On Fri, 2003-09-12 at 22:52, Trey Sizemore wrote:
> I need help finding the IP address of a Domain Name Server.
>
> Thanks
>
Use your own caching name server. Very simple to set up.
>
> --
--
Hart's PGP Key: 0x7BFF655E - http
On Fri, Sep 12, 2003 at 09:57:36PM -0500, Dave Ihnat wrote:
> I assume you know the canonical name; try "dig any -x xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx".
-want. I meant WANT.
--
Dave "end of a LONG day at the end of a LONGER week" Ihnat
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
redhat-list mailing l
On Sat, 2003-09-13 at 10:52, Trey Sizemore wrote:
> I need help finding the IP address of a Domain Name Server.
You appear to be a customer of bellsouth.net.
Probably you should be using
NS.BELLSOUTH.NET has address 205.152.0.5
or
NS.ATL.BELLSOUTH.NET has address 205.152.0.20
Or ask your ISP..
from the command prompt you can type
nslookup name.of.machine.com and it will give you the IP address.
Ian
At 07:52 PM 9/12/2003, you wrote:
I need help finding the IP address of a Domain Name Server.
Thanks
--
Cheers,
Trey
---
At a given moment I open my eyes and exist.
And before that, durin
On Fri, Sep 12, 2003 at 10:52:41PM -0400, Trey Sizemore wrote:
> I need help finding the IP address of a Domain Name Server.
I assume you know the canonical name; try "dig any -x xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx".
Cheers,
--
Dave Ihnat
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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unsubscribe
On Friday, Dec 27, 2002, at 06:53AM, Ben Logan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Fri, Dec 27, 2002 at 06:35:56PM +0800, Patrick Law wrote:
>> Good day,
>>
>> If I wish to configure ip address from command line, which file I need to
>> edit?
>>
>> How do I make dhcpd start automatically when I b
On Fri, Dec 27, 2002 at 06:35:56PM +0800, Patrick Law wrote:
> Good day,
>
> If I wish to configure ip address from command line, which file I need to
> edit?
>
> How do I make dhcpd start automatically when I boot up machine?
Hi, Patrick,
I just setup DHCP for the first time on my machine, b
Try "neat"
On Fri, 27 Dec 2002, Patrick Law wrote:
> Good day,
>
> If I wish to configure ip address from command line, which file I need to
> edit?
>
> How do I make dhcpd start automatically when I boot up machine?
>
> Thanks first,
>
> -Patrick
>
--
Mike Burger
http://www.bubbanfrie
Saul Arias wrote:
> At 03:43 PM 09-10-02, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
>
>> *L* That solved one problem, now I'm getting 403 Forbidden! *sighs and
>> goes back to working on the httpd.conf file*ponders removing and
>> re-installing Apache to get a clean httpd.conf file* Damn, this SSL
>> stuff is c
At 03:43 PM 09-10-02, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
>*L* That solved one problem, now I'm getting 403 Forbidden! *sighs and
>goes back to working on the httpd.conf file*ponders removing and
>re-installing Apache to get a clean httpd.conf file* Damn, this SSL stuff
>is confusing me. *nods*
If you wan
At 03:14 PM 09-10-02, Bret Hughes wrote:
>If you are still concerned about the ipaddress, what's his name had a
>good solution, go the the chicken whatever site he suggested and see
>where your internal boxes are being masqueraded from. That IP address
>will be your router's external interface.
Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
> Saul Arias wrote:
>
>> At 12:12 PM 09-10-02, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
>>
>>> No, the router I'm using is an external Linksys Cable/DSL router.
>>> Before getting it I had considered using some of the client software
>>> available for download, but after trying to set up
On Wed, 2002-10-09 at 11:27, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
> >
> > My external IP as DynDNS.org has it is 24.158.191.171, but it only
> > brings up my routers admin page instead of the web site I'm trying to
> > host off my system and no one EXTERNAL of me can connect at all.
> > Apparently this is
Saul Arias wrote:
> At 12:12 PM 09-10-02, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
>
>> No, the router I'm using is an external Linksys Cable/DSL router.
