Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Static routes in SCO
Operating Systems SCO Static routes in SCO Post 302607336 by hicksd8 on Wednesday 14th of March 2012 07:15:07 AM
Old 03-14-2012
I agree with admin_xor and although it has been a few years since I was heavily involved in SCO, I remember being able to add multiple static routes; very handy with multiple network cards installed connecting to different subnets. I think SCO is a little different when compared to "standard unix" in this respect.
This User Gave Thanks to hicksd8 For This Post:
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Debian

Setting Routes and such

Ok, I made changes to my routing tables..... which file do I modify to make the routes initialize correctly when the machine boots up? I work with all flavours of Unix/Linux... but this is an older box... Linux, Release 2.2.14-5.0. I did a grep for the default route in /etc, but didnt find... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: djsal
2 Replies

2. SCO

how to add default routes in SCO

Hi, I add following routes manually each time system reboots: #route add 192.168.1.0 -gateway 192.168.0.90 #route add 192.168.200.0 -gateway 192.168.0.200 Is there any way in SCO 7.1.1 to automate this route add process? i.e. each time system reboots, it automatically adds these routes in... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tayyabq8
1 Replies

3. Solaris

Where are routes stored ?

Hi there When adding a route (or indeed deleting a route) which file is amended ? I am moving a box from one network to another and when it starts up it tries to connect run 'add net 192.x.x.x' etc etc ...but i dont want it to do that where do I edit these route additions cheers (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: hcclnoodles
5 Replies

4. AIX

Static Routes question

I added a static route through smit using: Communications applications and Services ==> TCIP/IP ==> Further Configuration ==> Static Routes ==> Add a Static Route ==> Route Type of host Filled in Destination Address, Default Gateway Address and Network Interface of en0. This... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jyoung
2 Replies

5. Solaris

Add Static Routes to new physical address

Hi, I need help to add new route: 10.252.0.138, GW 10.252.0.129 to e1000g1 and 10.252.0.10, GW 10.252.0.1 to e1000g2 tnx (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mehrdad68
4 Replies

6. IP Networking

I need HELP to Set up Coyote Linux router with 1 static IP & 64 internal static IP

hello, i need help on setting my coyote linux, i've working on this for last 5 days, can't get it to work. I've been posting this message to coyote forum, and other linux forum, but haven't get any answer yet. Hope someone here can help me...... please see my attached picture first. ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: dlwoaud
0 Replies

7. SCO

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... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: gibson_hg
5 Replies

8. Programming

Even the Static cURL Library Isn't Static

I'm writing a program which uses curl to be run on Linux PCs which will be used by a number of different users. I cannot make the users all install curl on their individual machines, so I have tried to link curl in statically, rather than using libcurl.so. I downloaded the source and created a... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: BrandonShw
8 Replies

9. Red Hat

Centos-quick way to check if static routes are persistent

Hi All, Is there a quick way to check whether the current routes on my centos are persistent or not before rebooting ? i can take a route -n output but i may completely lost access to my server if the routes are gone. thanks. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: coolatt
1 Replies

10. Red Hat

How to set static routes for packets, within the same Network?

I have three systems A,B,C. I want to configure A in such a way that all packets from A to C goes via B. I tried: 1. ip route add 'ip of C' via 'ip of B' 2. route add -net 'net address' netmask gw 'ip of B' These commands work initially when I try a ping or traceroute and expire after... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kanak
2 Replies
ripquery(8)						      System Manager's Manual						       ripquery(8)

NAME
ripquery - Queries RIP gateways SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/ripquery [-1] [-2] [-[a5] authkey] [-n] [-p] [-r] [-v] [-w time] gateway ... FLAGS
Sends the query as a version 1 packet. Sends the query as a version 2 packet (default). Specifies the authentication password to use for queries. If -a specified, an authentication type of SIMPLE will be used, if -5 is specified, an authentication type of MD5 will be used, otherwise the default is an authentication type of NONE. Authentication fields in incoming packets will be displayed, but not validated. Prevents the address of the responding host from being looked up to determine the symbolic name. Uses the RIP POLL command to request information from the routing table. This is the default. If there is no response to the RIP POLL command, the RIP REQUEST command is tried. The gated daemon responds to a POLL command with all the routes learned through RIP. Used the RIP REQUEST command to request information from the gateway's routing table. Unlike the RIP POLL command, all gateways should support the RIP REQUEST. If there is no response to the RIP REQUEST command, the RIP POLL command is tried. The gated daemon responds to a REQUEST command with all the routes he announces out the specified interface. Because of limitations in the UDP interface, on systems based on BSD 4.3 Reno or earlier, REQUESTs respond about the interface used to route packets back to the sender. This can be avoided by running ripquery on the host being queried. Displays version information about ripquery before querying the gateways. Specifies the time in seconds to wait for the initial response from a gateway. The default value is 5 seconds. DESCRIPTION
The ripquery command is used to request all routes known by a RIP gateway by sending a RIP request or POLL command. The routing informa- tion in any routing packets returned is displayed numerically and symbolically. The ripquery command is intended to be used as a tool for debugging gateways, not for network management. SNMP is the preferred protocol for network management. The ripquery command by default uses the RIP POLL command, which is an undocumented extension to the RIP specification supported by routed on SunOS 3.x and later and by gated 1.4 and later. The RIP POLL command is preferred over the RIP REQUEST command because it is not sub- ject to Split Horizon or Poisoned Reverse. See the RIP RFC for more information. RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: gated(8), gdc(8), ospf_monitor(8), routed(8) delim off ripquery(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:06 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy