  | |  | Mount | Mount 2004-04-13 - By sg@(protected)
Back Sir,
You are right.
here is /etc/hosts
127.0.0.1 Greenlands.sgcricket.com Greenlands localhost.localdomain localhost
192.168.0.1 net
this is the /etc/hosts for linux machine A. and same is for Linux machine B.
And the ip address of linux machines are
Linux machine A having 192.168.0.254
Linux machine B having 192.168.0.252
Please give me how can i do this.
Rajeev.
*=============================
> sg@(protected) wrote:
> > Sir,
> >
> > I am having two linux machine and one windows 98 machine they are
> > connecting each other over ethernet card and i have install internet
> > connection on windows 98 machine and ip address of that machine is
> > 192.168.0.1 and i have define this ip address is default gateway for
> > both
> > linux machine to use internet connection when i have connect to internet
> > then i am able to mount both linux machine.
>
> I 'm still not clear exactly what your configuration is, but this is the
> way I 'm thinking of it:
>
> You three machines: two Linux and one W98. These are all connected via
> ethernet to a switch or hub with the W98 machine presenting a fixed IP
> address of 192.168.0.1 to the hub or switch. The other two machines
> must have addresses on the same subnet, either by a fixed adddress or by
> having the Windows box run a DHCP server.
>
> The W98 machine _also_ has a modem (cable modem, DSL, or dialup) that
> connects it to the internet and that the W98 machine has connection
> sharing enabled (which turns the W98 box into a router, too).
>
> Did I get that right?
>
> My suspicions are now one of the following:
>
> a) Your Linux boxes are using DHCP to get their addresses and the W98
> box doesn 't do DHCP, so what 's actually happening is the Linux boxes are
> depending on your ISP for DHCP services. That won 't be available until
> the W98 box connects to the ISP.
>
> b) You are using the ISP 's DNS service to identify the machines and
> again, that won 't be available until the W98 box connects to the ISP.
>
> The easiest way to get around this is to use fixed IPs and modified
> /etc/hosts files on the Linux boxes to identify the various machines.
> That way you are not dependent on DHCP or DNS for anything and your
> network will run regardless of the status of the connection to the ISP.
>
> If you don 't know how to do this, let me know and I can help you out.
> -- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --
> - Rick Stevens, Senior Systems Engineer rstevens@(protected) -
> - VitalStream, Inc.
http://www.vitalstream.com
-
> - -
> - If you 're not part of the solution, you 're part of the precipitate -
> -- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --
>
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