try calling @home service. they can direct you to their website which "shows"
your current ip#/gateway #/dns #'s. once you get these, use netconf (or
linuxconf netconf) and enter the #'s in directly. for you email address smp
#'s etc...use actual "numbers #" and not "$mail" (or characters).
Hi.
I'm have cable modem. I'm trying to get my linux machine two work
with the
at home service. @home uses DHCP. Hence I must configure my
linux box run
the dhcp client. I tried the following command but it still failed,
dhcpcd -h hostname eth0
maybe it's not
Hamada Amer wrote:
I'm have cable modem. I'm trying to get my linux machine two work with the
at home service. @home uses DHCP. Hence I must configure my linux box run
the dhcp client. I tried the following command but it still failed,
dhcpcd -h hostname eth0
If
On Sat, 24 Jun 2000, you wrote:
Hi.
I'm have cable modem. I'm trying to get my linux machine two work with the
at home service. @home uses DHCP. Hence I must configure my linux box run
the dhcp client. I tried the following command but it still failed,
dhcpcd -h
Actually, dhcpcd is a DHCP client, dhcpd is the server.
- Original Message -
From: "Guy T. Rice" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, June 18, 2000 10:22 PM
Subject: Re: [Cooker] nic configuration for @home (the wave)
On Sun, 18 Jun 2000, Hamada Amer wr
On Sun, 18 Jun 2000, Guy T. Rice wrote:
On Sun, 18 Jun 2000, Hamada Amer wrote:
I'm trying to configure linux so it could use the @home service.
For that I need to use DHCP.
I tried running dhcpcd eth0, but that doesn't work.
That's actually the reverse of what you want (dhcpcd is a