
                   comp.os.os2.networking.tcp_ip    (Usenet)

                 Saturday, 11-Dec-1999 to Friday, 17-Dec-1999

+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: sma.spam-not@rtd.com                              11-Dec-99 05:33:02
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 03:29:26
Subj: Re: Networking a HP LaserJet4...

From: James Moe <sma.spam-not@rtd.com>


"Dave {Reply Address in.sig}" wrote:
> 
> >>
> >  As I recall, HP is discontinuing ALL versions of JetAdmin, not just
> >os/2. The replacement is WebJetAdmin.
> >
> Which is not supported in an OS/2-only version as far as I can tell,
> you need the NT server stuff.
> 
  I have WebJetAdmon running on my computer at work which is os/2.

-- 

sma at rtd dot com
Remove ".spam-not" for email

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From: 72764.2166@csi.com                                11-Dec-99 00:42:16
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 03:29:27
Subj: Re: Connecting to a Linux server

From: "Barry" <72764.2166@csi.com>

Lorne,

I just downloaded and installed WR8610, but got the same results.  I also
noticed there is a WR8620, should I apply that fix or is it buggy?

Barry


On Fri, 10 Dec 1999 05:47:00 GMT, Lorne Sunley wrote:

>On Fri, 10 Dec 1999 05:02:54, "Barry" <72764.2166@csi.com> wrote:
>
>> I have 2 computers networked.  Computer #1 runs Red Hat Linux 6.0, 
Computer
>> #2 is a dual boot OS/2-WIN98 computer.  If I boot Computer #2 to WIN98 and
>> set it up to use either DHCP or manually entering of the IP address, I do
>> connect to the Linux box and see the shares.  
>> If I boot computer #2 to OS/2 and setup TCPIP to manually enter the IP
>> address, I do connect to the Linux box and see the shares.
>> However, If I change the TCPIP settings to automatically get IP address
using
>> the Linux computer's DHCP server (and that is the only change I am making),
>> reboot, I do NOT see the Linux box.  I know the DHCP is working okay on the
>> OS/2 side since the DHCP monitor shows a valid lease with the correct IP
>> address (the same IP address that shows when I boot WIN98 using DHCP).  Of
>> course if I change back to manually entering the IP address, the shares
then
>> show up.  Any ideas?
>> 
>
>What version of MPTS do you have installed?
>
>There are bugs in the earlier releases of MPTS and it's
>DHCP handling. If you haven't tried it yet update the
>MPTS level to WR8610.
>
>--
>
>Lorne Sunley
>



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From: lsunley@mb.sympatico.ca                           11-Dec-99 05:59:04
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 03:29:27
Subj: Re: Connecting to a Linux server

From: lsunley@mb.sympatico.ca (Lorne Sunley)

On Sat, 11 Dec 1999 05:42:33, "Barry" <72764.2166@csi.com> wrote:

> Lorne,
> 
> I just downloaded and installed WR8610, but got the same results.  I also
> noticed there is a WR8620, should I apply that fix or is it buggy?
> 

<snip>

You might as well. That one is updated with the same
tool you use to apply the regular OS fixpacks. So you 
will need the CSF 1.41 fixtool.

--

Lorne Sunley

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From: shelton@net1inc.net                               10-Dec-99 23:28:17
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 03:29:27
Subj: telnet

From: shelton <shelton@net1inc.net>

Where can I find some info on setting up telnet to log into a bbs ??????

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From: lsunley@mb.sympatico.ca                           11-Dec-99 05:51:13
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 03:29:27
Subj: Re: telnet

From: lsunley@mb.sympatico.ca (Lorne Sunley)

On Sat, 11 Dec 1999 05:28:34, shelton <shelton@net1inc.net> wrote:

> Where can I find some info on setting up telnet to log into a bbs ??????
> 

Try TCPHELP TELNET

If you have your TCP/IP stack set up all you usually
have to do is type

TELNET whatever.the.bbs.name.is

and log on using the BBS log on procedure.

The telnet client can be set up to emulate a
number of different types of terminals, but the
default usually works.

--

Lorne Sunley

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From: shelton@net1inc.net                               11-Dec-99 00:51:03
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 03:29:27
Subj: Re: telnet

From: shelton <shelton@net1inc.net>

I'm sorry what I meant was setting up telnetd to get to my bbs ( tribbs)

          It has been a long day !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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From: tholenAntiSpam@hawaii.edu                         11-Dec-99 07:07:08
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 05:07:10
Subj: Re: telnet

From: tholenAntiSpam@hawaii.edu

shelton writes:

> I'm sorry what I meant was setting up telnetd to get to my bbs ( tribbs)

Go into the TCP/IP configuration notebook and find the page that allows
you to enable telnetd.  You are given the choice of running telnetd by
itself, or letting the inetd super server handle it.  Of course, you'll
need to establish a password for telnet access.

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From: bdavis@fn.net                                     11-Dec-99 07:33:04
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 05:07:10
Subj: Re: telnet

From: bdavis@fn.net (Brian Davis)

On Sat, 11 Dec 1999 05:28:34, shelton <shelton@net1inc.net> wrote:

> Where can I find some info on setting up telnet to log into a bbs ??????
>
 
The default telnet in OS/2 will work but it won't allow you to
up/download anything if my memory serves me correctly.
Zoc and Hyperaccess can be used as telnet clients or
you can visit http://ozone.eesc.com and grab a free, no
frills telnet client called mTelnet that works just great.

Brian Davis (bdavis@fn.net)

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From: l_luciano@da.mob                                  11-Dec-99 09:33:09
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 10:16:29
Subj: Re: telnet

From: l_luciano@da.mob (Stan Goodman)

On Sat, 11 Dec 1999 06:51:07, shelton <shelton@net1inc.net> wrote:

> I'm sorry what I meant was setting up telnetd to get to my bbs ( tribbs)
> 
>           It has been a long day !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Apparently.

So type "TCPHELP TELNETD " instead.

-------------
Stan Goodman
Qiryat Tiv'on
Israel

E-mail sent to l_luciano@da.mob will, of course, not reach me. Sorry.
Send E-mail to: domain: hashkedim dot com, username: stan.


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From: jpolt@bradnet.legend.co.uk                        11-Dec-99 11:19:03
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 10:17:00
Subj: Re: telnet

From: jpolt@bradnet.legend.co.uk (John Poltorak)

In <UzTquBBFVYHy-pn2-StnL9xfuBbc9@Zeus>, bdavis@fn.net (Brian Davis) writes:
>On Sat, 11 Dec 1999 05:28:34, shelton <shelton@net1inc.net> wrote:
>
>> Where can I find some info on setting up telnet to log into a bbs ??????
>>
> 
>The default telnet in OS/2 will work but it won't allow you to
>up/download anything if my memory serves me correctly.
>Zoc and Hyperaccess can be used as telnet clients or
>you can visit http://ozone.eesc.com and grab a free, no
>frills telnet client called mTelnet that works just great.

Kermit offers a very feature rich environment for using telnet.

>Brian Davis (bdavis@fn.net)

--
John

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From: jpolt@bradnet.legend.co.uk                        11-Dec-99 11:29:14
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 10:17:00
Subj: FINGERD

From: jpolt@bradnet.legend.co.uk (John Poltorak)

There is a really nice Finger Daemon program by Billy Glover FINGD105.ZIP,
but I can't get it working properly under WSeB.

Has anyone had any success with it?

The problem may well be related to EMX rather than WSeB, since 
popuplog.os2 shows a trap in EMXLIBCM.DLL. The last time I ran it
successfully was with Warp Server and a previous version of EMX.

--
John

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From: bj@fx.dk                                          11-Dec-99 15:56:13
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 14:33:26
Subj: Re: Injoy Firewall logging

From: Bjarne Jensen <bj@fx.dk>

> But the product doesn't behave as documented. (see below)

Well, no reason for such an assertion when you have yet to
figure out what the exact problem is. I can guarantee you
that if logging is turned off in the right places, then it's
really OFF!

> My problem is that I have logging control = disabled on
>all my rules, yet the hard drive goes constantly whenever
>the firewall is accessed,  and the log shows every single

Either logging it turned off in the wrong places or you have
forgot to turn off the trace facility in gwpm.exe. If logging
really is what gives the harddisk ticks then simply look
directly in the log to see which firewall rule that is
responsible.

I think you'll find that the harddisk ticks are caused by
something else. Maybe accounting rules?

I can assist you if you e-mail me privately or on the InJoy
mailing list.





Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

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From: merlins@ibm.net                                   11-Dec-99 17:13:11
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 16:33:29
Subj: Re: telnet

From: Meinolf Sondermann <merlins@ibm.net>


shelton wrote:
> 
> I'm sorry what I meant was setting up telnetd to get to my bbs ( tribbs)
> 
>           It has been a long day !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I don't think that telnetd will you the trick. Escpecially up-/donloads will
not be easy to setup. Have a look at Ray Gwinn's SIO package. It has a nice
utility called "Virtual Modem". It emulates a comport/modem on a TCP/IP stack.
For incoming calls it listens on the Telnet port (23). You can run the same
BBS software as you did for years with your real modem.

Bye/2
Meinolf

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From: operagost@e-mail.com                              11-Dec-99 22:12:17
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 19:49:08
Subj: Re: Networking a HP LaserJet4...

From: "Stephen Eickhoff (remove the - to reply)" <operagost@e-mail.com>

You can configure printers from any browser using WebJetAdmin. However, you
escape the fact that will probably need a really powerful server running
Windows NT to host it.

By the way, I saw some comments in this thread about DLC. You can use DLC to
print to JetDirects, but you must add the 802.2 protocol in MPTS to do so. I
recommend against it on either OS/2 or Windows NT. Instead, on NT install
TCP/IP Printing support and set up an LPD port. Use "raw" as the service name.
With OS/2, I've found it easiest to use JetAdmin and enable only TCP/IP. Then
I go into printer properties and add a new HP Network port for that printer.

James Moe wrote:
> 
> "Dave {Reply Address in.sig}" wrote:
> >
> > >>
> > >  As I recall, HP is discontinuing ALL versions of JetAdmin, not just
> > >os/2. The replacement is WebJetAdmin.
> > >
> > Which is not supported in an OS/2-only version as far as I can tell,
> > you need the NT server stuff.
> >
>   I have WebJetAdmon running on my computer at work which is os/2.
> 
> --
> 
> sma at rtd dot com
> Remove ".spam-not" for email

-- 
----------------------------------
         Stephen Eickhoff
          Havertown, PA
----------------------------------

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From: wsrue@BellAtlantic.net                            11-Dec-99 23:03:13
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 19:49:08
Subj: Re: DSL Not Always On

From: "Walter S. Rue" <wsrue@BellAtlantic.net>

My original statement that BellAtlantic recognized only M$ Windows
clients was incomplete.  They also support certain Apple Mac clients. 
The software comes from iVasion, who is otherwise unknown to me.

