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Patrick Kirsch wrote:
It is only used in the following line, i.e. debug("glo fw = $globals{'fw'}"); #if ( $globals{'ssl'} and $server ne $globals{'fw'} ) { Which is commented out. Perhaps the author tried something or changed something and just forgot to comment out the debug line. Is that possible?
Yes this is possible :) I've looked up what %globals is used for, it is e.g. set in the configuration file.
Oh, ok. I would then assume it is one of the use=fw statements, which I don't use. I am 2 nets below the public IP, so I use their web method.
There is it possible to set the $globals{'fw'} value, $globals{'fw'} stands for your (if present) firewall host. Can you check your configfile, did you set a "fw=" value?
no. I didn't see it was needed, nor am I certain what it should be in my case, since I do not use the router's fw page to get my public IP. IIUC, if I would add fw= , or fw=nothing, would that part of the script be happy and allow the script to run? I do know it runs with that part commented out. Thanks for your help Patrick, I am certainly in learning mode here. -- Joe Morris Registered Linux user 231871 running openSUSE 10.2 x86_64 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org