Linux-Networking Digest #817, Volume #11 Thu, 8 Jul 99 00:13:59 EDT
Contents:
Subnet ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: Linux on winnt/netware5 networks ("Lucas Fisher")
Re: Could Microsoft Cheat On The New Mindcraft Benchmark? ("Fredrich P. Maney")
Re: ipchains help - newbie ("Rene Nunez")
Re: Damn Apache ("TURBO1010")
Remote Dialup Printer ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: (Really) Kill a Process ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: howto's (David)
Re: Could Microsoft Cheat On The New Mindcraft Benchmark? (Jason O'Rourke)
Re: Linux - Which One? ("George Georgakis")
Re: NT pings my DNS on Login... ("Cliff")
Re: Newbie help ("Kevin Rosel")
autofs and samba ("Marius Kaizerman")
Re: Real NOWHERE question. ("wea")
Re: How Do I Set up a Two-Computer Network? ("wea")
Re: Let's do the SAMBA ("M. Smith")
Backup via rdump linux->solaris slow (Morgan Fletcher)
Re: Network Card Collisions ("Warren Jennings")
Re: pppd scripting and diald (Andreas Bock)
Hide Server from Browse Lists? (Michael Sadd)
test, please ignore ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Newbie: Suse 6.1 and @home ("Jim Jonske")
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Subnet
Reply-To: sfraser@<No_FSCKING_SPAM>questercorp.com
Date: Thu, 08 Jul 1999 01:07:50 GMT
Afternoon folks,
I have a class C subnet that I am in the process of subnetting.
This is what I am trying to achieve:
209.53.151.255 to 209.53.151.239
16 addresses; subnet mask = 255.255.255.240
209.53.151.238 to 209.53.151.110
128 addresses; subnet mask 255.255.255.128
209.53.151.109 to 209.53.151.45
64 addresses; subnet mask 255.255.255.192
209.53.151.44 to 209.53.151.28
16 addresses; subnet mask 255.255.255.240
Then of course into plays comes what broadcast addresses to use.
The math I have gone over seems to dictate that this is possible. On
the other hand, my provider would prefer:
16
32
32
32
64
Personally I really don;t want to have to do it that way. If there are
any subnet gurus out there I'd love to hear from you, and see if I am
on the right path here.
Cheers and thanx in advance,
Scott Fraser
------------------------------
From: "Lucas Fisher" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Linux on winnt/netware5 networks
Date: Wed, 7 Jul 1999 19:20:15 -0500
Are you asking how you can access other SMB servers from linux? If so, you
can use smbclient to log on to those servers. It is somewhat like a ftp
client. You can also use smbmount to mount smb shares on a linux computer.
Lucas
Ken R. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:7lvopp$e9o$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I have a dell 266 running RH6.0. I have it up on the network ( I can
> ping pcs on my network and goto the internet. I am using DHCP. What
> would be the best way to use the resources of the network for file and
> print sharing. I have used Samba in a server role, but have no idea how
> to configure it as a client on these two networks.
> Any suggestions or ideas would help,
> Ken R.
>
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Share what you know. Learn what you don't.
------------------------------
From: "Fredrich P. Maney" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To:
omp.os.ms-windows.nt.advocacy,comp.os.linux.advocacy,comp.infosystems.www.servers.unix,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Re: Could Microsoft Cheat On The New Mindcraft Benchmark?
Date: 8 Jul 1999 00:48:32 GMT
In comp.infosystems.www.servers.unix I R A Aggie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
: On 7 Jul 1999 18:38:32 GMT, Fredrich P. Maney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, in
: <7m06r8$lgm$[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
: + from WWII. As for the USA benefitting from WWII, have you even *read*
: + history concerning the war and just how many US troops died? If I remember
: + the population numbers of England correctly, it was more than your entire
: + country (not just your combat dead, but your whole country).
: In a word: Bullshit. The costliest US war, in terms of lives lost was the
: US Civil War. Please stop while you're behind.
I never said that WWII was costliest war that the USA has been in by
any measure. I said that the US lost most troops in WWII than England did.
So, read my post next time before you try to slam me.
fpsm
--
| Fredrich P. Maney [EMAIL PROTECTED] |
| President, Seventh Floor Communications, Inc. www.seventhfloor.com |
| 167 West Main Street, Lexington, KY 40507 |
| [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.maney.org ICQ# 5632845 |
=======================================================================
'An it harm none, do what thou will.