But my surprise at the OS restriction leads me to wonder if a "bait and
switch" game is afoot.  None of the prominent announcements, promotions
or FAQs I could find at www.bellatlantic.com/infospeed mentioned OS
requirements.  Not even PPP was identified.  Maybe the silence was
simply because their first round of DSL service used static IP addresses
and they hadn't got round to updating the material.  But when asked to
confirm their RFC support, they had nothing to say.  Instead, they
referred me to iVasion, who replied only with a couple of Linux sites
dealing with PPP issues, perhaps trying to imply something.  Responding
to a direct question later, I finally heard one technical rep admit that
PPPoE was the protocol.  I guess I am not sure they were obfuscating
deliberately.  But some of this was clearly unprofessional and
amaturish.  Maybe M$ played a role too -- who knows!

Eventually, I found a technical rep who claimed familiarity with Linux
and, in response to an e-mail, heard from another claiming familiarity
with OS/2.  The latter assured me that connection was possible but did
not say how.  Later, after I was up and running, the rep on the phone
during the initial connection test was originally skeptical but
afterward invited me to send a description so they would have something
for future OS/2 users.


"Walter S. Rue" wrote:
> 
> Maybe I was imagining it, but I was sure that the BellAtlantic rep I
> spoke with about their DSL service said that OS/2 was supported.  In the
> install kit they sent, the CD with only Win software on it was the first
> ominous sign, then the instruction booklets with only Win related
> instructions in it, finally the voiced denial by their reps when I
> phoned back to confirm.
> 
> They require a special signon after the TCP/IP (DHCP) connection using
> proprietary software from IVasion named PoET, to be repeated at the
> beginning of each session (even though the line is non-switched).
> IVasion products are exclusively Win9x & NT.  No static IP options.  So
> much for "always on".
> 
> Might this signon after all be a standardized process available in the
> likes of InJoy?  Has anyone else worked around a similar problem?

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From: bernat@mail.dotcom.fr                             11-Dec-99 22:41:11
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 19:49:08
Subj: Firewall

From: Vincent Bernat <bernat@mail.dotcom.fr>

Hello !

I would like to know what is the best firewall for a dial-up connection 
for OS/2.
NAT translation is optionnal, logging is important, complete control on 
rules is important too.
I have tried InJoy FW and SafeFire but both seems to be aimed at 
permanent connexion (don't see the dial-up connexion as a lan adapter). 
I have tried the one supplied with TCP/IP 4.1 but it lacks of 
documentation and it doesn't want to log anything (LOG_DLL: OPENLOG: 
facility=32, error code=3, dosopen: error code = 3).
-- 
Vincent Bernat
 http://wguide.citeweb.net/

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From: davidb@magicnet.net                               11-Dec-99 22:56:09
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 19:49:08
Subj: Re: Firewall

From: davidb@magicnet.net

Try InternetGate from maccasoft.com.  It allows free evaluation with one
server & one client.  You
must be using TCPIP.  It also can be configured for lan, dial-up or permanent
cable.

Let me know if you try it.  I've set it up on dial-up and it works well and
I'm waiting
for cable in my area.

David

davidb@magicnet.net



In <MPG.12bce36fbab1a15b9897e3@news.lucas.loria>, Vincent Bernat
<bernat@mail.dotcom.fr> writes:
>Hello !
>
>I would like to know what is the best firewall for a dial-up connection 
>for OS/2.
>NAT translation is optionnal, logging is important, complete control on 
>rules is important too.
>I have tried InJoy FW and SafeFire but both seems to be aimed at 
>permanent connexion (don't see the dial-up connexion as a lan adapter). 
>I have tried the one supplied with TCP/IP 4.1 but it lacks of 
>documentation and it doesn't want to log anything (LOG_DLL: OPENLOG: 
>facility=32, error code=3, dosopen: error code = 3).
>-- 
>Vincent Bernat
> http://wguide.citeweb.net/

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From: wsrue@BellAtlantic.net                            12-Dec-99 00:23:05
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 21:20:14
Subj: Re: DSL Not Always On

From: "Walter S. Rue" <wsrue@BellAtlantic.net>

After finally determining that PPPoE was the required protocol, "up and
running" became rather simple.  Some details might be of use.

The BellAtlantic DSL service in my area (north of Boston) is branded as
"Infospeed DSL", URL www.bellatlantic.com/infospeed.  By the way, this
was NYNEX until the recent merger, and the "Infospeed" DSL incarnation
may have been of NYNEX origin.  In addition to the data line, it
features simultaneous voice, so we retain our original phone number and
voice service.  I chose the 640kb speed for price reasons, but two
higher speeds are also available.  Instead of the static IP address I
expected (and which Mr. Glass apparently has), they use PPPoE for its
connect & disconnect functions, even though the line itself is
electrically nonswitched.  BA explained that with static addresses
Windows' Network Neighborhood somehow showed all of them together,
making them equally accessible (maybe firewalls are only for those in
the know).  So PPPoE with its connection control was their response.

From Mr. Thacker's suggestion, I downloaded Link Guard Solution's
Safefire PPP over Ethernet (SFPPP).  After clearing up questions about
which (sample) CFG files to use and which path they should be in, and
also about dissociating TCP/IP from the ethernet card, it simply worked
and continues to work.  It is true after all: this DSL is (nearly)
always on!  I should add that LGS technical support was very responsive
and knowledgable.  But one thing the iVasion clients do that SFPPP
doesn't is the one-time account setup -- establishing the userid/mailid
& password and selecting a mail server.  So BA did that for me over the
phone.  The resulting uid/pw, of course, are copied into the CFG.

Apart from the OS & protocol obfuscations, the other thing I dislike is
the requirement to change ISP.  BA states that other ISP choices may be
available later, without saying when.  But later is too late.  I could
keep ATTGlobal for e-mail only, of course, but the duplicate expense and
the repeated switching from DSL to dial-up and back would be a big
nuisance.  So, except for the unlikely event that ATT makes an ISP deal
with BA within the next few days, I'm out.  It seems that at least
e-mail continuity may be a thing of the past.

-Walter


"Walter S. Rue" wrote:
> 
> Maybe I was imagining it, but I was sure that the BellAtlantic rep I
> spoke with about their DSL service said that OS/2 was supported.  In the
> install kit they sent, the CD with only Win software on it was the first
> ominous sign, then the instruction booklets with only Win related
> instructions in it, finally the voiced denial by their reps when I
> phoned back to confirm.
> 
> They require a special signon after the TCP/IP (DHCP) connection using
> proprietary software from IVasion named PoET, to be repeated at the
> beginning of each session (even though the line is non-switched).
> IVasion products are exclusively Win9x & NT.  No static IP options.  So
> much for "always on".
> 
> Might this signon after all be a standardized process available in the
> likes of InJoy?  Has anyone else worked around a similar problem?

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From: rde@tavi.co.uk                                    11-Dec-99 23:44:21
  To: All                                               11-Dec-99 21:20:14
Subj: NAT and WSeB?

From: rde@tavi.co.uk (Bob Eager)

A while ago (more than once) I recall seeing comments on using NAT 
under WSeB, using the vanilla system rather than an add-on such as 
InJoy. I particularly recall that it was supposed to be difficult to 
find out about hiw to do it!

I agree. I can't find out.

Anyone have any pointers please? Which CD should I be looking at for 
starters!
-- 
Bob Eager
rde at tavi.co.uk
PC Server 325; PS/2s 8595*3, 9595*3 (2*P60 + P90), 8535, 8570, 9556*2,
8580*6,
8557*2, 8550, 9577, 8530, P70, PC/AT..

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From: prmlaw@bellatlantic.net                           12-Dec-99 01:53:29
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 02:24:03
Subj: Re: DSL Not Always On

From: "Philip R. Mann" <prmlaw@bellatlantic.net>

On Sun, 12 Dec 1999 00:23:10 GMT, Walter S. Rue wrote:

>I could keep ATTGlobal for e-mail only, of course, but the duplicate expense
and
>the repeated switching from DSL to dial-up and back would be a big
>nuisance. 

ATTGlobal mail can be downloaded from BellAtlantic.Net and vice-versa.

Until BellAtlantic.Net establishes a better dialup system (its only
available from Va to NJ), you'll probably want to keep a nationwide ISP as
backup anyhow.

----- PRM -----


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From: rlackl1@attglobal.net                             12-Dec-99 03:38:08
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 10:13:27
Subj: DOIP

From: rlackl1@attglobal.net

In <mfDT4kDg6xAQ090yn@ibm.net>, on 12/06/99 
   at 05:25 PM, dcasey@ibm.net (Dan Casey) said:

>In article <384ac007$2$eynpxy1$mr2ice@news-s01.ny.us.ibm.net>,
>rlackl1@attglobal.net wrote:
>>I know there was some discussion of this here a couple of months ago but
>>unfortunately I didn't save it.
>>
>>I can get the alternate SLIP dialer to dial, connect and log in, but I
>>can't get it to work with Netscape (2.02) or MR/2 ICE.  It just sits
>>there.

>Sounds like your connection is not finding a DNS server (to resolve the
>Domain Name). Check your C:\MPTN\ETC directory for a file named "resolv"
>(no quotes) and see if it has the information for your ISP and DNS
>server. Mine looks like this:

>domain iquest.net
>nameserver 206.246.140.95

Thanks for the assist.  I suppose it's progress, but now (using LINKUP) I
get a connect and logon, and it starts MR2 just fine.  But after a few
minutes the dialer displays the message "SYS1806 The system cannot start
the program in the foreground" - even though MR2 is running just fine
(although it's just sitting "checking for new mail", it's obviously not
getting through).

-------
rlackl1@attglobal.net
-------

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From: tvv@sbs.kiev.ua                                   12-Dec-99 11:26:29
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 10:13:27
Subj: Re: Firewall

From: tvv@sbs.kiev.ua (Vit Timchishin)

On Sat, 11 Dec 1999 21:41:23, Vincent Bernat <bernat@mail.dotcom.fr> wrote:

> Hello !
> 
> I would like to know what is the best firewall for a dial-up connection 
> for OS/2.
> NAT translation is optionnal, logging is important, complete control on 
> rules is important too.
> I have tried InJoy FW and SafeFire but both seems to be aimed at 
> permanent connexion (don't see the dial-up connexion as a lan adapter). 
> I have tried the one supplied with TCP/IP 4.1 but it lacks of 
> documentation and it doesn't want to log anything (LOG_DLL: OPENLOG: 
> facility=32, error code=3, dosopen: error code = 3).
Try SafeFire PPP. It is the package suited for Dial-up connections

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From: scalisi@tin.it                                    12-Dec-99 11:46:01
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 14:24:13
Subj: Re: Firewall

From: scalisi@tin.it

In <mEA44.49889$oa2.429803@iad-read.news.verio.net>, on 12/11/99
   at 11:56 PM, davidb@magicnet.net said:

>Try InternetGate from maccasoft.com. 
>It allows free evaluation with one server & one client.
>You must be using TCPIP. 
>It also can be configured for lan, dial-up or permanent cable.

