Greg
At 19:32 30.07.2003 -0600, Greg Playle wrote:
This is essentially what I ended up doing. As Mr. Sturdevant observed,
card services do not come up in time.
I added a script at the end of the boot sequence in rc2.d that restarts
networking, dhcpd and shorewall, and suddenly Bob's your Uncle!
Mike Koceja wrote:
Charles,
Thank-you for your help in this matter. I downloaded
the kernel you suggested and replaced my existing one
with it. I still am unable to connect to my work lan
using an ipsec vpn client. Do I need to add the
address I am connecting to as a trusted site
somewhere?
Have
Maybe I don't have a problem, but at the very least, I hope my firewall
logs don't have to fill up with rejected packets due to this issue. I have
a replayTV 4k. These things have an awful dhcp implementation. They work
most reliably when configured for a static IP but they still send out
Maybe I don't have a problem, but at the very least, I hope my firewall
logs don't have to fill up with rejected packets due to this issue. I have
a replayTV 4k. These things have an awful dhcp implementation. They work
most reliably when configured for a static IP but they still send out
On Thu, 31 Jul 2003 21:10:27 -0400, Sean Vincent [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I think I can figure out how to add a rule to stop shorewall from
rejecting the bootpc and bootps packets. I just want to be sure they are
safe to ignore. Are operation not permitted and not found just
annoying or a
Three comments.
First, the bootpc and bootps packets are themselves the DHCP request and
response packets. bootp is an older protocol used for remote address
assignment, and DHCP uses the same ports (the c and s suffixes just signify
client and server).
Second, I am not familiar with ReplayTV
The truly odd thing is that, from your report, it only happens
*sometimes* ... and the miscellany of log messages you included seem to
confirm the sometimes-ness of the behavior. A Shorewall expert is going
to have to comment on that one.
Only a guess but I suspect it has to do with whether the