Actually, I respect people who know which files to modify and how,
especially using vi.
I wish people would call *me* old-fashioned :)
On 28.01.2011 22:51, Matt Wilby wrote:
Call me old fashioned, but I like my vi.... :-)
On 28/01/2011 17:43, Dmitry G. Kozhinov wrote:
That is, change your tambourine dance style :)
There is also modern fashioned way via GUI.
On 28.01.2011 22:00, Matt Wilby wrote:
Rather than using ipadm, you can also do it the old fashioned way by
creating /etc/hostname.<interface> and inserting the required
hostname from /etc/hosts.
Where hostname can be something like bge0, e1000g0, eri0, hme0 etc.
Matt
On 28/01/2011 16:31, Deano wrote:
My notes on static ip (not using NWAM) under OI from the default DHCP
--------
Update /etc/resolv.conf WITH DNS
/etc/nsswitch.dns /etc/nsswitch.conf
Update /etc/defaultrouter with GATEWAY
route -p add default GATEWAY
Update /etc/hosts
svcadm disable network/physical:nwam
svcadm enable network/physical:default
ipadm create-addr -T static -a HOSTNAME/24 LINK_NAME
HTH,
Deano
-----Original Message-----
From: Daniel Kvasnička [mailto:daniel.kvasnicka...@gmail.com]
Sent: 28 January 2011 16:13
To: openindiana-discuss@openindiana.org
Subject: [OpenIndiana-discuss] Cannot get static IP network setup to
work
Hi people,
I'm trying to setup OpenIndiana b148 to use static IPv4 address and
manually
set up DNS servers. And I can't even ping my gateway.
The problem is that the only acces to the machine I have is through
VNC to
the QEMU instance it runs in.
Here is the link to screenshots showing what I've done with nwamcfg
so far:
http://www.dropbox.com/gallery/1967301/1/oi?h=bfc6e1
I've also:
- checked /etc/resolv.conf for nameserver entries
- ensured "dns" is entered in /etc/nsswitch.conf in appropriate places
- entered appropriate line in /etc/nwam/llp (e1000g0 static
xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx/24)
- checked that my gateway is in /etc/defaultrouter
- tried to set 255.255.255.0 as mask using ifconfig, because
ifconfig -a
showed the mask is set to ff000000
What the hell am I doing wrong? :) Can the problem be somewhere
outside the
system? As I've said. It's a virtual instance running in a VM and I
have no
way to check the VM settings myself.
Dan
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