I am not able to use igate between two win98 connected via a parallel port.
The direct connection win98 -_ win98 works for file transfer, but no for
tcpip connections. Has anyone tried it?
--
-----------------------------------------------------------
Antonio(Nino) Scalisi           scalisi@tin.it
at 11:46(+0100, relative to GMT) on Sunday, 12 Dec 1999
Using MR/2 ICE v2.02  Reg: #20729.
Under ---> OS/2 WARP 4 rev.9.036 (fixpack 12)
Java ver.  1.1.8  build 19991026
ObjREXX 6.00   TCPIP 4.2 - MPTN 6.2007 (TCPIP 4.1 + W08620)
-----------------------------------------------------------

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: jms%email.de%email.de%email.de@b...               12-Dec-99 14:17:09
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 14:24:13
Subj: ipx over tcp/ip

Message sender: jms%email.de%email.de%email.de@bromo.email.ch

From: jms%email.de%email.de%email.de@bromo.email.ch (Jens)

Any idea how to configure IPX (netware) over TCP/ip ?
(I don't have a network card, only dialup)

Thanks,
Jens -> jms@email.de

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: dcasey@ibm.net                                    12-Dec-99 10:19:04
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 14:24:13
Subj: Re: Firewall

From: dcasey@ibm.net (Dan Casey)

In article <MPG.12bce36fbab1a15b9897e3@news.lucas.loria>,
Vincent Bernat <bernat@mail.dotcom.fr> wrote:
>Hello !
>
>I would like to know what is the best firewall for a dial-up connection
>for OS/2.
>NAT translation is optionnal, logging is important, complete control on
>rules is important too.
>I have tried InJoy FW and SafeFire but both seems to be aimed at
>permanent connexion (don't see the dial-up connexion as a lan adapter).

Try the Injoy Dialer with the Firewall Plugin. Injoy Firewall (the
product) *is* aimed at a permanent connection (Cable or DSL). The
Injoy Dialer is used for Dial-Up connections, and there is a firewall
plugin available for it when you regsiter at the Professional and SOHO
level. See BMT Micro for registration.

--
**************************************************************
*  Dan Casey                                                 *
*  President                                                 *
*  V.O.I.C.E. (Virtual OS/2 International Consumer Education *
*  http://www.os2voice.org                                   *
*  Abraxas on IRC                                            *
*  http://members.iquest.net/~dcasey                         *
*  Charter Associate member, Team SETI                       *
*  Warpstock 99 in Atlanta  http://www.warpstock.org         *
**************************************************************
*  E-Mail (subject: Req. PGP Key) for Public Key             *
**************************************************************

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: shelton@net1inc.net                               12-Dec-99 09:49:16
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 14:24:14
Subj: Re: telnet

From: shelton <shelton@net1inc.net>

thanx, this more are less what I was looking for  !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: phillipd@antares.cloudnet.com                     12-Dec-99 15:56:07
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 14:24:14
Subj: Re: NAT and WSeB?

From: Phillip Davenport <phillipd@antares.cloudnet.com>

Bob Eager <rde@tavi.co.uk> wrote:
> A while ago (more than once) I recall seeing comments on using NAT 
> under WSeB, using the vanilla system rather than an add-on such as 
> InJoy. I particularly recall that it was supposed to be difficult to 
> find out about hiw to do it!

> I agree. I can't find out.

Here -
</http://publib.boulder.ibm.com:80/cgi-bin/bookmgr/BOOKS/SG242577/CCONTENTS/>

Chapter 10..

I've got a nagging recollection that somewhere I read that IBM may have
disabled NAT in stack 4.21..

  p

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: phillipd@antares.cloudnet.com                     12-Dec-99 16:06:09
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 14:24:14
Subj: Re: Firewall

From: Phillip Davenport <phillipd@antares.cloudnet.com>

Vincent Bernat <bernat@mail.dotcom.fr> wrote:

[...]
> I have tried the one supplied with TCP/IP 4.1 but it lacks of 
> documentation and it doesn't want to log anything (LOG_DLL: OPENLOG: 
> facility=32, error code=3, dosopen: error code = 3).

It wants a unix-flavored syslog facility..

  p

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: mipri@gmx.net                                     12-Dec-99 13:59:04
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 14:24:14
Subj: Re: Firewall

From: "Michael Prinzing" <mipri@gmx.net>

On Sat, 11 Dec 1999 22:41:23 +0100, Vincent Bernat wrote:

>I would like to know what is the best firewall for a dial-up connection 
>for OS/2.
>NAT translation is optionnal, logging is important, complete control on 
>rules is important too.
>I have tried InJoy FW and SafeFire but both seems to be aimed at 
>permanent connexion (don't see the dial-up connexion as a lan adapter). 

You should try the InJoy Dialer with firewall plugin (SOHO version)
instead of InJoy Firewall.


Michael



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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: rde@tavi.co.uk                                    12-Dec-99 17:05:07
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 14:24:14
Subj: Re: NAT and WSeB?

From: rde@tavi.co.uk (Bob Eager)

On Sun, 12 Dec 1999 15:56:15, Phillip Davenport 
<phillipd@antares.cloudnet.com> wrote:

> > A while ago (more than once) I recall seeing comments on using NAT 
> > under WSeB, using the vanilla system rather than an add-on such as 
> > InJoy. I particularly recall that it was supposed to be difficult to 
> > find out about hiw to do it!
> 
> > I agree. I can't find out.

> Here -
>
</http://publib.boulder.ibm.com:80/cgi-bin/bookmgr/BOOKS/SG242577/CCONTENTS/>
> 
> Chapter 10..

Thanks. It's very interesting, but all about the AIX firewall product.
Is there some equivalent included with WSeB? If so, where?

A lot of that is about firewall functionality (which is not new to me)
and Chapter 10 covers configuration. But not how to do it (or even 
install it) in WSeb...

-- 
Bob Eager
rde at tavi.co.uk
PC Server 325; PS/2s 8595*3, 9595*3 (2*P60 + P90), 8535, 8570, 9556*2,
8580*6,
8557*2, 8550, 9577, 8530, P70, PC/AT..

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: phillipd@antares.cloudnet.com                     12-Dec-99 18:31:26
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 16:45:15
Subj: Re: NAT and WSeB?

From: Phillip Davenport <phillipd@antares.cloudnet.com>

Bob Eager <rde@tavi.co.uk> wrote:
> On Sun, 12 Dec 1999 15:56:15, Phillip Davenport 
> <phillipd@antares.cloudnet.com> wrote:

>> > A while ago (more than once) I recall seeing comments on using NAT 
>> > under WSeB, using the vanilla system..
[...]
>> Here -
>>
</http://publib.boulder.ibm.com:80/cgi-bin/bookmgr/BOOKS/SG242577/CCONTENTS/>
>> 
>> Chapter 10..

> Thanks. It's very interesting, but all about the AIX firewall product.
> Is there some equivalent included with WSeB? If so, where?

In Russia, of course - </http://www.os2.spb.ru/guru/tcpip/ipsece.html/>

The book referenced above may be the ipfwdocs.zip refered to at this
link..

My niggly bit _still_ says that this may not be implemented in the OS/2
stack..

  p

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: orgrti@auto.myfreeoffice.com                      12-Dec-99 19:05:29
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 16:45:15
Subj: Great & Inexpensive Health Natural Breakthroughs!  1486

From: orgrti@auto.myfreeoffice.com

Join our online no risk discount catalog business with great products right
from factory, including some medical breakthroughs and get our free lead
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time from home and make serious money. Call 1-800-933-3508 or email to
ilikemoney@auto.myfreeoffice.com
txhmbdevkdcqpvbjoqzxbfmeodqdmhqymsbrdwomuredufhutpksi

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: lesben@ptcom.net                                  12-Dec-99 15:33:20
  To: davidb@magicnet.net                               12-Dec-99 19:56:10
Subj: Re: Firewall

To: davidb@magicnet.net
From: Les Benn <lesben@ptcom.net>

David how did you configure the mail for Netscape with internet gate?
I have the proxy server working for everything except mail. my proxy
addr is 192.168.0.1 and I left all the ports standard. I user injoy as
the dialer and have a win 98 client to my aurora server

davidb@magicnet.net wrote:
> 
> Try InternetGate from maccasoft.com.  It allows free evaluation with one
server & one client.  You
> must be using TCPIP.  It also can be configured for lan, dial-up or
permanent cable.
> 
> Let me know if you try it.  I've set it up on dial-up and it works well and
I'm waiting
> for cable in my area.
> 
> David
> 
> davidb@magicnet.net
> 
> In <MPG.12bce36fbab1a15b9897e3@news.lucas.loria>, Vincent Bernat
<bernat@mail.dotcom.fr> writes:
> >Hello !
> >
> >I would like to know what is the best firewall for a dial-up connection
> >for OS/2.
> >NAT translation is optionnal, logging is important, complete control on
> >rules is important too.
> >I have tried InJoy FW and SafeFire but both seems to be aimed at
> >permanent connexion (don't see the dial-up connexion as a lan adapter).
> >I have tried the one supplied with TCP/IP 4.1 but it lacks of
> >documentation and it doesn't want to log anything (LOG_DLL: OPENLOG:
> >facility=32, error code=3, dosopen: error code = 3).
> >--
> >Vincent Bernat
> > http://wguide.citeweb.net/

-- 
Les Benn
My computer: OS/2 Aurora Server on a K6/2 AMD 266w/96MB
My Car: Gold 1986 Fiero SE/V6 "Fire Water"
home page http://www.tg-2000.com

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: 72764.2166@csi.com                                12-Dec-99 12:59:20
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 19:56:11
Subj: Re: Connecting to a Linux server

From: "Barry" <72764.2166@csi.com>

Lorne,

I was reading thru some messages here and on Compuserve and I added something
that solved the problem.  What I did was add to DHCPD.CFG file the following:

option 12  <hostname>

with <hostname> being my actual hostname with no quotes.  Why this solved the
problem I'm not sure.  How one could know this without lucking out by reading
it I'm not sure either.

