On 8/6/2018 9:15 PM, Ilyass Kaouam wrote:
# Generated by NetworkManager
Ok -- The app "NetworkManager" is managing your interfaces.
To deal with NetworkManager through the CLI and config files you will
need to do some reading:
https://developer.gnome.org/NetworkManager/stable/nm-settings-k
Thank's John :) :)
Le lun. 6 août 2018 à 21:40, john doe a écrit :
> On 8/6/2018 9:15 PM, Ilyass Kaouam wrote:
> > # Generated by NetworkManager
> >
>
> Ok -- The app "NetworkManager" is managing your interfaces.
>
> To deal with NetworkManager through the CLI and config files you will
> need to
# Generated by NetworkManager
nameserver 8.8.8.8
Le lun. 6 août 2018 à 14:01, john doe a écrit :
> On 8/6/2018 12:12 PM, Ilyass Kaouam wrote:
> > I configured my network here (see attached picture please)
> >
> > [image: Capture d’écran 2018-08-06 à 12.12.06.png]
> >
>
> I don't have access t
On 8/6/2018 12:12 PM, Ilyass Kaouam wrote:
I configured my network here (see attached picture please)
[image: Capture d’écran 2018-08-06 à 12.12.06.png]
I don't have access to images.
What is the output of:
$ cat /etc/resolv.conf
--
John Doe
On 8/6/2018 11:16 AM, Ilyass Kaouam wrote:
Thank you for all your reply,
I configured the network via the GUI during installation, the network works
perfectly.
I just want to know if I want to change the address or ..., without going
through the GUI, where I can make my changes, knowing that the
Thank you for all your reply,
I configured the network via the GUI during installation, the network works
perfectly.
I just want to know if I want to change the address or ..., without going
through the GUI, where I can make my changes, knowing that the
/etc/network/interfaces file does not conta
On 2018-08-06, Joe wrote:
> On Mon, 6 Aug 2018 04:01:44 -0400
> Jude DaShiell wrote:
>
>> If you do a command line install with no graphics, you end up with no
>> network configuration once installation completes.
>
> Not in my experience.
>
> At one time, if you did a non-expert install with no
On Mon, 6 Aug 2018 04:01:44 -0400
Jude DaShiell wrote:
> If you do a command line install with no graphics, you end up with no
> network configuration once installation completes.
Not in my experience.
At one time, if you did a non-expert install with no network DHCP
server, then you got no net
pened to the text on that site since I put it up in pure
ascii without any markup editing. If need be, I think I can find it
among my files here.
On Mon, 6 Aug 2018, john doe wrote:
> Date: Mon, 6 Aug 2018 02:02:52
> From: john doe
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Sub
On 8/6/2018 1:53 AM, Ilyass Kaouam wrote:
If I choose to configure the network during installation, where can I
configure the network after?
on which file, because in /etc/network/interfaces I don't see the ip
address, subnetwork ...
It depends which pkg you choose to install during installati
On 06/26/2015 05:13 AM, Bob Proulx wrote:
notoneofmyseeds wrote:
>Bob Proulx wrote:
>
>I must say you have written a book here on this topic, Rob. I've learned a
>lot. I printed it out. To your questions now.
Sometimes people say I write too much. But the details are important.:-)
And this is
On Friday 26 June 2015 10:28:08 Proxy One wrote:
> Sometimes people say I write too much.
There is writing too much and writing a lot. I talk too much. You write a
lot.
In Latin too much and very much are the same word. In case any modern
language does the same thing, Bob is saying that some
On 2015-Jun-26 17:27, Charlie wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Jun 2015 21:13:20 -0600 Bob Proulx sent:
>
> > Sometimes people say I write too much. But the details are
> > important. :-)
>
> No way Bob. Never too much.
>
> Personally I read all your posts even if they don't apply to anything I
> need or p
On Thu, 25 Jun 2015 21:13:20 -0600 Bob Proulx sent:
> Sometimes people say I write too much. But the details are
> important. :-)
No way Bob. Never too much.
Personally I read all your posts even if they don't apply to anything I
need or particularly interest me. Sometimes they generate intere
notoneofmyseeds wrote:
> Bob Proulx wrote:
>
> I must say you have written a book here on this topic, Rob. I've learned a
> lot. I printed it out. To your questions now.
Sometimes people say I write too much. But the details are important. :-)
And this is a large book again with this message.
