The problem I am facing now is that the QNX host could not ping the SCO host and vice versa. They are in the same domain, ie, 172.20.3.xx. As I am very new to Unix, I guess I must have missed out some important steps. Pls help... Thanx alot (2 Replies)
We need to add our remote office to our linux routing table.
Our internal office ip addresses are all in the range of 198.9.200.x
with an subnet mask of 255.255.255.0
the remote office has ip addresses in the range of 192.168.0.0 and also a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0
when i use the... (3 Replies)
I not able to ping outside the internet. i am able to ping my 192. ip address. when i try to ping a 68. ip address i get no route to host. what should i do to correct this issue. I have sco openserver 5.05 (6 Replies)
hello,
I am doing Socket programming..
when I am establishing a socket connection using TCP protocol ...I am getting
Error :: No route to host. at the client side during connect() call...........that it is returning -1.
So I thing problem lies here......but what to do now...
So for just... (6 Replies)
I do a ssh to remote host(A1) from local host(L1). I then ssh to another remote(A2) from A1.
When I do a who -m from A2, I see the "connected from" as "A1".
=> who -m
userid pts/2 2010-03-27 08:47 (A1)
I want to identify who is the local host who initiated the connection to... (3 Replies)
Hello,
My program should connect to a server. here's the code :
int main(int argc, char *argv){
int sock = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
if(sock == -1){
perror("socket()");
exit(errno);
}
printf("retour socket = %d",sock);
struct sockaddr... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a system with network interfaces en0 and en1
en0:
physical ip: 1.1.1.10
virtual ip1: 192.168.100.11
virtual ip2: 192.168.100.12
en1:
physical ip: 1.1.1.20
virtual ip1: 192.168.100.20
virtual ip2: 192.168.100.21
default gateway ist 192.168.100.254
when I open a... (12 Replies)
I have a unix machine that operates some CNC machines, I need to hook up my windows machine through core ftp to load programs onto the box.
The card i need to route to for the FTP on unix is tu1
I need to check the routing tables on the unix box to see which IP address will automatically... (2 Replies)
A linux box is supposed to emailing the results of backups to the windows exchange server, but nothing arrives. it never has, as the muppet who set up the Windows domain knew nothing about linux. I know only slightly more than that...
pretty sure sendmail is the daemon running to handle mail. it... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I have installed RHEL4 using vmware workstation..
Host OS: Windows XP
Guest OS: RHEL4
Pls refer step 17 & 18 in below link...
ORACLE-BASE - Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 and Centos 4 Installation
1) If i choose to assign IP automatically (using DHCP) means, i am able to connect RHEL4... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: thomasraj87
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
route.conf
ROUTE.CONF(5) BSD File Formats Manual ROUTE.CONF(5)NAME
route.conf -- static routes config file
DESCRIPTION
The route.conf file is read by the staticroute rc.d script during system start-up and shutdown, and is intended for adding and removing
static routes.
FILE FORMAT
Lines starting with a hash ('#') are comments and ignored. Lines starting with a plus sign ('+') are run during start-up, while lines start-
ing with a minus sign ('-') are run during system shutdown. If a line starts with a '!', the rest of the line will get evaluated as a shell
script fragment. All other lines are passed to route(8). During start-up, they are passed behind a ``route add -'' command and during shut-
down behind a ``route delete -'' command.
FILES
/etc/route.conf The route.conf file resides in /etc.
/etc/rc.d/staticroute
rc.d(8) script that parses route.conf.
EXAMPLES
In this example, the interface for the desired routing changes is set, the IP address on that interface is determined, and a route is added
during startup, or deleted during system shutdown.
# Set interface and determine current IP address for added route.
!ifname=bnx0
!ipaddr=$(/sbin/ifconfig ${ifname} | awk '$1 == "inet" {print $2}')
net 10.10.1 -interface ${ipaddr}
In this example, IP forwarding is turned on during start-up, and a static route added for 192.168.2.0. During system shutdown, the route is
removed and IP forwarding turned off.
# Turn on/off IP forwarding.
+sysctl -w net.inet.ip.forwarding=1
-sysctl -w net.inet.ip.forwarding=0
net 192.168.2.0 -netmask 255.255.255.0 192.168.150.2
SEE ALSO rc.conf(5), rc(8), route(8)BSD May 1, 2012 BSD