Barry


On Sat, 11 Dec 1999 05:59:08 GMT, Lorne Sunley wrote:

>On Sat, 11 Dec 1999 05:42:33, "Barry" <72764.2166@csi.com> wrote:
>
>> Lorne,
>> 
>> I just downloaded and installed WR8610, but got the same results.  I also
>> noticed there is a WR8620, should I apply that fix or is it buggy?
>> 
>
><snip>
>
>You might as well. That one is updated with the same
>tool you use to apply the regular OS fixpacks. So you 
>will need the CSF 1.41 fixtool.
>
>--
>
>Lorne Sunley
>



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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: bobmcl@ibm.net                                    11-Dec-99 14:30:02
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 19:56:11
Subj: Re: OS/2 Newbie help!!!

From: Bob McLellan <bobmcl@ibm.net>


jrosinskinews@my-deja.com wrote:

> Hello, got a problem with a warp3 box has stopped
> accepting all tcp connections (web, telnet, http)
> through the IP addresses on both NICs, even on
> the local box.  HOWEVER, when connecting locally
> using 127.0.0.1 I CAN connect.  Looks like a
> hosed TCP stack, but I'm not sure.  The problem
> started when I started getting "MPTN_NB opened ok
> handle=5" and "MPTHOST IOCTL result=0" messages
> when parsing some of the network lines in the
> config.sys on startup.
>
> ANY HELP PLEASE!!!
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Before you buy.

 First up check LANTRAN,LOG in IBMCOM to see if your LAN is initialising
correctly. If everything in there is OK then try 'netstat -r' to see if
your routes are correct and 'netstat -a' to check the addresses. Can you
ping your adapters as well as 127.0.0.1.
Certainly the messages you are getting when loading are something I have
never seen. Do you recall doing anything to the system (fixpacks, new
config etc)?

Regards

--
------------------------------------------------------
Bob McLellan
The Little Blue Kiwi
OS/2 Solutions for New Zeland


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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: barry@servtech.com                                12-Dec-99 16:49:12
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 19:56:11
Subj: TCP ?

From: barry@servtech.com (Barry Bogart)

Hi,
    I just installed Warp v4. I applied FP 12 and now I need to update the 
TCP/IP. I ran Inetver and is reports 4.00e

Where do I get the TCP/ip fixes?

