RE: Multiple DSLs, and switching incoming route upon failure?

2001-05-25 Thread Jeff S Wheeler
Are your DSL uplinks from different ISPs, or from the same IP provider? If they are differing providers, there is no way you can feasably implement BGP. If they are redundant paths to the same ISP you could ask them to issue you a reserved ASN (65512 - 65535) and announce your /28 into their netw

Multiple DSLs, and switching incoming route upon failure?

2001-05-25 Thread Mike Fedyk
Hi, I don't believe I'm subscribed to this list, so please cc me also. (I'm on so many debian lists, and I put all of the low traffic ones in one folder...) I already have multiple DSL links to the Internet, but I haven't done anything more as far as incoming connections besides SMTP and a couple

RE: Multiple DSLs, and switching incoming route upon failure?

2001-05-25 Thread Jeff S Wheeler
Are your DSL uplinks from different ISPs, or from the same IP provider? If they are differing providers, there is no way you can feasably implement BGP. If they are redundant paths to the same ISP you could ask them to issue you a reserved ASN (65512 - 65535) and announce your /28 into their net

Multiple DSLs, and switching incoming route upon failure?

2001-05-25 Thread Mike Fedyk
Hi, I don't believe I'm subscribed to this list, so please cc me also. (I'm on so many debian lists, and I put all of the low traffic ones in one folder...) I already have multiple DSL links to the Internet, but I haven't done anything more as far as incoming connections besides SMTP and a coupl

ntpdate timeout

2001-05-25 Thread Jeff Lee
I've run into an interesting problem with ntpdate- we have it on most of our servers, run once on boot as is the standard. The /etc/init.d/ntpdate file is configured correctly, and for most of our systems it works fine. The other day, my manager moved a system to another part of the office, where i

ntpdate timeout

2001-05-25 Thread Jeff Lee
I've run into an interesting problem with ntpdate- we have it on most of our servers, run once on boot as is the standard. The /etc/init.d/ntpdate file is configured correctly, and for most of our systems it works fine. The other day, my manager moved a system to another part of the office, where

Re: TCPD with traffic shaping capabilities?

2001-05-25 Thread Alson van der Meulen
On Fri, May 25, 2001 at 10:44:24AM +0300, Dmitry Litovchenko wrote: > Hello, Debian world! > > Does anybody know how to limit incomming (and maybe outgoing) traffic > on tcpd-wrapped service. Some kind of tunnels or queues, I think. > > Yes, yes, I know traffic shaper works only on outgoing traff

Re: TCPD with traffic shaping capabilities?

2001-05-25 Thread Alson van der Meulen
On Fri, May 25, 2001 at 10:44:24AM +0300, Dmitry Litovchenko wrote: > Hello, Debian world! > > Does anybody know how to limit incomming (and maybe outgoing) traffic > on tcpd-wrapped service. Some kind of tunnels or queues, I think. > > Yes, yes, I know traffic shaper works only on outgoing traf

How to make the debian install cd use a different kernel.

2001-05-25 Thread Friedrich Clausen
Hi, How can I make the debian installation program use another kernel? The reason I need this is I want to use a journalling filesystem called xfs. I have a kernel that is patched to use xfs but how can I make the cd boot off that kernel? This also brings up the question of the new tools as wel

How to make the debian install cd use a different kernel.

2001-05-25 Thread Friedrich Clausen
Hi, How can I make the debian installation program use another kernel? The reason I need this is I want to use a journalling filesystem called xfs. I have a kernel that is patched to use xfs but how can I make the cd boot off that kernel? This also brings up the question of the new tools as we

TCPD with traffic shaping capabilities?

2001-05-25 Thread Dmitry Litovchenko
Hello, Debian world! Does anybody know how to limit incomming (and maybe outgoing) traffic on tcpd-wrapped service. Some kind of tunnels or queues, I think. Yes, yes, I know traffic shaper works only on outgoing traffic. Yes, I have this. But also I have incoming traffic to shape and just don't k

TCPD with traffic shaping capabilities?

2001-05-25 Thread Dmitry Litovchenko
Hello, Debian world! Does anybody know how to limit incomming (and maybe outgoing) traffic on tcpd-wrapped service. Some kind of tunnels or queues, I think. Yes, yes, I know traffic shaper works only on outgoing traffic. Yes, I have this. But also I have incoming traffic to shape and just don't