Networking weirdness
Trying to network my Debian 2.2/Corel Linux box to my [EMAIL PROTECTED] cable modem. Failing. No trouble getting my Mac and my Windows box to talk to the modem, but the same settings fail on my Linux box. The thing is, I'm pretty sure everything is set right on my Linux box. Apart from them all being the same as the settings on my other computers, I can turn the activity light in my modem on by trying to ping the gateway. Furthermore, I'm reasonably confident about my understanding of how to set up networking in Linux, because I can get Linux talking to my other two computers just fine, including setting up Windows 98 as my NAT service (shudder!) for Linux. On top of all that, the cable modem has a 10.x.x.x address, and I have no trouble pinging it, and I can set up Windows 98 as the gateway just fine. So here's the question: what could my Linux box possibly be doing so that it can talk to my PC, my Mac, my cable modem, my PC as its gateway, but not AT&T's cable modem gateway? I'm pretty sure that it's something about how Linux is trying to talk to the gateway. An alternative question that might help is: I understand how to use route and ifconfig to set this stuff up, but what sort of IP diagnostics are available to me to work out what's wrong?
RE: DNS lookups fail
Sorry, that was not quite right. nslookup did eventually return, with: *** Can't find server name for address ...: No response from server for all three servers I have in my /etc/resolv.conf file, which are working fine. I can ping these same servers just fine, so I don't think it's a routing issue. -- > From: Guyren G Howe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Date: Wed, 22 Mar 2000 04:40:40 -0800 > To: "debian-user@lists.debian.org" > Subject: DNS lookups fail > > I have somehow managed to get things so that the computers going through my > Debian 2.2 box for NAT can do DNS just fine, but I can't do a nslookup from > the same box itself to save myself. > > nslookup never returns anything, even a timeout. My /etc/resolv.conf file > shows the same things I have set on the other computers that work fine through > my linux box. > > What could I have got wrong? > > TIA
DNS lookups fail
I have somehow managed to get things so that the computers going through my Debian 2.2 box for NAT can do DNS just fine, but I can't do a nslookup from the same box itself to save myself. nslookup never returns anything, even a timeout. My /etc/resolv.conf file shows the same things I have set on the other computers that work fine through my linux box. What could I have got wrong? TIA
Redirecting 101 again
I still can't make my games work from inside my firewall. I was hoping someone could offer me specific instructions; the things I've tried to do with ipmasqadm and ipautofw don't seem to have done what I told them to do. So here is what I need. My Linux box is 192.168.0.5. My PC is 192.168.0.2. Here is what Atomic told me I need to get Close Combat 4 working through my firewall: To work though a firewall or proxy server, the ports 47624, and the range 2300-2400 must be open for both inbound and outbound TCP and UDP traffic. So: given that I have Debian 2.2, how do I get this to work. Also: I have another game on a different machine that needs port 47624. How can I switch my redirection to the other machine when needed? Many thanks.
redirecting 101
Hi. I want to get some games and other things working on machines inside my Linux NAT server. eg for Close Combat, I need ports 47624 and 2300-2400 on both TCP and UDP redirected so from the outside they look like they're going to/from my Linux box, but everything gets redirected in both directions to my PC. I also want to redirect different ranges of ports to different machines on my internal network. I *need* to be able to play Total Annihilation from my Mac! I can't work out how to do this. All the instructions I can find tell me to use ipfwadm, but Debian doesn't seem to offer it (not listed in debian packages, for example). I presume ipchains can do this, but I don't seem to have an ipchains man page (how can I reinstall the man page, btw?) and I could never make that work anyway. I'd love to understand the general theory of how to redirect particular ports for particular protocols to particular machines. ipchains? ipautofw? ipportfw? TIA
Apple rtsp_proxy gives segmentation fault
Hi, all. I would like to use Quicktime streaming over my cable modem from my Mac and Windoze machines. Apple offers a rtsp_proxy (possibly also useful with Real and/or MS streaming as well, but I don't know) for linux. I downloaded, installed and launched it successfully, but when I try to hit it, I get a segmentation fault. I have tried dejanews and other internet searches without finding a reference to this. I am running 2.2 kernel, and all my internet stuff works just great. I am using NAT on it; perhaps it is interfering with the UDP or TCP stuff that the rtsp_proxy is trying to do. So have you gotten this to work? And do I need to adjust my ipchains if I am running the proxy on the NAT machine? TIA Guyren G Howe
Screen capture
How can I do a screen (or ideally, a window) capture under Debian (I am running Window Maker with Gnome, if that helps). TIA
netatalk setup
While there is a debian netatalk distribution, I can't find any useful documentation for getting it working. Most of the instructions I can find refer to compiling and installing it on Red Hat, and the instructions don't match what I have. I've tried searching the debian archive, but it never turns up anything. I've also looked in the Debian documentation online, but that doesn't give me anything, either. man atalkd *does* give me useful information, but it doesn't work. Since my local net is on eth1, man atalkd seems to say that all I need is a /etc/netatalk/atalkd.conf with the string "eth1". But I created this, and when I try to launch atalkd, all I get is: socket: Invalid argument atalkd: can't get interfaces, exiting Thinking I might need to load a module, I ran modconf, but there is nothing about appletalk, atalk or anything similar in the net section there, or anywhere else for that matter. Yet when I do apt-get install netatalk, it says I have the latest version installed. So how do I get this working?