Happy Holidays.

~~~ Telegard/2 v3.09.g2-sp3/mL
---
 * Origin: thesanatorium.dhs.org (1:260/432)

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: carlking@healthquestnutrition.com                 12-Dec-99 19:07:28
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 21:19:04
Subj: IBM Network Client problem on Warp server Domain.

From: Carl King <carlking@healthquestnutrition.com>

I am using the IBM Networking Client on a win95 machine and it works
quite seemlessly authenticating to a Warp Server PDC. The problem is
when I try to use the Dynamic IP client. I lose my domain controller
connectivity after I install the Dyn IP client. DHCP and DDNS work fine
at that point (I can both release and renew IP from the client and ping
other hosts by name) , but then I can't authenticate to the PDC. If I
remove the Dynamic IP client, the connectivity returns to normal. If I
try to use the MS DHCP option in Win95, I also lose an authentication
connection.

This seem more like a problem with the IBM Networks client for Win95 to
connect to a Warp server PDC since the loss of authentication happens
with either the IBM Dyn IP client or the MS Win95 DHCP option.

Feed back Please!!!!

The client is IPx8311 FixPak for IBM Networks Client for Windows 95.

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: rde@tavi.co.uk                                    13-Dec-99 01:04:08
  To: All                                               12-Dec-99 21:19:04
Subj: Re: NAT and WSeB?

From: rde@tavi.co.uk (Bob Eager)

On Sun, 12 Dec 1999 18:31:53, Phillip Davenport 
<phillipd@antares.cloudnet.com> wrote:


> > Thanks. It's very interesting, but all about the AIX firewall product.
> > Is there some equivalent included with WSeB? If so, where?
> 
> In Russia, of course - </http://www.os2.spb.ru/guru/tcpip/ipsece.html/>
> 

Thanks!

-- 
Bob Eager
rde at tavi.co.uk
PC Server 325; PS/2s 8595*3, 9595*3 (2*P60 + P90), 8535, 8570, 9556*2,
8580*6,
8557*2, 8550, 9577, 8530, P70, PC/AT..

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: sma.spam-not@rtd.com                              13-Dec-99 02:01:05
  To: All                                               13-Dec-99 03:31:20
Subj: Re: Networking a HP LaserJet4...

From: James Moe <sma.spam-not@rtd.com>


"Stephen Eickhoff (remove the - to reply)" wrote:
> 
> You can configure printers from any browser using WebJetAdmin. However, you
> escape the fact that will probably need a really powerful server running
> Windows NT to host it.
> 
   My pentium1/90 is hosting the WebJetAdmin service. I.e., it is
running the HTTP server for WebJetAdmin. I connect to myself to
configure a printer.
   It is rather slow...

-- 

sma at rtd dot com
Remove ".spam-not" for email

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: mcmorran@norfolk.infi.net                         12-Dec-99 21:23:19
  To: All                                               13-Dec-99 03:31:20
Subj: Re: DOIP

From: mcmorran@norfolk.infi.net (Peter McMorran)

In <3852c473$1$eynpxy1$mr2ice@news-s01.ny.us.ibm.net>, on
12/12/99 
   at 03:38 AM, rlackl1@attglobal.net said:


>Thanks for the assist.  I suppose it's progress, but now (using
>LINKUP) I get a connect and logon, and it starts MR2 just fine. 
>But after a few minutes the dialer displays the message "SYS1806
>The system cannot start the program in the foreground" - even
>though MR2 is running just fine (although it's just sitting
>"checking for new mail", it's obviously not getting through).

>-------
>rlackl1@attglobal.net
>-------
Hi,

This (admittedly odd) message simply means that your connection
has dropped. Either the ISP disconnected you for some reason
(unlikely in a short time), or the modem tried to retrain and
failed. You just have to find the DOIP window and hit dial to
make it redial and reconnect. The program in the foreground that
the message appears to refer to is the slip or ppp connection
program which has exited. The dialer window is just a facade that
runs these command-line based programs for you. Personally, I
like (love) InJoy which redials automatically -- wakes me up
since the sound is on.

Cheers,
Peter

-- 
--------------------------------------------------------------------
mcmorran@norfolk.infi.net (Peter McMorran)

Config: MR/2 ICE 2.02 (reg. #297),  parameters /NF:\news /ZL /T60
mail directory E:\nettools\mr2100\mail
486DX4/100, 32 Mb   Warp4, FP11, HPFS /cache:2048 /crecl:64
TCP/IP 4.02t, InJoy, V.90 modem to infi.net
--------------------------------------------------------------------

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: lesben@ptcom.net                                  12-Dec-99 22:33:14
  To: barry@servtech.com                                13-Dec-99 03:31:20
Subj: Re: TCP ?

To: Barry Bogart <barry@servtech.com>
From: Les Benn <lesben@ptcom.net>

Harry 

go to the Warp home page for IBM from there select downloads then select
software choice if you want TCP/IP 4.1 otherwise select fixpacks instead
of software choice

Barry Bogart wrote:
> 
> Hi,
>     I just installed Warp v4. I applied FP 12 and now I need to update the
> TCP/IP. I ran Inetver and is reports 4.00e
> 
> Where do I get the TCP/ip fixes?
> 
> Happy Holidays.
> 
> ~~~ Telegard/2 v3.09.g2-sp3/mL
> ---
>  * Origin: thesanatorium.dhs.org (1:260/432)

-- 
Les Benn
My computer: OS/2 Aurora Server on a K6/2 AMD 266w/96MB
My Car: Gold 1986 Fiero SE/V6 "Fire Water"
home page http://www.tg-2000.com

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: lesben@ptcom.net                                  12-Dec-99 22:39:17
  To: carlking@healthquestnutrition.com                 13-Dec-99 03:31:20
Subj: Re: IBM Network Client problem on Warp server Domain.

To: Carl King <carlking@healthquestnutrition.com>
From: Les Benn <lesben@ptcom.net>

Carl I just finished doing that on my network at home, I have Aurora
Server and win 98 (the almost Y2K compliant version). First you have to
start the DHCP Server on Warp (put a shadow in the startup folder)

Then on Win 9x open network in the Control Panel and set the button to
get ip address dynamicly. If you don't have DHCP Server I think it is
available from IBM.

Carl King wrote:
> 
> I am using the IBM Networking Client on a win95 machine and it works
> quite seemlessly authenticating to a Warp Server PDC. The problem is
> when I try to use the Dynamic IP client. I lose my domain controller
> connectivity after I install the Dyn IP client. DHCP and DDNS work fine
> at that point (I can both release and renew IP from the client and ping
> other hosts by name) , but then I can't authenticate to the PDC. If I
> remove the Dynamic IP client, the connectivity returns to normal. If I
> try to use the MS DHCP option in Win95, I also lose an authentication
> connection.
> 
> This seem more like a problem with the IBM Networks client for Win95 to
> connect to a Warp server PDC since the loss of authentication happens
> with either the IBM Dyn IP client or the MS Win95 DHCP option.
> 
> Feed back Please!!!!
> 
> The client is IPx8311 FixPak for IBM Networks Client for Windows 95.

-- 
Les Benn
My computer: OS/2 Aurora Server on a K6/2 AMD 266w/96MB
My Car: Gold 1986 Fiero SE/V6 "Fire Water"
home page http://www.tg-2000.com

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: mohd.k.yusof@bohm.anu.edu.au                      13-Dec-99 15:53:10
  To: All                                               13-Dec-99 03:31:20
Subj: Wierd problem, can't connect to certain hosts on network

From: "Khairil Yusof" <mohd.k.yusof@bohm.anu.edu.au>

I'm connected to the LAN via ethernet and on 
subnet mask 255.255.255.0

Using Warp 4/TCP4.1 (lastest fixpacks).

I can't access a computer on another subnet mask for some strange 
reason, even though I can connect to every other computer on the 
network.

I'm on at: 

fenner50.anu.edu.au 150.203.110.50

and the computer which I can't connect to has two ip addresses 
and two host names: 

help.anu.edu.au   150.203.121.96
fenner.anu.edu.au 150.203.121.99

I have no problems connecting to other computers on that subnet.
eg. 150.203.121.100, 150.203.121.101, 150.203.121.1 etc. I just can't 
connect to this computer.

I can't understand why. All other computers on the network though can 
access it. Sometimes I can but most of the time I can't. It's only one 
hop away.

Any suggestions/solutions would be much apprecieated.


----------------------------------------
       ICQ : 5783742	                            
  Homepage : http://hayai.freeshell.org
PGP Key Id : 0x6FFEFD7F


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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: leea@psynet.net                                   12-Dec-99 21:05:23
  To: All                                               13-Dec-99 03:31:20
Subj: Re: ipx over tcp/ip

From: Lee Aroner  <leea@psynet.net>

You can't run IPX OVER IP, but you can run it as well as. Just 
type "MPTS" and go through the configure screens till you get 
to the protocol setup and add IPX.

LRA 

------------------------
  From: Jens <jms%email.de%email.de%email.de@bromo.email.ch>
  Subject: ipx over tcp/ip
  Date: 12 Dec 1999 14:17:19 GMT 
  To: "comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip" 
<@news:comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip@192.168.16.2>


> 
> Any idea how to configure IPX (netware) over TCP/ip ?
> (I don't have a network card, only dialup)
> 
> Thanks,
> Jens -> jms@email.de
> 

---------------End of Original Message-----------------

--------------------------------------------------------
Name: Lee Aroner
E-mail: Lee Aroner <leea@nospm.psynet.net>

(Please remove "nospm." to reply...)

Date: 12/12/1999
Time: 21:05:47

 _,_ /|
 \`o.O' ACK!
 =(___)=
    U

--------------------------------------------------------

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(1:109/42)

+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: mohd.k.yusof@bohm.anu.edu.au                      13-Dec-99 16:37:01
  To: All                                               13-Dec-99 03:31:21
Subj: Re: Wierd problem, can't connect to certain hosts on network

From: "Khairil Yusof" <mohd.k.yusof@bohm.anu.edu.au>

Sorry.. just solved it.

Removed net entry in routes and then created a host route entry to 
help. Strange why it would not connect only to these two host 
entries..

Any explanations why?




----------------------------------------
       ICQ : 5783742	                            
  Homepage : http://hayai.freeshell.org
PGP Key Id : 0x6FFEFD7F


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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: rainer.doering@icn.siemens.de                     13-Dec-99 16:38:06
  To: All                                               13-Dec-99 14:27:00
Subj: Re: TCP ?

From: Rainer Doering <rainer.doering@icn.siemens.de>

On Sun, 12 Dec 1999 16:49:25 +0000 GMT, barry@servtech.com (Barry
Bogart) wrote:

>Hi,
>    I just installed Warp v4. I applied FP 12 and now I need to update the 
>TCP/IP. I ran Inetver and is reports 4.00e
>
>Where do I get the TCP/ip fixes?
>
>Happy Holidays.
>
>~~~ Telegard/2 v3.09.g2-sp3/mL
>---
> * Origin: thesanatorium.dhs.org (1:260/432)

Update MPTS:
ftp://service.boulder.ibm.com/ps/products/mpts/fixes/
Update PEER:
ftp://service.boulder.ibm.com/ps/products/lan/fixes/ibm.peer/
Update TCP/IP:
ftp://service.boulder.ibm.com/ps/products/tcpip/rsu/stack/

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: jstucklex@attglobal.net                           13-Dec-99 13:50:13
  To: All                                               13-Dec-99 17:04:10
Subj: Re: Socket timeouts

From: Jerry Stuckle <jstucklex@attglobal.net>

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

--------------649497B5E40
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Lee,

Sorry for the delay - I was out of town for a few days.  

Thanks for your help.  I have attached the inetcft.ini and mptcfg.ini
files.  I appreciate any suggestions you may have!

Lee Aroner wrote:
> 
> Have a look at the value for KEEPALIVE in INETCFG.EXE. Just do
> a: "INETCFG -g all" and post what you get. You might also post
> your MPTCFG.INI file.
> 
> LRA
> 
-- 

=======================================================
To reply, delete the "x" from my email address

Jerry Stuckle
jstucklex@attglobal.net
JDS Computer Training Corp.
Sun Certified Java Programmer
VisualAge/Java Certified Advanced Technical Expert
VisualAge/C++ Certified Developer

=======================================================

--------------649497B5E40
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; name="inetcfg.ini"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline; filename="inetcfg.ini"

#Inetcfg:	CURRENT	DEFAULT	MINIMUM	MAXIMUM

keepalive	7800	7800	0	7800	KeepAlive (sec)
tcpswinsize	8192	8192	1024	246723	TCP SendWindow Size
tcprwinsize	8192	8192	1024	246723	TCP RecvWindow Size
udpswinsize	9216	9216	1024	246723	UDP SendWindow Size
udprwinsize	41600	41600	1024	246723	UDP RecvWindow Size
lingertime	120	120	0	65535	Linger Time (sec)
probecnt	8	8	1	8	Number Of KeepAlive Probes
ipforward	1	0	0	1	IP Forwarding flag ON/OFF
mtudiscover	1	1	0	1	TCP Path MTU Discovery ON/OFF
arpkillc	1200	1200	180	15300	ARP Complete TimeOut (sec)
arpkilli	180	180	60	1200	ARP InComplete TimeOut (sec)
lipcstswinsize	10240	10240	1024	246723	LIPC Stream SendWindow Size
lipcstrwinsize	10240	10240	1024	246723	LIPC Stream RecvWindow Size
lipcdgswinsize	2048	2048	1024	246723	LIPC Dgram SendWindow Size
lipcdgrwinsize	4096	4096	1024	246723	LIPC Dgram RecvWindow Size
synattack	0	0	0	1	SYN Attack Flag ON/OFF
firewall	0	0	0	1	FIREWALL ON/OFF
multidefrt	1	1	0	1	Multiple Default Routes ON/OFF
winscale	1	1	0	1	TCP Window Scale ON/OFF
timestmp	0	0	0	1	TCP TimeStamps ON/OFF
realslow	20	20	1	100	TCP TW Q Slow Timeout ticks
cc		0	0	0	1	TTCP function ON/OFF
msl		30	30	1	16384	TCP MaxSegLifeTime (sec)
tcpttl		64	64	1	255	TCP  TTL (hops)
udpttl		64	64	1	255	UDP  TTL (hops)
icmpttl		64	64	1	255	ICMP TTL (hops)
fragttl		60	60	1	255	Fragment TTL (sec)

--------------649497B5E40
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; name="MPTCONFG.INI"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline; filename="MPTCONFG.INI"

[CONTROL]
  Local_IPC      = YES
  INET_Access    = YES
  NETBIOS_Access = YES
[IFCONFIG]
  Interface      = 0,,,
  Address        = 206.223.85.4,,,
  Brdcast        = ,,,
  Dest           = ,,,
  Enable         = UP,,,
  Netmask        = 255.255.255.0,,,
  Metric         = 0,,,
  Mtu            = 1500,,,
  Trailers       = NO ,,,
  Arp            = NO ,,,
  Bridge         = NO ,,,
  Snap           = NO ,,,
  Allrs          = NO ,,,
  802.3          = NO ,,,
  Icmpred        = NO ,,,
  Canonical      = NO ,,,
  EnableDhcp     = NO ,,,
[NETBIOS]
  SESSIONS       = 50
  NCBS           = 80
  NAMES          = 29
  HOSTNAME       = APOLLO

--------------649497B5E40--

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: jaker@smatnet.net                                 13-Dec-99 14:10:23
  To: All                                               13-Dec-99 17:04:11
Subj: Re: Logging in from OS/2 to Windows NT network

From: jaker <jaker@smatnet.net>

If you are running OS/2 Warp 3.0 Connect or later you can use either LAN
Requester or Peer-to-Peer services to connect with a Microsoft network.  You
need to be running NetBEUI on the NT server and your OS/2 box.  Both Lan
Requester  and Peer-to-Peer services include a graphical browser for creating
shared drives/folders and browsing Microsoft Network shared resources.

If you have to use TCP/IP then you are going have to load NFS software on both
the NT server and the OS/2 box.  I believe that you can get a free NFS client
from IBM's web site.  I know that On-Net's Interdrive for NT will give your
NT server the NFS capability but this is rather expensive.

Chris Turton wrote:

> Hello anyone,
>
> I am having a problem with a voicemail server that I have that runs OS/2
> warp 4. What I need to be able to do is map a drive letter on my voicemail
> to a network drive on the NT server for backup purposes. This way I can use
> a backup utility to backup to the TCPIP NT network. Can anyone provide any
> ideas regarding this? I can't find anyone in Australia that knows how to do
> this and I am running low on ideas. I would be eternally grateful for any
> assistance. I have tried the " net use" command and others and no luck.
>
> Please help!
>
> Chris Turton
> Sydney Australia
> email : cturton@btas.com.au

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: bernat@mail.dotcom.fr                             12-Dec-99 22:43:05
  To: All                                               13-Dec-99 17:04:11
Subj: Re: Firewall

From: Vincent Bernat <bernat@mail.dotcom.fr>

In article <%JP44.424$M37.78298@ptah.visi.com>, 
phillipd@antares.cloudnet.com says...

> > I have tried the one supplied with TCP/IP 4.1 but it lacks of 
> > documentation and it doesn't want to log anything (LOG_DLL: OPENLOG: 
> > facility=32, error code=3, dosopen: error code = 3).
> 
> It wants a unix-flavored syslog facility..

