IP without host

2000-01-14 Thread Dave Wiard
is there any way i can set up my machine to use IP but NOT go looking for
a host, anywhere?  i have 2 machines completely isolated and i'd like to
let them talk (ipx would be fine also, but i can't seem to get that
compiled in correctly).  i've got an AMD (nt, right now) and an sx164.
the sx uses the tulip driver for the NIC and it works great with IP.  i
tried to compile IPX and the tulip.c fails to compile.  any help getting
this to work would be great. TIA

--
dave wiard
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Re: IP without host

2000-01-14 Thread Stephen A. Witt
On Thu, 13 Jan 2000, Dave Wiard wrote:

 is there any way i can set up my machine to use IP but NOT go looking for
 a host, anywhere?  i have 2 machines completely isolated and i'd like to
 let them talk (ipx would be fine also, but i can't seem to get that
 compiled in correctly).  i've got an AMD (nt, right now) and an sx164.
 the sx uses the tulip driver for the NIC and it works great with IP.  i
 tried to compile IPX and the tulip.c fails to compile.  any help getting
 this to work would be great. TIA
 
 --
 dave wiard
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

Not sure what you want to do here. It sounds like you want to set up an
isolated (from the Internet or your intranet) Ethernet LAN with two hosts
(computers) on it. This is very easy to do with IP. My personal opinion
would be to forget about IPX. I don't consider this a native (whatever I
mean by that) networking protocol for Linux, but I'm sure some would
disagree. I also don't understand the IP without host bit, but I'll
ignore that.

If my assumption is correct, connect your machines together via an
Ethernet LAN. 10Base2, 10BaseT, whatever. Configure each machine to have a
unique network address. This is usually done on a Debian machine in
/etc/init.d/network. I would use one of the reserved IP networks such as
192.168.0.0. For example, make one machine 192.168.1.1 and the other
192.168.1.2 and set the network netmask to 255.255.255.0. Enter each
host/IP address in /etc/hosts for both machines and voila, you have a
private, isolated IP network and these machines should be able to
communicate with all network applications (that they have installed) all
day long with very good performance.

Hope this helps...





Re: IP without host

2000-01-14 Thread Phil Brutsche
A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far way, someone said...

 is there any way i can set up my machine to use IP but NOT go looking for
 a host, anywhere?  i have 2 machines completely isolated and i'd like to
 let them talk (ipx would be fine also, but i can't seem to get that
 compiled in correctly).

Just give them an IP from one of the private ranges (ie 192.168.0.1 -
192.168.0.254), and simply associate the names with IP#s in /etc/hosts on
each machine.  DNS isn't required.

 i've got an AMD (nt, right now) and an sx164. the sx uses the tulip
 driver for the NIC and it works great with IP.  i tried to compile IPX
 and the tulip.c fails to compile.  any help getting this to work would
 be great. TIA

Sorry, can't help there.

-- 
--
Phil Brutsche   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

There are two things that are infinite; Human stupidity and the
universe. And I'm not sure about the universe. - Albert Einstein