Mike Patterson wrote: > > Hi there-- > > My latest excursion has been into the realm of Kahn, a variation on > Kali. Of course, I'm having some problems, and the answer doesn't seem to > be obvious to other Kahn users, so I'm guessing that it's a problem with > my network. > > The setup is this: > > 1.1.1.1 is a linux machien running kahnd > 1.1.1.2 is a win95 dialing into 1.1.1.1 > 1.1.1.3 is a win95 machine on the same lan as 1.1.1.1 > > Connect through mgetty/pppd just fine. 1.1.1.2 and 1.1.1.3 can both read > the samba drives on 1.1.1.1. > > Now, both .2 and .3 can connect to the kahnd on 1.1.1.1, and can talk to > each other, but .2 doesn't show on .3's list.
Which "list" is that? If you mean "When I open 'Network Neighborhood' on 1.1.1.3 I can't see 1.1.1.2" then you've discovered one of the gross inadequacies of NetBIOS (and NetBT). You see, when LanManager was conceived (yes, this is what we now call "Microsoft Networking") they wanted it to be *easy* to use, not like that confusing TCP/IP stuff. So, rather than have a distributed, managed name space a la DNS they decided that they would use a flat name space and let chaos rule. Machines sharing a network literally "fight it out" to decide who's going to be the "Browse Master"--the computer responsible for knowing who all is on the network. At any rate, in NetBT (read as "using Microsoft Networking over TCP/IP") UDP broadcast is used to look up machines (to map machine name to IP address) and UDP broadcast packets are *not* routed which means if 1.1.1.3 is trying to find 1.1.1.2 by name, it won't find it. The solution to this is to set up a WINS server--sorta like a DNS server. You can do this in Linux, you just need SAMBA (which it seems like you already have. The program is nmbd and you need to create a file which maps host names to IP addresses (and which looks like an /etc/hosts file) and 'nmbd -H your-lm-hosts-file' will then run the server. Then on your Win95 client go into TCP/IP settings and set 1.1.1.1 as a WINS server. If you've got '-proxyarp' being passed to pppd on your Linux box, you should be there. > In addition, when trying to play a game (any game!), I can see the network > game, but when I attempt to join it, the attempt fails. I assume this means > that either global or direct packets aren't making it. > > Any ideas would be helpful, or at least where to look. Thanks. > I hope this helps. Your post was actually a little too vague to be able to tell what problem you're having. -- Jens B. Jorgensen [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .