Hi Bob,
You can (should) stick your script in /etc/init.d. Then, check what
runlevel
you're in. It should be at the top of /etc/inittab. For that runlevel, go in
to the appropriate /etc/rcX.d folder (X corresponding to your runlevel) and
put a symlink to the script in /etc/init.d. Pay
You don't need an rc.local script.
If you look in /etc/rc2.d/ you'll see lots of Snumbername scripts.
These are the scripts that get run when you start the system. The 'S'
is for Start (I guess), and there are K scripts for Kill in other
related directories. The number is the order in which it
Sir/Ma'm,
I have installed Debian on my system. But I have
problem in configuring the internet connection.
pppconfig seem to offer solution for dial-up
lines.
But I have a LAN card installed in my system and it
is on WAN having an unique IP address.
How do I install my LAN card and
First you need to find out what brand of card you have, then setting it
up for a static IP is pretty easy.
once u have found out what card you have and installed it in the kernel
then go to /etc/network and edit interfaces, it should look a little like
this:
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
Hi. I wonder if anybody has any advice on network configuration,
because I can't get eth1 to pass any traffic out of my router box.
I've got box1's eth0 connected to my dsl line through the dsl
modem/router and it picks up the ip, etc. through dhcpcd. This card is
connected to the internet fine
Steve Doerr wrote:
Hi. I wonder if anybody has any advice on network configuration,
because I can't get eth1 to pass any traffic out of my router box.
I've got box1's eth0 connected to my dsl line through the dsl
modem/router and it picks up the ip, etc. through dhcpcd. This card
hi,
first of all thanks a lot the debian mailing list , i could load
win2k alongside debian ( kind of : ) ).
however there are a new set of problems i face
first of all i use a intel 810 chipset which i can't find in the
existing video cards as a result of which my
Subramaniam Aiyer (CTS) wrote:
hi,
first of all thanks a lot the debian mailing list , i could load
win2k alongside debian ( kind of : ) ).
however there are a new set of problems i face
first of all i use a intel 810 chipset which i can't find in the
Hi! I have a potato box with dlink dfe 530 tx.
I recompile my kernel with via-rhine driver bulit-in.
And next?
$cat /proc/pci
I found
Bus 0, device 14, function 0:
Ethernet controller: VIA Technologies Unknown device (rev 66).
Vendor id=1106. Device id=3065
Medium devsel.
. Also has the structure of the network startup changed, because all
of the documentation i have found refers to paths or files, that are not
the same as the ones i haveAt anyrate if any one knows the source of
any detailed/current documentation on the way debian runs startup files,
network
detailed/current documentation on the way debian runs startup files,
network configuration, or just has an answer to my question please
reply...thanks...oh yeah...i am running potato..
/etc/network/interfaces is where you should set up potato
networking parameters, including your internal (192.168
debian runs startup files,
network configuration, or just has an answer to my question please
reply...thanks...oh yeah...i am running potato..
Suppose you install debian without a network card, then later add one.
Is there any way to re-run that initial installation program (where it
prompts you for your ip address, hostname, etc) without having to also
reinstall everything else? Or do you have to get the scripts and
configuration
On Wed, Oct 11, 2000 at 01:38:22PM +, Jamil Geor wrote:
Hi,
You could just use modconf to install the network card module that
you need.
Jamil
Thanks. It appears, however, that I didn't make the question very clear.
Just installing the module is not going to get the network
Hi,
You could just use modconf to install the network card module that
you need.
Jamil
On Mon, 9 Oct 2000, Hugo van der Merwe wrote:
Hello,
I am doing another debian install, and was uncertain about the network
card type. I decided to skip that part of the install, hoping to find
Hello,
I am doing another debian install, and was uncertain about the network
card type. I decided to skip that part of the install, hoping to find an
easy way to do it after the basic system is up and running. On a laptop,
pcnetconfig does this job. Is there an easy way to get the networking
After a move I went from a cable modem w/static ip to DSL with dhcp. I'm
trying to figure out what configuration
changes to make to my machine.
Since this is a dhcp machine now, what should I put in
/etc/hostname? I tried putting a hostname in there and
defining hostname as 127.0.0.1 in
Hi Guys,
I just subscribed to this list to get more information regarding the Debian
Linux, which kind of lacks a lot of information resources. Most sites are
about RedHat Linux and as much as Debian is giving me problems, I still like
to stick to this distribution instead of moving to RedHat.
