On 08/23/18 13:10, Fred Erickson wrote:
Firefox can’t establish a connection to the server at 192.168.11.1.
My Viasat system quit working earlier and I've been unable to work on
this most of the day ... It is usually very reliable but it seems I
have offended the gods recently.
I was reading t
On Wed, 22 Aug 2018 19:06:47 -0400
Bob Goodwin wrote:
> > --
>
> Doing as you suggest, ping succeeds but Firefox still does not
> connect with or without the :80.
>
> Firefox can’t establish a connection to the server at 192.16
On 08/22/2018 04:06 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 08/22/18 18:35, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> Of course it is. Port 0 is restricted. What you should FIRST do is:
>>
>> ping 192.168.11.1
>>
>> to see if you can hit the Buffalo device. If you can, then try to browse
>> the device. Use one of the follow
On 08/22/18 18:35, Rick Stevens wrote:
Of course it is. Port 0 is restricted. What you should FIRST do is:
ping 192.168.11.1
to see if you can hit the Buffalo device. If you can, then try to browse
the device. Use one of the following URLs (they are 100% equivalent):
http://192
On 08/22/2018 01:03 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 08/21/18 18:22, Samuel Sieb wrote:
>>>
>>> What is the simplest way to do that with Fedora 27 or 28,NetworkManager?
>>
>> If you want a gui, then install nm-connection-editor. That lets you
>> add extra static addresses to an interface or wifi connec
On 22.08.2018 22:03, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> Which looks like it's done what I think I want but the browser still
> does not connect to: http://192.168.11.1:0
>
> "This address is restricted
using tcp port 0 is usually wrong. AFAIK DD-WRT web interface is
listening on default port 80, so just remo
On 08/21/18 18:22, Samuel Sieb wrote:
What is the simplest way to do that with Fedora 27 or 28,NetworkManager?
If you want a gui, then install nm-connection-editor. That lets you
add extra static addresses to an interface or wifi connection.
For the command line, use "ip addr".
ip addr add
On 08/21/2018 05:09 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
I also copy/pasteded the wrong ping results earlier. Firefox normally
works from 192.168.1.1. I just want it to configure the device at
192.168.11.1, the default that results from a "hard reset."
Then you need to assign yourself an address in the 192
On 08/21/18 19:06, Samuel Sieb wrote:
I should have checked before posting. The dev name is required when
removing the address as well:
ip addr del 192.168.1.10/24 dev eth0
__
Yes it told me when I tried it. dev/ens2p0 is what it wants ...
It's feeding
On 08/21/2018 04:04 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 08/21/2018 04:02 PM, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> Can you ping anything on the 192.168.11/0 network? I don't think you
>> have a route for the 192.168.11.0/24 network. While you added an alias
>> to your NIC (enp2s0:0) and an IP address for that alias (192.
On 08/21/2018 04:02 PM, Rick Stevens wrote:
Can you ping anything on the 192.168.11/0 network? I don't think you
have a route for the 192.168.11.0/24 network. While you added an alias
to your NIC (enp2s0:0) and an IP address for that alias (192.168.11.1),
you have not added a route for that netwo
On 08/21/2018 03:22 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
For the command line, use "ip addr".
ip addr add 192.168.1.10/24 dev eth0
ip addr del 192.168.1.10/24
Replace eth0 with the appropriate device name.
I should have checked before posting. The dev name is required when
removing the address as well:
ip
On 08/21/2018 03:29 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 08/21/18 10:53, Gary Hodder wrote:
>> You can temporarily give your lan interface another class C and
>> configure that device to give it a ip in your range.
>> Say your device reset to 192.168.0.1 and your ethernet interface is
>> eth0 you can
>> ifc
On 08/21/2018 03:29 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
However: Firefox can’t establish a connection to the server at
192.168.11.1.
That's the address you set your computer to. What address is the router at?
___
users mailing list -- users@lists.fedoraproject.or
On 08/21/18 10:53, Gary Hodder wrote:
You can temporarily give your lan interface another class C and
configure that device to give it a ip in your range.
Say your device reset to 192.168.0.1 and your ethernet interface is
eth0 you can
ifconfig eth0:0 192.168.0.2 netmask 255.255.255.0
Config devi
On 08/21/2018 07:53 AM, Gary Hodder wrote:
You can temporarily give your lan interface another class C and
configure that device to give it a ip in your range.
Say your device reset to 192.168.0.1 and your ethernet interface is
eth0 you can
ifconfig eth0:0 192.168.0.2 netmask 255.255.255.0
Config
On 08/21/2018 03:12 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
It seems too often I struggle with the problem of dealing with a device
that, when "reset" or new, is on a different subnet and my computer
address needs to change temporarily for the device to be accessedwith
the Firefox browser long enough to change
On Tue, 2018-08-21 at 06:12 -0400, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> It seems too often I struggle with the problem of dealing with a
> device
> that, when "reset" or new, is on a different subnet and my computer
> address needs to change temporarily for the device to be
> accessedwith
> the Firefox browser
Bob Goodwin writes:
> It seems too often I struggle with the problem of dealing with a
> device that, when "reset" or new, is on a different subnet and my
> computer address needs to change temporarily for the device to be
> accessedwith the Firefox browser long enough to change the device
> addr
It seems too often I struggle with the problem of dealing with a device
that, when "reset" or new, is on a different subnet and my computer
address needs to change temporarily for the device to be accessedwith
the Firefox browser long enough to change the device address too
something in my 192.
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