-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 SuSE 9.0 I have a Linksys WPC11 in my laptop which I had given up on getting to work. I just finished installing SuSE 9.0 on the machine, and somehow it is working now ... almost. I can see my router, and I can see the other machines on my local network. I have no problem mounting NFS directories on the network. What I can't do is see the internet. Logic tells me that it should be a lot easier to get this working than it was to get the wireless card working. The problem is that I don't have a clue as to where to start. I've looked at everything I could think of. I even added my IPs name server IP addresses manually. Note: if I ping something inside my network, it works. If I try to ping something outside my network - even by IP address - I get a message telling me the network in unreachable. Can anyone offer any help? - ---Michael -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.2-rc1-SuSE (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFAlBodjeziQOokQnARAs46AJ9t0LfY3y/W+QMp6CTMtj1GQQyH7wCffM/y wqU3Xihd5+8gM12De6Jkp80= =q0dr -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
On Sat, 2004-05-01 at 17:43, Michael Satterwhite wrote:
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SuSE 9.0
I have a Linksys WPC11 in my laptop which I had given up on getting to work. I just finished installing SuSE 9.0 on the machine, and somehow it is working now ... almost.
I can see my router, and I can see the other machines on my local network. I have no problem mounting NFS directories on the network. What I can't do is see the internet. Logic tells me that it should be a lot easier to get this working than it was to get the wireless card working. The problem is that I don't have a clue as to where to start. I've looked at everything I could think of. I even added my IPs name server IP addresses manually.
Note: if I ping something inside my network, it works. If I try to ping something outside my network - even by IP address - I get a message telling me the network in unreachable.
Can anyone offer any help? - --Michael
Sounds like you don't have your default gateway set correctly. Need to point that to the device that connects your lan to the Internet. Other possibility is that you don't have the subnet mask set correctly. But the most likely problem is that the default gateway is not setup. Do a netstat -rn Look for an entry with a UG in flags column. The IP address in the gateway column should be your LANs gateway to the Internet. Make sure you can ping that device. -- Scot L. Harris <webid@cfl.rr.com>
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Saturday 01 May 2004 17:03, Scot L. Harris brilliantly wrote:
Sounds like you don't have your default gateway set correctly. Need to point that to the device that connects your lan to the Internet.
Of course! That solved everything. Frankly, I have no idea *WHY* it's working, only that it is. A couple of months ago I tried everything to get this working. Now it comes up with essentially no effort. Ah, well, it *IS* working. That's all that matters. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.2-rc1-SuSE (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFAlCIbjeziQOokQnARArZ+AJ98FuvvtITj2Lk4FXUAShr/ro0QagCeInxE fOfawM+1fs5Wrn3DkMfbC0w= =QQ/E -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
On Sat, 2004-05-01 at 18:18, Michael Satterwhite wrote:
On Saturday 01 May 2004 17:03, Scot L. Harris brilliantly wrote:
Sounds like you don't have your default gateway set correctly. Need to point that to the device that connects your lan to the Internet.
Of course! That solved everything.
Frankly, I have no idea *WHY* it's working, only that it is. A couple of months ago I tried everything to get this working. Now it comes up with essentially no effort. Ah, well, it *IS* working. That's all that matters.
Great! Glad I could help. Glad you have the wireless working. I have tried a couple of times but have yet to get linux to recognize any of the wireless cards I have. Have not spent enough time yet to figure it out. On my to do list. :) -- Scot L. Harris <webid@cfl.rr.com>
participants (2)
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Michael Satterwhite
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Scot L. Harris