Well, I have get a syslog from Hobbes (a direct port from BSD I think). 
When it starts (syslog), it says that /mptn/etc/syslog.log is write 
protected (it isn't). I will try to switch back to standard syslog from 
OS/2.
-- 
Vincent Bernat
 http://wguide.citeweb.net/

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: nelmark@athenet.net                               13-Dec-99 13:49:28
  To: All                                               13-Dec-99 17:04:11
Subj: OS/2 implementation of TCP/IP

From: "Nelmark" <nelmark@athenet.net>

I'm an amateur on OS/2 so please bear with me...

Does OS/2 support variable length subnet masks?  My company has 4 Class C
nets supernetted together, thus a subnet mask of 255.255.252.0.  When I try
to set this up on an OS/2 machine we have it doesn't seem to work.  I
changed the settings is the setup.cmd batch file found in the c:\mptn\bin
directory, is that where the settings should be changed?

Any helped would be appreciated, thank you.


--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: lsunley@mb.sympatico.ca                           13-Dec-99 22:07:09
  To: All                                               13-Dec-99 19:44:00
Subj: Re: OS/2 implementation of TCP/IP

From: lsunley@mb.sympatico.ca (Lorne Sunley)

On Mon, 13 Dec 1999 19:49:57, "Nelmark" <nelmark@athenet.net> wrote:

> I'm an amateur on OS/2 so please bear with me...
> 
> Does OS/2 support variable length subnet masks?  My company has 4 Class C
> nets supernetted together, thus a subnet mask of 255.255.252.0.  When I try
> to set this up on an OS/2 machine we have it doesn't seem to work.  I
> changed the settings is the setup.cmd batch file found in the c:\mptn\bin
> directory, is that where the settings should be changed?
> 

It does support that form of subnet mask. The other
thing that may be causing you a problem is an
extra "route add net" statement in that same file.
There should only be a "route add default".

--

Lorne Sunley

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: mohd.k.yusof@bohm.anu.edu.au                      14-Dec-99 15:17:29
  To: All                                               14-Dec-99 03:29:05
Subj: Disappearing hosts

From: "Khairil Yusof" <mohd.k.yusof@bohm.anu.edu.au>

I removed the net statement.

I then added a host route statement to a host I couldn't reach for 
some strange reason.

This fixes the problem, however after a certain period this host 
disappears again until I run mptstart again. This is how it looks 
like:

---

default              150.203.110.1        done
63.68.131.237        150.203.110.1        done
150.203.110.1        lan:0.0.c.fd.d4.c4   done
150.203.121.96       150.203.110.1        done
150.203.121.100      150.203.110.1        done
no ARP table entries present
add net default: gateway 150.203.110.1

add host 150.203.121.96: gateway 150.203.110.1

---

should the add host statement come first?


----------------------------------------
       ICQ : 5783742	                            
  Homepage : http://hayai.freeshell.org
PGP Key Id : 0x6FFEFD7F


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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: tvoltagg@home.com                                 14-Dec-99 04:20:06
  To: All                                               14-Dec-99 03:29:06
Subj: Netscape for Win-OS/2 Problem

From: tvoltagg@home.com

I have been running my 16 Bit Netscape in win-os/2 for a long time now
(Netscape 4.08).  Before you ask...Yes, I mostly use Netscape for OS/2 ver 
4.61, but I also use Quicken 98 for win 3.1 in win-os/2 and in order to do 
online banking, I need to run the win 3.1 version of Netscape.  

I use Warp 4 FP 12 and tcpip 4.1 with the 8620 stack.
I recently tried to tune the thing, and now I have screwed up my configuration
so badly, that I cannot connect anymore.  I get the error that "Netscape is 
unable to locate the server..."

I have copied the resolv2 file and called it resolv and put it in my
x:\mptn\etc
directory.  I have taken out all the winsock.dll's except the one 
in x:\tcpip\dos\bin.  I have added the set etc=x:\mptn\etc in autoexec.bat, 
yet I still can't connect.  I went back to the winsock help web sites for OS/2 

and have done everything that they say, but am still unable to connect at all.
So, a few questions:

1 - Is there a good FAQ for this?
2 - I can connect fine in OS/2.  Does modifying the tcpip configuration solve
this DOS problem, or should I leave the tcpip configuration alone?
3 - It is so confusing between whether I should be pointing to the mptn or
tcpip directories.  Which should I point to?
4 - HELP!!!!!

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: timurkz@saxz.mmbankz.ruz                          14-Dec-99 08:41:28
  To: All                                               14-Dec-99 03:29:06
Subj: Re: Netscape for Win-OS/2 Problem

From: "Timur Kazimirov" <timurkz@saxz.mmbankz.ruz>

On Tue, 14 Dec 1999 04:20:12 GMT, tvoltagg@home.com wrote:

[skipped]
>
>I have copied the resolv2 file and called it resolv and put it in my
x:\mptn\etc
>directory.  I have taken out all the winsock.dll's except the one 
>in x:\tcpip\dos\bin.

1) Have you x:\tcpip\dos\bin in the PATH statement in your autoexec.bat?
2) Check your config.sys for the lines:
   DEVICE=X:\TCPIP\BIN\VDOSTCP.SYS
   DEVICE=X:\MPTN\BIN\VDOSTCP.VDD
   RUN=X:\MPTN\BIN\VDOSCTL.EXE
3) Check DOS_DEVICE setting in the properties for this WinOS2 session
   for the value C:\TCPIP\BIN\VDOSTCP.SYS


With best regards,
Timur Kazimirov

-- Remove all "z" from my address to reply



--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: oliver.rick@oor.de                                13-Dec-99 21:08:06
  To: All                                               14-Dec-99 11:41:16
Subj: Re: TCP ?

From: oliver.rick@oor.de (Oliver Rick)

On Sun, 12 Dec 1999 Les Benn wrote:

>>     I just installed Warp v4. I applied FP 12 and now I need to update
>> the TCP/IP. I ran Inetver and is reports 4.00e Where do I get the TCP/ip
>> fixes?

> go to the Warp home page for IBM from there select downloads then select
> software choice if you want TCP/IP 4.1 otherwise select fixpacks instead
> of software choice

Software Choice requires a subscription for a two year period worth $209.

To the original poster:

- backup your system
- get MPTS FixPak WR08610 and install
  http://www.warpupdates.de/english/net_mpts54.html
- test if it works for you (some users reported problems)
- if the above FixPak doesn't work, restore your system and get
  MPTS FixPak WR08423 (and WR08424 on top of it if you like) and install
  http://www.warpupdates.de/english/net_mpts51.html
- get TCP/IP FixPak UN_0980 and install
  http://www.warpupdates.de/english/tcpip40.html#fixpak

The MPTS FixPak(s) contain(s) the TCP/IP stack needed as a prerequisite for
the TCP/IP FixPak, which contains fixes for the services.

Good luck!

   /Olli/
--
IBM OS/2 Warp Update Summary:
http://www.warpupdates.de/english/warpupdates.html

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: heloman@my-deja.com                               14-Dec-99 13:26:03
  To: All                                               14-Dec-99 14:35:14
Subj: Still Not Quite There?!

From: heloman@my-deja.com

I am running Warp 4.0 w/fp 12 and am connected to the
RoadRunner system. I find that the system isn't
connecting to the rr system and ready to run after
boot up. I open the DHCP screen and it shows a valid
address and lease yet when I try to get NS4.61 to go
anywhere nothing happens. If I click on 'get lease'
in the DHCP screen (even though it shows a valid
lease) then go back and allow NS4.61 to search for a
site it appears to run o.k. What setting/switch am I
missing? From my understanding after boot up I should
be able to get NS4.61 to go to work immediately.Any
help would be appreciated.....


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: wrook@walkabout.org                               14-Dec-99 09:14:26
  To: All                                               14-Dec-99 14:35:14
Subj: Re: recommend

From: Wilson Rook <wrook@walkabout.org>

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
--------------517E4C7ADAEFC17A5322B5F1
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Inet.Mail 1.3 for personal or small single domain.

Inet.Mail Pro 1.5.5 for larger needs.

See http://www.hethmon.com/

Wilson Rook

Kenny wrote:

> hi guys,
> anyone know what is the easiest manage software for mail server ????
> thanks for helping .

--------------517E4C7ADAEFC17A5322B5F1
Content-Type: text/x-vcard; charset=us-ascii;
 name="wrook.vcf"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Description: Card for Wilson Rook
Content-Disposition: attachment;
 filename="wrook.vcf"

begin:vcard 
n:Rook;Wilson (Bill)
tel;fax:(231) 861-2680
tel;work:(231) 861-2615
x-mozilla-html:FALSE
adr:;;4708 First Street, P.O. Box 37;New Era;MI;49446-0037;USA
version:2.1
email;internet:wrook@walkabout.org
fn:Bill Rook
end:vcard

--------------517E4C7ADAEFC17A5322B5F1--

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: donnelly@tampabay.rr.com                          14-Dec-99 15:39:06
  To: All                                               14-Dec-99 14:35:15
Subj: Re: Still Not Quite There?!

From: donnelly@tampabay.rr.com (Buddy Donnelly)

On Tue, 14 Dec 1999 13:26:06, heloman@my-deja.com wrote:

> I am running Warp 4.0 w/fp 12 and am connected to the
> RoadRunner system. I find that the system isn't
> connecting to the rr system and ready to run after
> boot up. I open the DHCP screen and it shows a valid
> address and lease yet when I try to get NS4.61 to go
> anywhere nothing happens. If I click on 'get lease'
> in the DHCP screen (even though it shows a valid
> lease) then go back and allow NS4.61 to search for a
> site it appears to run o.k. What setting/switch am I
> missing? From my understanding after boot up I should
> be able to get NS4.61 to go to work immediately.Any
> help would be appreciated.....
> 
Try cycling that "release lease" "get lease" procedure on a couple of 
sessions. I found it sort of straightened itself out if I did that.

-- 

Good luck,

Buddy

Buddy Donnelly
donnelly@tampabay.rr.com


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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: bobmcl@ibm.net                                    13-Dec-99 11:12:18
  To: All                                               14-Dec-99 19:59:12
Subj: Re: Connecting to a Linux server

From: Bob McLellan <bobmcl@ibm.net>


Lorne Sunley wrote:

> On Fri, 10 Dec 1999 05:02:54, "Barry" <72764.2166@csi.com> wrote:
>
> > I have 2 computers networked.  Computer #1 runs Red Hat Linux 6.0, 
Computer
> > #2 is a dual boot OS/2-WIN98 computer.  If I boot Computer #2 to WIN98 and
> > set it up to use either DHCP or manually entering of the IP address, I do
> > connect to the Linux box and see the shares.
> > If I boot computer #2 to OS/2 and setup TCPIP to manually enter the IP
> > address, I do connect to the Linux box and see the shares.
> > However, If I change the TCPIP settings to automatically get IP address
using
> > the Linux computer's DHCP server (and that is the only change I am
making),
> > reboot, I do NOT see the Linux box.  I know the DHCP is working okay on
the
> > OS/2 side since the DHCP monitor shows a valid lease with the correct IP
> > address (the same IP address that shows when I boot WIN98 using DHCP).  Of
> > course if I change back to manually entering the IP address, the shares
then
> > show up.  Any ideas?
> >
>
> What version of MPTS do you have installed?
>
> There are bugs in the earlier releases of MPTS and it's
> DHCP handling. If you haven't tried it yet update the
> MPTS level to WR8610.
>
> --
>
> Lorne Sunley

 Use 'netstat -r' and 'netstat -a' to inspect your routes and addresses. Are
they
OK. Also check the DHCPCD.CFG file in mptn\etc. Many people have found that
they
need to make a few modes to this before DHCP will work properly.
I have found that with WR8421 the original DHCP problems were fixed. Watch out 
for
WR8610/20, there are a few tricks to it. Check the Warp Updates page
http://www.warpupdates.de/english/warpupdates.html.
If all else fails, run a trace of the setup phase and see what shows up.
--
------------------------------------------------------
Bob McLellan
The Little Blue Kiwi
OS/2 Solutions for New Zeland


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From: bobmcl@ibm.net                                    13-Dec-99 11:22:25
  To: All                                               14-Dec-99 19:59:12
Subj: Re: DOIP

From: Bob McLellan <bobmcl@ibm.net>


rlackl1@attglobal.net wrote:

> In <mfDT4kDg6xAQ090yn@ibm.net>, on 12/06/99
>    at 05:25 PM, dcasey@ibm.net (Dan Casey) said:
>
> >In article <384ac007$2$eynpxy1$mr2ice@news-s01.ny.us.ibm.net>,
> >rlackl1@attglobal.net wrote:
> >>I know there was some discussion of this here a couple of months ago but
> >>unfortunately I didn't save it.
> >>
> >>I can get the alternate SLIP dialer to dial, connect and log in, but I
> >>can't get it to work with Netscape (2.02) or MR/2 ICE.  It just sits
> >>there.
>
> >Sounds like your connection is not finding a DNS server (to resolve the
> >Domain Name). Check your C:\MPTN\ETC directory for a file named "resolv"
> >(no quotes) and see if it has the information for your ISP and DNS
> >server. Mine looks like this:
>
> >domain iquest.net
> >nameserver 206.246.140.95
>
> Thanks for the assist.  I suppose it's progress, but now (using LINKUP) I
> get a connect and logon, and it starts MR2 just fine.  But after a few
> minutes the dialer displays the message "SYS1806 The system cannot start
> the program in the foreground" - even though MR2 is running just fine
> (although it's just sitting "checking for new mail", it's obviously not
> getting through).
>
> -------
> rlackl1@attglobal.net
> -------

 First, at least while you are getting this problem resolved, abandon LINKUP.
It is just for the IBM/ATT network. Use the 'Internet Utilities (LAN)' folder
or edit you WPS objects that are kicking linkup off. Just start the dialler
(DOIP) by itself, and start MR2 itself.
Re your original post, you may need to check the DOIP settings that you
entered.
--
------------------------------------------------------
Bob McLellan
The Little Blue Kiwi
OS/2 Solutions for New Zeland


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From: andrew@netneurotic.de                             14-Dec-99 22:32:23
  To: All                                               14-Dec-99 19:59:13
Subj: Realtek and OS/2

From: andrew@netneurotic.de (Andrew J. Brehm)

Maybe somebody can help me...

I have two machines, one running OS/2 (occasionally).

While the network works fine under Linux, BeOS, and Windows (on one
machine), OS/2 is somewhat isolated.

I installed the network adapter correctly (as I understand) with the
drivers that came with the adapter. I had to copy the driver (pcind.os2)
manually, because the setup script didn't do it.

ifconfig lan0 correctly shows that the IP address assigned to the
adapter is 192.168.0.41 and I can ping that address from the same
machine.

However, I cannot ping 192.168.0.42 (the other machine) and neither can
I ping 192.168.0.41 from the other machine. The OS/2 workstation is
simply isolated.

Since the adapter works fine under BeOS, Windows, and Linux, I assume
something must be wrong with the software configuration, but what could
it be?

-- 
Fan of Woody Allen
User of MacOS, BeOS, LinuxPPC
Supporter of Pepperoni Pizza

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: engel003@mc.duke.edu                              14-Dec-99 19:44:17
  To: All                                               14-Dec-99 21:14:07
Subj: Desktop On-call--How to send Ctrl-Alt-Del to host?

From: "L. Engelhart" <engel003@mc.duke.edu>

I have Desktop On-call 2.5 installed on a host NT 4 workstation.  If
someone is logged in on the host, I can control it remotedly from any
browser.

However, I can't figure out any way to log on remotely.  The emulation
buttons for Control and Alt seem to work individually with TAB, ESC,
etc.  But I can't figure out any way to send Ctrl-Alt-Del.

According to this product description, it should be possible, even with
the earlier version (2.0).

http://www.jp.ibm.com/esbu/E/dtoc/features2.html

Anybody figured this out?  Both NetOp and PCAnywhere have explicit
configuration for this.  Seems a real shortcoming if DToC doesn't.

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: racette@cablevision.qc.ca                         15-Dec-99 02:56:27
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 03:46:00
Subj: DOCSIS modem ?

From: racette@cablevision.qc.ca (Martin Racette)

Hi guys,

I have to switch to DOCSIS modem, 
because my ISP, and I know from work 
that I need to run in Win98 
"WINIPCFG.EXE" to make the modem find 
the IPs it requires, but how can I do 
something like that in Warp ??????

P.S. Please can you answer through 
E-Mail as well as here

//-------------------------
Thank you in advance

Merci a l'avance

Martin

