George H. Yeager wrote:
George:
I have not accomplished this yet (permanently). I have been on RR with SuSE 6.0. You just have to set up your IP/Mask/DNS info and go.
Did that using YaST.
You'll eventually need a DHCPCD package (free).
Why do I need the daemon? Don't I just need the client?
Look around the web to find it.
OK - I'll bite. Why did it work flawlessly when I rebooted several times? Doing the math, the DHCP client said it got a lease for 1800 minutes, which is 10 hours. That's about when the whole system collapsed. Why would eth1 (the non-DHCP'd interface) suddenly lose its routing? When I got to the machine (two reboots later), the dummy interface had eth0's parameters, eth0 was 0.0.0.0, and eth1 was OK (192.168.1.254). Total weirdness - never saw the likes with RedHat's DHCP. OBTW - RedHat's distribution of Gnome LinuxConf has YaST begging for mercy (and I thought YaST was cool compared to Red Hat's control-panel). The DHCP client I was using is the one on the SuSE website. SuSE makes an awesome workstation, but I can't get it to route for beans. Anyway, being the money-grubbing capitalist republican that I am, I'm going to focus on where the money is, and in the US, RedHat's got the ticket. At least I can acknowledge whose slave I am.
It is available with good installation instructions.
The one that Lenz pointed me to has excellent instructions.
I'll see if I can find them this evening.
That's ok. Red Hat's working fine. Thanks anyway. George - To get out of this list, please send email to majordomo@suse.com with this text in its body: unsubscribe suse-linux-e Check out the SuSE-FAQ at <A HREF="http://www.suse.com/Support/Doku/FAQ/"><A HREF="http://www.suse.com/Support/Doku/FAQ/</A">http://www.suse.com/Support/Doku/FAQ/</A</A>> and the archive at <A HREF="http://www.suse.com/Mailinglists/suse-linux-e/index.html"><A HREF="http://www.suse.com/Mailinglists/suse-linux-e/index.html</A">http://www.suse.com/Mailinglists/suse-linux-e/index.html</A</A>>