On Fri, 01 May 2009 05:36:06 -0400, Paul Cartwright posted:
I seemed to have a problem with my static setup of eth0 that stopped my
debian lenny setup from coming up correctly.
This doesn't tell us anything that we could use to troubleshoot. Do you
mean the system doesn't come up or just
On Fri, May 01, 2009 at 05:36:06 -0400, Paul Cartwright (a...@pcartwright.com)
wrote:
I seemed to have a problem with my static setup of eth0 that stopped my
debian
lenny setup from coming up correctly. I kept getting errors in logs.
To redo my network config, just eth0, what is the best
On Fri,01.May.09, 15:11:17, Bob Cox wrote:
What I would expect to see is something a bit like this:
auto lo
iface lo inet loopback
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
address 192.168.10.103
netmask 255.255.255.0
gateway 192.168.10.1
network 192.168.10.0
broadcast 192.168.10.255
On Fri, May 01, 2009 at 19:04:25 +0300, Andrei Popescu
(andreimpope...@gmail.com) wrote:
[snip]
Nitpick: 'network' and 'broadcast' are optional and gateway is necessary
only if this interface is used to connect to the internet.
Good points. I like nitpicking ;-)
As an aside, I use static
On Fri May 1 2009, Celejar wrote:
this is what I had that didn't work:
#static setup
#auto eth0
#iface eth0 inet static
#address 192.168.10.103
#netmask 255.255.255.0
#broadcast 192.168.10.255
here is what I have now:
# The loopback network interface
auto lo
iface lo inet loopback
On Fri May 1 2009, Andrei Popescu wrote:
auto lo
iface lo inet loopback
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
address 192.168.10.103
netmask 255.255.255.0
gateway 192.168.10.1
network 192.168.10.0
broadcast 192.168.10.255
Nitpick: 'network' and 'broadcast' are optional and gateway
On Fri May 1 2009, Bob Cox wrote:
What I would expect to see is something a bit like this:
auto lo
iface lo inet loopback
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
address 192.168.10.103
netmask 255.255.255.0
gateway 192.168.10.1
network 192.168.10.0
broadcast 192.168.10.255
(assuming you
On Fri May 1 2009, Bob Cox wrote:
Nitpick: 'network' and 'broadcast' are optional and gateway is necessary
only if this interface is used to connect to the internet.
Good points. I like nitpicking ;-)
As an aside, I use static IPs on everything here with no wireless and
all manually
Hello folks,
I'm trying to control an external instrument via Ethernet. I've installed an
additional networking card in my Debian box and connected the thing via a
crossover cable.
NOTE: I've booted Windows on the same machine and was able to talk to the
instrument using a supplied demo
Dan H wrote:
Hello folks,
I'm trying to control an external instrument via Ethernet. I've installed an
additional networking card in my Debian box and connected the thing via a
crossover cable.
NOTE: I've booted Windows on the same machine and was able to talk to the
instrument using a
On Thu, Jun 28, 2007 at 11:07:01PM +0100, Adam Hardy wrote:
Andrew Sackville-West on 25/06/07 04:27, wrote:
On Sat, Jun 23, 2007 at 08:35:09PM +0100, Adam Hardy wrote:
I have set up a network for our house using a gateway server with etch
and two NICs, eth1 for the internal network and eth2
Andrew Sackville-West on 25/06/07 04:27, wrote:
On Sat, Jun 23, 2007 at 08:35:09PM +0100, Adam Hardy wrote:
I have set up a network for our house using a gateway server with etch and
two NICs, eth1 for the internal network and eth2 for the DSL modem.
I set up iptables with firewall-builder
On Sat, Jun 23, 2007 at 08:35:09PM +0100, Adam Hardy wrote:
I have set up a network for our house using a gateway server with etch and
two NICs, eth1 for the internal network and eth2 for the DSL modem.
I set up iptables with firewall-builder and all seems OK, but I can only
ever access
I have set up a network for our house using a gateway server with etch and two
NICs, eth1 for the internal network and eth2 for the DSL modem.