http://205.237.57.73/

ICQ #48552954

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: james.arnold@!!!usa.net                           15-Dec-99 02:31:17
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 03:46:00
Subj: Re: Realtek and OS/2

From: james.arnold@!!!usa.net

In <1e2tqhe.1roh9jsw9udn8N@dialup-362.germany.ecore.net>,
andrew@netneurotic.de (Andrew J. Brehm) writes:
>Maybe somebody can help me...
>
>I have two machines, one running OS/2 (occasionally).
>
>While the network works fine under Linux, BeOS, and Windows (on one
>machine), OS/2 is somewhat isolated.
>
>I installed the network adapter correctly (as I understand) with the
>drivers that came with the adapter. I had to copy the driver (pcind.os2)
>manually, because the setup script didn't do it.
>
>ifconfig lan0 correctly shows that the IP address assigned to the
>adapter is 192.168.0.41 and I can ping that address from the same
>machine.
>
>However, I cannot ping 192.168.0.42 (the other machine) and neither can
>I ping 192.168.0.41 from the other machine. The OS/2 workstation is
>simply isolated.
>
>Since the adapter works fine under BeOS, Windows, and Linux, I assume
>something must be wrong with the software configuration, but what could
>it be?
>

        Sometimes (a lot ot the time) Warp 3&4 will add an extra route
statement to "setup.cmd" that can foul things up. Take a look at your 
"setup.cmd" in x:\mptn\bin; where x: is the boot drive or the drive that
contains the mptn directory. If you have a line that starts 
"route add net..." delete that line. Then make sure that you are in the
mptn\bin directory and type "setup.cmd". That should get you going and
the next time that you boot you should also be OK.

        Just remember to check the setup.cmd file anytime you make changes
to your TCP/IP configuration using the TCP/IP configuration notebook, and
delete the "route add net..." line if it exits.

        Jim

===========================================================================
remove !!! for e-mail
James Arnold                                email:    james.arnold@usa.net
                                              ICQ:    9719182

        Member Toronto OS/2 User Group

Brought to you by the letters O S the number 2 and NR/2
===========================================================================

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: abstewa@attglobal.net                             14-Dec-99 22:06:14
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 03:46:00
Subj: Re: Desktop On-call--How to send Ctrl-Alt-Del to host?

From: Alon Stewart <abstewa@attglobal.net>

Usually these remote control programs will accept a Ctrl, Alt and the D key
as a substitute to reboot or login to NT.

"L. Engelhart" wrote:

> I have Desktop On-call 2.5 installed on a host NT 4 workstation.  If
> someone is logged in on the host, I can control it remotedly from any
> browser.
>
> However, I can't figure out any way to log on remotely.  The emulation
> buttons for Control and Alt seem to work individually with TAB, ESC,
> etc.  But I can't figure out any way to send Ctrl-Alt-Del.
>
> According to this product description, it should be possible, even with
> the earlier version (2.0).
>
> http://www.jp.ibm.com/esbu/E/dtoc/features2.html
>
> Anybody figured this out?  Both NetOp and PCAnywhere have explicit
> configuration for this.  Seems a real shortcoming if DToC doesn't.

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(1:109/42)

+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: operagost@e-mail.com                              15-Dec-99 04:20:19
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 03:46:01
Subj: Injoy Firewall

From: "Stephen Eickhoff (remove the - to reply)" <operagost@e-mail.com>

I've only been able to get a maximum of about 25Kbps, and an average of a
measly 10Kbps out of my 640Kbps ADSL. I suspected three things:

1) I don't have a "home run", so the digital data has to travel up an old
single pair about 50 feet to my apartment, thereby negating the fact
that the CO is right outside the building.

2) Bell Atlantic's network just sucks.

3) The logging of EVERY FRIGGIN CONNECTION by Injoy Firewall was bogging
down my poor old P90.

Since, after reading the documentation several times, there seems to be
NO WAY of completely turning off logging (I tried, it doesn't work), I decided
to simply make the log file read-only. That seems to have done the trick. I
instantly managed to max out at 640Kbps and get an AVERAGE of 25-30 Kbps now.
I'd really rather have some logging, just on certain ports. It's a shame that
FX's tech support still hasn't answered my e-mail. Maybe English is the wrong
language or something? They didn't mind taking my money!

Unless you have a much better machine than mine (A P90 with 48 MB RAM and a
2.1GB Seagate Hawk), I recommend setting gwpm.log read only, at least to see
what happens.

-- 
----------------------------------
         Stephen Eickhoff
          Havertown, PA
----------------------------------

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: acastle6@aol.com                                  15-Dec-99 04:25:04
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 03:46:01
Subj: netscape unable to locate the server

From: acastle6@aol.com (Acastle6)

I have aol and I installed netscape 4.08.  How can I fix this message? 
Netscape unable to located server: home.netscape.com  The server does not have
a DNS entry.  Check the server name in the location (URL) and try again.

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: rcb@spamx.sandersnet.com                          15-Dec-99 04:45:16
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 03:46:01
Subj: Netscape not showing everything...

From: rcb@spamx.sandersnet.com (Roger Brett)

Hello,
I've had a problem with the last two versions (at least) of Netscape 
Communicator (4.04 & 4.61).  The problem is that certain things don't 
show up on a web page, such as the search string entry field at the 
Lexmark knowledgebase web site.  Also, at "www.recycledsoftware.com"  
I can't see the pricelist below the category frame.  I can see all of 
the above when using the W9x version.

Is this an HTML rev. compatibility problem?  Has anyone else noticed 
this anomoly?

Thanks,
R.Brett
--------------------------------------------------------
Remove the "spamx." after the "@"
when auto-replying.

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: peter@seagoon.newcastle.edu.au                    15-Dec-99 04:47:10
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 03:46:01
Subj: Re: netscape unable to locate the server

From: peter@seagoon.newcastle.edu.au (Peter Moylan)

Acastle6 <acastle6@aol.com> wrote:
>I have aol and I installed netscape 4.08.  How can I fix this message? 
>Netscape unable to located server: home.netscape.com  The server does not
have
>a DNS entry.  Check the server name in the location (URL) and try again.

There never was a Netscape 4.08 for OS/2, as far as I know.  Are you trying
to run a Windows version of Netscape on OS/2?  It can be done, I'm told,
but it's the hard way to do things.

The most likely problem is that you don't have DOS nameserver support
properly installed.  If you switch to the native OS/2 version of Netscape
the problem should go away.

-- 
Peter Moylan                                         peter@ee.newcastle.edu.au
See http://eepjm.newcastle.edu.au for OS/2 information and software

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: cocke@catherders.com                              15-Dec-99 06:51:28
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 10:26:21
Subj: Re: Injoy Firewall

From: Michael W. Cocke <cocke@catherders.com>

I suspect you may be having other problems - like a loose nut between 
the keyboard and the chairback.

a) Turning logging off in the Injoy firewall turns logging OFF unless 
you've done something else, too.  It's very straightforward.

b) Injoy tech support is flat-out amazing.  Over the last few years I've
gotten used to the idea that manufacturer tech support was worthless.  
Bjarne just forced me to rethink that opinion.  He spent 4 hours with me
yesterday helping me debug something that wasn't even an Injoy problem -
and didn't charge me, either!



On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 04:20:38 GMT, Stephen Eickhoff (remove the - to reply)
wrote:

>I've only been able to get a maximum of about 25Kbps, and an average of a
>measly 10Kbps out of my 640Kbps ADSL. I suspected three things:
>
>1) I don't have a "home run", so the digital data has to travel up an old
>single pair about 50 feet to my apartment, thereby negating the fact
>that the CO is right outside the building.
>
>2) Bell Atlantic's network just sucks.
>
>3) The logging of EVERY FRIGGIN CONNECTION by Injoy Firewall was bogging
>down my poor old P90.
>
>Since, after reading the documentation several times, there seems to be
>NO WAY of completely turning off logging (I tried, it doesn't work), I
decided
>to simply make the log file read-only. That seems to have done the trick. I
>instantly managed to max out at 640Kbps and get an AVERAGE of 25-30 Kbps now.
>I'd really rather have some logging, just on certain ports. It's a shame that
>FX's tech support still hasn't answered my e-mail. Maybe English is the wrong
>language or something? They didn't mind taking my money!
>
>Unless you have a much better machine than mine (A P90 with 48 MB RAM and a
>2.1GB Seagate Hawk), I recommend setting gwpm.log read only, at least to see
>what happens.
>
>-- 
>----------------------------------
>         Stephen Eickhoff
>          Havertown, PA
>----------------------------------
>

-------------------------------------------------------------------
         Please note:  My Email and web page addresses have changed!
                The new email address is cocke@catherders.com   
                 The web page is at http://www.catherders.com

               Because network administration is like herding cats.

-------------------------------------------------------------------



--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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(1:109/42)

+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: tvoltagg@home.com                                 15-Dec-99 12:13:10
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 10:26:22
Subj: Re: netscape unable to locate the server

From: tvoltagg@home.com

I'm having the same problem (I need the win-os/2 version for Quicken).  How
does one
ensure dos nameserver support?


In <slrn85e7d9.4a.peter@eepjm.newcastle.edu.au>,
peter@seagoon.newcastle.edu.au (Peter Moylan) writes:
>Acastle6 <acastle6@aol.com> wrote:
>>I have aol and I installed netscape 4.08.  How can I fix this message? 
>>Netscape unable to located server: home.netscape.com  The server does not
have
>>a DNS entry.  Check the server name in the location (URL) and try again.
>
>There never was a Netscape 4.08 for OS/2, as far as I know.  Are you trying
>to run a Windows version of Netscape on OS/2?  It can be done, I'm told,
>but it's the hard way to do things.
>
>The most likely problem is that you don't have DOS nameserver support
>properly installed.  If you switch to the native OS/2 version of Netscape
>the problem should go away.
>
>-- 
>Peter Moylan                                        
peter@ee.newcastle.edu.au
>See http://eepjm.newcastle.edu.au for OS/2 information and software

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: tvoltagg@home.com                                 15-Dec-99 12:14:19
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 10:26:22
Subj: Re: Netscape for Win-OS/2 Problem

From: tvoltagg@home.com

I've done all this. Still doesn't work. Can someone who actually has this
running email or post their resolv, autoexec.bat and config.sys files?


In <gvzhexfnkzzonaxeh.fmqgpx0.pminews@news.sax.mmbank.ru>, "Timur Kazimirov"
<timurkz@saxz.mmbankz.ruz> writes:
>On Tue, 14 Dec 1999 04:20:12 GMT, tvoltagg@home.com wrote:
>
>[skipped]
>>
>>I have copied the resolv2 file and called it resolv and put it in my
x:\mptn\etc
>>directory.  I have taken out all the winsock.dll's except the one 
>>in x:\tcpip\dos\bin.
>
>1) Have you x:\tcpip\dos\bin in the PATH statement in your autoexec.bat?
>2) Check your config.sys for the lines:
>   DEVICE=X:\TCPIP\BIN\VDOSTCP.SYS
>   DEVICE=X:\MPTN\BIN\VDOSTCP.VDD
>   RUN=X:\MPTN\BIN\VDOSCTL.EXE
>3) Check DOS_DEVICE setting in the properties for this WinOS2 session
>   for the value C:\TCPIP\BIN\VDOSTCP.SYS
>
>
>With best regards,
>Timur Kazimirov
>
>-- Remove all "z" from my address to reply
>
>
>

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: andrew@netneurotic.de                             15-Dec-99 13:22:21
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 10:26:22
Subj: Re: Realtek and OS/2

From: andrew@netneurotic.de (Andrew J. Brehm)

<james.arnold@!!!usa.net> wrote:

>         Sometimes (a lot ot the time) Warp 3&4 will add an extra route
> statement to "setup.cmd" that can foul things up. Take a look at your
> "setup.cmd" in x:\mptn\bin; where x: is the boot drive or the drive that
> contains the mptn directory. If you have a line that starts 
> "route add net..." delete that line. Then make sure that you are in the
> mptn\bin directory and type "setup.cmd". That should get you going and
> the next time that you boot you should also be OK.
> 
>         Just remember to check the setup.cmd file anytime you make changes
> to your TCP/IP configuration using the TCP/IP configuration notebook, and
> delete the "route add net..." line if it exits.

I remember that "netstat -r" actually showed my other machine in the
list... it doesn't anymore though.

Anyway, the line "route add net..." didn't exist.

Any other ideas?

-- 
Fan of Woody Allen
User of MacOS, BeOS, LinuxPPC
Supporter of Pepperoni Pizza

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: GregoryC@stcinc.com                               15-Dec-99 00:19:11
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 16:48:08
Subj: Samba and Warp 3 Connect

From: Gregory Carvalho <GregoryC@stcinc.com>

I have Warp 3 Connect with Fixpack 40 on it. I would like to get it to
communicate with Samba. The Warp computer can ping the Samba computer.
The Warp computer is not communicating with the nmbd on the Samba Server
for WINS resolution, so PC Net commands are not functioning. Does anyone
know how to make this configuration work?
-- 
Cordially,
Gregory Carvalho		GregoryC@stcinc.com
Simplified Technology Company	http://www.stcinc.com
In God I Trust!

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: cocke@catherders.com                              15-Dec-99 09:18:08
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 16:48:09
Subj: Netbios over tcp/ip questions

From: Michael W. Cocke <cocke@catherders.com>

This is the first time I've ever tried to set up netbios over IP, and I 
have a few questions:

I'm trying to connect from one system to another over the internet, and 
I'd like to share drives on them using warp peer.  Questions of security
aside(I already have ipsec & pluto working - thank you Bjarne!), I'm 
having problems setting it up.

I have netbios, tcp/ip, and netbios over tcp/ip configured for the 
appropriate interfaces.  I can ping from one to the other successfully. 

My questions: Is the NET USE syntax supposed to work for drive sharing 
over this link? How?  Is there a way to check if the netbios layer is 
working, other than by trying a NET USE?

Thanks!



-------------------------------------------------------------------
         Please note:  My Email and web page addresses have changed!
                The new email address is cocke@catherders.com   
                 The web page is at http://www.catherders.com

               Because network administration is like herding cats.

-------------------------------------------------------------------




--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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(1:109/42)

+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: barry@servtech.com                                15-Dec-99 09:23:22
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 16:48:09
Subj: Netscape not showing everything...

From: barry@servtech.com (Barry Bogart)

 rc> Hello, I've had a problem with the last two versions (at least) of
 rc> Netscape  Communicator (4.04 & 4.61).  The problem is that certain
 rc> things don't  show up on aweb page, such as the search string entry
 rc> field at the  Lexmark knowledgebase web site.  Also, at
 rc> "www.recycledsoftware.com"   I can'tsee the pricelist below the
 rc> category frame.  I can see all of  the above when using the W9x
 rc> version.
 rc> Is this an HTML rev. compatibility problem?  Has anyone else noticed
 rc> this anomoly?

 I've just installed Warp v4 and installed Communicator latest version andit 
was showing the graphics on Ebay.com but now its not.

The only thing I did was try to reload old cache files and I guess thatswhat 
did it.

