On Wednesday 19 May 2004 05.45, Krsnendu dasa wrote:
> Can someone advise me exactly how to configure 3Com 3c509 network cards
> for etherboot. I have downloaded the floppy boot disk, but once the
> kernel downloads it says that it can't find the isa card. I read on the
> rom-o-matic website that t
On Wed, 2004-05-19 at 10:45, Sudev Barar wrote:
> On Wed, 2004-05-19 at 09:12, Krsnendu dasa wrote:
> > I have used etherboot disk for realtek 8029 card on the thin client
> > computer (P100 IBMs). It has got an IP address, downloaded the kernel
> > etc. When it goes to boot the xserver it fails. T
On Wed, 2004-05-19 at 09:12, Krsnendu dasa wrote:
> I have used etherboot disk for realtek 8029 card on the thin client
> computer (P100 IBMs). It has got an IP address, downloaded the kernel
> etc. When it goes to boot the xserver it fails. The message I can see on
> the screen when this happens i
Can someone advise me exactly how to configure 3Com 3c509 network cards
for etherboot. I have downloaded the floppy boot disk, but once the
kernel downloads it says that it can't find the isa card. I read on the
rom-o-matic website that there is some trick using a special config
file, but I couldn'
I have used etherboot disk for realtek 8029 card on the thin client
computer (P100 IBMs). It has got an IP address, downloaded the kernel
etc. When it goes to boot the xserver it fails. The message I can see on
the screen when this happens is:-
"
(++) using config file: "/tmp/XF86Config.1"
Skippin
Am Dienstag, 18. Mai 2004 04:27 schrieb Krsnendu dasa:
> The school network is 192.168.0.1 gateway. As it is for standard Windows
> internet connection sharing setup. (Our gateway is running vector Linux
> with Samba 2.x connecting thru PP0.) I have put fixed IP addresses for
> all the computers so
s when the kernel on the client tries to
boot and fails, but I will save that for another mail with more detail.
Krsnendu dasa
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Nuno
Tavares
Sent: Sunday, 16 May 2004 4:26 p.m.
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Ltsp-d
It sounds like a routing problem to me. You shouldn't have eth0 and eth1
belonging to the same network segment, unless you bridge them.
What are the addresses of eth0 and eth1?
-
Nuno Tavares
---
This SF.Net email is sponsored by: SourceForge.