>> Before getting it I had considered using some of the client software
>> available for download, but after trying to set up one such utility, I
>> became h
At 12:12 PM 09-10-02, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
>No, the router I'm using is an external Linksys Cable/DSL router. Before
>getting it I had considered using some of the client software available
>for download, but after trying to set up one such utility, I became
>hopelessly confused. I figured I
Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
> Saul Arias wrote:
>
>> At 12:12 AM 09-10-02, Mike Burger wrote:
>>
>>> On 8 Oct 2002, Bret Hughes wrote:
>>>
>>> > [bhughes@gateway1 Procmail]$ grep -B1 -A1 zhad other.rc
>>> > :0:
>>> > * ^From.*[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>> > /dev/null
>>> >
>>> > Nuff said.
>>> >
>>> > Bret
Kevin MacNeil wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 08, 2002 at 08:53:42PM -0500, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
>
>>Well, I need to know my real IP so I can tell DynDNS the correct IP to
>>direct http://omega-fleet.homelinux.org too.
>>
>>And yes, this is behind the router from the workstation/server.
>
>
> If the r
Saul Arias wrote:
> At 12:12 AM 09-10-02, Mike Burger wrote:
>
>> On 8 Oct 2002, Bret Hughes wrote:
>>
>> > [bhughes@gateway1 Procmail]$ grep -B1 -A1 zhad other.rc
>> > :0:
>> > * ^From.*[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> > /dev/null
>> >
>> > Nuff said.
>> >
>> > Bret
>>
>> I'm with you.
>
>
> The length o
On Tue, Oct 08, 2002 at 08:53:42PM -0500, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
> Well, I need to know my real IP so I can tell DynDNS the correct IP to
> direct http://omega-fleet.homelinux.org too.
>
> And yes, this is behind the router from the workstation/server.
If the router is a linux box you can down
And it only took you 18 messages to help instead of throwing insults
Saul Arias wrote:
> At 12:12 AM 09-10-02, Mike Burger wrote:
>
>> On 8 Oct 2002, Bret Hughes wrote:
>>
>> > [bhughes@gateway1 Procmail]$ grep -B1 -A1 zhad other.rc
>> > :0:
>> > * ^From.*[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> > /dev/null
At 12:12 AM 09-10-02, Mike Burger wrote:
>On 8 Oct 2002, Bret Hughes wrote:
>
> > [bhughes@gateway1 Procmail]$ grep -B1 -A1 zhad other.rc
> > :0:
> > * ^From.*[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > /dev/null
> >
> > Nuff said.
> >
> > Bret
>
>I'm with you.
The length of this thread is 17 messages now, and no one
On 8 Oct 2002, Bret Hughes wrote:
> On Tue, 2002-10-08 at 22:01, Saul Arias wrote:
> > On Tue, 2002-10-08 at 22:24, Collin Baillie wrote:
> > > > Second, I know the solution to your problem, but since you are a lazy
> > > > parasite who wants the solution spoon fed to it, all the advice I'll
> >
Dude, don't let your spaghetti boil over.
EXHALE---
Breathe.
If you do not know the answer to something, it is OK
to admit that you don't know it.
Heck dude there is alot that I don't know, and if someone
asks me, and I don't know, I am Not Ashamed to say
"sorry, I don't
On 8 Oct 2002, Saul Arias wrote:
> Let me clarify:
> What I did mean is "read the fucking manual" and "search the fucking
> web". Maybe in upper case. That's the response Mr. Nagy deserves.
>
> Before anyone flames me for being too harsh on newbies, consider this:
How about flaming you for not
On Tue, 2002-10-08 at 22:01, Saul Arias wrote:
> On Tue, 2002-10-08 at 22:24, Collin Baillie wrote:
> > > Second, I know the solution to your problem, but since you are a lazy
> > > parasite who wants the solution spoon fed to it, all the advice I'll
> > > give you is this: RTFM and STFW.
> >
> >
On Tue, 2002-10-08 at 21:23, Saul Arias wrote:
> On Tue, 2002-10-08 at 19:39, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
> > Okay, I know, check google and the docs, but I KNOW how to do this, at
> > least I did. How does one find out their systems IP info? I know it's
> > something like ipcfg or some such, but I
On Tue, 2002-10-08 at 22:24, Collin Baillie wrote:
> > Second, I know the solution to your problem, but since you are a lazy
> > parasite who wants the solution spoon fed to it, all the advice I'll
> > give you is this: RTFM and STFW.
