Hi, On 6 Dec 2000, Gary Hennigan wrote:
> "Tim Condit" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > I've installed potato from CD-ROM, and am having a few problems. > > My ppp connection was working okay for a day or two, but now it's > > not. I'm using wvdial, and have previously connected to my ISP, so > > I know the /etc/wvdial.conf (and /etc/resolv.conf) info is > > correct, but here's what I'm seeing: > > > > When I run wvdial, a ppp connection is opened. When I view > > ifconfig, it's UP. I can ping the local IP, but not the remote > > one. Further, when I kill wvdial, the ppp connection remains > > present and UP in the ifconfig listing. > > When you say you can ping local, you mean 127.0.0.1 or the IP address > you get from your ISP? Why don't you include the output from > "ifconfig" and also "route -n". You can, of course, change any real IP > addresses to protect the innocent. Oh, that refers to the IP address from my ISP. I can also ping 127.0.0.1. I'm at work at the moment, but I'll send the output of ifconfig and 'route -n' tomorrow if necessary. > I'm not familiar with wvdial, but if you can ping the address assigned > by your ISP then you may just need to make sure the PPP has the option > "defaultroute" set. It's been a while since I messed with dialup stuff > but the option, I think, was simply "defaultroute" in the pppd.conf > file. I'll try that. It's odd that it would be unset though, as pppd was working fine a couple days ago. > > Also, I don't have traceroute installed! Surely there is a free > > version of traceroute available. Any suggestions on where it's > > located? > > Umm, maybe it's in the "traceroute" package? :) Doh! Thanks.. > Gary -- Tim Condit [EMAIL PROTECTED] UUNet Network Quality Services 734-214-7548 If you make a man a fire, you'll keep him warm for a day. If you set a man on fire, you'll keep him warm for the rest of his life. -- unknown (to me, anyway)