Hi Mark, Couple of things. /etc/init.d/network is not your normal stop, start, restart stuff.. It just executes a series of command. your resolv.conf should have
search your.domain.com nameserver 1 nameserver 2 nameserver 3 .. For eg, I call my network at home loonys.net. so my resolv.conf will look like this search loonys.net ; my domain name nameserver 127.0.0.1 ; local machine nameserver 205.152.0.20 ; Primary DNS from isp nameserver 205.152.0.5 ;secondary DNS from isp My /etc/hosts will have something like this .. For eg, I call my network at home loonys.net. so my resolv.conf will look like this search loonys.net ; my domain name nameserver 127.0.0.1 ; local machine nameserver 205.152.0.20 ; Primary DNS from isp nameserver 205.152.0.5 ;secondary DNS from isp My /etc/hosts will have something like this 127.0.0.1 localhost 192.168.1.1 www.loonys.net 192.168.1.1 loony1.loonys.net loony1 192.168.1.2 loony2.loonys.net loony2 loony1 is my first machine and loony2 is my second machine. Hope this helps.. Cheers, Vaidhy BTW, all this is explained in very detail in NET-3.HOWTO On Sun, Apr 04, 1999 at 01:37:36PM -0700, Mark Wagnon wrote: > Vaidhyanathan G Mayilrangam wrote: > > > > Hi Mark, > > > > I have a Linksys and it seems like your card is identified right. However. > > take a look at /etc/init.d/network. I am using IP 192.168.1.1 and have it > > like this. > > > > [config info snipped] > > > > > This code brings up the network. you might want to check if you have the > > above statements in your file. > > > > Let me know, > > > > Cheers, > > Vaidhy > > > > I've entered the info into my /etc/init.d/network file. I've set up my > /etc/hosts file to reflect my ip address and hostname. I was confused on > what to enter into my /etc/resolv.conf. Originally I had a line that > read "search ." then my two dns entries. I have some documentation that > instructs me to insert "search domain.im.in.home.com" as the example. I > only have a subdomain listed. I tried the "search ." to start. > > I was able to ping my ip address and my gateway, but not the > nameservers. Also, in order to do so, I had to stop and restart the > network using /etc/init.d/network stop (start). I had to do this even > after I rebooted. um, what else... I tried replacing the line in my > resolv.conf with "search .", but got the same results. > > I should have written this down, as I'm flipping between Linux and > Windows to correspond now. > > Any ideas? Thanks again (because I couldn't have come this far on my > own). > > Mark > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null