07-10-2002
if you are using a linksys router with dhcp, all you need to do is for the computer that you want to have a static ip, just set that computers ip to any value like this, 192.168.1.2 - 99
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***Newbie alert***
What's the easiest way to accomplish this? An admin left our company and I have taken over his HP Workstation and moved it to a different location that is on a different IP segment.
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... (1 Reply)
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4. Solaris
Hello friend, I am new in UNIX, but I want to learn a lot
Well I have a problem to try to configure my PC with a static IP Address
(IP 192.168.1.39, Mask 255.255.255.0, gateway 192.168.1.1)
(DNS 200.48.225.130 and 200.48.225.146).
where are the file that I must be change?
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5. Red Hat
Hi,
I am using RHEL 5.1 and i would like to know,
how to find the whether my system is using DHCP or STATIC IP
with out looking at /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifconfig-eth0 configuration file.
Regards,
Venkat (3 Replies)
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Hey guys ,
YEs this is probably silly for most but i am new to this forum and solaris . i am curious to know if the ip address we have for our solaris server is static or dhcp . how can i tell ? will ifconfig -a tell me this ? or other commands?
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Hi All,
Could you please explain the purpose of assigning the static IP by using the DHCP Concept. Like by using the clients MAC address we assign the static IP Address. Waiting for your reply. Thanks in Advance. (6 Replies)
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8. HP-UX
Hi,
I can find the IP details whether it is Static or dynamic in Linux machine from the location /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifconfig-eth0 configuration file.
Can someone suggest a location to find the same in HP UX machines?
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LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
nos-tun
NOS-TUN(8) BSD System Manager's Manual NOS-TUN(8)
NAME
nos-tun -- implement ``nos'' or ``ka9q'' style IP over IP tunnel
SYNOPSIS
nos-tun -t tunnel -s source -d destination -p protocol_number [source] target
DESCRIPTION
The nos-tun utility is used to establish an nos style tunnel, (also known as ka9q or IP-IP tunnel) using a tun(4) kernel interface.
Tunnel is the name of the tunnel device /dev/tun0 for example.
Source and destination are the addresses used on the tunnel device. If you configure the tunnel against a cisco router, use a netmask of
``255.255.255.252'' on the cisco. This is because the tunnel is a point-to-point interface in the FreeBSD end, a concept cisco does not
really implement.
Protocol number sets tunnel mode. Original KA9Q NOS uses 94 but many people use 4 on the worldwide backbone of ampr.org.
Target is the address of the remote tunnel device, this must match the source address set on the remote end.
EXAMPLES
This end, a FreeBSD box on address 192.168.59.34:
nos-tun -t /dev/tun0 -s 192.168.61.1 -d 192.168.61.2 192.168.56.45
Remote cisco on address 192.168.56.45:
interface tunnel 0
ip address 192.168.61.2 255.255.255.252
tunnel mode nos
tunnel destination 192.168.59.34
tunnel source 192.168.56.45
AUTHORS
Nickolay N. Dudorov <nnd@itfs.nsk.su> wrote the program, Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@FreeBSD.org> wrote the man-page. Isao SEKI
<iseki@gongon.com> added a new flag, IP protocol number.
BUGS
We do not allow for setting our source address for multihomed machines.
BSD
April 11, 1998 BSD