------------------------------
From: "Rene Nunez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: ipchains help - newbie
Date: Thu, 08 Jul 1999 01:13:49 GMT
Robert,
I want to thank for your time in helping me out. Between your examples and
reading again the How-to is beginning to make more sense...
Also people never make stupid mistakes, it is either a lack of knowlege or
not focusing on the problem at hand. Besides, over the years, I have
made all of the stupid mistakes that anybody could ever come up with !!!
:-)
Again, thank you for your assistance, and please feel free to email me if I
can be of any help.
Rene
------------------------------
From: "TURBO1010" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Damn Apache
Date: Wed, 7 Jul 1999 17:29:23 -0700
Think what you need is ipmasquerading, and not proxies.
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:7lj46u$kip$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Yeah, way off, i have it configured as a gateway but for the browser it
> has to be a proxy. But thank you for the input, your the only one who
> has answered all day! Thanx again!
>
> In article <Nb7f3.2355$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> "BAd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I could be WAY off on this, but shouldn't you set up your Linux box
> as a
> > gateway, rather than a proxy?
> >
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
> <7lief4$beb$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
> > >I finally got PPP to work on my Linux box. I forwarded my IP
> address.
> > >Tell me if this is right, here's what i did
> > >ipfwadm -F -a deny
> > >ipfwadm -F -m 10.8.80.6/8 -D 0.0.0.0/0
> > >
> > >My linux box's network addy is 10.8.80.6 and my Internet IP is
> assigned
> > >dynamically. Well, I did this and connected with my ISP and pinged
> > >various web sites, so my PPP on my Linux box obiviously worked. Then
> I
> > >went to Netscape on my Windows 98 box and set the http proxy to
> > >10.8.80.6 port 80. I don't know if port 80 is right, or if i can
> change
> > >the port or what, but the locally stored apache page came up with
> every
> > >web site. I looked in the apache FAQ to find out how to shut it off,
> > >and it gave me some kill command. But the command said to kill
> > >something in .usr/local/apache/... and i have no apache directory in
> > >/usr/local. For right now I dont even need apache, so if someone
> could
> > >please tell me how to uninstall it or something, that would be great,
> > >but it would be even better if someone knows of another reason why my
> IP
> > >forwarding doesnt work or how to make it work so i can access the web
> > >from my 98 box by goign through my Linux box. Thanx in advance!
> > >
> > >
> > >Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> > >Share what you know. Learn what you don't.
> >
> >
>
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Share what you know. Learn what you don't.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Remote Dialup Printer
Date: Wed, 07 Jul 1999 14:49:46 GMT
I would like information on setting up remote
dialup printers on a RedHat v6.0 system. The
system that will be calling the Linux box is SCO
OpenServer. I can cu between the machines with
no trouble but the lp system on the SCO box does
not seam to use the same dialer as cu, for it
never dials the modem??? Any help would be
greatly consumed. Thanks in advance.
Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Share what you know. Learn what you don't.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.admin
Subject: Re: (Really) Kill a Process
Date: Thu, 08 Jul 1999 00:52:18 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> is it a zombie? if so, you can't kill it b/c it's already dead...it's
> not a big deal and you certainly don't to reboot. You may need to
> remove the lock file in ~/.netscape/lock.
> -ckm
>
Well, it does kind of matter. I had this problem w/ the stock version
of netscape that came w/ SuSE 6.0. I couldn't kill it ( didn't think
about renicing it first), and according to kpm, it would steadily
increase my cpu usage to ~98%, and everything else would bog down
accordingly. So yes, it does matter, and if you can't kill it, you have
to reboot. BTW, another annoying netscape thing... though this one
would seem to be related more Mandrake 6.0, since my netscape's in
Redhat, SuSE, Slackware, and Caldera work fine. In Mandrake 6.0, the
'Alt+o' sequence to open a new URL just beeps at me. Similarly, 'Esc'
doesn't stop a page from loading anymore. WTF? Anyone else have this
problem w/ Mandrake? I d/l'ed the 4.61 mdk.rpms and got the same thing,
and when I loaded them in plain RH, it happened there, as well.
Monte
Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Share what you know. Learn what you don't.
