Don't forget to try accessing a known web site by its IP address. If you can access a web site by its IP address then dhcp, is not the issue. I would assume your linksys product has some firewalling ability and may be blocking outgoing dns requests from the inside of your network...Usually this is not an issue but worth checking your linksys configuration.
-----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of R. Scott Belford Sent: Wednesday, December 31, 2003 7:59 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [luau] Network questions Are you assigning the computers ip addresses that are in the same class as those being offered by your Linksys router? If your are setting the ip addresses manually, are you also setting the gateway to your Linksys router? If you have no route through your Linksys product, then you cannot reach your DNS. Try disabling dhcp on your router, and assign ip addys consistent with the settings you choose on the router. --scott On Tue, 2003-12-30 at 22:15, kilauea wrote: > I have recently put a linksys router on my Road Runner cable modem and > have two (linux of course) boxes connected. The boxes are only used for > web browsing and are currently configured for DHCP with the router > providing a DHCP server. All works fine in this config but I would like > to give the boxes fixed IP addresses. When I set the boxes to fixed IP > addresses (rc.inet1) the boxes see each other OK but DNS isn't working > even though resolve.conf shows the RR DNS addresses. How do I set the > boxes to fixed addresses but still provide DNS for web browsing? > > Aloha from Kauai > Mahalo, Kilauea > > > _______________________________________________ > LUAU mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://videl.ics.hawaii.edu/mailman/listinfo/luau _______________________________________________ LUAU mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://videl.ics.hawaii.edu/mailman/listinfo/luau
