.
Regards,
Livio @ ravetto DOT org
Joe Nelson wrote:
Apparently, I didn't realize that when I responded to this earlier, it went
to ALParada personally and not to the list. (Sorry, I'm new on this
particular list.) I'm resending this to the list so that everyone can
benefit from the discusion
it appears as an IDE drive, so you set it up like a harddrive really...
Andrew Nance wrote:
Hi group,
I was thinking about getting away from booting and saving all info on the
floppy on my Bering-uClibc 2.2 box
I would like to have write protection like on the floppy, where it can be
turned on and
Hello list,
Is there such thing as sendmail or qmail for bering-uclibc?
I would like my gateway to send mails like I do from bering 1.1.
Cheers,
Livio
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Hello list,
Is there such thing as sendmail or qmail for bering-uclibc?
I would like my gateway to send mails like I do from bering 1.1.
Cheers,
Livio
ps: in the meantime I will try to compile it with uclibc
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Hello Jon,
The adapter is for the duo version of the memory stick, which is a lot smaller than
the one you would use inyour digital camera.
Booting from USB could be a cheaper solution considering the high competition on these
products. I can't
A couple of tips that might help.
*Maybe you have to register the MAC address of your Bering WAN interface with NTL
themselves. I have a Blueyonder connection and I had to do this in the past to get
access (this was a painless online registration)
*The cable modem needs to be rebooted between
hi,
Is it possible to connect weblet via internet and password protected?
Regards,
Chris Lee
I wouldn't go this way.
Just get ssh up and running on the WAN interface and redirect the weblet port(Is it
port 5000?)
in other words, from a unix command line:
ssh -L5000:127.0.0.1:5000
hi Chris, List
regarding the SNMP stuff, I am afraid I cannot answer. I don't know if leaf is capable
of doing this. (might be)
for what is of NAT'ing the LAN, it is quite easy.
and for QoS, you wouldn't normaly have to worry about this. Shorewall can do this
(check shorewall.net for more
Hello Chris,
By the look of it, you will replace the Cisco equipment ;-)
Regarding the WAN IP, I understand that what is marked is your public IP address, to
get Leaf working in your environment you will probably have to set its WAN interface
to 172.23.76.154. I suspect your gateway will show if
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