Kent Schumacher wrote: > > Bob Tanner wrote: > > > > Quoting Kurt Schumacher (burtmetcalf at mediaone.net): > > > I am somewhat a novice at Linux and I just got a cable modem through RR > > > (3Com) and want to hook it up to my Linux machine. I installed it under > > > Windows to make sure everything was working. Can anyone help me get it > > > connected and running under Linux. As I said, I am somewhat of a novice > > > so if you can make it easy to understand, I would appreciate it. > > > > What distribution? > > -- > > I took an interest in Kurt's system over the weekend and failed utterly > to get it working. > > He's running a 2.2.18 kernel on a RedHat 6.1 base. > > The Windows 95 machine has a netgear fa311 card and a single 10baseT > cable runs from the NIC to the cable modem - as Kurt said it's a > 3com modem. The 3com web site has a lot of docs on cable modems > but not Kurt's specific modem. At any rate. > > Kurt has a working SMC network card in his linux machine, so I > had him move the cable to the network card and then had him > run the netcfg app and set the IP parameters (IP address, > netmask, etc...) to the same values he had on the windows > machine. When he tried to ping qwest.net IP address it > failed with a network not found. Note that this was the > direct IP number, not the name. > > Kurt was not able to find a gateway address on his Windows box > (and I haven't run Windows in years so I couldn't help him). Try "192.168.100.1" == the cable modem. My working setup includes an /etc/sysconfig/network which looks like: > NETWORKING=yes > HOSTNAME=YourMachineNameHere > GATEWAYDEV= > GATEWAY=192.168.100.1 > FORWARD_IPV4=yes > IPX="no" > IPXINTERNALNETNUM="0" > IPXINTERNALNODENUM="0" > IPXAUTOPRIMARY="on" > IPXAUTOFRAME="on" If he has a second NIC on the box, make sure you're priming the right NIC at boot time. > I then had him move the netgear fa311 to the linux box on the > off chance that RoadRunner was tracking the MAC address, and had > him install the netgear driver. > > After all was installed, I had him try a dhcpcd eth0, which > has always worked with my Cisco 675. The cable modem lights > blinked for a while and then dhcpcd exited. > > /var/log/messages showed that dhcpcd had timed out. > > I guess what would be helpful is just some general information. > > Does RoadRunner need to be hooked to a specific NIC? Yes... use the NIC that it was installed with on the Windows box. The modem is configured with that MAC address and won't talk to any others. > What mode is the 3com modem running in. Should it be treated > like a wire, a router, or ??? Treat it like a gateway. > Is DHCP the proper way to get an IP address set up? Yes. RPM version dhcp-2.0b1pl6-6 works. Some previous versions didn't. > If so, any clues as to why dhcpcd failed? > > What are the rest of you doing to make it work? Once the connection lease is granted, use pump in a root cron script to keep the lease open. Leases are usually only 12 hours long, so renew at least every 6 hours. > > Thanks, > Kent No problem, -Steve