 1999 16:41:48 +0200

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
<HTML>
&nbsp;
<BR>&nbsp;
<BLOCKQUOTE TYPE=CITE><I></I>&nbsp;
<BR><I>Other problem is my ISP uses proxy. So I have to manually set proxy
in the</I>
<BR><I>Netscape. But whenever I typed in the proxy , Netscape will tell
me "unknown</I>
<BR><I>host name" and refuse to accept it. What's the matter?</I>
<BR>&nbsp;</BLOCKQUOTE>
Make sure the internet connection is active, while configuring proxies.</HTML>


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

From: Nicholas E Couchman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Samba & guest account ???
Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 15:23:16 GMT

You don't even need a guest account.  Make sure the username you are using for
your Wintel machine is also a valid username under Linux and that user is
enabled.  Next login as root and type the following:
smbpasswd -a username
You will be prompted for a password.  The -a option adds the user to the
/etc/smbpasswd file.  You can also use -n to set the password to nothing
(null).  I just recently had the same problem you are having, and the key was
making sure the entries were added /etc/passwd.  It you have RedHat 6.0, you
use Linuxconf and have the Samba and Linux passwords synced (I know you can use
a line in /etc/smb.conf to do this, but I don't know what it is).  Also make
sure that you have password encryption enabled for samba (This line should be
in /etc/smb.conf, it will be either commented out or the value will be no).
Again, if you have RH 6, you can use Linuxconf to configure this (and much
more, including shares).
--Nick

Dimitri Willemse wrote:

> Hi,
>
> I am trying to run a Linux machine as a server for Windows.
>
> It is running a 2.0.36 kernel. I edited the /etc/smb.conf file so it shares
> /tmp as a temp dir, just for testing.
>
> The linux machine appears in the network neighbourhood on the Windows
> machine, but when I try to open it, I have to supply a password for the
> \\linux\IPC$ share.
>
> I read about this in the Samba documentation, but it only says I need to
> have 'the' guest account enabled.
>
> Any1 have an idea??
>
> Dimitri


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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Greg Comeau)
Crossposted-To: 
comp.os.linux.development.apps,comp.os.linux.development.system,comp.lang.c++
Subject: Re: Why not C++
Date: 30 Jun 1999 14:41:10 -0400
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

In article <hZfe3.491$[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Josh Stern) 
writes:
>Greg Comeau <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>>>If I'm using a C library, my program might have to say:
>
>>>some_function( &x );
>>>
>>>so, when debugging, I know right there that I can't assume x won't be
>>>altered. The same thing in C++ would be:
>>>
>>>some_function( x );
>>>
>>>but I don't know whether I'm passing by value or by reference or const
>>>by reference. I have to go and find the header, then look through it to
>>>find the prototype for that function. It would be useful if there were a
>>>syntax difference.
>
>>The above is flawed, because in both examples you need to go and find
>>the header, and in both examples you then need to look through it to find
>>the prototype for that function, so the above is a misguided argument.
>>In both examples it would be useful if there were a syntax difference.
>>Neither (x) nor (&x) is sufficient in either C or C++ from this perspective.
>
>>It's more that a development time issue.  Anyway, it's doubtful anything
>>about it is changing, so we'll need to settle on good support tools to help
>>out with this, and more.
>
>How about if we just ask the programmer to use some common sense
>and call the non-const version of the function
>
>void
>getSomethingsValue(T& x)  ?
>
>
>Then if you see
>
>getSomethingsValue(x);
>
>in a function definition, it is pretty obvious that it is not being
>called to return a value, and the function name is a very strong
>hint that it is not being called to set another value.

Oh indeed, like I said "and more".  Naming identifiers properly
is indeed important on this and other things.  It's never an end
all or substitute but it is certainly a step in the right direction.

- Greg
-- 
       Comeau Computing, 91-34 120th Street, Richmond Hill, NY, 11418-3214
     Producers of Comeau C/C++ 4.2.38 -- New Release!  We now do Windows too.
    Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] / Voice:718-945-0009 / Fax:718-441-2310
                *** WEB: http://www.comeaucomputing.com *** 

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

From: Carsten Kemper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: wad.linux,comp.os.linux.questions
Subject: Samba-Problem: login-scripts
Date: Tue, 29 Jun 1999 21:11:59 +0200

Hi Leute und Linux-Freaks,

ich habn Problem, ich m��te mal ganz dringend wissen wie man unter Samba

Login-Scripts f�r die einzelnen User anlegt soda� jeder beim Anmelden
unabh�ngig von der Station wo er grad ist sein Homeverzeichnis und noch
einige Andere gemappt kriegt.

Hat mal einer nen Tip f�r mich ? Ich hab grad SUSE 6.1 im Einsatz.
Samba l�uft auch soweit schon und ich hab Zugriff auf die freigegebenen
Shares.

Help appreciated by mail to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Carsten


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

From: CaroKat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Bay Networks Netgear Support
Date: Sat, 26 Jun 1999 03:44:27 GMT

How do you know what io=0xNNN to use?