------------------------------
From: David <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: howto's
Date: Wed, 07 Jul 1999 19:58:11 -0500
Rbtech wrote:
> can anyone point me in the direction of the howto's?
http://www.redhat.com/mirrors/LDP
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jason O'Rourke)
Crossposted-To:
omp.os.ms-windows.nt.advocacy,comp.os.linux.advocacy,comp.infosystems.www.servers.unix,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Re: Could Microsoft Cheat On The New Mindcraft Benchmark?
Date: 7 Jul 1999 17:43:17 -0700
I R A Aggie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>+ from WWII. As for the USA benefitting from WWII, have you even *read*
>+ history concerning the war and just how many US troops died? If I remember
>+ the population numbers of England correctly, it was more than your entire
>+ country (not just your combat dead, but your whole country).
>
>In a word: Bullshit. The costliest US war, in terms of lives lost was the
>US Civil War. Please stop while you're behind.
James - that fact is not really relevent. WWII was still costly to the US
in terms of lives lost, though it pales in comparison to the price paid by
the Soviets and Chinese (approx 30million each). Obviously having
virtually no damage and also having ranted up production abilities for the
war meant that the US was in terrific shape afterwards.
--
Jason O'Rourke [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.jor.com
'96 BMW r850R
last dive: June 13th, Pescadero Wash Rocks (Carmel), 46 mins at 64ft max
------------------------------
From: "George Georgakis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Linux - Which One?
Date: Thu, 08 Jul 1999 00:55:05 GMT
Huh?
"I am going to setup a very small server on my home computer..."
"... planning to have a dual-boot system..."
This doesn't make sense. A server is normally a dedicated machine which
"serves" other machines. You don't "dual-boot" a server - a server is
SUPPOSED to stay up at all times so other machines can access it. Unless
you provode a specific need to a very limited number of users.
What, exactly, do you want to set up??? "Small networking solutions"
doesn't say anything.
George
Troy Knight <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in article
<7m0rgr$b3h$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
> Hi, I am going to setup a very small server on my home computer to handle
> small networking solutions, for the internet. I want a linux OS because,
> firstly it's free, and secondly it won't eat up the small amount of
> resources I have like NT will. Problem is, there are too many! Can anyone
> give me any idea which one would be the best for this type of situation.
I
> am planning to have a dual-boot system, and have mediam networking
knowledge
> and experince, thanks.
>
>
>
------------------------------
From: "Cliff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: NT pings my DNS on Login...
Date: Wed, 07 Jul 1999 19:55:46 GMT
Weber wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>
>Hmm... winipcfg gives me an error "the entry point could not
>be found in winsock32.dll" Never seen that before.
>I'm using NT 4.0 service pack 3.
>
Not good. I don't think it is part of the problem but you definitely
want to fix that.
>
>Anyway, from the network configuration:
[snip]
>Many roads seem to lead to WINS and LMHOSTS, but I don't
>know anything about how they work.
>
WINS is the NetBIOS/NetBEUI equivalent of DNS. If your network is small
you don't really need to use it. NB names can be resolved by broadcast
instead. That's why I asked about winipcfg. The node type will tell you
what mode you're operating in. I'd guess you're using WINS to resolve NB
names. It sounds like your network configuration may have gotten hosed.
Try riping it out and reinstall just TCP/IP and see if it pings. If so,
then add back in the other stuff and try again.
--
-Cliff
Views expressed are my own and not necessarily those of my employer
Concordia Net, Inc. When replying via email please use; cwheat at concordia
dot net not
root@localhost
Scott
------------------------------
From: "Kevin Rosel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To:
comp.os.ms-windows.networking,comp.os.ms-windows.networking.windows,microsoft.public.win95.networking,microsoft.public.win98.networking,microsoft.public.word.setupnetworking,pl.comp.networking
Subject: Re: Newbie help
Date: Wed, 7 Jul 1999 21:04:48 -0400
Sygate is great, I just installed myself. Once you have it installed as a
server on your machine that will connect to the Internet via Dialup, you
install it as a client on your other pc. Then you have to change your
internet and mail connections (the one's in Control Panel) to use your LAN
to get out instead of the dialup.....
There are lots of good how to sites in this newsgroup if you look a bit..