@lists.debian.org
Subject: Network Configuration
Importance: High
Hi Guys,
I just subscribed to this list to get more information regarding the
Debian
Linux, which kind of lacks a lot of information resources. Most sites are
about RedHat Linux and as much as Debian is giving me problems
-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Network Configuration
Importance: High
Hi Guys,
I just subscribed to this list to get more information regarding the
Debian
Linux, which kind of lacks a lot of information resources. Most sites are
about RedHat Linux and as much as Debian is giving me
]
Visit us at: http://www.astro.com.my
-Original Message-
From: Saran [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, September 12, 2000 2:50 PM
To: CHEONG, Shu Yang [Patrick]; debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: RE: Network Configuration
Hi,
I thought linuxconf is only available
PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, September 12, 2000 3:16 PM
To: 'Saran'
Cc: 'debian-user@lists.debian.org'
Subject: RE: Network Configuration
1. Linuxconf is a Linux administration/configuration tool...as such any
Linux distribution can run it (see
http://www.solucorp.qc.ca/linuxconf/).
2. Whoa...2 (I
On Tue, Sep 12, 2000 at 02:50:21PM +0800, Saran ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Hi,
I thought linuxconf is only available on RedHat ?
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:karsten]$ apt-cache search linuxconf
linuxconf - a powerful Linux administration kit
linuxconf-x - X11 GUI for Linuxconf
Hello All,
I need some help in configuring my network. I have two DSL connection and would
like to firewall both on one machine. I have my potato box doing that now but I
cant figure out how to divide the network up. I want half of the network to
reach the internet from DSL 1 and the other half
On %M 0, Peter Iannarelli wrote
Hello Matthew:
To change the IP address, network, etc of you NIC
to into /etc/init.d/network.
You will see everything you need there.
Peter
It may also be necessary to edit /etc/networks, and perhaps /etc/hosts.
John P.
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL
When I first installed Debian, I entered incorrect information
for the IP addresses of the network. I need to correct
the information now. Is there a utility to do this similar
to the setup program? I've tried modifying the configuration files
by hand, but it does not seem to work right so that
Hello Matthew:
To change the IP address, network, etc of you NIC
to into /etc/init.d/network.
You will see everything you need there.
Peter
Matthew Wade Roberts wrote:
When I first installed Debian, I entered incorrect information
for the IP addresses of the network. I need to correct
On 22 Mar 1999, Shaun Lipscombe wrote:
Yes this is true for stuff that you dont use night and day, like
iso9660 support for instance. I would like to see a good reason for
not compiling NIC support right in, like how much will that enlarge
the kernel by? 100k ?
The total sizes of the *.o
True.
Not compiling network support in might cause the same problems as not
compiling in the device for the root file system, IE: not being able
to boot. What I meant was that at some point, it is possible to make
the kernel too big and then SOMETHINGS need to be left out. But this
is probably
Hi All:
I am a new comer in Linux. I managed to install the Linux. My problem is
that I do not know how to configure the Network Card.
I have a Pentium 2, 64MB RAM and the Network card is Novell NE 2000.
Where do I get a driver ?
How do I configure and install it ?
Thank in advanced
Ilan Kasan
Hi All:
I am a new comer in Linux. I managed to install the Linux. My problem is
that I do not know how to configure the Network Card.
I have a Pentium 2, 64MB RAM and the Network card is Novell NE 2000.
I used modconf and selected the ne or the
ne2k-pci drivers. I got the following error message:
Read the kernel HOWTO and compile support directly into the kernel for
ne2kpci. You probably don't want the driver to be modular, unless you
rarely need to use your nic, and you have limited RAM resources.
There IS a good reason for NOT compiling stuff into the kernel that is
ALWAYS used, and
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hi!
First of all I would like to thank your for your reply
On Fri, 8 Jan 1999, Rahsheen Porter wrote:
Well, all my network script does is:
1. set up lo
2. set up eth1 (local network)
I just have one interface
3. do some ipfwadm stuff for IP
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hi all
I have setup a dhcp successfully, It works great
But, it is started by rc* scripts _after_ /etc/rcS.d/S40network script
wich uses static config info
To use dhcp provied configuration, I suposse I should:
start the /etc/inid.d/dhcp script in
On Fri, Jan 08, 1999 at 08:01:27PM +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hi all
I have setup a dhcp successfully, It works great
But, it is started by rc* scripts _after_ /etc/rcS.d/S40network script
wich uses static config info
Well, all my network script
of problem can be. Any sugestions ?
Thanks.
By the way, we have a machine in our subnet that recently
was installed linux in. We have had some problems with the
network configuration in order that the linux box doesn't
recognize its DNS. It's possible to execute telnet from it only
to IP
Howdy Y'all
How can I re-configure my network after installing linux?