Jeffrey Bell wrote:
> 
> Bill,
> 
> It will work, I have the smae card in a i486 working fine. I configired
> the kernel (2.0.35) with NE2000 campatable card.
> 
> Bill deKoning wrote:
> 
> > Hello,
> >
> > I have recently purchased a Netgear EA201 ISA 10baseT network interface
> > card. The manual says that it supports Unix and most operating systems
> > that support packet drivers, but i cant find the damned drivers for the
> > card. If anyone could help me please email me at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> > Thank you,
> >
> > DeadwoK
> 
> --
> Jeffrey A. Bell         icq # 41684113
>    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
>  Research is what I'm doing when I don't know what I'm doing.
>                         -- Wernher von Braun --

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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jeff Fox)
Crossposted-To: redhat.networking.general
Subject: Re: Setting Linux up as a proxy server
Date: Tue, 29 Jun 1999 19:35:07 GMT

Squid might be a good choice.

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

From: "Pat Crean" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: many many many TX errors on ifconfig.
Date: Tue, 29 Jun 1999 17:27:43 -0400

Read /usr/src/linux/Documentation/Changes --- get latest version of net
tools.


Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Ok this is happening on two different machines, both running RedHat 5.1
> 2.2.5 kernel.  Both have 3c509b ethernet cards set for eth0.   And both




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

From: "Dan Reaka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: VPN across a Linux Firewall
Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 10:34:13 -0500

I am trying to set up VPN (PPTP) on our network. We are currently using
a Linux Firewall using ipfwadm and ipporfw. PPTP uses port 1723 which has
been redirected with ipportfw. The documentation on PPTP talks about
protocol 47 which needs to be enabled on all routers and firewalls. I'm not
for sure how to turn protocols on and off with Linux. Can anyone help me
with this matter or direct me to documentation on the subject. Any help
would be greatly appreciated. Thanks




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

From: "Anders Rundegren" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Re: Apache "redirect" question
Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 09:17:42 -0700

Yes... this is a great idea but does only solve the problem of accessing the
toppage! I would like to have it work like the example below! More ideas?

http://myserver.com -> http://otherserver.com/~user24/
http://myserver.com/info/ -> http://otherserver.com/~user24/info/
http://myserver.com/info/new/ -> http://otherserver.com/~user24/info/new/

Again, I would like to keep the first address in the URL-field but
displaying the content found in the second URL.

Thanx // Anders



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

From: Nicholas E Couchman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Does any body have a copy of their smb.config file
Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 15:33:08 GMT

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
==============4DC8A8CE28C5BA06151449BF
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

I have a copy of smb.conf that I will attach.  There is no smb.cfg or
smb.config, unless you specify that you want it to be the file it reads.  It
sounds to me like you need to change the domain on Samba to be the same as the
NT domain.  Here's the file.
--Nick

Christopher Lynn wrote:

>        I've been trying to get samba running on an NT network.  Well more
> specifically trying to get it to show up in the Network Neighbourhood.  I
> can see the linux samba server from the solaris stations no problem.  NT is
> the problem though.  So if somebody can send me a copy of their smb.cfg file
> or give me a step by step it would be really appreciated.
>
> Cheers.

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==============4DC8A8CE28C5BA06151449BF==


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

From: "Sebastian" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Problem with kppp
Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 20:40:27 +0200


Hello got a problem with kppp under a Redhat 5.2 Environment!
I'm using KDE.
As root there is no problem with kpp, I can surf the web!!
But as user I can't!!
Well, I get a connection, but as soon as I want to go anywhere kfm or
netscape tell me that they do not know the host and that there is a problem
with the DNS Server although I entered the nameservers in the resolv.conf!
Also is my own Computer a unknown host, I renamed it with linuxconf as root
from "localhost@localdomain" to walhalla!
Could this be the source of my problems?
Thanks a lot for any responds!!




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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: How reset network card setting on the fly?
Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 18:04:09 GMT

I am using Red hat 6.0. If I change the network card settings
in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 and, say, change the IP
address. Is there anyway to make Linux reset my newly changed settings
without rebooting?


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

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

From: Tom Herman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Setting up Xisp
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 16:17:03 GMT

I used xisp a lot because my old ISP started to have a problem
with busy signals.  Xisp was really great at re-dialing.
Sometimes xisp re-dialed 27 times before I got a connect!

For some reason, I have to su to root and run xisp out of the /
directory.  eg.
  su -
  <passwd>
  cd /
  xisp &

You might try that.

HTH

Tom
--

Rod Smith wrote:
> 
> [Posted and mailed]
> 
> In article <7lbh5d$tff$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
>         [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> > I have installed the xisp 2.5 for my redhat 5.2, but it won't make a
> > connection.  I've installed it in the /opt/xisp*** partition. First it
> > dials up then connects and then after a while it hangs up.  What did I
> > not do yet?  I've checked the options file and only lock is there. And
> > for pap-secrets, linuxconf added the userid and password automatically,
> > but there is no auth command. How do I set everything up? or is there a
> > FAQ around somewhere?
> 
> Read the documentation.  Carefully.  My hunch is (since you didn't
> mention doing it) that you've got to change the permissions on some of
> your files.  This is all described in the X-ISP documentation.  You can
> also (as root) do a "cat /var/log/messages" to check the PPP connection
> messages (both normal activity and errors get reported here).
> 
> --
> Rod Smith
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> http://www.channel1.com/users/rodsmith
> NOTE: Remove the "uce" word from my address to mail me
> Author of _Special Edition Using WordPerfect for Linux_, from Que;
> see http://www.channel1.com/users/rodsmith/books.html

-- 
The views expressed are the author's and do not necessarily
reflect the official position of GTE or any of its subsidiaries

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


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