I set up iptables with firewall-builder and all seems OK, but I can only ever
access the web interface on the DSL modem from the gateway server
On Monday 11 June 2007 15:50, Celejar wrote:
On Sun, 10 Jun 2007 16:06:17 +0200
Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wednesday 06 June 2007 01:54, Celejar wrote:
On Sun, 3 Jun 2007 16:34:48 +0200
Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I have a box with a usb-nic which uses the
On Sun, 10 Jun 2007 16:06:17 +0200
Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wednesday 06 June 2007 01:54, Celejar wrote:
On Sun, 3 Jun 2007 16:34:48 +0200
Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I have a box with a usb-nic which uses the zd1211rw module. The box is
dist-upgraded to the
On Wednesday 06 June 2007 01:54, Celejar wrote:
On Sun, 3 Jun 2007 16:34:48 +0200
Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I have a box with a usb-nic which uses the zd1211rw module. The box is
dist-upgraded to the testing level. I can connect to the router using
network-manager and from
On Sun, 3 Jun 2007 16:34:48 +0200
Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I have a box with a usb-nic which uses the zd1211rw module. The box is
dist-upgraded to the testing level. I can connect to the router using
network-manager and from kde with network-manager-kde just fine.
eth1
On Sun, Jun 03, 2007 at 04:34:48PM +0200, Chris wrote:
Hi,
[,...]
Every time I boot, I have to re-enter the passphrase again, but I want it to
connect automatically at boot. I tried to set up an interface
in /etc/network/interfaces (I don't really need network-manager). But I
can't
On Monday 04 June 2007 20:29, Andrew Sackville-West wrote:
On Sun, Jun 03, 2007 at 04:34:48PM +0200, Chris wrote:
Hi,
[,...]
Every time I boot, I have to re-enter the passphrase again, but I want it
to connect automatically at boot. I tried to set up an interface
in
Hi,
I have a box with a usb-nic which uses the zd1211rw module. The box is
dist-upgraded to the testing level. I can connect to the router using
network-manager and from kde with network-manager-kde just fine.
eth1 IEEE 802.11b/g ESSID:cjwlan Nickname:zd1211
Mode:Managed
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On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 08:52:37PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Sorry for the 2 posts, I was called away and wanted to get the answer
out. My Bad.
Wayne
Sorry for the three posts myself.
What I did only seemed to work once, for some reason now
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
[Snip All]
I seem to have fixed it. I just created /etc/rc2.d/S95networking and
linked it to /etc/init.d/networking, and it worked perfectly.
Hopefully I didn't mess anything up in the process, but it seems to be
working fine so
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 08:52:37PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Sorry for the 2 posts, I was called away and wanted to get the answer
out. My Bad.
Wayne
Sorry for the three posts myself.
What I did only seemed to work
Wayne Topa([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 08:52:37PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Sorry for the 2 posts, I was called away and wanted to get the answer
out. My Bad.
Wayne
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On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 10:42:20PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
[Snip All]
I seem to have fixed it. I just created /etc/rc2.d/S95networking and
linked it to /etc/init.d/networking, and
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On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 11:22:21AM -0500, Alejandro Barcena Campos wrote:
Michael Pobega wrote:
Thank you for this script! My only question is will it stall at boot
time if it doesn't find any of the networks in /etc/networks/interfaces?
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On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 11:22:21AM -0500, Alejandro Barcena Campos wrote:
Michael Pobega wrote:
Thank you for this script! My only question is will it stall at boot
time if it doesn't find any of the networks in /etc/networks/interfaces?
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Michael Pobega wrote:
Okay, I've got more to add.
Like I said in my last email this has stopped working, and I have the
error messages here (No idea why eth2 isn't being recognized)
Configuring network interfaces...Error for wireless request
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On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 03:13:59PM -0500, Alejandro Barcena Campos wrote:
Michael Pobega wrote:
Okay, I've got more to add.
Like I said in my last email this has stopped working, and I have the
error messages here (No idea why eth2 isn't
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On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 03:13:59PM -0500, Alejandro Barcena Campos wrote:
Michael Pobega wrote:
Okay, I've got more to add.