>
> RTFM = Read The Fine* Manual
> STFW = Search The Fine* Web
> Second, I know the solution to your problem, but since you are a lazy
> parasite who wants the solution spoon fed to it, all the advice I'll
> give you is this: RTFM and STFW.
RTFM = Read The Fine* Manual
STFW = Search The Fine* Web
* You may at your disgression replace "fine" with another, mo
On Tue, 2002-10-08 at 19:39, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
> Okay, I know, check google and the docs, but I KNOW how to do this, at
> least I did. How does one find out their systems IP info? I know it's
> something like ipcfg or some such, but I can't remember atm.
First, read this: http://www.tuxed
FQDN = Fully Qualified Domain Name
ie...www.domain.com
NAT = Network Address Translation
It's when your router/firewall takes traffic destined for internet ip
address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx and reroutes it to internal ip address
yyy.yyy.yyy.yyy
On Tue, 8 Oct 2002, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
> Mike Bu
Mike Burger wrote:
> It would seem that the router is answering on the IP that has been
> assigned to that FQDN, and is either not supposed to, the wrong IP has
> been assigned to the router or web server, or the proper NAT hasn't been
> configured.
>
> On Tue, 8 Oct 2002, Joseph A Nagy Jr wro
Dave Lewis wrote:
> oki... what info were you looking for ? you would be typing that from
> behind the router right ? on a workstaiton for instance ?
>
> Dave
>
> At 07:28 PM 10/8/2002 -0500, you wrote:
>
>> Dave Lewis wrote:
>>
>>> ifconfig
>>
>>
>> Gives me
>>
>> eth0 Link encap:Ethe
It would seem that the router is answering on the IP that has been
assigned to that FQDN, and is either not supposed to, the wrong IP has
been assigned to the router or web server, or the proper NAT hasn't been
configured.
On Tue, 8 Oct 2002, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
> Dave Lewis wrote:
> > if
ifconfig, or the newer "ip" command.
On Tue, 8 Oct 2002, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
> Okay, I know, check google and the docs, but I KNOW how to do this, at
> least I did. How does one find out their systems IP info? I know it's
> something like ipcfg or some such, but I can't remember atm.
>
>
oki... what info were you looking for ? you would be typing that from
behind the router right ? on a workstaiton for instance ?
Dave
At 07:28 PM 10/8/2002 -0500, you wrote:
>Dave Lewis wrote:
>>ifconfig
>
>Gives me
>
>eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:C0:CA:12:44:58
> inet ad
Dave Lewis wrote:
> ifconfig
Gives me
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:C0:CA:12:44:58
inet addr:192.168.1.101 Bcast:192.168.1.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
UP BROADCAST NOTRAILERS RUNNING MTU:1500 Metric:1
RX packets:645068 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 fram
ifconfig
:)
Dave
At 06:39 PM 10/8/2002 -0500, you wrote:
>Okay, I know, check google and the docs, but I KNOW how to do this, at
>least I did. How does one find out their systems IP info? I know it's
>something like ipcfg or some such, but I can't remember atm.
>
>
>
>--
>redhat-list maili
* Joe Giles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002-07-31 04:37 +0200]:
> I use DHCP, and I would like to use an IP variable (If one exists) to
> set my DISPLAY option...
To answer to your question: there's no such variable, but two special
hostnames: »localhost« and the your machine's local hostname, so setti
Worked Like a charm... Thanks man...
Joe
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On Tuesday 30 July 2002 10:37 pm, Joe Giles wrote:
> > Is there a preset variable in Linux that stores your IP address?
> >
> > I use DHCP, and I would like to use an IP variable (If one exists) to
>
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Tuesday 30 July 2002 10:37 pm, Joe Giles wrote:
> Is there a preset variable in Linux that stores your IP address?
>
> I use DHCP, and I would like to use an IP variable (If one exists) to
> set my DISPLAY option... Can anyone help ?
>
> Example
>
On Wed, Jul 31, 2002 at 02:37:16AM -, Joe Giles wrote:
> Is there a preset variable in Linux that stores your IP address?
