On Wed, 12 Jun 2002, Toralf Lund wrote:
> [ ... ]
> >> Is there anything else I must do to get rid of the packet filters? Or
> >> could the DHCP failure have a different cause?
> > It turns out that the host doesn't get the address properly when booting
> > with the network installation CD (no,
[ ... ]
>> Is there anything else I must do to get rid of the packet filters? Or
>> could the DHCP failure have a different cause?
> It turns out that the host doesn't get the address properly when booting
> with the network installation CD (no, I wasn't going to re-install, I
> just wanted to
What happens if you assign a static IP to the NIC?
On Tue, 11 Jun 2002, Toralf Lund wrote:
> >> Are you running IPchains or IPtables on the server?
> >>
> >> If so, make sure you open up both ports 67 and 68, for both TCP and UDP,
> >> on the interface you are using for the internal network.
>
>> Are you running IPchains or IPtables on the server?
>>
>> If so, make sure you open up both ports 67 and 68, for both TCP and UDP,
>> on the interface you are using for the internal network.
> Not on the server, by it turned out they were running on the client even
> though I didn't want them
> Are you running IPchains or IPtables on the server?
>
> If so, make sure you open up both ports 67 and 68, for both TCP and UDP,
> on the interface you are using for the internal network.
Not on the server, by it turned out they were running on the client even
though I didn't want them to (whi
Are you running IPchains or IPtables on the server?
If so, make sure you open up both ports 67 and 68, for both TCP and UDP,
on the interface you are using for the internal network.
On Tue, 11 Jun 2002, Toralf Lund wrote:
> One of our Red Hat 7.2 workstations fail to start networking when it i