Re: [leaf-user] Bering UClibc 2.3.1 problems

2005-11-27 Thread Jim Ford
Jim, Did you read the dnsmasq documentation in the Bering-uClibc section: http://leaf.sourceforge.net/doc/guide/bucu-dnsmasq.html I think the problem is that the provider's DNS servers are not passed to dnsmasq (read the section Using dnsmasq with dhcpcd). Eric Thanks Eric. I've

Re: [leaf-user] Bering UClibc 2.3.1 problems

2005-11-27 Thread Eric Spakman
Hello Jim, Thanks Eric. I've looked at the above guide but noticed that it instructs that the resolv-file should point to /etc/dhcpc/resolv.conf. There isn't a dhcpc directory in my /etc! Should I create one and add an empty resolv.conf file in it? I tried pointing

Re: [leaf-user] Bering UClibc 2.3.1 problems

2005-11-27 Thread Jim Ford
Thanks again, Eric The etc/dhcpc/resolv.conf is only created when you use the dhcpcd package. Because you didn't tell much about your setup I have to guess a bit: -You have a dynamic ip-address from your provider: That's me!. My ISP assigns me a dynamic IP address. My firewall is connected

Re: [leaf-user] Bering UClibc 2.3.1 problems

2005-11-27 Thread Eric Spakman
Hello Jim, It worked! But an oddity is that even though I uncommented the range of IP addresses to allocate starting at 192.168.1.1, my Win XP machine gets allocated 192.168.1.65. When I plug my Linux laptop in (with the Win XP machine still connected), it gets 192.168.1.2. So why doesn't

Re: [leaf-user] Bering UClibc 2.3.1 problems

2005-11-27 Thread Jim Ford
Whilst I can ssh into the firewall (very useful) I can't access it with a browser. I've noticed that my syslog file has entries cannot execute /usr/sbin/sh-httpd: no such file or directory. I guess that it ought to be mini-httpd that should be called. I've tried starting mini-httpd by

Re: [leaf-user] lrcfg backup problem

2005-11-27 Thread Charles Steinkuehler
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 groups, freeman wrote: | Jim Ford wrote: | |I'd be interested in the experience (and workarounds) of others. | | | I use a CD-ROM drive and find that gives me a number of benefits... | | - CD-ROM is read-only, so integrity of its files can be