Kevin
Adam Haile wrote in message <5pPg3.640$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>I have a small 2 (win 98) computer network at my house everything is
working
>fine (File sharing and Print Sharing). Except I'm trying to Dial up to my
>internet provider for both computers. I have read that you have to use a
>proxy server to do that. I have heard several mentioned Including SyGate
and
>WinGate; Linux, Unix and WinNT. I am not only networking my computers for
>file sharing and the internet but also for future job prospects. Can anyone
>steer me toward the most industry related or maybe give me advise on how do
>learn about networking. Thanks for the Posts Please E-Mail any Replies to
me
>thanks Adam
>
>
------------------------------
From: "Marius Kaizerman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.protocols.smb
Subject: autofs and samba
Date: Thu, 8 Jul 1999 05:42:25 +0300
Hi,
I'm using autofs on an linux RH5 system to automount some
share-points from an NT system.
The problem is that I don't know how to configure the username
and password in the /etc/auto.something file, same passwords
that I configured in the NT system for those directories.
For example, this is my auto.something file (which is read by
/etc/auto.master):
fe -fstype=smbfs ://winnt/fe
* -fstype=smbfs ://winnt/jam
I've tried to add -U user -P password after the '-fstype=smbfs', I tried
to add it after the '://winnt/fe', I tried those without the minus sign,
with commans, but nothing.
Anyone can help ?
Thanks,
Marius.
------------------------------
From: "wea" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Real NOWHERE question.
Date: 8 Jul 1999 02:15:42 GMT
try
[global]
security = share
Guo Quin ���g��峹 ...
>Hello.
>I 've got problems in SAMBA.
>I can telnet; ftp and http in and out or it is RHtoW98; W98toRH; RHtoRH:
>W95to E98; RHtoW95 or W95toRH.
>I can "smbclient" from RH5.0 to Windozes.
>I can "nethood" from Windozes to RH5.0.
>The only thing doesn't work is "smbmount".
>Note:I used to use "enter" for password (me set it up like that).
>
>It did work if I "smbmount" RHtoRH at root directory only, since
>I could use my root login password, all other directory failed.
>This is meaningless since I would like to "smbmount" a windoze
>directory or drive.
>I configged and configegd and then configged.....but
>First "nethood" went blank in Windoze, then I try to restore
>smb.conf by configging and configging.... then
>Second, now I can't even "smbclient" RH to Windozes.
>
>This means Samba is all out, what a "fight".
>
>Kieu
>
>
------------------------------
From: "wea" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: How Do I Set up a Two-Computer Network?
Date: 8 Jul 1999 02:15:41 GMT
I think the problem is linux network setting. do you setup network card
correct in linux system.you can type ping 162.168.0.3 in your b
machine(linux) and if you get a wrong message,you have to type "netconf" or
"netconfing" to check your setting.or you can tell me more about the
information about your linux machine.
Ben W. ���g��峹 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>I have two machines I wish to network together. The connection is
>a cross-over RJ-45 cable. Machine A will be running Linux and Machine
>B will be running Windows 98.
>
>Configuration for Machine A:
>I.P. Address: 192.168.0.1
>Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0
>Host name: 192-168-0-1
>Domain name: .192-168-0-1
>
>Configuration for Machine B:
>I.P. Address: 192.168.0.3
>Subnet mask 255.255.255.0
>Host name: 192-168-0-3
>Domain name: .192-168-0-1
>
>
>The biggest obstacle I have right now is pinging either machine. With
>both Machine A and B running Windows 98, I can ping them both. If
>Machine A runs Linux and Machine B runs Windows 98, I just cannot
>get a ping response from either one of them. I tried typing at the
>Linux machine the following command line:
>
> route add -host 192.168.0.3 netmask 255.255.255.0
>
>in order to add Machine B to the Linux routing table, but it complains
>that the netmask is wrong for the I.P. address.
>
>Will someone please direct or suggest some extremely dummy-proof way
>of getting my machines to recognize each other? I have read the
>Net3-HowTo, the Ethernet-HowTo, and DNS-HowTo, but it is very
>confusing.
>
>Thank you.
>
>Ben W.
>Very new to Linux...
>
------------------------------
From: "M. Smith" <smithm@mvpdotnet>
Subject: Re: Let's do the SAMBA
Date: Wed, 7 Jul 1999 20:43:32 -0500
Andrew Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Forbidden
>
> You don't have permission to access /MigrationPath/maguai/samba.html on
this
> server.