Like I said in my last email this has stopped working, and I have the
error messages here (No idea why eth2 isn't
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 11:22:21AM -0500, Alejandro Barcena Campos wrote:
Michael Pobega wrote:
Thank you for this script! My only question is will it stall at boot
time if it doesn't find any of the networks in
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On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 04:40:39PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 11:22:21AM -0500, Alejandro Barcena Campos wrote:
Michael Pobega wrote:
Thank you for this
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 04:40:39PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
snip previous posts in the thread
SIOCSIFADDR: No such device
eth2: ERROR while getting interface
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On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 07:14:35PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 04:40:39PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 07:14:35PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 04:40:39PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 07:14:35PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 04:40:39PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to
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On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 08:46:26PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 07:14:35PM -0400, Wayne Topa wrote:
Michael Pobega([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
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[Snip All]
I seem to have fixed it. I just created /etc/rc2.d/S95networking and
linked it to /etc/init.d/networking, and it worked perfectly.
Hopefully I didn't mess anything up in the process, but it seems to be
working fine so I can't complain.
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On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 12:36:07AM -0500, Alejandro Barcena Campos wrote:
Michael Pobega wrote:
I used to have the same problem, so I made a very little script for
that, you can see it here[1], even do it is in spanish, I think you can
figure
Michael Pobega [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The problem is that I'm frequently roaming (Family matters and personal
matters), and although I could just put multiple profiles in
/etc/network/interfaces and comment each one out in a per-area basis, I
would find it easier to have a program to
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Michael Pobega wrote:
Thank you for this script! My only question is will it stall at boot
time if it doesn't find any of the networks in /etc/networks/interfaces?
It will start when you bring your interface up.
ifup eth0 for example or at boot
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In my effort to try to move away from programs like
network-manager-gnome I've set up my wireless network to start with the
Debian at boot time.
The problem is that I'm frequently roaming (Family matters and personal
matters), and although I could
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Michael Pobega wrote:
In my effort to try to move away from programs like
network-manager-gnome I've set up my wireless network to start with the
Debian at boot time.
The problem is that I'm frequently roaming (Family matters and personal
Michael Pobega wrote:
In my effort to try to move away from programs like
network-manager-gnome I've set up my wireless network to start with the
Debian at boot time.
The problem is that I'm frequently roaming (Family matters and personal
matters), and although I could just put multiple
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On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 11:00:28AM +, Mihira Fernando wrote:
Michael Pobega wrote:
In my effort to try to move away from programs like
network-manager-gnome I've set up my wireless network to start with the
Debian at boot time.
The
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On Mon, Apr 09, 2007 at 09:53:51PM -0500, Alejandro Barcena Campos wrote:
Michael Pobega wrote:
In my effort to try to move away from programs like
network-manager-gnome I've set up my wireless network to start with the
Debian at boot time.
Michael Pobega wrote:
Does it work outside of X.Org though? I know WiFi-Radar has a daemon
mode, but it never seemed to work for me (Maybe I was using it wrong).
I dont use it outside X but the developers say to start it at boot time
so I guess it is possible to run it outside X.
Any idea
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On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 12:28:57PM +, Mihira Fernando wrote:
Michael Pobega wrote:
Does it work outside of X.Org though? I know WiFi-Radar has a daemon
mode, but it never seemed to work for me (Maybe I was using it wrong).
I dont use
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Michael Pobega wrote:
I used to have the same problem, so I made a very little script for
that, you can see it here[1], even do it is in spanish, I think you can
figure it out by just seeing the code.
[1]
On 10/18/06, Florian Kulzer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
There are to separate issues here:1) Which module is used for the device? If you blacklisted the 43xx module then it should not be loaded. It should be possible to identify the module in the output of ls /sys/bus/pci/drivers.
