On Tuesday 21 March 2006 00:29, Neil Bower wrote: > Just a wild guess here. > > What does your /etc/resolv.conf file say and anything in your > /etc/hosts.allow or /etc/hosts.deny files?
The resolv.conf on the workstation has the following: nameserver 192.168.0.10 nameserver 192.168.0.1 domain open2space.com (though I've added the second name server to temporarily get around this problem - .1 is my firewall) resolv.conf on the server has the following: nameserver 192.168.0.1 domain open2space.com The hosts.allow file (there is no hosts.deny) on the workstation has: all:192.168.0.0/24 The server doesn't have either the hosts.allow, or hosts.deny. Again, I've only ever seen this one particular address cause this problem... Could it be that I don't have my reverse lookups setup? I don't see why they would be needed in this case though - the internal server is only intended to avoid synchronizing multiple internal hosts files. Thansk for the suggestion though. Shawn _______________________________________________ clug-talk mailing list [email protected] http://clug.ca/mailman/listinfo/clug-talk_clug.ca Mailing List Guidelines (http://clug.ca/ml_guidelines.php) **Please remove these lines when replying

