In your server end's options file you should do something like <xxx.yyy.zzz.aaa>:<bbb.ccc.ddd.eee>
And in the client's you can have: ipcp-accept-local ipcp-accept-remote You can read about this stuff in 'man pppd'. There are other combinations you can use as well. By the way, don't do jeopardy-style posting, answering at the top, like I did just here. It makes a mess when Christoph has answered *after* your post, then you insist on answering *before* his. I just did it here to try to keep it slightly readable. Paulo Henrique Baptista de Oliveira wrote: > > Hi Cristoph, > At slack (that my friend tested) there isnt pppconfig (pppsetup I > think). > I think that the error is that I dont allocate an IP here (at the > server). > How I do this? > Much thanks, Paulo Henrique > Quoting Christoph Simon ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): > > > > > > Hi all, > > > I mounted a PPP server with mgetty (Debian potato) and tried to conect > > > with another Linux machine (Slack) and received the following log with an > > > error at end. What is wrong? > > > Thanks, Paulo Henrique > > > > > > rcvd [IPCP ConfNak id=0x1 <addr 200.200.200.200>] > > > sent [IPCP ConfRej id=0x2 <addrs 0.0.0.0 200.200.200.200>] > > > sent [IPCP TermReq id=0x3 "Could not determine remote IP address"] > > > rcvd [IPCP TermReq id=0x4 "Could not determine local IP address"] > > > > Your client is insisting to use this IP address which the server is > > not willing to accept (or vice verse). Did you specify an IP address > > in PPP config? (Nak = not acknowledged, Rej = rejected) > > > > HTH > > > > Christoph Simon > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- > > ^X^C > > q > > quit > > :q > > ^C > > end > > x > > exit > > ZZ > > ^D > > ? > > help > > shit > > . > > > > > > > > -- > > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null > > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null