And it's been doing it every few seconds since. Now, in the networking-HOWTO, I noticed something about needing to have IP multicasting enabled in the kernel. Is this true for DHCP? Also, what purpose does the "search=" entry serve? Thanks. _________________________ Joseph A. Hylkema josephhy@wsu.edu "Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants, it is the creed of slaves." William Pitt, 1783 Support a Husky-Free Northwest. GO COUGARS!!!!! On Tue, 14 Mar 2000, Joseph Andrew Hylkema wrote:
Okay, I set it up that way, but this time in the console log I got the message: "dhclient: send_packet no such device."
_________________________
Joseph A. Hylkema
josephhy@wsu.edu
"Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants, it is the creed of slaves."
William Pitt, 1783
Support a Husky-Free Northwest.
GO COUGARS!!!!!
On Tue, 14 Mar 2000, Avi Schwartz wrote:
Yes. It can be very simple or more complex, depending on your setup. For example, if you get the IP, GW, etc. from DHCP, all you need is something like:
work,*,*,*) # Work scheme # Transceiver selection, for some cards -- see 'man ifport' IF_PORT="" # Use BOOTP (via /sbin/bootpc)? [y/n] BOOTP="n" # Use DHCP (via /sbin/dhclient)? [y/n] DHCP="y" # Use /sbin/pump for BOOTP/DHCP? [y/n] PUMP="n" # Host's IP address, netmask, network address, broadcast address IPADDR="" NETMASK="" NETWORK="" BROADCAST="" # Gateway address for static routing GATEWAY="" # Things to add to /etc/resolv.conf for this interface DOMAIN="" SEARCH="xyz.com" DNS_1="" DNS_2="" DNS_3="" # NFS mounts, should be listed in /etc/fstab MOUNTS="" # For IPX interfaces, the frame type and network number IPX_FRAME="" IPX_NETNUM=""
As you see, very little is changed.
On the other hand, in my home network, I have it a bit more complicated:
homenet,*,*,*) # Home scheme # Transceiver selection, for some cards -- see 'man ifport' IF_PORT="" # Use BOOTP (via /sbin/bootpc)? [y/n] BOOTP="n" # Use DHCP (via /sbin/dhclient)? [y/n] DHCP="n" # Use /sbin/pump for BOOTP/DHCP? [y/n] PUMP="n" # Host's IP address, netmask, network address, broadcast address IPADDR="10.23.20.30" NETMASK="255.255.255.0" NETWORK="10.23.20.0" BROADCAST="10.23.20.255" # Gateway address for static routing GATEWAY="10.23.20.1" # Things to add to /etc/resolv.conf for this interface DOMAIN="" SEARCH="isp.com" DNS_1="10.23.20.1" DNS_2="" DNS_3="" # NFS mounts, should be listed in /etc/fstab MOUNTS="" # For IPX interfaces, the frame type and network number IPX_FRAME="" IPX_NETNUM=""
Avi Joseph Andrew Hylkema wrote:
So you're saying we have to hardcode all of the information in the /etc/pcmcia/network.opts file?
_________________________
Joseph A. Hylkema
josephhy@wsu.edu
"Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants, it is the creed of slaves."
William Pitt, 1783
Support a Husky-Free Northwest.
GO COUGARS!!!!!
On Tue, 14 Mar 2000, Avi Schwartz wrote:
Assuming you are talking about a PCMCIA network card, let me suggest something to you. If you used YAST to setup the network card, don't! Remove the card from the basic network setup in YAST, then modify /etc/pcmcia/network.opts with all your network parameters. You can also use it to create different schemes (work, dialup, homenet, etc.) Until I figured this one out, I had a lot of grief with the networking part.
Avi
Joseph Andrew Hylkema wrote:
I'm STILL, for the third or so day, trying to get SuSE to run right on my friend's laptop. The latest problem is on bootup, I'm getting "error while executing /sbin/route add default gw 134.x.x.x." So, I went into /etc/route.conf and commented out the line with the default gateway address. I'm not getting the error anymore, but I'm still not able to connect it to the network. With that line uncommented, it seems to load the card without incident.
-- Avi Schwartz Get a Life avi@CFFtechnologies.com Get Linux
-- Avi Schwartz Get a Life avi@CFFtechnologies.com Get Linux
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