How to fix apt/dpkg/dselect
I have been trying for three or four days to get my x server to run. I can't get dselect or apt to do the intelligent thing when it comes to re-installing anything. If I fix something (by brute-force: download via ftp and install), something else breaks. apt and dselect are hopelessly trapped in loops or something about what depends on what, what I should have installed and so on. For instance: at the moment, I am trying to install man-db, since I don't have any man pages (don't ask). I do: apt-get install man-db I get: ... You might want to run apt-get install -f... Sorry, but the following packages have unmet dependencies: man-db: Depends: groff rstart: Depends: netstd but it is not going to be installed rstartd: Depends: netstd but it is not going to be installed E: Unmet dependencies. Try apt-get -f install with no packages (or specify a solution) I thought apt was supposed to *sort out* dependencies. So I do: apt-get install -f and I get: blah blah blah The following... will be installed: netstd ... 0 packages upgraded, 1 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded. 10 packages not fully installed or removed. ...Do you want to continue? I say Yes. I get: Unpacking netstd... dpkg: error processing... netstd_3.07-7slink... trying to overwrite '/usr/bin/finger', which is also in package finger dpkg-deb: subprocess paste killed by signal (broken pipe) Errors were encountered while processing: ...netstd_3.07-7slink... E: Sub-process /usr/bin/dpkg returned an error code (1) So then, not seeing what else I can do, I do: apt-get install finger and I get: ... rstart: Depends: netstd but it is not going to be installed rstartd:... and then it advises me to run apt-get -f install. So I'm stuck in a loop. Is there some master package I can ask for that will reinstall Debian 2.2? What else can I do? This sucks! TIA Guyren G Howe
startx hell
Anyone have any thoughts on this? -- > From: Guyren G Howe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Date: Mon, 24 Jan 2000 17:24:49 -0800 > To: "debian-user@lists.debian.org" > Subject: startx hell > > startx won't run. It gives me: > > System: '/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb/xkbcomp -w 1 -R/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb -xkm > -m us -em1 "The XKEBOARD keymap compiler (xkbcomp) reports: " -emp "? " -em1 > "Errors from xkbcomp are not fatal to the X server keymap/xfree86 > compiled/xfree86.xkm' > > Figuring that this is because I have no keymap installed, I searched the > Debian package system for a keymap thingy. I found console-tools. However, > when I do > > apt-get install console-tools > > I get a character-mode (ncurses?) display labelled "Debian Configuration" > and then "Configuring Console-data", which is asking me what keyboard layout > I want (qwerty, azerty, etc). However, this script does *nothing*. No > keystroke has any effect except for Ctrl-C. > > So: how do I get startx to happen? > > TIA >
startx hell
startx won't run. It gives me: System: '/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb/xkbcomp -w 1 -R/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb -xkm -m us -em1 "The XKEBOARD keymap compiler (xkbcomp) reports: " -emp "? " -em1 "Errors from xkbcomp are not fatal to the X server keymap/xfree86 compiled/xfree86.xkm' Figuring that this is because I have no keymap installed, I searched the Debian package system for a keymap thingy. I found console-tools. However, when I do apt-get install console-tools I get a character-mode (ncurses?) display labelled "Debian Configuration" and then "Configuring Console-data", which is asking me what keyboard layout I want (qwerty, azerty, etc). However, this script does *nothing*. No keystroke has any effect except for Ctrl-C. So: how do I get startx to happen? TIA
Package hell (again)
Okay, so I'm in different package hell this time. In trying to install a sound driver, dselect has somehow decided to remove most of the software on my computer. I'm talking as far as removing apt-get and a bunch of other system utilities. Plus, when I try to re-fetch anything with dselect, I get about a million attempts to install or remove a bunch of other stuff, all of which gives me DPKG ERRORs. All dependency problems. It seems to have a list somewhere of left-over jobs it still has to do, and it keeps trying to do them. Now, I can manually ftp things and install them one at a time. But how do I ever get dselect back to a state of sanity? I've tried removing its configuration files, and it just refuses to run. Is there some other way to "reset" it?