Just accessed the file minutes ago and printed. No problems.
------------------------------
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.misc,comp.unix.solaris,comp.sys.sun.admin
Subject: Backup via rdump linux->solaris slow
From: Morgan Fletcher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 07 Jul 1999 19:11:43 -0700
My worksite has a backup system where a central solaris 2.5.1 server
rsh-es into various other UNIX boxes (Solaris, HPUX and AIX) and does
an rdump similar to this:
/sbin/rdump -0 -u -b 32 -s 1000000 -f ale:/dev/rmt/1hn /scm
I recently added a linux box to the network (debian 2.1, kernel
2.0.36), and the sysadmin tried adding two of it's ext2 partitions
(taking up most of a 2GB SCSI disk) to the backup routine. Rdump is
much slower on the linux box, to the point of being unusable. We found
storage speeds in the range of 80k/sec across a 10base-t connection. I
can ftp files between the two machines at ~900k/sec, and another
solaris box rdumps at ~690k/sec, so it's not the network. We've tried
playing with the blocksize figure, but we see only minor
changes. We've also seen errors like this in the backup report:
short read error from /dev/sda1: [block -2012730776]: count=1024, got=0
bread: lseek2 fails!
Any idea for a fix or at least a diagnosis? This is enough of a hiccup
that I will have to abandon linux as a platform for the task I have in
mind if I can't solve it. I'm not looking for suggestions of alternate
backup methods - for linux to work it has to fit within the current
backup paradigm.
Thanks in advance!
morgan
--
VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV
>> M o r g a n F l e t c h e r http://www.hahaha.org <<
>> Tibi gratias agimus quod nihil fumas. [EMAIL PROTECTED] <<
------------------------------
From: "Warren Jennings" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Network Card Collisions
Date: 8 Jul 1999 00:13:17 GMT
Hi,
This can be a problem with cheap and nasty net card. The delay before retry
after a collision should be semirandom based
on things like the MAC address. I've found a number of the bottom of the
range cards just have a fixed delay. If you get a collision between two of
them on the same segment, they both wait about the same time and retry and
get another collision etc. It's only when the timing skews between the two
grow large enough that you can start getting packets out.
If your cards are the same, see if you can borrow a different type to try
in one of the machines. If this is the problem you'll notice a big speed
up, otherwise - keep looking.
Hope this helps
Warren
------------------------------
From: Andreas Bock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.comp.linux.isp,alt.os.linux.dial-up
Subject: Re: pppd scripting and diald
Date: Wed, 07 Jul 1999 21:08:37 +0200
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
gordo wrote:
> =
> I've tried to follow Bill's advice on his page but I just can't quite
> get a complete connection.
> =
> I've used the command in the form of
> /usr/sbin/pppd /dev/ttyS1 57600 debug connect "/usr/sbin/chat -v ''
> ATD5555555 CONNECT '' ogin: [mylogin] assword: [blabla]"
> =
> and i can trail its progress; i see it "CONNECT" and the ISP resond
> but then the "CONNECT SCRIPT FAIL"s and then it disconnects.
> =
> Anyone know how to use Chat properly? Share a Chat or a modem to ISP
> connect script(s) with me? I'm soooo close!
Maybe there=B4s a problem detecting that login was successful
Following the connect script called from diald I use.
I=B4ve marked the line corresponding to your problem. But If your ISP doe=
s
not give you back a prompt then this script will fail. Find it out with
seyon or minicom
Bye
Andreas
!/bin/sh
# Copyright (c) 1996, Eric Schenk.
#
# This script is intended to give an example of a connection script that
# uses the "message" facility of diald to communicate progress through
# the dialing process to a diald monitoring program such as dctrl or
diald-top.