>
> I use DHCP, and I would like to use an IP variable (If one exists) to set my DISPLAY
>option... Can anyone help ?
>
> Example
>
> display=$MYIP:0;export display
>
Michael Burger wrote:
>
> To my knowledge, no...however, the easiest way to find out is to log
> in to the console, and run "ifconfig" to see if the interface has
> truly been taken down.
>
> However, as I stated at first, I do not believe that Linux actually
> does an "ifconfig eth0 down".
>
To my knowledge, no...however, the easiest way to find out is to log
in to the console, and run "ifconfig" to see if the interface has
truly been taken down.
However, as I stated at first, I do not believe that Linux actually
does an "ifconfig eth0 down".
On Wed, 18 Apr 2001 18:39:39 -0700, Dan
Thanks for the response, but I have to say "kind of".
The guy I'm working with seems to believe that linux is doing the
equivalent of "ifconfig eth0 down", which is a quite different kind of
going down.
Also, many OSes log something when there's a conflict. I saw one
message that said linux doe
That's what any OS/device will do when there's an IP conflict. Both
interfaces shut down for a short period of time...varied, mind you.
If both come back up and still have the same IPs and conflict, they
both go down, again.
It matters not whether you're running Linux, BSD, Windows, or are on
a
Oh, hell...I hate it when I give the wrong answer to a question.
>From "man named.conf":
Interfaces
The interfaces and ports that the server will answer queries from may be
specified using the listen-on option. listen-on takes an optional port,
and an address match list. The server will liste
I have a script in my start up that goes through a list of IPs for which
I'm aliasing, and uses "ifconfig alias" for eth0:0 thru eth0:15 (I happen
to have 16 virtual IPs running on the box. ).
It looks like this:
-
#!/bin/bash
names="ip.address.1
In named.conf you need the listen-on portdirective which allows you to
specify the IPs to listen on. In your case
options {
listen-on port 53 { 192.168.42.1; };
...
}
hth
charles
On Mon, 19 Feb 2001, Mark Lo wrote:
> Hi,
>
> How to tell bind to listen to a single ip addr
On Mon, 19 Feb 2001, Mark Lo wrote:
> Hi,
>
> How to tell bind to listen to a single ip address if I have two IP
> address alias in a single ethernet card.
>
> For example,
>
> eth0 ="192.168.42.1"
> eth0:0="192.168.42.2"
>
> How Can I tell bind to only listen to eth0 but et
On Wed, 31 Jan 2001, linda hanigan spewed into the bitstream:
lh>Hi All,
lh>I can't seem to figure out ip address ranges for my
lh>firewall script.
lh>my isp uses 207.69.188.185, 207.69.188.186, &
lh>207.69.188.187 for DNS servers
lh>I know I need to give the address as
lh>207.69.188.?/? I thin
-Original Message-
From: Darren R. Weber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Friday, October 20, 2000 7:14 PM
Subject: IP address and pump
>Is there a way to force pump to get a different address? Here is the
reason I ask.
>
>I know I can tell it to rele
s--look it up.
> Otherwise, you could try just throwing in another NIC if you have one.
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Darren R. Weber
> > Sent: Friday, October 20, 2000 9:16 PM
> > To: [EMAI
20, 2000 9:16 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: IP address and pump
>
>
> Thanks for the other notes here too. I allready know the
> provider. I did an nslookup and got the name associated with
> the IP and it was all too familiar. The IP was also very
> close. .
On Sat, Oct 21, 2000 at 12:15:45AM -0400, Darren R. Weber wrote:
> Thanks for the other notes here too. I allready know the provider.
> I did an nslookup and got the name associated with the IP and it was
> all too familiar. The IP was also very close. . .it is another DSL
> user with my provide
Thanks for the other notes here too. I allready know the provider. I did an nslookup
and got the name associated with the IP and it was all too familiar. The IP was also
very close. . .it is another DSL user with my provider. I intend to contact them
about the problem, but I was hoping to a
On Fri, Oct 20, 2000 at 08:48:01PM -0400, Michael Burger wrote:
> On Fri, 20 Oct 2000 19:44:43 -0400, Darren R. Weber wrote:
> >Is there a way to force pump to get a different address? Here is the reason I ask.
