Pollywog writes:
> Does this mean "diald" is no longer needed?
Diald has filtering: you can control what kind of packets will bring up the
link, what kind keep it up, etc.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dancing Horse Hill
Elmwood, Wisconsin
On Fri, 16 Mar 2001 18:34:11 -0800
Jaye Inabnit ke6sls <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> You can also use pon since the new pppconfig will support dial on demand. The
> trick is to issue the pon statement following your boot up. That will
> configure your network to listen for outgoi
Hello,
You can also use pon since the new pppconfig will support dial on demand. The
trick is to issue the pon statement following your boot up. That will
configure your network to listen for outgoing packets and start the link
automatically (like windoz does) and stop it at a preset time yo
Carel Fellinger wrote:
>
> On Wed, Mar 14, 2001 at 09:43:15PM +0100, Gergely Nagy wrote:
> ...
> > I checked some docs, and got lost. A book of mine suggests using diald, but
> > that would mean dial on demand. I understand diald needs its own connection
> > files wich seems a waste after finally
Carel Fellinger writes:
> you can use the info in the files used by pon/poff to set up diald, you
> even can use the /etc/chatscript/provider file.
You can also run pppconfig, go to 'Advanced', and select 'Demand'.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dancing Horse Hill
Elmwood, Wisconsin
On Wed, Mar 14, 2001 at 09:43:15PM +0100, Gergely Nagy wrote:
...
> I checked some docs, and got lost. A book of mine suggests using diald, but
> that would mean dial on demand. I understand diald needs its own connection
> files wich seems a waste after finally setting up a working set of pon /
>
Hi!
I need help with:
I want to periodically (say every 10 minutes) check mail in a multidrop POP3
account over a dialup line, download them, and filter them to different mail
accounts. (It's a group mail account: all mail for a domain is being poured
in one POP3 mailbox.)
I checked some docs, a
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