Duly noted. Thanks for the info.
--Todd
On 01 Mar 2003 14:21:07 -0600
John Hasler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Todd writes:
> > Or, if you don't need any other name resolution, back up the
> > original resolv.conf, and make /etc/resolv.conf a symlink to
> > /etc/ppp/resolv.conf.
>
> This is tak
Don Spoon writes:
> All you have to do is enter your ISP "username" when asked, not your
> E-Mail address as you did.
Some ISPs want the entire email address.
> It looks like your modem is working OK and getting the necessary info
> from your ISP (IP, DNS, etc).
He wouldn't be getting as far as
Todd writes:
> Or, if you don't need any other name resolution, back up the original
> resolv.conf, and make /etc/resolv.conf a symlink to /etc/ppp/resolv.conf.
This is taken care of automatically (though in a different fashion) by
scripts that are enabled by selecting 'Dynamic' in the 'Configure
Christof Hurschler wrote:
Hi, I've tried, but can't seem to figure out how to get this working. Yes,
I'm a newbie.
I'm running Woody, and made the following config file with pppconfig
# This optionfile was generated by pppconfig 2.0.10.
#
#
hide-password
noauth
connect "/usr/sbin/chat -v -f /etc/
Or, if you don't need any other name resolution, back up the original
resolv.conf, and make /etc/resolv.conf a symlink to
/etc/ppp/resolv.conf. That way you'll track any changes to the DNS
servers automatically. Note: I haven't done this on Debian - I'm
assuming Deb ppp is no different than other L
Christof Hurschler writes:
> Mar 1 18:58:38 k6 pppd[682]: not replacing existing default route to tap0
This is your problem. You most likely do not need that default route at
all. Get rid of it.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTE
On 3468 September 1993, Christof Hurschler wrote:
> I can connect with pon, but lynx and konquerer can't locate any
> hosts that I try to open.
Can you ping hosts? Perhaps it's just a DNS problem.
$ cat /etc/resolv.conf
> Mar 1 18:58:38 k6 pppd[682]: primary DNS address 62.53.142.30
> Mar 1 1
On Sat, Nov 09, 2002 at 02:03:24PM +0100, Emanuele Boieri wrote:
> Hello all!
> At last I successfully installed my modem (beta) drivers (dawned internal modems)
>and the kppp application to get into the internet...BUT, after the number is dialled
>it comes up an error: the problem (it says) is
Emanuele writes:
> I'd like to connect to the internet,really.
You might try http://newbiedoc.sourceforge.net/ and look in the
'Peripherals' section for the article entitled 'Setting up a serial
modem on a Debian desktop PC'.
Chris
--
___ Chris Lale <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
/ \
| <_/ My PC
Emanuele writes:
> I'd like to connect to the internet,really.
Run pppconfig as root and aswer the questions. Then use the command 'pon'
to start ppp and 'poff' to stop it. If you still have problems post the
output of the command 'plog' and the contents of /etc/ppp/peers/provider
and /etc/chats
Thanks for your help - that did the trick !!
Philipp
Christoph Groth wrote:
> Philipp Bliedung <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > It complains about the module: tty-ldisc-3. I have absolutely no
> > clue where I can get it from, I've never heared about anything lilke
> > that. What do I have to d
Philipp Bliedung <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> It complains about the module: tty-ldisc-3. I have absolutely no
> clue where I can get it from, I've never heared about anything lilke
> that. What do I have to do to get my modem working?
Have a look at the file /etc/modutils/aliases (The files lo
On Thu, 8 Feb 2001, Tom George wrote:
> Before compiling the 2.4.1 kernel I used apt-get dist-upgrade to
> install all the available upgrades in the stable distribution,. I then
> checked against the list in changes and found that I still had only
> modutils 2.3.11-13.1. I used apt-get install
On Fri, 9 Feb 2001, David Wright wrote:
>...
> 2.4 kernels missed the boat for getting into the current stable=potato,
> so you're going to have to do the same sort of thing. Debian will not
> add new packages to its stable distribution just so that it works with
> a kernel that happens to be call
On Thu, 8 Feb 2001, Tom George wrote:
> I compiled 2.4.1 and tried to sign on the internet. pppd sent a string
> that caused the connection to fail. I reloaced 2.2.12 and signed on
> with no difficulty in order to send this message. Any ideas?
The following configuration works perfectly (for
David Wright wrote:
Quoting Tom George ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
I am a little nervous about this - I really want to use some of the
features of 2.4 but why should I have to obtain packages from the
unstable distribution for a stable kernel distribution?
--
Quoting Tom George ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> >> I am a little nervous about this - I really want to use some of the
> >> features of 2.4 but why should I have to obtain packages from the
> >> unstable distribution for a stable kernel distribution?
--
> I thought
Hall Stevenson wrote:
Before compiling the 2.4.1 kernel I used apt-get dist-upgrade to
install all the available upgrades in the stable distribution,. I
then
checked against the list in changes and found that I still had only
modutils 2.3.11-13.1. I used apt-get install modutils to get ve
> Before compiling the 2.4.1 kernel I used apt-get dist-upgrade to
> install all the available upgrades in the stable distribution,. I
then
> checked against the list in changes and found that I still had only
> modutils 2.3.11-13.1. I used apt-get install modutils to get version
> 2.4.1-2. St
Tom George wrote:
Hall Stevenson wrote:
I compiled 2.4.1 and tried to sign on the internet. pppd
sent a string that caused the connection to fail. I
reloaced 2.2.12 and signed on with no difficulty in order
to send this message. Any ideas?
You need a specific, updated version of pppd to
Hall Stevenson wrote:
I compiled 2.4.1 and tried to sign on the internet. pppd
sent a string that caused the connection to fail. I
reloaced 2.2.12 and signed on with no difficulty in order
to send this message. Any ideas?
You need a specific, updated version of pppd to work with kernels 2.
> I compiled 2.4.1 and tried to sign on the internet. pppd
> sent a string that caused the connection to fail. I
> reloaced 2.2.12 and signed on with no difficulty in order
> to send this message. Any ideas?
You need a specific, updated version of pppd to work with kernels 2.4.x.
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