What is your default gateway and subnet mask for your lan?
Cheers,
Eric Six
-Original Message-
From: Brian Henning [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2003 11:37 AM
To: freebsd
Subject: network issue
My local network (192.168.1.0) consists of two machine BSD1
Brian Henning wrote:
My local network (192.168.1.0) consists of two machine BSD1 (192.168.1.40) and
BSD2 (192.168.1.42).
There is a third machine (192.168.1.254, ip address from isp) that acts as a
gateway router. When my internet connection goes down for whatever reason I
loose connections in my
On Thu, Feb 13, 2003 at 11:36:47AM -0600, Brian Henning wrote:
My local network (192.168.1.0) consists of two machine BSD1 (192.168.1.40) and
BSD2 (192.168.1.42).
There is a third machine (192.168.1.254, ip address from isp) that acts as a
gateway router. When my internet connection goes down
My local network (192.168.1.0) consists of two machine BSD1
(192.168.1.40) and BSD2 (192.168.1.42).
There is a third machine (192.168.1.254, ip address from isp) that acts
as a gateway router. When my internet connection goes down for whatever
reason I loose connections in my local network.
Brian Henning wrote:
Let me try again, here is my situation and question with a little more detail.
My local network (192.168.1.0) consists of two machine BSD1 (192.168.1.40) and
BSD2 (192.168.1.42). Both of these machines use the subnet mask 255.255.255.0
and gateway 192.168.1.254.
There is a
]
Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2003 1:49 PM
Subject: Re: network issue revisited
Brian Henning wrote:
Let me try again, here is my situation and question with a little more
detail.
My local network (192.168.1.0) consists of two machine BSD1 (192.168.1.40)
and
BSD2 (192.168.1.42). Both
I'm guessing more than likely your DNS server is external to
your internal LAN and you don't have an internal DNS to
manage RFC1918 IPs. If this is the case, this is why pings will
*seem* to fail. They are trying to look up your internal addresses
(which will fail with an internet connection up
(which rules out DNS problems).
Not unless he does ping -n. If not, the A will still attempt
to be resolved.
Don
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- Original Message -
From: Bill Moran [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Brian Henning [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: freebsd [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2003 1:49 PM
Subject: Re: network issue revisited
Brian Henning wrote:
Let me try again, here is my situation and question with a little
: network issue
I'm guessing more than likely your DNS server is external to
your internal LAN and you don't have an internal DNS to
manage RFC1918 IPs. If this is the case, this is why pings will
*seem* to fail. They are trying to look up your internal addresses
(which will fail
Brian Henning wrote:
Ok, i am willing to try out the internal dns server but, i don't know which
machine to run it on.
Any suggestions?
Whichever box doesn't act as your most-used-workstation, or, the router
if its capable of running a server.
Don
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northern snowfall wrote:
(which rules out DNS problems).
Not unless he does ping -n. If not, the A will still attempt
to be resolved.
Don
Good point, I stand corrected.
--
Bill Moran
Potential Technologies
http://www.potentialtech.com
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with
On Thu, Feb 13, 2003 at 03:33:57PM -0500, Bill Moran wrote:
northern snowfall wrote:
(which rules out DNS problems).
Not unless he does ping -n. If not, the A will still attempt
to be resolved.
Don
Good point, I stand corrected.
--
Bill Moran
I must be missing something. Don is
Hi,
I'm kinda new to this list but I had the same problem when I've
upgraded from 4.5-release to 4.7-stable.
about the ping, I'm not sure if you have any f/w on ur network or
you've installed ipf by default try ipfstat or ipmon.
concerning ssh, make sure your hostname is configured correctly if
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