I am a new debian user, and have just installed
debian on an old PC. I am in the process of setting up a local network,
and find that when I boot up, some spurious entries in the routing table are
causing problems. When I delete these and retain only the routing table
entries that should be there, everything is fine and I can ping to and from the
computer.
However, everytime I boot up, the routing table
returns to its previous state with the incorrect entries (they are to an
interface that doesn't, as far as I know exist, not to my installed NIC
interface). I know that there must be a script somewhere that is creating
the routing table entries on startup, but I can't find it. I have looked
everywhere that I can think of (including for files listed on the web as
containing this information for other distros, but the files don't seem to exist
in my installation), and done a grep search, but nothing
appears.
I basically did a default debian install - can
anyone tell me where the routing table is populated?
Kristin.
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- Re: how to save changes to the routing table Kristin Stock
- Re: how to save changes to the routing table Bill Marcum