On Thursday 25 June 2015 08:46:49 notoneofmyseeds wrote:
> On 06/23/2015 10:22 PM, Bob Proulx wrote:
> > Another question: When you are connected to both as you have done
> > what is the output of these commands so that we can see the (as you
> > say broken) state of things?
> >
> >ip addr show
On 06/23/2015 10:22 PM, Bob Proulx wrote:
Another question: When you are connected to both as you have done what
is the output of these commands so that we can see the (as you say
broken) state of things?
ip addr show
ip route show | tac
I had a very long and nice response that I lost, as
On Tue, 23 Jun 2015 22:30:02 +0200
Bob Proulx wrote:
> Perhaps someone else on the mailing list will have additional
> suggestions. Hopefully they will be better than my poor contributions
> here.
I would suggest getting into the depths of
the /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf file. You
notoneofmyseeds wrote:
> "one ethernet interface that you sometimes connect to one wired network and
> sometimes to a different wired network?"
> For now, this is a laptop that is located in one place.
> All networks are DHCP.
Those are good clarifications. Let me mention a few problems to be
ov
On 06/22/2015 10:39 PM, Bob Proulx wrote:
If you have only one wired ethernet and are planning on connecting
back and forth between two wired networks then it is similar but I
would use guessnet to manage the interface so that it can
automatically switch you between the specified network profiles
On 06/22/2015 10:39 PM, Bob Proulx wrote:
You say networks. Is that the same as ethernet interfaces? You have
two ethernet interfaces? Or you have one ethernet interface that you
sometimes connect to one wired network and sometimes to a different
wired network?
Bob, your ever so detailed and k
notoneofmy wrote:
> I have three separate networks, ip addresses, etc.
> One wireless and two hard wired, ethernet.
> The wireless must connect to the internet.
> As is necessary, I will need to physically swap the ethernet cables
> between networks.
You say networks. Is that the same as ethernet
On 15-06-21 11:52 PM, Bob Proulx wrote:
>> do I need to remove/purge NetworkManager Applet 0.9.10.0 to manually
>> > configure my interfaces?
> It is not necessary. However I recommend doing so anyway.
>
> It is not necessary because NetworkManager and wicd ignore any
> interface with a configurat
notoneofmyseeds wrote:
> do I need to remove/purge NetworkManager Applet 0.9.10.0 to manually
> configure my interfaces?
It is not necessary. However I recommend doing so anyway.
It is not necessary because NetworkManager and wicd ignore any
interface with a configuration in /etc/network/interfa
I Hope you get you network up and working,
We're here to help.
--
Tiago Almeida
tiagov...@gmail.com
Thanks a lot for a prompt reply to my email, Tiago!
I'll follow up on the suggestions you've made and let you know how I go.
Cheers.
Alexander Kapshuk.
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To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.o
Alexander,
You probaly should look at:
www.about*debian*.com/*network*.htm
To the automatic network configuration works during installation you must
have cable on (link on network-card) and your network card must be know to
Linux (a.k.a properly modules loaded), may cards have support built-in a
G'day,
I have installed Debian Lenny on a HP Comaq Presario CQ61 laptop.
However, the automatic network configuration failed during installation.
I'm fairly new to Linux. I'd appreciate somebody referring me to a HOWTO
or some other resource containing instructions on how to rectify the
probl
On Sun May 3 2009, Andrei Popescu wrote:
> > Firestarter might work, but i really wanted to be able to add my own
> > entry to some file somewhere:) command-line junky :)
>
> Sounds like shorewall to me ;)
ahhh, I might have to look at it. thanks!
per the INTRO page:
http://www.shorewall.net/
Sho
On Sat May 2 2009, Andrei Popescu wrote:
> > need to run:
> > iptables -I INPUT -p tcp -m state --state NEW --dport 80 -i eth0 -j
> > ACCEPT iptables -I INPUT -p tcp -m state --state NEW --dport 22 -i eth0
> > -j ACCEPT /sbin/iptables -N ssh-connection
> > /sbin/iptables -A ssh-connection -i eth0 -
On Sat,02.May.09, 16:32:44, Paul Cartwright wrote:
> Firestarter might work, but i really wanted to be able to add my own
> entry to some file somewhere:) command-line junky :)
Sounds like shorewall to me ;)
Regards,
Andrei
--
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough
On Sat May 2 2009, Thorny wrote:
> If I understand correctly what you asking:
>
> You will need to option your router to port forward port 80 requests
> from the WAN interface to the static IP Address of the computer on your
> LAN you want them to go to.