Can't give non-root X access
How do I give access to X from anything other than root? I get an error that the user is not allowed to run X. I realise that this probably involves xauth. But the explanations I can find about how it works might as well be in Greek. They all talk about the name of the host, for example. Why should I need this when I want to just be able to create a non-root login on the same computer? Can someone explain for me, step-by-step, how I let my non-root login use X? Many thanks.
package hell
How do I get out of package hell? In trying to install Enlightenment on my Debian/Corel machine, I've got myself trapped in all sorts of loops where apt-get, dselect and dpkg all refuse to install any of the things I need because they can't install other things that those things depend on. I've somehow managed to get my X Server uninstalled, and I can't reinstall it. I get several screens of errors about things that it can't install, and I can't find any way of piping this output to less or anything so I can see all the errors. The ones I can see say, for example, that things can't be installed because they depend on xfree86-common, which it doesn't get up to installing, because of these errors that come up first. I've tried everything I can think of. Just now, for example, I told dselect to remove everything. Then I told it to install xfree86-common. It complains it can't because "cannot open help file '/usr/share/doc/xfree-86common/.dhelp'" I've tried apt-get update followed by apt-get upgrade, but I just get the same errors. I thought this whole package thing was supposed to make this stuff easier. This makes windows look like something well organised. Hlp!
Clarification on setting window manager
Okay, I asked the question a little while back about how I can set my window manager. So far I have been advised to edit, in different messages from different people: /etc/X11/window-managers ~/xinitrc ~/.xsession I've also been advised to run register-window-manager --default, but when I run it, it advises me that it will soon be superceded! Any or all of these look plausible. None of them actually seem to work (they currently *all* say kde, but I'm still getting enlightenment). What is the *real* answer here? BTW, enlightenment looks like shit. I get stray lines all over the screen when I resize windows, most of the little icons don't do anything, and the right mouse-click on the desktop, which all the enlightenment "documentation" (which is a generous term) I've been able to find advises me to do, doesn't do anything. Is enlightenment just crap, or am I missing something here?
Re: debian-user-digest Digest V100 #79
Title: Re: debian-user-digest Digest V100 #79 This does nothing. I execute chmod 700 .xsession, and nothing happens. I just get the command prompt back. Besides, shouldn't this tie into startx somehow? From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reply-To: debian-user@lists.debian.org Date: 13 Jan 2000 22:02:49 - To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: debian-user-digest Digest V100 #79 From: John Pearson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Thu, 13 Jan 2000 15:52:34 +1030 To: "debian-user@lists.debian.org" <debian-user@lists.debian.org> Subject: Re: How to install new Window manager On Wed, Jan 12, 2000 at 03:57:53PM -0900, Ethan Benson wrote > On 12/1/2000 Guyren G Howe wrote: > > >But I can't work out how to get Afterstep to come up instead of KDE. Can > >someone tell me how to do this? All the explanations I've found go into > >gorey detail about compiling it, then say something like "and then you > >install it". > > add a .xsession to your home directory wtih contents as follows: > > #! /bin/sh > > ## name of your preferred windowmanager (afterstep may not be right name) > afterstep & > That line should be: exec afterstep When your .xsession terminates, so does your session. The last program you start in your .xsession should *not* be put in the background like that, or you will exit before your WM has time to start. > then chmod 700 .xsession > > Ethan
KDE stuff under other desktops (and desktop recommendations)
I want to get right into customising this thing (currently ranked as newbie). So I installed the Afterstep desktop instead of KDE. Kinda nice, in many ways. But I miss some of the nice little apps from my Corel KDE stuff. I've found that I can fire up the file browser by executing CorelExplorer. But it lets me look at files but not, for example, open them. And I cannot, for the life of me, work out where to find all the little KDE things I was using. So: how do I go about getting them to run under Afterstep. And also, I was hoping that those who have tried a bunch of different desktops would summarise why you settled on the desktop you prefer. Advantages and disadvantages of the varoius desktops you've tried. TIA
Worked it out
I worked out why X wouldn't start (had my XFree86 config wrong). Thanks anyway.
X doesn't start any more
Hi all, After choosing afterstep and some other stuff in dselect, when I reboot my machine, it says it's starting kdm, but nothing happens. And when I do exec xdm, it just logs me out. Any idea how to fix this? Thanks!
