To find the source of the error message, try running the 
firewall script manually with the -v option:

sh -v rc.firewall > /tmp/some.file

You can then look through the output file to see where 
you have a file missing.  HTH.

Cheers,
Ed

On Thu, 4 May 2000 08:38:38, Burke, Thomas G. wrote:

> Now, as for the firewall script, I'm still having the same problem.
> first line of script -> #!/bin/sh
> 
> I checked, and /bin/sh exists (as a link) - if I type /bin/sh , it runs a
> new shell, so obviously it was working...  I checked further through the
> script & realized that ipmasqadm was being called, but was not installed on
> my system.  I downloaded, installed (rpm), and rebooed, just to make sure.
> Still get the same error.  So, I played with some other scripts (that are
> also fairly complex), and they don't work, either....  I went through the
> scripts & tried to find every path & file that's in them, & I think
> everything exists on the system...  Here's the exact error:
> 
> bash: ./rc.firewall: no such file or directory
> 
> Any clues out there?

-- 
Linux -- because a computer's a terrible thing to waste!
System currently up 106 days, 0 hours, 3 minutes. 
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