I have done that and it works.
>
> If thos
On Sat, 02 May 2009 06:15:04 -0400, Paul Cartwright posted:
[...]
> what I want is a rule tht allows http for my web page to port forward from
> my router to my desktop, and also allow me to ssh into my desktop from my
> laptops.
If I understand correctly what you asking:
You will need to option
On Sat,02.May.09, 06:15:04, Paul Cartwright wrote:
> On Sat May 2 2009, Andrei Popescu wrote:
> > > part of the problem was 2 files I had worked on that did give me
> > > errors, and I removed them. 1 was ipv6,
> >
> > Do yo mean the module? If you don't want it loaded (though I have it and
> > the
On Sat May 2 2009, Andrei Popescu wrote:
> > part of the problem was 2 files I had worked on that did give me
> > errors, and I removed them. 1 was ipv6,
>
> Do yo mean the module? If you don't want it loaded (though I have it and
> there are no problems) just blacklist it in a file (ex. 00local.co
On Sat,02.May.09, 05:38:38, Paul Cartwright wrote:
> well, that seems to work.
...
> part of the problem was 2 files I had worked on that did give me
> errors, and I removed them. 1 was ipv6,
Do yo mean the module? If you don't want it loaded (though I have it and
there are no problems) just
On Sat May 2 2009, Andrei Popescu wrote:
> > #static setup
> > #auto eth0
> > #iface eth0 inet static
> > #address 192.168.10.103
> > #netmask 255.255.255.0
> > #broadcast 192.168.10.255
> > here is what I have now:
>
> Please re-enable this part (and comment out the dhcp parts) and post the
> outp
On Fri,01.May.09, 05:36:06, Paul Cartwright wrote:
> I seemed to have a problem with my static setup of eth0 that stopped my
> debian
> lenny setup from coming up correctly. I kept getting errors in logs.
> To redo my network config, just eth0, what is the best way to do it. I tried
> dpkg-recon
On Fri May 1 2009, Bob Cox wrote:
> What I would expect to see is something a bit like this:
>
> auto lo
> iface lo inet loopback
>
> auto eth0
> iface eth0 inet static
> address 192.168.10.103
> netmask 255.255.255.0
> gateway 192.168.10.1
> network 192.168.10.0
> broadcast 192.168.10.255
>
> (ass
On Fri May 1 2009, Celejar wrote:
> > this is what I had that didn't work:
> > #static setup
> > #auto eth0
> > #iface eth0 inet static
> > #address 192.168.10.103
> > #netmask 255.255.255.0
> > #broadcast 192.168.10.255
> > here is what I have now:
# The loopback network interface
auto lo
iface l
On Fri May 1 2009, Andrei Popescu wrote:
> > auto lo
> > iface lo inet loopback
> >
> > auto eth0
> > iface eth0 inet static
> > address 192.168.10.103
> > netmask 255.255.255.0
> > gateway 192.168.10.1
> > network 192.168.10.0
> > broadcast 192.168.10.255
>
> Nitpick: 'network' and 'broadcast' are
On Fri May 1 2009, Bob Cox wrote:
> > Nitpick: 'network' and 'broadcast' are optional and gateway is necessary
> > only if this interface is used to connect to the internet.
>
> Good points. I like nitpicking ;-)
>
> As an aside, I use static IPs on everything here with no wireless and
> all manua
On Fri, May 01, 2009 at 19:04:25 +0300, Andrei Popescu
(andreimpope...@gmail.com) wrote:
[snip]
> Nitpick: 'network' and 'broadcast' are optional and gateway is necessary
> only if this interface is used to connect to the internet.
Good points. I like nitpicking ;-)
As an aside, I use stati
On Fri,01.May.09, 15:11:17, Bob Cox wrote:
> What I would expect to see is something a bit like this:
>
> auto lo
> iface lo inet loopback
>
> auto eth0
> iface eth0 inet static
> address 192.168.10.103
> netmask 255.255.255.0
> gateway 192.168.10.1
> network 192.168.10.0
> broadcast 192.168.10
On Fri, May 01, 2009 at 05:36:06 -0400, Paul Cartwright (a...@pcartwright.com)
wrote:
> I seemed to have a problem with my static setup of eth0 that stopped my
> debian
> lenny setup from coming up correctly. I kept getting errors in logs.
