tony, wayne: as promised, here are the files which you would need to update for adsl usage 1) /etc/resolv.conf 2) /etc/network/interfaces 3) firewall scripts - i am not fimilar with the way debian does this as this machine is behind a firewall already....
1) contains the nameservers and related info 2) contains the machine ip, broadcast, netmask, and routing info i hope this help. if you need a sample of the above, let me know... On Wednesday 10 October 2001 19:29, Allen Wayne Best wrote: > tony, wayne: > > for what it's worth, adsl is, imo, much easier than ppp(oe). basically, set > up your workstation just like it's on a local network. i will have to look > at my debian machine at work to give you the exact files to place your ip > information. once you have that, you are home free. > > i am running at home with a "speedstream 5260 ethernet adsl modem" with no > problems. my former ip (verio) and current ip (speakeasy) had no problems > with the way i'm set up. my home machine is rh7.1, hence i cannot tell you > all the files that need to be changed! maybe someone will jump in with the > particular files...otherwise, i will add them in the morning from work. so > for now, on redhat: > > 1) /etc/resolve.conf > 2) /etc/sysconfig/network > 3) /etc/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth? > 4) /etc/sysconfig/ipchains > > 1. this contains the dns info > 2. this has your gateway, hostname, ethernet card, etc > 3. contains your ip address, broadcast, network ip, netmask > 4. finally (very important, especially for always connected clients), the > firewall rules. this is, for me, the most difficult part, and essential, > regardless of ppp(oe) or standard network setup. > > if you need some further assist with the particular files, please let me > know at this address and/or [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > On Wednesday 10 October 2001 17:28, Anthony and Mary Ann Tantillo pronounced: > > Actually, I got Earthlink/DSL to work with the pppoe distributed with > > 2.2r3 (potato) and the testing (woody) distributions using the standard > > 2.2.19pre17 kernel that installed from the CD. > > > > Tony > > > > On Wed, Oct 10, 2001 at 07:06:50PM +0100, Wayne Brown wrote: > > > on 10th Oct Royce Bell wrote > > > > > > > Sheesh, you guys are scaring the pants off me! Or, maybe I'm > > > > just getting > > > > to old to go about things like I did 30 years ago...hmmm? > > > > Actually, I'm not > > > > so scared as I am overwhelmed at how much I have forgotten > > > > over the years of > > > > DOS/Windows immersion (I'd transliterate that as "baptism," but the > > > > scriptural import of that term implies newness, regeneration, > > > > and Heaven: > > > > All terms that seem quite inappropriate in the context of BSOD). > > > > > > > > A number of you have posted me directly with a recommendation > > > > of Libranet as > > > > a good starting point, while still maintaining the Debian > > > > relationship. A > > > > couple of you guys (any gurls here?) warned that I would not > > > > be happy with > > > > Libranet. Am I correct in understanding Libranet IS Debian > > > > with simplified > > > > installation/management? And, are there limitations to > > > > Libranet that I need > > > > to know going in? Are there benefits to the Debian distro > > > > directly, and > > > > what are they? At this point, I'm not so sure I'm interested > > > > in a plethora > > > > of configuration options, so much as a clean and stable > > > > install that will > > > > let me get the system up, running StarOffice or some other suite > > > > (suggestions?), connected to my Earthlink/DSL account, and printing. > > > > > > IMHO Mandrake 8.0 would be a good starter for ease of configuration and > > > getting the system up. However you will not learn as much as you will > > > from using Debian. There is a steep learning curve and a fair bit of > > > reading > > and > > > > configuration to be done with Debian but ultimately you will have a > > > system the way you want it AND know what is happening "under the hood". > > > > > > Debian has an excellent package management system which handles > > dependencies > > > > for you, so you choose to install gizmo x, Debian tells you what > > > library files are needed and selects them for you. Compared to the RPM > > > system, > > this > > > > is a real boon (IMHO) > > > > > > I noticed you are on DSL, is that cable or ADSL? both are possible > > > through Linux but require work. Cable is easier because connecting via > > > a standard network card. ADSL is trickier, maybe others reading could > > > give their opinion on this. I am not sure if the standard kernel > > > supplied supports PPPoe (PPP over ethernet) and wether you will need to > > > recompile the > > kernel. > > > > Certain distro's (I think Mandrake 8.0 and Suse 7.2 does as standard) > > > > > > > Also, I'm not sure I am understanding some terms you guys are > > > > using that > > > > seem to me to be synonymous, eg. windowsmanager and shell, etc. > > > > > > > > One other thought: I am leaning toward doing the GNU/Linux > > > > install on two > > > > machines, concurrently. One as the productivity machine, and > > > > the other to > > > > make parallel installs AND configuration changes or new > > > > installs before they > > > > go on the productivity machine, just to be sure I don't burn > > > > the bridge (do > > > > I have to buy TWO licenses for that, Bill? Just joking). > > > > Boy, parallel > > > > install brings back memories of "how we used to do it." > > > > Matter of fact, > > > > that's how I first "broke" my Microsoft license agreement, not taking > > > > chances on the woeful frustrations of "fix one problem, > > > > create ten more" of > > > > Microsoft releases with my system that was required to get > > > > the work out. > > > > > > > > Thoughts? > > > > > > For the ultimate in safety doing the above is a good idea, personally I > > have > > > > found Debian to be rock solid, "the business" as it were. Occasionally > > > I > > may > > > > get a minor problem with a package but nothing serious (yet!) > > > > > > > > > Regards > > > > > > Wayne. -- regards, allen wayne best contractor, diagnostics and support tools telnet 447-4070 "your friendly neighborhood rambler owner" "my rambler will go from 0 to 105" Current date: 50:46:9::283:2001 Martin was probably ripping them off. That's some family, isn't it? Incest, prostitution, fanaticism, software. -- Charles Willeford, "Miami Blues"