Re: telnet not working on home LAN

1999-11-03 Thread Nathan E Norman
On Wed, 3 Nov 1999, Patrick Kirk wrote: : Hi all, : : Just put Debian on a second PC and having problems telnetting in from work. : : Trying 10.0.0.2... : Connected to 10.0.0.2. : Escape character is '^]'. : Connection closed by foreign host. : : Anyone know why I'm not getting a

Re: telnet not working on home LAN

1999-11-03 Thread Blazej Sawionek
1. dpkg --status telnetd if not installed = install (in my case this was the problem - apparently by default it is not installed) 2. check /etc/inetd.conf for lines: ftp stream tcp nowait root/usr/sbin/tcpd /usr/sbin/in.ftpd telnet stream tcp nowait

RE: telnet not working on home LAN

1999-11-03 Thread John Davis
Hmm. I think its because 10.x.x.x domains are not routable. John -Original Message- From: Nathan E Norman [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, November 03, 1999 10:18 AM To: Patrick Kirk Cc: Debian User List Subject: Re: telnet not working on home LAN On Wed, 3 Nov

Re: telnet not working on home LAN

1999-11-03 Thread Patrick Kirk
Thanks. To solve your problem, comment out the line ALL: PARANOID from /etc/hosts.deny -- Nathan Norman MidcoNet 410 South Phillips Avenue Sioux Falls, SD mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.midco.net finger [EMAIL PROTECTED] for PGP Key: (0xA33B86E9) -- Unsubscribe?

RE: telnet not working on home LAN

1999-11-03 Thread Nathan E Norman
On Wed, 3 Nov 1999, John Davis wrote: : Hmm. : : I think its because 10.x.x.x domains are not routable. Sure they are. They're just not supposed to be routed across the Internet. -- Nathan Norman MidcoNet 410 South Phillips Avenue Sioux Falls, SD mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: telnet not working on home LAN

1999-11-03 Thread aphro
well, 2 t hings is your work outside your 10.X network ? i hope your on the same network as that machine :) second ..the machine may be trying to resolve your ip ..or something. i have this problem too, and it goes away when i remove the default gateway. if the gateway is there and is

RE: telnet not working on home LAN

1999-11-03 Thread Paul McHale
10.0.0.0 is what is called a private IP. It sounds like you have a DSL router or something similar. It is using network address translation. The only public IP is assigned to the router by your ISP. When a machine on your LAN talks through your router, the router strips off the IP of the local