On Thu, Jun 07, 2001 at 09:18:44PM -0400, D-Man wrote: > On Thu, Jun 07, 2001 at 10:09:10AM -0400, Rob Mahurin wrote: > | > | Here's a tcpdump | grep gow with the static IP, watching gow boot up. > | [tcpdump] > > Apparently I don't have tcpdump on my system.
Packet sniffers are quite useful to have around. > | > If you want more specifics on how I configured the doze systems I can > | > turn one on tomorrow and see what it says. > | > | This would be wonderful, thank you. > > On the Windo~1 98 box I have : > right-click on "Network Neighborhood" and click "Properties" > (can get here from control panel also) > > Under the Configuration tab I have : > Client for Microsoft Networks > Microsoft Family Logon > 10/100M PCI Fast Ethernet Adapter > TCP/IP -> 10/100M PCI Fast Ethernet Adapter > File and printer sharing to Microsoft Networks I lack the "family logon" and the file sharing; the former I've never seen before and the latter I'll enable when ping works. My ethernet card is detected as 3com EtherLink III ISA (3c509b-TPO) in PnP mode There's also some "Infrared PnP Serial Port (*PNP0510)" that is apparently part of the motherboard; I can't hardware disable it and if I delete it it reinstalls itself. It has a "Fast Infrared Protocol". > Properties for "Client for Microsoft Networks" : > "Quick Logon" selected under "Network Logon options", nothing > else selected. Mine has an unchecked "logon to Windows NT domain" box and the radio button for "Network Logon Options" is set to "Logon and restore network connections." This is probably what's sending those netbios requests on bootup. > Properties for "10/100M PCI Fast Ethernet Adapter" : > Driver Type : > Enhanced Mode 32bit and 16bit NDIS driver > (only choice) I have two "real mode (16 bit)" drivers, one which is NDIS (using it doesn't change anything that I can tell), and one which is ODI, which I wasn't able to use because the system asked me for a Novell disk I don't have. > Bindings : > TCP/IP -> 10/100M PCI Fast Ethernet Adapter Similar. > Advanced : > Early Tx Threshold : 10 > Link Speed / Duplex Mode : Auto Mode > Network Address : Not Present My only property is "Maximum Transmits", which is set to "Not Present." I can make it an arbitrary integer. Don't know what it does. > Properties for "TCP/IP -> 10/100M PCI Fast Ethernet Adapter" : > IP Address : > Specify an IP address (radio button selected) > IP Address : 192.168.0.3 > Subnet Mask : 255.255.255.0 Same, but 10.0.0.3. (255.255.255.0 is a subnet of the broader 255.0.0.0 permitted on the 10... private networks). > WINS Configuration : > Disable WINS Resolution Same. > Gateway : > 192.168.0.1 (my Debian box) 10.0.0.2 (bravo) > DNS Configuration : > Enable DNS > Host : Compaq (yeah I know, real original names) > Doman : <blank> > DNS Server Search Order : > 129.21.3.17 (the server from school, my ISP) Host: gow Domain: study DNS Server: 10.0.0.2, which will run bind > Bindings : > Client for Microsoft Networks > File and printer sharing to Microsoft Networks Haven't installed the second one yet; it wouldn't work without TCP/IP. > Identification : > (this is stuff for samba only, doesn't really matter what > names you fill in) For the record, I have: Host: gow Workgroup: WORKGROUP Description: <blank> Changing this hostname to "dude" (the name of the cat who says "gow") broke "ping gow", but not "ping 10.0.0.3", and didn't fix "ping 10.0.0.1", which still says "Request timed out." Adding the three local machines to c:\windows\hosts restored "ping gow" and made "ping peon" fail with "Request timed out" rather than "Unknown host peon." > If you need any more info/detail just let me know. I'd really like to see a tcpdump from your (or any working) network; I'm still curious about that "icmp router solicitation", which, after a 15-second power outage that deleted my previous fscking response, resolves to 08:46:57.211735 gow.study > ALL-ROUTERS.MCAST.NET: icmp: router solicitation Using tcpdump -n, it's the same 224.0.0.2 that I was wondering about earlier. > HTH, Very much, thank you. I have to go to work now, but I'll play with this again tomorrow. Rob -- The problem with any unwritten law is that you don't know where to go to erase it. -- Glaser and Way