On Thursday 18 May 2006 02:07, Michael P. Soulier wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying FreeBSD as a PPPoE client for my ADSL connection. Setup was
great, but I'm finding that when I lose a connection (troubles with my
isp), the ppp command does not return like I would like it to.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]#
On 5/18/06, Nikos Vassiliadis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Enable echo so ppp will know when the other peer is down, and then will act
as you tell it to. I think enabling echo and -ddial mode will be fine, no need
of
scripting, but anyways the recommended way of interacting with ppp(8) is
On 5/18/06, Nikos Vassiliadis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Enable echo so ppp will know when the other peer is down, and then will act
as you tell it to. I think enabling echo and -ddial mode will be fine, no need
of
scripting, but anyways the recommended way of interacting with ppp(8) is
Quoting Michael P. Soulier [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I've noticed that when I drop ppp, the tun0 seems to hang on a bit. If
I restart too quickly, I get a tun1. The ifconfig command will not
permit me to destroy tun0 either, so I wait for a little while before
bringing it back up again.
In the
On 5/18/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In the ppp.linkdown
mylabel:
iface clear
That will clear the interface and also remove the address when the PPPoE goes
down.
Ah, thanks. I see that /usr/share/examples/ppp has more examples of
this. I wish the handbook did, since it's my
Hello,
I'm trying FreeBSD as a PPPoE client for my ADSL connection. Setup was
great, but I'm finding that when I lose a connection (troubles with my
isp), the ppp command does not return like I would like it to.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# ppp -foreground -nat storm
Working in foreground mode
Using