Morgan, thanks for the quick reply... see below:
Morgan Gangwere wrote:
Paul Doubek wrote:
-Don't have DNS running for local addresses. I'm trying to access the
Fedora web service by IP address rather than host name.
-Can ping Fedora from both SuSE and WinXP.
-Telnet from either box to Fedora's port 80 fails (SuSE: "No route to
host", WinXP: Connect failed"), but telnet to Fedora's port 22 succeeds.
Try pinging. No Route To Host means that there's proabably a layer 1 or
3 problem...
As you can see above... I can ping to the Fedora box from the SuSE and
WinXP boxes fine, in fact I can ping either SuSE or WinXP from Fedora as
well. I can also telnet from SuSE and WinXP to Fedora port 22 (SSH) but
I can't telnet to port 80. I can telnet from Fedora to SuSE port 22.
I've tried adding each of the machines to the other machines' hosts
files. That allows me to access ping each of the other machines by name,
but doesn't fix the http problem.
-All the machines are on the same segment/same network (192.168.1),
but Fedora and WinXP use the SuSE IP for the default gateway.
-Observed network traffic on the Fedora box while pinging and trying
to telnet/http access the box and I can see the traffic bump up, so I
don't think I'm getting blocked by the firewall.
Could be your physical network or the layer 3 routing again.
-Set the error logging to Debug in httpd.conf.
-See no indication of a problem in the httpd/error_log or
access_log... there don't appear to be any entries that correspond to
my attempts to access the server remotely.
Apache logs //everything// ttbomk.
I've looked in all the log files in /var/log/httpd. The only time I see
any activity in those log files is if I access the Fedora web server
from the Fedora machine (locally). It acts as if Apache is never seeing
the traffic from the other two machines, but it appears to me that the
OS is seeing the requests. That's what let me to look for (and find) the
Fedora firewall running.
-Disabled the Fedora firewall as it was enabled when the build was
complete.
-Have changed /var/www/html and all it's contents to be owned by
user/group apache/apache, all have 755 permissions.
Try going from the Fedora box to the SuSE box. If that works, routing is
working one way. Make sure everything is in place and you //may// just
find your problem.
I will work that direction a little more. I actually hoped that in the
act of trying to describe the problem the solution would come to me, as
seems to happen quite often. I agree... it behaves like a routing
problem except I can ping and TN both directions... so it seems like
it's got to be a Transport or Session layer thing. I've been looking for
some clue that would indicate either httpd or the OS is trapping or
rejecting the packets but I'm striking out.
I appreciate your thoughts on the subject.
Paul Doubek
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