Don't know if this helps, but here are my
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 and /etc/resolv.conf files (remember
this is from a RH6.0 box and yours may be in a different place)
ifcfg-eth0::
DEVICE=eth0
IPADDR=10.0.0.120
NETMASK=255.255.255.0
NETWORK=10.0.0.0
GATEWAY=10.0.0.1
BROADCAST=127.255.255.255
ONBOOT=yes
resolv.conf::
search localdomain
nameserver 206.80.192.1
nameserver 204.147.80.5
> uswest.net is the ISP and the internal network is 10.0.0.x/24 as you surmised. The
> routing and DNS were working fine until Sunday which is a mystery because I didn't
> do any changes. I booted into windows to play a game and booted back into linux and
> it's had the problem ever since.
> > More info please. Who is your ISP??? If it is USWest, then What is your
> > internal network (10.0.0.x/24???). I'm currently using this router for USWest
> > (DSL and ISP) in PPP mode and my Linux box (RH6.0 Dec Alpha) has no problem with
> > it as the gateway. I do not have X installed (I like CLI in Linux). Only real
> > problem I had was getting the name servers configured (took 30 min on web to
> > find solution) and could then use the system fine. Internally the linux box is
> > given a static IP (all the other boxes are given dynamic IPs, but dhcpd and
> > pump?? don't work with the router).
> > > Cisco 675 DSL router
> > > Mandrake 7.0
> > >
> > > I can't route to other networks when I use the DSL router as the
> > > gateway. It worked for quite a while but suddenly stopped (with no
> > > changes from my end). when I try to look at the routing table with
> > > 'netstat -r' it shows all the routes and then hangs just before the DSL
> > > router's entry. It just hangs there forever.. If I remove the route
> > > (route del default), the route command doesn't hang anymore. If I re-add
> > > the route (route add default gw 10.0.0.1) it just hangs again. I can
> > > ping the router and it seems OK. The strange thing is that the router
> > > works fine if I reboot into win98 (I had to boot into windows to send
> > > this email).
> > >
> > > Not being a network expert, I'm a bit perplexed. I know (or have read
> > > somewhere [must be correct if I read it right :) ] that some OS's rely
> > > on an "active" router to respong to routed request's with some sort of
> > > ACK while others are happy with a "passive" route with no response from
> > > routed on the router. Could this have some sort of relation to my
> > > problem or am I even more confused than I think I am?
--
"Intel giveth and Microsoft Taketh Away" - Gordon Moore