I'm having odd problems with a fresh potato install. I installed from the 2.2.7-2000-02-13 floppies yesterday (03/02/2000) and this is not an upgraded from Slink.
System info: HP Vectra XA6 Series 5xx Via Rhine NIC (working fine, this doesn't appear to be a NIC problem) Custom kernel, not the stock Potato 2.2.14 synergy:~ ] uname -a Linux synergy 2.2.14 #2 Fri Mar 3 12:53:28 PST 2000 i686 unknown synergy:~ ] lsmod Module Size Used by sb 34708 0 (unused) uart401 6352 0 [sb] sound 58284 0 [sb uart401] soundcore 2788 6 [sb sound] nfs 29408 1 (autoclean) lockd 32200 0 (autoclean) [nfs] sunrpc 54628 1 (autoclean) [nfs lockd] autofs 9440 1 (autoclean) via-rhine 9232 1 synergy:~ ] sudo ipchains -L Chain input (policy ACCEPT): Chain forward (policy ACCEPT): Chain output (policy ACCEPT): Telnet is not the only application exhibiting these symptoms, it just happens to illustrate them: synergy:~ ] telnet synergy Trying xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx... telnet: Unable to connect to remote host: No buffer space available synergy:~ ] telnet localhost Trying 127.0.0.1... [hangs untill I ^C out...] But, from another host: caliber:~ ] telnet synergy Trying xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx... Connected to synergy Escape character is '^]'. Debian GNU/Linux 2.2 (frozen) synergy synergy login: Or: synergy:~ ] rpcinfo -p synergy rpcinfo: can't contact portmapper: RPC: Remote system error - No buffer space available But from another host: caliber:~ ] rpcinfo -p synergy program vers proto port service 100000 2 tcp 111 rpcbind 100000 2 udp 111 rpcbind Of course, this means that lockd, statd and other RPC friends have been unable to register on synergy so my NFS is erratic at best. I'm also getting a lot of these: Mar 3 19:22:49 synergy kernel: neighbour table overflow Mar 3 19:23:02 synergy kernel: neighbour table overflow Mar 3 19:27:17 synergy kernel: neighbour table overflow Any ideas? Thanks in advance! PeeWee -- email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - useless: http://www.scc.mi.org/peewee/ - efnet: Pwe I said you were a state of mind, I believe. I said that if you ran very swiftly and were acceptably violent, you would be admired. - "The Era of Great Numbers"