On Fri, Jul 27, 2001 at 08:51:44PM -0400, F. Heitkamp wrote: > I am having the same problem with a Debian distribution on a PC > laptop. There is a default route set and God only knows where > it's coming from. (grepping through the /etc directory didn't > show anything.)
Well, it's not magic. What interface is it using? (Psst -- it's the last column.) Why is that configured and up? (Pssst -- see the /etc/network/interfaces file.) > Chad: > > Having your powerbook use dhcp and request an ip address every time it's > > booted/resumed will make your life easier. Don't hard-code addresses (and > > routes) -- get them from the environment and release them when going to > > sleep. > > Yeah that's fine for you but not everyone can run the "preferred" > setup. I seems like Debian is getting sort of a Windows attitude.:) I have no idea what that means. I have to note that you're nothing like the person I replied to. He connects to the internet through his ethernet interface, and that is what is causing his problem. _Your_ config sounds fscked up. > I have a small network at my home where I network various PCs, > Amigas and Macs and I use static IP addresses there. Some > times I like to connect the computers individually to my ISP > for various reasons. Great! I'd recommend having pppd set a default route, but that may imply a Windows attitude. It's the best thing to do, tho. - chad -- Chad Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | If you keep your mind sufficiently unix brujo, shutterbug, bookworm | open, people will throw a lot of URL: http://web.chad.org/home/ | rubbish into it. --William Orton