On Tue, 5 Nov 1996, Johann Spies wrote: > Date: Tue, 5 Nov 96 15:35 SAT > From: Johann Spies <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: debian-user@lists.debian.org > Subject: Reading news offline > Resent-Date: Tue, 5 Nov 1996 11:40:15 -0500 (EST) > Resent-From: debian-user@lists.debian.org > > I have a dial-up connection to my ISP. > > I want to be able to read the usergroups offline. I have downloaded suck, > inn and inews and also trn. After I have read their documentation and > also the News-HOWTO, I still do not know how to do it.
Actually, for a small newsfeed I prefer CNews with the nntp package to inn (but that's a personal preference). If you have inn up and running properly, don't bother changing it. > I can read news with trn and gnus, but only while I am connected to the ISP. Have you installed and configured your news server properly. ie. While connected to your isp, are you connecting with the isp's news server or your own? You can find this out by running the netstat command to see which news server you are connected to. For example, I am currently reading news on my system using tin and downloading newsbatches from my isp using suck. Here's the (partial) output of the netstat command: $ netstat Active Internet connections (w/o servers) Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address State tcp 0 0 xwing.xwing.org:nntp xwing.xwing.org:1649 ESTABLISHED tcp 0 0 xwing.xwing.org:1649 xwing.xwing.org:nntp ESTABLISHED tcp 0 0 p2.radium.sentex.c:1648 flint.sentex.net:nntp ESTABLISHED My newshost is xwing.xwing.org and my isp's newshost is flint.sentex.net. The nntp connection to xwing.xwing.org is tin connecting to my system's news server. The nntp connection to flint.sentex.net is suck's connection to my isp's news server. If you are indeed connected to your own news server, then your problem is just one of ip routing and loading the dummy module will let you connect to your own news server even when you are not connected to your isp. (That's what I do on my system). > I tried out suck. It made contact with the ISP's NNTP-server and did > nothing further but complaining about not finding a history-file. When > I use the -H (or is -h) option it stopped complaining but still > did nothing. Make sure you have configured suck properly. That means configuring files in the /etc/suck directory and also possibly changing some paths in the get-news script before it will work properly. I recommend that you "instrument" the get-news script by sticking in some echo statements to print out the paths that the get-news program is using so you can ensure they are correct. I also had to adjust the filtering done by the put-news script in order to be able to feed news batches back to my isp's news server. > How can I download the newsgroups I want to subscribe and read them on > my own system in my own time? You are on the right path. You need to set up a news server and also suck. You also have to have your IP routing set up properly too. > It was a straight forward thing when I used Windows (even without reading > a single bit of documentation). After a few hours of reading and > experimenting in Linux, I had no success and I do not even know which > road to travel. A few hours is a very small investment in time. Don't forget that when you use Windows, you are using client software. By using Linux and trying to set up INN or CNews on your system, you are setting up a UNIX system running news (and other) server software. You are effectively setting up a mini isp yourself and that is bound to require a greater investment of your time. Best regards, Nick -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Nick Busigin [EMAIL PROTECTED] To obtain my pgp public key, email me with the subject: "get pgp-key" -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]