Author Topic: am i doing something wrong?  (Read 539 times)

worker201

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am i doing something wrong?
« on: 16 September 2003, 23:52 »
Okay, so I have this old laptop that I just installed SuSe8.2 on, works great so far.  I also have this Linksys ethernet PCMCIA card that is fully supported under Linux and SuSe.  So I put the card in the notebook and set everything up with Yast2, and it seems okay.

Now, I look at my WinXP machine at work and copy its static IP address, as well as the subnet mask, the DNS numbers, and the gateway.  I then input those numbers into Yast2.  The I unplugged the network cable from my work machine and stuck it in the laptop and Voila...

nothing.

Can't use Konqueror to navigate to simple websites.

So what am I doing wrong?  Nothing seems obviously foul about this situation.  Not that I'm blaming Linux; the laptop would have melted if I tried that with the Win98 it had before.  I'm just a little disappointed, and I was hoping that someone around here would steer me in the right direction.  Thanks in advance.

flap

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am i doing something wrong?
« Reply #1 on: 17 September 2003, 00:48 »
Can you ping hostnames/ip addresses? Is the network connection definitely up (run ifconfig)?
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worker201

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am i doing something wrong?
« Reply #2 on: 17 September 2003, 01:10 »
quote:
Originally posted by flap:
Can you ping hostnames/ip addresses? Is the network connection definitely up (run ifconfig)?


Uhm, what?  As a person who has been running Windows pretty much exclusively for 10 years, I have no idea what you are talking about.  I haven't got any clue about how to ping with Linux, and I'm not sure how to run anything besides OpenOffice.  If you could be so kind and expand on that, I would appreciate it.

flap

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« Reply #3 on: 17 September 2003, 01:37 »
Sorry.

Type "ifconfig" at a command line (you may need to do that as root) and see if "eth0" is listed as one of the active network interfaces.

To ping just type
ping <ip address/hostname>

[ September 16, 2003: Message edited by: flap ]

"While envisaging the destruction of imperialism, it is necessary to identify its head, which is none other than the United States of America." - Ernesto Che Guevara

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Master of Reality

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am i doing something wrong?
« Reply #4 on: 17 September 2003, 07:07 »
open up konsole.. and "ping -c2 <IP address>"
hmm... also...erm...hmmm...uhhh....OHH! I KNOW!!
Look on your work computers browser (if its internet explorer then keep reading) and go to tools (i think) > internet options
and then erm... connection tab... then i think it will say proxy settings somewhere. CHeck that and see if it has a proxy server its connecting to.


As you can tell... i dont use windows very often.
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mobrien_12

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am i doing something wrong?
« Reply #5 on: 17 September 2003, 10:49 »
Are you sure that you actually CAN use your work computer IP # on another computer?  Several of my machines are on a subnet run by very paranoid sysadmins.  They programmed the router to accept packets from a given IP# only if it matched the MAC addresses that I supplied to them.. If I tried to use another computer with the same IP#, or if I switched network cards, the router would drop ALL traffic.  

OF course, they didn't tell me this and it made upgrading a network card a bitch to troubleshoot.
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hm_murdock

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« Reply #6 on: 17 September 2003, 16:15 »
I like to hit those kinds of dudes with swords.

If you have to deal with a guy like that... chances are you're screwed. He'll take one look at it and say "Linux? HA! That's a hacker tool!"
Go the fuck ~

worker201

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« Reply #7 on: 18 September 2003, 01:21 »
quote:
Originally posted by M. O'Brien:
Are you sure that you actually CAN use your work computer IP # on another computer?  Several of my machines are on a subnet run by very paranoid sysadmins.  They programmed the router to accept packets from a given IP# only if it matched the MAC addresses that I supplied to them.. If I tried to use another computer with the same IP#, or if I switched network cards, the router would drop ALL traffic.  


Pretty sure this is not the case -- lots of people around here do it, and are apparently encouraged to do it, since we have basically "run out" of IP addresses.  Work for me is not a small office, but a superfuckinghuge university, and the sysadmins' job seems to be to hide in closets and troll for viruses.

Aside to Jimmy James: we actually have labs full of Dell workstations running RedHat9.  All in all, the building is probably 30% Mac, 30% Win98, 30%Linux/Sparc, 5% Win2000+ and 5% SGI.  If only all buildings in the world were like this...

worker201

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« Reply #8 on: 21 September 2003, 02:02 »
It works now.  Well, thank you all for your suggestions.  I ran ifconfig and I pinged my gateway, and it was successful, so I ran the Konqueror directly over to Mozilla.org.

I guess the problem was: the network cable was not plugged in when I started Linux.  It must test the network connection on startup or something.  Today, I hooked everything up before booting, and it worked like a charm: the blinkenlights on the adapter were even working.

So if anyone can confirm what I have seen here, I would be interested, if for nothing more than posterity's sake.

Again, thanks for all the ideas and assistance.

flap

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« Reply #9 on: 21 September 2003, 22:29 »
Yes, the network connection has to be enabled manually if it wasn't started at boot-time. If you need to do that in the future just type "ifup eth0" to enable it.
"While envisaging the destruction of imperialism, it is necessary to identify its head, which is none other than the United States of America." - Ernesto Che Guevara

http://counterpunch.org
http://globalresearch.ca