On Wed, 23 Oct 2019, wes wrote:

> a) No, they generally do not.

Well, that's the way I was taught to do it in the '90s.

> b) That is not the only non-standard aspect to your setup. By convention,
> the router is always set to .1 on whatever network it's routing for.
> However there is no law that states this must be the case; your router can
> have whatever IP you want it to. It just means there will be more
> opportunities for confusion when people try to help you :)

127.0.0.1       localhost.localdomain   localhost
127.0.1.1       salmo.appl-ecosys.com   salmo # for slrn
192.168.55.1    salmo.appl-ecosys.com   salmo mail  # desktop server
192.168.55.2    caddis.appl-ecosys.com  caddis  # Dell E5410
192.168.55.3    lemna.appl-ecosys.com   lemna  # Dell 2100
192.168.55.4    router1.appl-ecosys.com router1  # LinkSys 
192.168.55.5    pachy.appl-ecosys.com   pachy  # Sony Vaio
192.168.55.6    typha.appl-ecosys.com   typha  # ThinkPad X200
192.168.55.7    baetis.appl-ecosys.com  baetis  # Currently unassigned
192.168.55.192  lj5.appl-ecosys.com     lj5
192.168.55.194  colorp.appl-ecosys.com  colorp
192.168.55.200  wap.appl-ecosys.com     wap
# End of hosts.

> Ok, since you just did this, what does ssh localhost (as root) give you now?

As before:

# ssh localhost
Permission denied (publickey).

> Maybe if we get this figured out, we can update the documentation to clear
> this up for other users in the future.

That would be helpful.

Regards,

Rich
_______________________________________________
Dirvish mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.dirvish.org/mailman/listinfo/dirvish

Reply via email to