I was doing trial
On Wed, Oct 18, 2006 at 08:04:09 +0530, L.V.Gandhi wrote:
On 10/17/06, Florian Kulzer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, Oct 17, 2006 at 07:25:43 +0530, L.V.Gandhi wrote:
[ snip: earlier discussion about different wireless hardware ]
I am having broadcom chip 94306 for wireless (dell
On Tue, Oct 17, 2006 at 07:25:43 +0530, L.V.Gandhi wrote:
[ snip: earlier discussion about different wireless hardware ]
I am having broadcom chip 94306 for wireless (dell trumobile 1300) in my
dell inspiron 600m. In sid I used to work without any problem with
ndiswrapper. After reinstalling
On 10/17/06, Florian Kulzer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, Oct 17, 2006 at 07:25:43 +0530, L.V.Gandhi wrote:[ snip: earlier discussion about different wireless hardware ] I am having broadcom chip 94306 for wireless (dell trumobile 1300) in my dell inspiron 600m. In sid I used to work without
Hi,How can I setup my debian box to connect to a wireless router for myinternet connection. My wireless card is:D-Link AirPlus DWL-520+ Wireless NIC (PCI) 802.11bIf you can point me to some useful information online will be very helpful too.
Thanks,Martin
On Sun, Oct 15, 2006 at 23:30:50 -0400, Martin Paraskevov wrote:
Hi,
How can I setup my debian box to connect to a wireless router for my
internet connection. My wireless card is:
D-Link AirPlus DWL-520+ Wireless NIC (PCI) 802.11b
If you can point me to some useful information online
Florian Kulzer wrote:
essages.
If everything works out: Install wireless-tools and use iwconfig to
check and set parameters such as the ESSID, access point, encryption
key, etc.
Also, when everything works out for the modules, you can just use the
network-admin command (or networking from
On 10/16/06, Florian Kulzer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sun, Oct 15, 2006 at 23:30:50 -0400, Martin Paraskevov wrote: Hi, How can I setup my debian box to connect to a wireless router for my internet connection. My wireless card is:
D-Link AirPlus DWL-520+ Wireless NIC (PCI) 802.11b If you can
hello, I just installed the debian 3.1r0 base system using CDImage file from
debian,org and want to install others from internet. But now I cann't access
internet.
during the first stage of installation, DHCP was checked, it works and the
installation didn't ask me to further config the
So I edit /etc/network/interfaces as the following and then reboot thesystem(I don't know how to enact this file). With command 'base-config', I
Use:
# /etc/network/interfaces restart
_auto loiface lo inet loopbackauto eht0
iface eth0 inet staticaddress
Since it connected with DHCP ok durring install I'm guessing the
drivers and everything are ok with your network card. Perhaps your
just not supplying enough information in /etc/network/interfaces?
Here's mine:
auto lo
iface lo inet loopback
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
address
it works. It is
great and thanks!
From: Nelson Castillo [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: weiyun lv [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Help: Sarge network configuration
Date: Tue, 30 Aug 2005 10:42:50 -0500
So I edit /etc/network/interfaces as the following and then reboot
I log in as root, then I edit the interfaces file and try to run# /etc/network/interfaces restart
it says: Permission denied
Yup.
It's: /etc/init.d/networking ... Sorry.
You might want to use ifup and ifdown, as someone else explained.
I forgot to use ifconfig to check, but after I
successfully install it.
I am attempting to install the Sarge distribution, with a modification for
a screen reader, called Speakup.
The problem isn't booting the installation from floppy disks, that works
fine. The problem is the network configuration.
I know that I am supposed to ask my system
aptitude install configure-debian
configure-debian
True, a very good tool. IMO it should be at least be priority standard
if not important in an Debian distribution.
O. Wyss
--
How to enhance your code, see http://freshmeat.net/projects/wxguide/;
--
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I wonder if there isn't any GUI-tool which allows to configure the
network since I haven't found any. Does anybody know any?
O. Wyss
--
How to enhance your code, see http://freshmeat.net/projects/wxguide/;
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with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble?
--- Otto Wyss [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I wonder if there isn't any GUI-tool which allows to configure the
network since I haven't found any. Does anybody know any?
