John Hasler wrote:
Kent writes:
I'm actually beginning to be a bit disappointed in kppp, thinking it
maybe doesn't have this capability.
Why do you want to use it?
Because I'm setting this machine up for someone else who has already
decided to use KDE and that "Internet Dialer" (KPP
Kent writes:
> Since /etc/ppp/options specifically says to not do this...
Do it anyway. It's only a security risk for incoming connection.
> That's assuming that kppp has some mechanism for doing so.
I doubt that it does.
> I'm actually beginning to be a bit disappointed in kppp, thinking it
>
John Hasler wrote:
Kent writes:
How can I set this option, either globally for all users for all dial-up
accounts,...
By editing /etc/ppp/options and replacing 'auth' with 'noauth'.
Thanks for the reply; I should have been more specific. Since
/etc/ppp/options specifically says to no
Kent writes:
> How can I set this option, either globally for all users for all dial-up
> accounts,...
By editing /etc/ppp/options and replacing 'auth' with 'noauth'.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dancing Horse Hill
Elmwood, Wisconsin
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with a su
I suspect I need to feed the "noauth" option to KPPP, but it says this
can only be done by root (whereas I could log in as root and verify this
"noauth" issue to be the problem, that doesn't really solve the
problem). How can I set this option, either globally for all users for
all dial-up acco
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