Thanx for the help :)
Brant Wells; a linux newbie
__
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
How can I re-configure my network after installing linux?
You use the ifconfig command. Use the
man ifconfig
to learn about it.
This only configures the running system. In order
to keep the changes even if you reboot, you need to change
the /etc/init.d/network file.
Subject: Network Configuration
Date: Tue, Dec 01, 1998 at 07:14:55AM -0800
In reply to:Brant Wells
Quoting Brant Wells([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
Howdy Y'all
How can I re-configure my network after installing linux?
1. find / -iname Networking-Overview-HOWTO.gz.
2. In the same
How can I re-configure my network after installing linux?
Well, assuming you're talking about changing the IP address... you need to
change a couple of files:
/etc/init.d/network - Shell script that sets up your ethernet interface.
/etc/hosts - file that holds the IP's of well-known hosts...
Hi, folks !!!
By the way, we have a machine in our subnet that recently
was installed linux in. We have had some problems with the
network configuration in order that the linux box doesn't
recognize its DNS. It's possible to execute telnet from it only
to IP addresses, and a ping
Have you added lines to your /etc/resolv.conf?
ex.
nameserver xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
where xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx is the IP of your DNS server.
Erik
By the way, we have a machine in our subnet that recently
was installed linux in. We have had some problems with the
network
Hi everyone,
Let me try my question again:
I have installed Debian from my office (connected to the net through
an ethernet card, to make it fast) and now transported the computer
back home.
During the installation I set up the network to use my ethernet card,
but now I have to switch to
the command to access either
-the network configuration tool
-the installation program
Thanks..
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] .
Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .
Robert D. Hilliard is rumoured to of said:
During the base installation, as part of configuring the network,
the configure script asks for the netmask and the IP address for the
network and/or the default gateway. Where is this information stored?
You will find this information at the
During the base installation, as part of configuring the network,
the configure script asks for the netmask and the IP address for the
network and/or the default gateway. Where is this information stored?
Bob
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[EMAIL
On Sun, 6 Jul 1997, Robert D. Hilliard wrote:
During the base installation, as part of configuring the network,
the configure script asks for the netmask and the IP address for the
network and/or the default gateway. Where is this information stored?
In the Network Administrator's
It's stored in /etc/init.d/network
HTH,
Shaya
On Sun, 6 Jul 1997, Robert D. Hilliard wrote:
During the base installation, as part of configuring the network,
the configure script asks for the netmask and the IP address for the
network and/or the default gateway. Where is this
On Sun, 06 Jul 1997 19:48:11 EDT Robert D. Hilliard
([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
During the base installation, as part of configuring the network,
the configure script asks for the netmask and the IP address for the
network and/or the default gateway. Where is this information stored?
Hello,
last week, I had a problem with my ethernet card not being detected by
the modconf program so I asked this list. I got lots of answers and
finally my card is detected.
The problem now is that I can't make it work. I mean, I can't do ftp,
telnet, etc... When I try some of these,
Jordi Inglada wrote:
Hello,
last week, I had a problem with my ethernet card not being detected by
the modconf program so I asked this list. I got lots of answers and
finally my card is detected.
The problem now is that I can't make it work. I mean, I can't do ftp,
telnet,
Hello,
last week, I had a problem with my ethernet card not being detected by
the modconf program so I asked this list. I got lots of answers and
finally my card is detected.
The problem now is that I can't make it work. I mean, I can't do ftp,
telnet, etc... When I try some of
On Tue, 25 Mar 1997, Jordi Inglada wrote:
The problem now is that I can't make it work. I mean, I can't do ftp,
telnet, etc... When I try some of these, I wait and wait,... If I use
nfs as the access method to the distribution, I got the message server
my nfs server seems to be down or
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], writes:
Hello,
last week, I had a problem with my ethernet card not being detected by
the modconf program so I asked this list. I got lots of answers and
finally my card is detected.
The problem now is that I can't make it work. I mean, I
I've been trying to set up PPP on two debian machines, and haven't
quite got it working. The server has been running 0.93 for a while,
and I just starting installing 1.1 on the client last week.
I can start and maintain the connection, and I can reach the server
from the client, but nowhere
In your email to me, Paul Kautz, you wrote:
I've been trying to set up PPP on two debian machines, and haven't
quite got it working. The server has been running 0.93 for a while,
and I just starting installing 1.1 on the client last week.
I can start and maintain the connection, and I
During a fresh install of 1.1 beta, I had problems configuring
my network. I have an older Western Digital (wd.o) card.
There were three problems:
1. The network card was not detected by the boot floppy. After
installing the base system, I was able to switch to vt2 and
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