/usr/sbin/routed is an application that needs to be installed, not a file
that the system writes each time you (re)boot. Not having any recent
experience with SuSE, I can only suggest that you use its package manager to
find the package that contains routed and install it.
But ... on Linux workstations, "routed" is usually not needed to handle
routing. The command /sbin/route sets up simple (but sufficient for
workstations, and even for most servers and many routers) routing tables in
the kernel. So you might want to tell us a bit more about the actual
"problem with routing on my linux-server" that you are experiencing.
At 02:21 PM 6/20/01 +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>Hi,
>I have a problem with routing on my linux-server.There is running SuSE 7.0.
>In /usr/sbin there is no routed or in.routed. When I reboot the system is
>says:
>starting routedstartproc: cannot start /usr/sbin/routed/ :no such file or
>directory
>Normally usr/sbin/routed/ will be written new after every reboot !?
>What can I do that the system writes usr/sbin/routed new ?
--
------------------------------------"Never tell me the odds!"---
Ray Olszewski -- Han Solo
Palo Alto, CA [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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