Why would you need one? $EDITOR /etc/network/interfaces, is just fine for
most cases. Still, if you cannot live without a GUI,
On Sat, Jul 10, 2004 at 08:40:57PM +0200, Otto Wyss wrote:
I wonder if there isn't any GUI-tool which allows to configure the
network since I haven't found any. Does anybody know any?
try
apt-cache search network administration
or other such keywords. I seem to recall at least one
--- Otto Wyss [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I wonder if there isn't any GUI-tool which allows to configure the
network since I haven't found any. Does anybody know any?
Why would you need one? $EDITOR /etc/network/interfaces, is just fine for
most cases. Still, if you cannot live without a
KDE has a nice network configuration tool on the control panel, but as
stated above the config-file is probably easier and more
straightforward.
On Sat, 10 Jul 2004 12:06:27 -0700, Kenward Vaughan
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sat, Jul 10, 2004 at 08:40:57PM +0200, Otto Wyss wrote:
I wonder
Otto Wyss wrote:
I installed etherconf to see what it makes but it doesn't install an
etherconf command, no man page and nothing in share/doc. Well I just
remove it.
To use etherconf, run this as root:
dpkg-reconfigure etherconf
Adam
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with a
To use etherconf, run this as root:
dpkg-reconfigure etherconf
Thanks a lot, how nice would it be if these two lines where in a README
in /usr/share/doc/etherconf.
O. Wyss
--
How to enhance your code, see http://freshmeat.net/projects/wxguide/;
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Otto Wyss wrote:
To use etherconf, run this as root:
dpkg-reconfigure etherconf
Thanks a lot, how nice would it be if these two lines where in a README
in /usr/share/doc/etherconf.
From the package description (available via dpkg -l etherconf or
apt-cache show etherconf):
debconf
aptitude install configure-debian
configure-debian
--
Karl Hegbloom [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Karl Hegbloom wrote:
aptitude install configure-debian
configure-debian
Very nice. Thanks.
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On Thu, 08 Jan 2004 03:30:28 +0530, Ritesh Raj Sarraf wrote:
hi all,
i'm a newbie to Debian. I just shifted from RedHat. I've got two lan cards on my
debian system. one connected to the internet and the other to my local lan.
i'm not able to ping my ISP DNS server from my debian machine.
Ritesh Raj Sarraf [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
1. (*) text/plain ( ) text/html
(Please post to the list in plain text only.)
i'm a newbie to Debian. I just shifted from RedHat. I've got two lan
cards on my debian system. one connected to the internet and the
other to my
hi all,
i'm a newbie to Debian. I just shifted from RedHat.
I've got two lan cards on my debian system. one connected to the internet and
the other to my local lan.
i'm not able to ping my ISP DNS server from my
debian machine.
Details:
eth0 (Ethernet connected to ISP)
IP 192.168.1.43
DNS
Hi all-
Recently moved our unofficial debian server into a proper lab up
at work. Used to have it set up as DHCP (without any troubles),
but the networking people have given us a range of static IP's
on our own interal subnet, so I'm trying to stick the server on
one of those so we have a little
On (02/01/04 07:51), Robert Ames wrote:
Recently moved our unofficial debian server into a proper lab up
at work. Used to have it set up as DHCP (without any troubles),
but the networking people have given us a range of static IP's
on our own interal subnet, so I'm trying to stick the server
Hi all-
Recently moved our unofficial debian server into a proper lab up
at work. Used to have it set up as DHCP (without any troubles),
but the networking people have given us a range of static IP's
on our own interal subnet, so I'm trying to stick the server on
one of those so we have
Hello all. Almost there. Still working on this 486. Hopefully it will be a
routing, firewalling box. The 2 nics in this box are dlink 220 isa. I have
been able to determine that they both require the ne network module. The
problem is that I can not get both eth0 and eth1 working at the same
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED] you wrote:
Hello all. Almost there. Still working on this 486. Hopefully it will be a
routing, firewalling box. The 2 nics in this box are dlink 220 isa. I have
been able to determine that they both require the ne network module. The
problem is that I can not
Le Mercredi 27 Août 2003 13:03, James LeClair a déclamé :
The problem is that I can not get both eth0 and eth1
working at the same time. eth0: io=0x300 irq=10
eth1: io=0x240 irq=3
I've got this on my old P75 (2 ISA cards too), in /etc/modutils/aliases
alias eth0 ne
alias eth1 ne
Hi,
I would appreciate if somebody could give me some help with the
following network setup problem:
I used to have a very simple home network setup.