> To redo my network config, just eth0, what is the be
On Fri, 01 May 2009 05:36:06 -0400, Paul Cartwright posted:
> I seemed to have a problem with my static setup of eth0 that stopped my
> debian lenny setup from coming up correctly.
This doesn't tell us anything that we could use to troubleshoot. Do you
mean the system doesn't come up or just does
On Fri, 1 May 2009 05:36:06 -0400
Paul Cartwright wrote:
> I seemed to have a problem with my static setup of eth0 that stopped my
> debian
> lenny setup from coming up correctly. I kept getting errors in logs.
> To redo my network config, just eth0, what is the best way to do it. I tried
> dp
Dan H wrote:
Hello folks,
I'm trying to control an external instrument via Ethernet. I've installed an
additional networking card in my Debian box and connected the thing via a
crossover cable.
NOTE: I've booted Windows on the same machine and was able to talk to the
instrument using a suppl
On Thu, Jun 28, 2007 at 11:07:01PM +0100, Adam Hardy wrote:
> Andrew Sackville-West on 25/06/07 04:27, wrote:
> >On Sat, Jun 23, 2007 at 08:35:09PM +0100, Adam Hardy wrote:
> >>I have set up a network for our house using a gateway server with etch
> >>and two NICs, eth1 for the internal network an
Andrew Sackville-West on 25/06/07 04:27, wrote:
On Sat, Jun 23, 2007 at 08:35:09PM +0100, Adam Hardy wrote:
I have set up a network for our house using a gateway server with etch and
two NICs, eth1 for the internal network and eth2 for the DSL modem.
I set up iptables with firewall-builder and
On Sat, Jun 23, 2007 at 08:35:09PM +0100, Adam Hardy wrote:
> I have set up a network for our house using a gateway server with etch and
> two NICs, eth1 for the internal network and eth2 for the DSL modem.
>
> I set up iptables with firewall-builder and all seems OK, but I can only
> ever acces
"Ritesh Raj Sarraf" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 1. (*) text/plain ( ) text/html
(Please post to the list in plain text only.)
> i'm a newbie to Debian. I just shifted from RedHat. I've got two lan
> cards on my debian system. one connected to the internet and the
> other t
On Thu, 08 Jan 2004 03:30:28 +0530, Ritesh Raj Sarraf wrote:
> hi all,
> i'm a newbie to Debian. I just shifted from RedHat. I've got two lan cards on my
> debian system. one connected to the internet and the other to my local lan.
> i'm not able to ping my ISP DNS server from my debian machine.
Le Mercredi 27 Août 2003 13:03, James LeClair a déclamé :
>The problem is that I can not get both eth0 and eth1
> working at the same time. eth0: io=0x300 irq=10
> eth1: io=0x240 irq=3
I've got this on my old P75 (2 ISA cards too), in /etc/modutils/aliases
alias eth0 ne
alias eth1 ne
o
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> you wrote:
> Hello all. Almost there. Still working on this 486. Hopefully it will be a
> routing, firewalling box. The 2 nics in this box are dlink 220 isa. I have
> been able to determine that they both require the "ne" network module. The
> problem is that I can
Ernesto Marquina, 2002-Nov-27 20:05 +:
> Hi,
>
> While I was configuring my network on debian woody, the isntaller
> asked me if theres an DHCP server on my network, I answered YES and
> he configured everything for me. Now everytime I start my linux I
> get this netenv window...and I choose t
On Fri, 2002-06-28 at 07:49, Lars Jensen wrote:
> Initially when I first set up my system (potato), I configured the
> network for DHCP. How do I change it to a manual configuration of DNS,
> gateway and permanent IP? Which files do I need to change? Is there a
> tool for this?
>
> Also, how do I
On Fri, 2002-06-28 at 02:49, Lars Jensen wrote:
> Also, how do I change my host name.
I believe hostname is stored /etc/hostname
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The name of the program that is being run is netenv; it is there to
aid laptop users who may change their network environment options
regularly (example, one for home, one for the office, another for a
remote location).
You can just disable netenv from being run. Probably the
easiest way is to edi
On 22-Mar-2002 Michael Griffis wrote:
> I am new to linux and rather ambitiously installed Woody on my Fujitsu
> laptop with good results.
