Lowell Gilbert wrote:
Brian John [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Apr 3, 2005 9:12 PM, Anthony Atkielski [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
One you've changed resolv.conf, it should stay that way permanently
across boots, unless you change it again.
dhclient will overwrite
Brian John wrote:
Lowell Gilbert wrote:
Brian John [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Apr 3, 2005 9:12 PM, Anthony Atkielski
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
One you've changed resolv.conf, it should stay that way permanently
across boots, unless you change it again.
dhclient will overwrite
On Sun, Apr 03, 2005 at 08:06:16PM -0500, Brian John wrote:
[...]
Ok, I think you may have pointed me to the source of the problem. Here
is what my resolv.conf looks like after every time I reboot my compuer:
search domain.actdsltmp
nameserver 192.168.0.1
nameserver 205.171.3.65
If
On Sun, 03 Apr 2005 20:06:16 -0500
Brian John [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ok, I think you may have pointed me to the source of the problem.
Here is what my resolv.conf looks like after every time I reboot my
compuer: search domain.actdsltmp
nameserver 192.168.0.1
nameserver 205.171.3.65
On Sun, Apr 03, 2005 at 08:06:16PM -0500, Brian John wrote:
[...]
Ok, I think you may have pointed me to the source of the problem. Here
is what my resolv.conf looks like after every time I reboot my compuer:
search domain.actdsltmp
nameserver 192.168.0.1
nameserver 205.171.3.65
If
On Apr 3, 2005 9:12 PM, Anthony Atkielski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
One you've changed resolv.conf, it should stay that way permanently
across boots, unless you change it again.
dhclient will overwrite /etc/resolv.conf on boot
___
On Apr 3, 2005 9:12 PM, Anthony Atkielski [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
One you've changed resolv.conf, it should stay that way permanently
across boots, unless you change it again.
dhclient will overwrite /etc/resolv.conf on boot
How can I keep dhclient from doing this?
/Brian
On Monday 04 April 2005 07:40 am, Brian John wrote:
On Apr 3, 2005 9:12 PM, Anthony Atkielski
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
One you've changed resolv.conf, it should stay that way
permanently across boots, unless you change it again.
dhclient will overwrite /etc/resolv.conf on boot
On Monday 04 April 2005 07:40 am, Brian John wrote:
On Apr 3, 2005 9:12 PM, Anthony Atkielski
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
One you've changed resolv.conf, it should stay that way
permanently across boots, unless you change it again.
dhclient will overwrite /etc/resolv.conf on
On Monday 04 April 2005 09:52 am, Brian John wrote:
On Monday 04 April 2005 07:40 am, Brian John wrote:
On Apr 3, 2005 9:12 PM, Anthony Atkielski
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
One you've changed resolv.conf, it should stay that way
permanently across boots, unless you change
Brian John [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Apr 3, 2005 9:12 PM, Anthony Atkielski [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
One you've changed resolv.conf, it should stay that way permanently
across boots, unless you change it again.
dhclient will overwrite /etc/resolv.conf on boot
How can I
cape canaveral writes:
dhclient will overwrite /etc/resolv.conf on boot
Then perhaps dhclient.conf is the culprit; an alternative is to stop
running dhclient, but only if the machine's own IP address is static.
--
Anthony
___
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 2005-04-03, Brian John scribbled these
curious markings:
Hello, I just got an xDSL system. In Windows I can browse the internet
and do whatever I want just fine. However, in FreeBSD the only things
that work are my p2p programs. Azureus and
Brian John writes:
Hello, I just got an xDSL system. In Windows I can browse the internet
and do whatever I want just fine. However, in FreeBSD the only things
that work are my p2p programs. Azureus and amule work fine, they both
connect and download. However, when I try to use dillo,
On Sun, 3 Apr 2005 15:51:47 -0500 (CDT)
Brian John [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello, I just got an xDSL system. In Windows I can browse the
internet and do whatever I want just fine. However, in FreeBSD the
only things that work are my p2p programs. Azureus and amule work
fine, they both
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 2005-04-03, Brian John scribbled these
curious markings:
Hello, I just got an xDSL system. In Windows I can browse the internet
and do whatever I want just fine. However, in FreeBSD the only things
that work are my p2p programs.
Brian John writes:
Hello, I just got an xDSL system. In Windows I can browse the internet
and do whatever I want just fine. However, in FreeBSD the only things
that work are my p2p programs. Azureus and amule work fine, they both
connect and download. However, when I try to use
I didn't use any config files for this. I never had to use any to get my
cable modem to work either. What config files should I be looking at?
/Brian
- Original Message -
Sounds to me as if you don't have your FreeBSD system configured
correctly for DSL modem hookup.
Post the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sun, 3 Apr 2005 15:51:47 -0500 (CDT)
Brian John [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello, I just got an xDSL system. In Windows I can browse the
internet and do whatever I want just fine. However, in FreeBSD the
only things that work are my p2p programs. Azureus and amule
Brian John writes:
Now, if I change it to this (using my secondary DNS server from my DSL
modem's 'setup' page):
search domain.actdsltmp
nameserver 205.171.2.65
...everything works. Is there a way that I could keep this from
changing every time that I reboot my computer?
One you've
Brian John writes:
I don't think so because it works fine in Windows. Wouldn't it not work
in windows if that was the case?
I understood that you had changed ISP connections also. If you're using
the same connection that Windows used, then it's not the ISP. Based on
your other posts, it
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