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Operating Systems SCO SCO 5.0.5 Add routes for new networks Post 302419445 by gibson_hg on Friday 7th of May 2010 07:35:30 AM
Old 05-07-2010
SCO 5.0.5 Add routes for new networks

Hi all,

n00b here. We currently have 3 SCO 5.0.5 machines in our network that run a mission management system.

Our internal network was always a 10.0.0.0 network and the machines worked fine.

Our company is going through a network upgrade for VoIP and some of our departments are now on VLANS. They are 10.1.11.x and 10.1.12.x. The SCO machines are still able to talk to anything on the 10.0.0.0 network fine but they cannot talk to anything on the new VLANs.

I have been trying to add routes to the S99route script but that hasn't solved anything. My knowledge is very limited with Unix and SCO 5.0.5 is pretty old.

No one in the company has any knowledge as the people that first built the SCO machines have moved on a long time ago.

What is the proper way to get the machines to route traffic to and from the VLANs? I have searched the net but haven't had much luck.

Thanks in advance for any help or advice you may have.
 

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SYSTEMD-NETWORKD.SERVICE(8)				     systemd-networkd.service				       SYSTEMD-NETWORKD.SERVICE(8)

NAME
systemd-networkd.service, systemd-networkd - Network manager SYNOPSIS
systemd-networkd.service /lib/systemd/systemd-networkd DESCRIPTION
systemd-networkd is a system service that manages networks. It detects and configures network devices as they appear, as well as creating virtual network devices. To configure low-level link settings independently of networks, see systemd.link(5). systemd-networkd will create network devices based on the configuration in systemd.netdev(5) files, respecting the [Match] sections in those files. systemd-networkd will manage network addresses and routes for any link for which it finds a .network file with an appropriate [Match] section, see systemd.network(5). For those links, it will flush existing network addresses and routes when bringing up the device. Any links not matched by one of the .network files will be ignored. It is also possible to explicitly tell systemd-networkd to ignore a link by using Unmanaged=yes option, see systemd.network(5). When systemd-networkd exits, it generally leaves existing network devices and configuration intact. This makes it possible to transition from the initrams and to restart the service without breaking connectivity. This also means that when configuration is updated and systemd-networkd is restarted, netdev interfaces for which configuration was removed will not be dropped, and may need to be cleaned up manually. CONFIGURATION FILES
The configuration files are read from the files located in the system network directory /lib/systemd/network, the volatile runtime network directory /run/systemd/network and the local administration network directory /etc/systemd/network. Networks are configured in .network files, see systemd.network(5), and virtual network devices are configured in .netdev files, see systemd.netdev(5). SEE ALSO
systemd(1), systemd.link(5), systemd.network(5), systemd.netdev(5), systemd-networkd-wait-online.service(8) systemd 237 SYSTEMD-NETWORKD.SERVICE(8)
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