when you get an addresses in the 192.168.x.x it usually means the cable
is not connected, I think you will find that your cable modem will also
answer on 192.168.100.1 (I think).

Best thing I have found is power off the modem leave it off for about 5
min and then turn it back on.

A

On Fri, Dec 19, 2003 at 06:33:40AM +1100, Karl Bowden wrote:
> It must have just been a temp tesltra problem, because this morning it
> works fine.
> 
>  - Karl
> 
> On Fri, 2003-12-19 at 00:58, Grant Parnell wrote:
> > I've not seen this with Cable before but it's possible it's a new setup
> > for disabled accounts. See if he/she can access 'www' or
> > 'www.nsw.bigpond.com' or whatever the domain you get from DHCP is. Then 
> > try accessing the account info. Anything from 'sorry we stuffed up' to 
> > 'you forgot to pay the bill' might surface.
> > 
> > I got this with Optus dialup when I signed up for somebody once... some
> > private IP space address 192.168.x.x or 10.x.x.x I can't remember which. I
> > chased for a while and finally rang them.. there was a website you needed
> > to hit and enable the account.
> > 
> > On Thu, 18 Dec 2003, Karl Bowden wrote:
> > 
> > > A friends linux box connected to a Telstra Cable broadband connection
> > > decided to stop responding tonight, the box is setup using dhcp, and
> > > bpalogin.
> > > 
> > > >From what I can determine the DHCP request returns an ip in the range of
> > > 192.168.100.x instead of an external/usable ip.
> > > 
> > > Is anybody else experiencing this? Has anybody else had this problem in
> > > the past? How should have I configured the box better?
> > > 
> > > I also have an ADSL connection with IINET with a static ip. It uses
> > > pppoe and even though the ip is static I just let pppoe fetch it with
> > > dhcp.
> > > 
> > > Ebout every 10 - 15 days of connection time these machines will stop
> > > responding to the internet. I can turn the modem off and on again and
> > > restart that connection but the connection is momentery. It is not until
> > > I reboot the machine that the connection will be established reliably
> > > again. What gives? Should I not use DHCP (Maybe it's a lease problem)?
> > > Thene is nothing in the logs to indicate what's going wrong. It just
> > > timeouts. It happens on both machines, one on cable in Sydney (RH8), and
> > > one on adsl in Forster (RH9).
> > 
> > This one's a little harder to fathom... try adding a daily/hourly ping to 
> > some host on the net. My thinking is some sort of inactivity timeout. Also 
> > an alternative to rebooting, perhaps down & up the interface daily. Won't 
> > answer the WHY? question but may narrow it down.
> > 
> >  -- 
> > ---<GRiP>---
> > Electronic Hobbyist, Former Arcadia BBS nut, Occasional nudist, 
> > Linux Guru, SLUG/AUUG/Linux Australia member, Sydney Flashmobber,
> > BMX rider, Walker, Raver & rave music lover, Big kid that refuses
> > to grow up. I'd make a good family pet, take me home today!
> >         Do people actually read these things?
> -  - -- ----  ----------------------------------------- --- -- -   -
> Karl Bowden
> 
> Pacific Speed
> email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> web: www.pacificspeed.com.au
> -  - -- ---- 
> -------------------------------------------------------------- --- --
> -   -
> 
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