How to install new Window manager
I'm a newbie at this. I figured I'd get started learning to customise all this stuff by installing a new Window Manager. I like the look of AfterStep (one of its skins in particular), so I've downloaded all the relevant bits. But I can't work out how to get Afterstep to come up instead of KDE. Can someone tell me how to do this? All the explanations I've found go into gorey detail about compiling it, then say something like "and then you install it". I'm also interested in the meta-question: where would I look, on the net or in /usr/doc or whatever, to work out the answer to this question for myself? TIA
@Home not working
I'd be grateful for some advice about why I can't get a basic TCP network running on this *&^%&$%&^ thing. I have a Debian 2.1/Corel box. It has two tulip Ether cards, which work fine on my local LAN. (2 cards because I want to set up NAT, but I figured I'd get basic internet connection working first). The settings I use on my Mac and PC that work fine on @Home are: address: 24.8.xx.yy (I'm substituting letters for part of my address) netmask: 255.255.255.128 gateway: 24.8.xx.129 ...and I have a bunch of domain servers and such. I set this up with ifconfig. To simplify things, I've done ifconfig eth1 down, so I just have loopback and eth0 addresses: ... eth0 inetaddr:24.8.xx.yy Bcast: 24.8.xx.255 Mask:255.255.255.128 UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 RX packets:81 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0 TX packets:356 errors:209 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier: 418 Collisions:0 Interrupt:10 Base address:0xb000 And route -n says: Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface 0.0.0.0 24.8.xx.129255.255.255.128 UG 0 0 0 eth0 24.8.xx.128 0.0.0.0255.255.255.128 U 0 0 0 eth0 When I do dmesg, I get: ... eth0: Changing PNIC configuration to half-duplex, CSR6 816e ... I can't see anything else there that looks like the 209 errors that ifconfig is telling me about. This shouldn't be so difficult! I've done all this stuff over and over with minor permutations, eg the route table in the opposite order, but I can never get anywhere. When I try to ping the gateway, ping 24.8.xx.129, I get nothing back. Heelp! Guyren G Howe
UDMA/66
I couldn't get Corel Linux to work until I switched my drive from the UDMA/66 port to the normal one (I have a BP6 mobo and UDMA/66 drive). The benchmarks I've seen (eg on Thresh) show the /66 to be way faster. Is there any way I can get this to work? TIA
[Rank Newbie] Netgear ether card under Corel distrib
I am diving head first into Linux, but have done very little work with Unix in my career except a tiny but at University. My immediate problem is that I can't get network cards working under my Corel linux (or my sound card -- an inland Sound Card PCI 128 Wave Table -- but I'm prepared to leave that one for later). I have bought two cards now. Both have had me download .c versions of the tulip drivers, and neither of them would compile for my Debian variant O/S. I have tried reinstalling the OS from scratch after installing each set of cards, but it didn't help. I can see the cards in the control Center's ftp setup, and I can set options for it, but when I do ifconfig -a, all I get is the loopback. Plus, the control center sees only card and there are two. If you feel like commenting, the first thing I want this thing to do is run NAT, so if that is relevant to this discussion, please say so. I have a home-built ABP Dual-celeron 400 (couldn't get 366's any more) machine, with a downloaded Corel Linux distrib. So my immediate question is: I need to know what to do with the tulip.c file I got from Bay Networks for my Netgear FA 310TX cards (I have two, so I can run this thing as a NAT machine). The metaquestion, which might be more useful to me in the long run, is: How do I translate instructions about compiling for RedHat or Slackware into instructions for Debian? Specific questions, which might or might not be the right ones: - do I compile for a module or a monolithic kernel? - after hours spent reading the /usr/doc stuff, I tried to compile, but I found that one of the make files referred to a bunch of files that didn't actually exist (at least, not in the locations given in the file; and the first few I searched for didn't exist *at all* -- I know, I searched). I found a bug report on this one (#32456 -- http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/debian/Bugs/db/32/32456-b.html), but I can find nowhere to search for responses to these bug reports. The metametaquestion is where is the best place to find answers to these sorts of questions for myself. I spent most of yesterday trying to work this one out for myself. I visited a couple of hundred web pages, and read a significant proportion of the /usr/doc stuff, but I am no wiser about why the arrangement of the files in Debian is clearly very different to those in Redhat, what that means for compiling for Debian, etc. And I have a cable modem. This time was almost entirely spent reading stuff that didn't answer my questions. I like the philosophy of Debian, but if everything I get is going to be set up for Redhat, and if adapting them to Debian is going to be hard, I might have to give up on debian and go with Red Hat. I'd rather not, though! TIA Help!!!