-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Fri, 5 Jan 2001, max wrote:
Nope, there are no laptops, since it is my home network with only 4 machines on it! That's why this is so puzzling...
max ----- Original Message ----- From: Ralf Eisinger
Sent: Friday, January 05, 2001 8:32 AM ... is it possible, that any of the other users from your network has a laptop and has tried to access the nfs by that way? (And has now removed the laptop ...)
On 05-Jan-01 max wrote:
this is from my syslog: Jan 5 09:30:57 datatwirl nfsd[3841]: Unauthorized access by NFS client 192.168.1.50. i KNOW there is no 192.168.1.50 on my network, and should not be anywhere on the internet. that ip address does not ping, is not in my /etc/hosts file, and no machine on my local network was ever put on that ip address. so why would nfs tell me something like this?
Maybe you have somewhere a 'hidden' system like vmware configuration running ? That could introduce these extra ip-addressess... - -- Groetjes vanwege... Greetings from... -- - -- Dieter Demerre *** ddemerre@acm.org -- - -- http://www.angelfire.com/de/ddemerre/ -- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGP 6.5.8 iQA/AwUBOlXa0wlG34XnM6kpEQJkMgCg2QYngUA/988+NFXdWLUIIAmWGgQAnRik 6fdM0KYOReVLh7Z9KR5NnBIk =4v6I -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----