On Tue, 05 Dec 2006 22:23:39 +0000 "Colin Humphrey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Yes, I was not looking to set up subnetworks and give out ip > addresses with dhcp but to have an ubuntu machine act as a server to > a windows machine. I could not even have gotten that far becasue > dhcp configuration failed and was thus skipped at installation. > > I wanted the installation procedure to dynamically set up the > networking addresses but as ethernet > and dhcp both failed I was given the default loop back device, this > was still no good as there was no ethernet detection. > > So current situe is to get a machine which passes ethernet detection > [good] and dhcp configuration[good but not essential]
OK, I'm a bit lost about what you're trying to do. To get IPs assigned dynamically you have to have a DHCP server on the network to do this (not actually true: there are ways of negotiating peer-to-peer for ad hoc networks, but for simplicity I'll ignore that...). If the DHCP step in the setting up networking is failing during boot up this is probably because there either isn't a DHCP server on the network or because the DHCP server isn't working properly (esp. if the same symptoms are seen on a couple of different machines). When you say there was no ethernet detection do you mean that the ethernet device wasn't detected or that it didn't detect the settings for the network? You can tell this by running 'ifconfig' Something like: |eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:16:CE:3B:6F:19 | inet addr:192.168.1.130 Bcast:192.168.1.255 |Mask:255.255.255.128 | inet6 addr: fe80::216:ceff:fe3b:6f19/64 Scope:Link | UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 | <snip> means the interface is up and running, where as: |eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:0A:E4:FB:1A:3F | UP BROADCAST MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 | <snip> means it is there but not configured. If you don't have a DHCP server then you have to set the IP address and DNS servers manually. The simplest test to see if your networking hardware works would be ifup eth0 <IP address on the same subnet as the windows machine> and then ping the IP address you picked from the windows machine. That would be enough for the windows machine to then access services on the ubuntu machine and for the ubuntu machine to access things if you specify the IP for them rather than the domain (add DNS servers to resolv.conf to use names). > Where can you get Xwindows from? Also To run Xwindows would you have > active desktop already installed? XWindows is the system that draws graphical displays in Linux (xorg is the flavour used in ubuntu). If you have a graphical display instead of just a command line (white text on a black background) then you already have XWindows installed. If you don't and you want it the easiest way to get it is sudo apt-get install ubuntu-desktop that fulls in some other things that you probably don't want on a server though like openoffice. I can't find a meta-package to pull in just the graphical utilities without the office and productivity stuff etc. sudo apt-get install gnome Will get you a more minimal desktop but I'm not sure if it gets all the network configuration tools etc. If you have gnome installed (or after you install it) the network configuration is System->Administration->Networking ________________________________________________________ Robert McWilliam [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.ormiret.com No sense being pessimistic: it wouldn't work anyway. -- ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk https://wiki.kubuntu.org/UKTeam/