* Chuck Collins (cstude1@home.com) wrote: > I have Cox cable that is not on a windows network. I have Irix 6.5.14 > machines coming through a BSD firewall. Cox does not support this OS. How do > I do it manually? ChangingBSD to dchp from static takes me of line. Is there > a FAQ on Cox cable site for ##ix systems. Really, no. It's an unuspported OS, and more strictly, utilizing "Cox Services" (heh) for more than one machine at a time (heh heh heh) is prohibited along with IP Translation ... ie, no IP Masq. Just finished reading the cox.net terms of service. So this email never happened, and you're using Win95. For those of you putting conversion off to the very last minute, such as myself, allow me to share my most apprehensive speculations. To initiate the conversion process, one must take the Confirmation number mailed in the Cox Toolbox (heh), and click through a couple of web forms correlating your account's authoritative email address with it, and allowing you to select a new password for your administrative account. The next instruction is to toss in the install CD. Oh oh, threw mine out along with all the glossies from the Cox Box (heh) -- that mailing cost them a gem! But no need to worry, looks like the CD just autoconfigures your TCP/IP settings for DHCP (as far as anyone knows). Couple of things here: Before I was instructed to pop in the ol' CD, it was made clear that any other email accounts "must" be configured _after_ I convert the DHCP settings. And further, (THIS COULD BE A MATTER) I should be careful NOT to change the cox hostname currently assigned, before I attempt the "migration". So for anyone, not myself, considering using a LEAF LRP solution to protect their SINGLE computer from the internet at large, be sure to send that old cox identifier the first time, but probably not again. This could mean some config file editing. THIS IS SPECULATION. Am just strategizing on the change -- if I hear from a friend how it actually goes, I'll drop a line. By the way, speaking of LEAF LRP. A recent announcement was made of a single floppy 2.4.16 based LEAF firewalling solution. Iptables firewall on a floppy, sure! Why not! http://leaf.sourceforge.net/devel/jnilo/ Cox n fishnet! wot, Gontran PS: Gentoo GNU/Linux allows you to upgrade _even_ your glibc on the fly without any interuptions to your running applicaions/services. Further, new 'update --world' functionality allows all of your core and extended applications to be updated automatique. Simplemente fantastique monique! http://www.gentoo.org