>
> However every time I reboot I am asked to choose a network environment
> and the only option is to set a new environment and enter a new IP. I
> use DHCP
Michael Griffis, Fri, Mar 22, 2002 at 10:39:01AM -0700:
> I am new to linux and rather ambitiously installed Woody on my Fujitsu
> laptop with good results.
>
> However every time I reboot I am asked to choose a network environment
> and the only option is to set a new environment and enter a new
You don't need an rc.local script.
If you look in /etc/rc2.d/ you'll see lots of S scripts.
These are the scripts that get run when you start the system. The 'S'
is for "Start" (I guess), and there are "K" scripts for "Kill" in other
related directories. The number is the order in which it will run
Hi Bob,
You can (should) stick your script in /etc/init.d. Then, check what
runlevel
you're in. It should be at the top of /etc/inittab. For that runlevel, go in
to the appropriate /etc/rcX.d folder (X corresponding to your runlevel) and
put a symlink to the script in /etc/init.d. Pay a
First you need to find out what brand of card you have, then setting it
up for a static IP is pretty easy.
once u have found out what card you have and installed it in the kernel
then go to /etc/network and edit interfaces, it should look a little like
this:
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
Steve Doerr wrote:
>
> Hi. I wonder if anybody has any advice on network configuration,
> because I can't get eth1 to pass any traffic out of my router box.
>
> I've got box1's eth0 connected to my dsl line through the dsl
> modem/router and it picks up the ip, etc. through dhcpcd. This card is
> the debian way is now to edit /etc/network/interfaces
> this is mine (there are 2 network cards in my box) :
>
> <-- cut here -->
> # /etc/network/interfaces -- configuration file for ifup(8), ifdown(8)
>
> # The loopback interface
> auto lo
> iface lo inet loopback
>
> # ADSL interface
> auto et
On Wed, Nov 15, 2000 at 03:27:14PM -0600, Keegan Prendergast wrote:
>I have my debian linux box setup as a masqing gateway for the rest of
> the computers in the house. The problem is, I did it by hand and have not
> rebooted since, because i could not figure out where i should put the
> comma
On Wed, Oct 11, 2000 at 01:38:22PM +, Jamil Geor wrote:
> Hi,
> You could just use modconf to install the network card module that
> you need.
>
> Jamil
Thanks. It appears, however, that I didn't make the question very clear.
Just installing the module is not going to get the network co
Hi,
You could just use modconf to install the network card module that
you need.
Jamil
On Mon, 9 Oct 2000, Hugo van der Merwe wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am doing another debian install, and was uncertain about the network
> card type. I decided to skip that part of the install, hoping to fin
On Tue, Sep 12, 2000 at 02:50:21PM +0800, Saran ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I thought linuxconf is only available on RedHat ?
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:karsten]$ apt-cache search linuxconf
linuxconf - a powerful Linux administration kit
linuxconf-x - X11 GUI for Linuxconf
linuxco
lto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, September 12, 2000 3:16 PM
To: 'Saran'
Cc: 'debian-user@lists.debian.org'
Subject: RE: Network Configuration
1. Linuxconf is a Linux administration/configuration tool...as such any
Linux distribution can run it (see
http://www.solucorp.qc.ca/lin
ECTED]
Visit us at: http://www.astro.com.my
> -Original Message-
> From: Saran [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, September 12, 2000 2:50 PM
> To: CHEONG, Shu Yang [Patrick]; debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: RE: Network Configuration
>
> Hi,
>
here. But basically, I configured as the ones below, with the IP address
being the only difference.
Thanks in advance
Saranjit Singh.
-Original Message-
From: CHEONG, Shu Yang [Patrick] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, September 12, 2000 2:41 PM
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
See below
Patrick Cheong
Information Systems Assurance
Measat Broadcast Network Systems
e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Visit us at: http://www.astro.com.my
> -Original Message-
> From: Saran [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, September 12, 2000 2:05 PM
> To: debian-user@list
On %M 0, Peter Iannarelli wrote
> Hello Matthew:
>
> To change the IP address, network, etc of you NIC
> to into /etc/init.d/network.
>
> You will see everything you need there.
>
> Peter
>
It may also be necessary to edit /etc/networks, and perhaps /etc/hosts.
John P.
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hello Matthew:
To change the IP address, network, etc of you NIC
to into /etc/init.d/network.
You will see everything you need there.
Peter
Matthew Wade Roberts wrote:
> When I first installed Debian, I entered incorrect information
> for the IP addresses of the network. I need to correct
>
True.
Not compiling network support in might cause the same problems as not
compiling in the device for the root file system, IE: not being able
to boot. What I meant was that at some point, it is possible to make
the kernel too big and then SOMETHINGS need to be left out. But this
is probably n
On 22 Mar 1999, Shaun Lipscombe wrote:
> Yes this is true for stuff that you dont use night and day, like
> iso9660 support for instance. I would like to see a good reason for
> not compiling NIC support right in, like how much will that enlarge
> the kernel by? 100k ?
The total sizes of the *.
>Read the kernel HOWTO and compile support directly >into the kernel for
>ne2kpci. You probably don't want the driver to be >modular, unless you
>rarely need to use your nic, and you have limited RAM >resources.
There IS a good reason for NOT compiling stuff into the kernel that is
ALWAYS used,
>Have you added lines to your /etc/resolv.conf?
>
> ex.
>
> nameserver xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
>
>where xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx is the IP of your DNS server.
>
Yes, all the configuration files are right. I think that
the problem is with the DNS or some configuration in it, but
I don't know wh
Have you added lines to your /etc/resolv.conf?
ex.
nameserver xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
where xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx is the IP of your DNS server.
Erik
>By the way, we have a machine in our subnet that recently
>was installed linux in. We have had some problems with the
>network confi
Hi, folks !!!
By the way, we have a machine in our subnet that recently
was installed linux in. We have had some problems with the
network configuration in order that the linux box doesn't
recognize its DNS. It's possible to execute telnet from it only
to IP addresses, and a ping to the D
>How can I re-configure my network after installing linux?
Well, assuming you're talking about changing the IP address... you need to
change a couple of files:
/etc/init.d/network - Shell script that sets up your ethernet interface.
/etc/hosts - file that holds the IP's of "well-known" hosts..
Subject: Network Configuration
Date: Tue, Dec 01, 1998 at 07:14:55AM -0800
In reply to:Brant Wells
Quoting Brant Wells([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
>
> Howdy Y'all
>
> How can I re-configure my network after installing linux?
>
1. find / -iname Networking-Overview-HOWTO.gz.
2. In the
> How can I re-configure my network after installing linux?
You use the ifconfig command. Use the
man ifconfig
to learn about it.
This only configures the running system. In order
to keep the changes even if you reboot, you need to change
the /etc/init.d/network file.
Robert D. Hilliard is rumoured to of said:
> During the base installation, as part of configuring the network,
> the configure script asks for the netmask and the IP address for the
> network and/or the default gateway. Where is this information stored?
You will find this information at the
On Sun, 06 Jul 1997 19:48:11 EDT "Robert D. Hilliard"
([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> During the base installation, as part of configuring the network,
> the configure script asks for the netmask and the IP address for the
> network and/or the default gateway. Where is this information stored
It's stored in /etc/init.d/network
HTH,
Shaya
On Sun, 6 Jul 1997, Robert D. Hilliard wrote:
> During the base installation, as part of configuring the network,
> the configure script asks for the netmask and the IP address for the
> network and/or the default gateway. Where is this infor
On Sun, 6 Jul 1997, Robert D. Hilliard wrote:
> During the base installation, as part of configuring the network,
> the configure script asks for the netmask and the IP address for the
> network and/or the default gateway. Where is this information stored?
In the "Network Administrator's
Jordi Inglada wrote:
>
> >>Hello,
> >>
> >> last week, I had a problem with my ethernet card not being detected by
> >>the modconf program so I asked this list. I got lots of answers and
> >>finally my card is detected.
> >>
> >> The problem now is that I can't make it work. I mean, I can'
>>Hello,
>>
>> last week, I had a problem with my ethernet card not being detected by
>>the modconf program so I asked this list. I got lots of answers and
>>finally my card is detected.
>>
>> The problem now is that I can't make it work. I mean, I can't do ftp,
>>telnet, etc... When I try
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, writes:
>Hello,
>
> last week, I had a problem with my ethernet card not being detected by
>the modconf program so I asked this list. I got lots of answers and
>finally my card is detected.
>
> The problem now is that I can't make it work. I m
On Tue, 25 Mar 1997, Jordi Inglada wrote:
> The problem now is that I can't make it work. I mean, I can't do ftp,
> telnet, etc... When I try some of these, I wait and wait,... If I use
> nfs as the access method to the distribution, I got the message "server
> seems to be down or inexisten
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