>
> >I know I can tell it to release, and then restart it but it just gets the sam
Thanks, that's what I thought.
-DRW
On Fri, 20 Oct 2000 20:48:01 -0400, you wrote:
> On Fri, 20 Oct 2000 19:44:43 -0400, Darren R. Weber wrote:
>
> >Is there a way to force pump to get a different address? Here is the reason I ask.
>
> >
> >I know I can tell it to release, and then restart
On Fri, 20 Oct 2000 19:44:43 -0400, Darren R. Weber wrote:
>Is there a way to force pump to get a different address? Here is the reason I ask.
>
>I know I can tell it to release, and then restart it but it just gets the same
>address again. I am on DSL and some idiot in Miami has apparently
On Fri, Oct 20, 2000 at 07:44:43PM -0400, Darren R. Weber wrote:
> Is there a way to force pump to get a different address? Here is
> the reason I ask.
>
> Is the only way to release my current IP and wait until the server
> has had time to give out the old one?
You are at the mercy of how th
On Fri, Aug 11, 2000 at 06:14:42PM -0400, Jeff Graves wrote:
: Bought a block of IP's. What IP addresses do I have?
:
: 64.184.117.0/28 netmask of 255.255.255.240
64.184.117.0/28 == 64.184.117.1 - 64.184.117.14. .0 is the network, .15 is
the broadcast. Saying /28 with a netmask of 255.255.255.
eww :P
___
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https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
Statux wrote:
> .255 is broadcast
> .0 is netmask
Not when you're subnetting.
> > >64.184.117.0/28 netmask of 255.255.255.240
The broadcast on this subnet is 64.184.117.15
The person who leases a same-sized block right after this one would
get:
64.184.117.16/28
In this case the network add
.255 is broadcast
.0 is netmask
On Sat, 12 Aug 2000, Roadrunner wrote:
> Hi,
>
> It looks to me that you own 64.184.117.0 + 64.184.117.28 and every number in
> between on subnetmask 255.255.255.240.
>
> However I thought that the '0' isn't used 'cause it means something like:
> "unknown value"
bought IPs? where do you buy IPs from? That's not like buying the
golden gate bridge or something is it?
:)
At 6:14 PM -0400 11/8/00, Jeff Graves wrote:
>Bought a block of IP's. What IP addresses do I have?
--
Nitro - 3D Visualisation, Graphics & Animation
Ph (+61 2) 9
Thanks guys.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Bret Hughes
Sent: Friday, August 11, 2000 7:33 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: IP Address Blocks
Roadrunner wrote:
> Hi,
>
> It looks to me that you own 64.184.117.0 + 64.1
Roadrunner wrote:
> Hi,
>
> It looks to me that you own 64.184.117.0 + 64.184.117.28 and every number in
> between on subnetmask 255.255.255.240.
>
> However I thought that the '0' isn't used 'cause it means something like:
> "unknown value" or in this case unknown computer. But it could also mea
> Bought a block of IP's. What IP addresses do I have?
>
> 64.184.117.0/28 netmask of 255.255.255.240
Netmask 255.255.255.240 /28 (...)
16 subnets 16 addresses
x.x.x.0 x.x.x.15
x.x.x.16 x.x.x.31
x.x.x.32 x.x.x.47
x.x.x.48 x.x.x.63
x.x.x.64
Hi,
It looks to me that you own 64.184.117.0 + 64.184.117.28 and every number in
between on subnetmask 255.255.255.240.
However I thought that the '0' isn't used 'cause it means something like:
"unknown value" or in this case unknown computer. But it could also mean
'all computers'.
anyway,
Wh
>Probably a simple question, I need to change my IP address on my >RH5.0
>box.
files for config reside in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts (???)
Look up the last part of the dir, because i'm not sure. Change the IP
adress, and restart your network. Scripts to do this are in /etc/rc.d/
> know I ca
> Probably a simple question, I need to change my IP address on my RH5.0
> box. I know I can change it, re-boot and it will be effective.
> Question is, is there a way to change it and have it take effect without
> re-booting ?
Mmm.. But of course. If your local to the machine, you can use:
#
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