Chris, On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 8:22 AM, Chris Teodorski <[email protected]> wrote: > Andres, > > On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 6:48 AM, Andres Riancho > <[email protected]> wrote: >> Chris, >> >> On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 7:25 AM, Chris Teodorski >> <[email protected]> wrote: >>> On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 8:36 PM, mOses <[email protected]> wrote: >>>> I downloaded MOTH to test it a few weeks ago. Long story short I >>>> finally got to it today. I am running VMWare Fusion 2.0.4 on a >>>> Macbook. I have however found an issue that have yet to resolve. >>>> >>>> The eth0 and eth1 interfaces do not want to come up. I tried to >>>> compile the vmware tools so that I can place the proper drivers in and >>>> was unable to because it requires the Linux kernel header files for >>>> 2.6.27. >>>> >>>> Anyone run into this issue and was able to resolve it? >>>> >>>> Oh and for everyone wondering about the keyboard mappings you need to >>>> run: >>>> >>>> $./sudo dpkg-reconfigure console-setup >>>> >>>> mosesRENEGADE >>>> soon.ibreakapps.com >>> >>> >>> >>> I've had exactly the same issues. When I run it in VmWare Server, >>> Vnet0 will appear to be up, with an IP of 192.168.122.1, no sign of >>> eth0 or eth1 and nothing I do seems to "stick" with vnet0. >> >> Do you guys have networking enabled in your vmware setup? >> Is networking working for other vmwares? >> If you login to moth, and then become root, "ifconfig -a" shows the >> eth0 interface? > > > I have two network cards defined in VMWare. One is by default set to > bridged, the other to NAT. I have another Ubuntu VM where networking > was working (haven't tried it since I started playing with moth). An > ifconfig -a in the vm does not show eth0. It does however show eth2 > and eth3. When I try to bring any ethX interface up, it says > "Ignoring unknown interface".
Hmmm... the Ubuntu system may be creating new interfaces because in my system they were emulated with a hardware/driver "X" and maybe in your system the emulation is done with hardware/driver "Y". But those interfaces should work... In my setup, I used DHCP to configure the interfaces, and that configuration is in /etc/network/interfaces ; which contains a reference to "eth0". If I were you, I would try to change the "eth0" in that file with eth2, and then try something like "ifup eth2". Also try the same with "eth3". Let me know how that works. PS: I CC'ed the mailing list, as I understand that your email could help others. Please remember to "reply-to-all" to use the mailing list! > Chris > -- Andrés Riancho Founder, Bonsai - Information Security http://www.bonsai-sec.com/ http://w3af.sf.net/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Register Now for Creativity and Technology (CaT), June 3rd, NYC. CaT is a gathering of tech-side developers & brand creativity professionals. Meet the minds behind Google Creative Lab, Visual Complexity, Processing, & iPhoneDevCamp as they present alongside digital heavyweights like Barbarian Group, R/GA, & Big Spaceship. http://p.sf.net/sfu/creativitycat-com _______________________________________________ W3af-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/w3af-users