All computers plus the DSL router were connected to a single
ethernet switch and were sharing the same subnet.
Each PC had the DSL router as the
Hi,
While I was configuring my network on debian woody, the isntaller asked me if theres
an DHCP server on my network, I answered YES and he configured everything for me. Now
everytime I start my linux I get this netenv window...and I choose the default
configuration, which I think is the one
Ernesto Marquina, 2002-Nov-27 20:05 +:
Hi,
While I was configuring my network on debian woody, the isntaller
asked me if theres an DHCP server on my network, I answered YES and
he configured everything for me. Now everytime I start my linux I
get this netenv window...and I choose the
hello all!
i had made a small mistake while setting up debian 3.0. i had entered my
machine's ip address (statically determined), and gateway address incorrectly.
i have changed ip address and gateway entries in /etc/network/interfaces by
hand!! *some satisfaction considering that i am a
to change it.
or what does it mean. i had modified this also and nothing seems to be wrong.
please let me know if i need to change this also or what does it mean.
regards,
sandip
/etc/network/interfaces and /etc/resolv.conf take care of the vast
majority of your network configuration
--- Robert Ian Smit [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
write. I took a few guesses based on the man page:
auto eth0-work
iface eth0-work inet dhcp
auto eth1-work
iface eth1-work inet dhcp
I think that getting rid of -work will help you a great deal in
getting it to _work_.
You're
Initially when I first set up my system (potato), I configured the
network for DHCP. How do I change it to a manual configuration of DNS,
gateway and permanent IP? Which files do I need to change? Is there a
tool for this?
Also, how do I change my host name.
Thanks for your help.
On Fri, 2002-06-28 at 02:49, Lars Jensen wrote:
Also, how do I change my host name.
I believe hostname is stored /etc/hostname
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On Fri, 2002-06-28 at 07:49, Lars Jensen wrote:
Initially when I first set up my system (potato), I configured the
network for DHCP. How do I change it to a manual configuration of DNS,
gateway and permanent IP? Which files do I need to change? Is there a
tool for this?
Also, how do I
to work fine.
Is this a network configuration problem? Is there anyway to avoid this
extra step?
thanks,
mg
. I
use DHCP so I don't enter an IP and everything seems to work fine.
Is this a network configuration problem? Is there anyway to avoid this
extra step?
Does the screen look like this:
http://netenv.sourceforge.net/netenv.gif ?
If so, you have netenv installed on your laptop. 'apt-get
don't enter an IP and everything seems to work fine.
Is this a network configuration problem? Is there anyway to avoid this
extra step?
you chose 'laptop' during the install, right? It looks like you have a program
installed which tries to allow you to have multiple hard coded IPs based
to work fine.
Is this a network configuration problem? Is there anyway to avoid this
extra step?
thanks,
mg
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Hello everybody
I just have installed the base system on a computer and network is not
reachable
While I was installing the base system the install stript started to loop
on configure network. The next step was always configure network.. So
I just was choosing the next item in the list to do
well... i played around w/ things, and managed to get a dummy driver set up.
and ./etc/ifconfig confirms the dummy0 as an ethernet device... but
something's missing that's preventing linuxconf-network from detecting and
using the dummy0 driver for the network... anyone have any ideas how to get
I'm still quite new to this excellent os (Potato r3)
and am building a web server.
I have made a script - rc.local to configure my
network adapter using ifconfig and route.
At the moment I'm invoking this by hand after bootup.
My question is where do I install this script so that
it's
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