# It also reports progress to the system logs. This can be useful if you
# are seeing failed attempts to connect and you want to know when and
why
# they are failing.
#
# This script requires the use of chat-1.9 or greater for full
# functionality. It should work with older versions of chat,
# but it will not be able to report the reason for a connection failure.
# Configuration parameters
# The initialization string for your modem
MODEM_INIT=3D"ATZ&C1&D2%C0"
# MODEM_INIT=3D"ATZ S7=3D45 S0=3D0 L1 V1 X4 &c1 E1 Q0"
# The phone number to dial
PHONE_NUMBER=3D"55555"
# The chat sequence to recognize that the remote system
# is asking for your user name.
USER_CHAT_SEQ=3D"login:--login:--login:--login:--login:--login:--login:"
# The string to send in response to the request for your user name.
USER_NAME=3D"loginname"
# The chat sequence to recongnize that the remote system
# is asking for your password.
PASSWD_CHAT_SEQ=3D"word:"
# The string to send in response to the request for your password.
PASSWORD=3D"password"
# The prompt the remote system will give once you are logged in
# If you do not define this then the script will assume that
# there is no command to be issued to start up the remote protocol.
#####################################################################
PROMPT=3D"PPP session from"
#####################################################################
# This is the line sent by the ISP the script has to recognize to set up
pppd
# Maybe this is your problem
# The command to issue to start up the remote protocol
PROTOCOL_START=3D"ppp"
# The string to wait for to see that the protocol on the remote
# end started OK. If this is empty then no check will be performed.
START_ACK=3D"Switching to PPP."
# Pass a message on to diald and the system logs.
function message () {
[ $FIFO ] && echo "message $*" >$FIFO
logger -p local2.info -t connect "$*"
}
# Initialize the modem. Usually this just resets it.
message "Initializing Modem"
chat TIMEOUT 5 "" $MODEM_INIT TIMEOUT 45 OK ""
if [ $? !=3D 0 ]; then
message "Failed to initialize modem"
exit 1
fi
# Dial the remote system.
message "Dialing system"
chat \
TIMEOUT 45 \
ABORT "NO CARRIER" \
ABORT BUSY \
ABORT ERROR \
"" ATX3DT$PHONE_NUMBER \
CONNECT ""
case $? in
0) message Connected;;
1) message "Chat Error"; exit 1;;
2) message "Chat Script Error"; exit 1;;
3) message "Chat Timeout"; exit 1;;
4) message "No Carrier"; exit 1;;
5) message "Busy"; exit 1;;
6) message "Modem Error"; exit 1;;
*)
esac
# We're connected try to log in.
message "Loggin in"
chat \
TIMEOUT 5 \
$USER_CHAT_SEQ \\q$USER_NAME \
TIMEOUT 45 \
$PASSWD_CHAT_SEQ $PASSWORD
if [ $? !=3D 0 ]; then
message "Failed to log in"
exit 1
fi
# We logged in, try to start up the protocol (provided that the
# user has specified how to do this)
if [ $PROMPT ]; then
message "Starting Comm Protocol"
chat TIMEOUT 15 $PROMPT $PROTOCOL_START
if [ $? !=3D 0 ]; then
message "Prompt not received"
exit 1
fi
fi
if [ $START_ACK ]; then
chat TIMEOUT 15 $START_ACK ""
if [ $? !=3D 0 ]; then
message "Failed to start Protocol"
exit 1
fi
fi
# Success!
message "Protocol started"
> >
> >If it's Tuesday, this must be someone else's fortune.
------------------------------
From: Michael Sadd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.protocols.smb,linux.samba
Subject: Hide Server from Browse Lists?
Date: Wed, 07 Jul 1999 22:43:57 -0500
I have noticed quite a bit of messages/documentation
on how to get a Samba server to show up in browse
lists.
I have the opposite problem--I want it to disappear!
Namely, the analog of
net config server /hidden:yes
Is there a specific flag which addresses this? I have
tried a number of obvious things, but none works so
far. I can post my smb.conf file if that helps.
My guess is that it is obvious, but I can't seem to find
it in the documentation! Any help is very much appreciated.
Best regards,
Mike
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: test, please ignore
Date: 7 Jul 1999 20:22:19 GMT
test
------------------------------
From: "Jim Jonske" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Newbie: Suse 6.1 and @home
Date: Wed, 07 Jul 1999 21:01:25 GMT
I just installed SuSE 6.1 on my machine with no major problems. This is my
first experience with Linux so I need some help. What do I need to do to be
able to connect to my ISP @home.com. Do I need DHCP or is it better to go
after it as static? I've got all my info from winipcfg for my Ethernet card
etc. Anxiously waiting to go. I've seen a few messages about connecting to
@home thru Red Hat but nothing for Suse. Any help is appreciated.
Thanks,
Jim
------------------------------
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