~~~ Telegard/2 v3.09.g2-sp3/mL
---
 * Origin: thesanatorium.dhs.org (1:260/432)

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: jpolt@bradnet.legend.co.uk                        15-Dec-99 15:38:10
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 16:48:09
Subj: Re: Realtek and OS/2

From: jpolt@bradnet.legend.co.uk (John Poltorak)

In <1e2tqhe.1roh9jsw9udn8N@dialup-362.germany.ecore.net>,
andrew@netneurotic.de (Andrew J. Brehm) writes:
>Maybe somebody can help me...
>
>I have two machines, one running OS/2 (occasionally).
>
>While the network works fine under Linux, BeOS, and Windows (on one
>machine), OS/2 is somewhat isolated.
>
>I installed the network adapter correctly (as I understand) with the
>drivers that came with the adapter. I had to copy the driver (pcind.os2)
>manually, because the setup script didn't do it.
>
>ifconfig lan0 correctly shows that the IP address assigned to the
>adapter is 192.168.0.41 and I can ping that address from the same
>machine.
>
>However, I cannot ping 192.168.0.42 (the other machine) and neither can
>I ping 192.168.0.41 from the other machine. The OS/2 workstation is
>simply isolated.
>
>Since the adapter works fine under BeOS, Windows, and Linux, I assume
>something must be wrong with the software configuration, but what could
>it be?

Can you supply contents of your protocol.ini, lantran.log and setup.cmd?

>-- 
>Fan of Woody Allen
>User of MacOS, BeOS, LinuxPPC
>Supporter of Pepperoni Pizza

--
John

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: leea@psynet.net                                   15-Dec-99 07:42:03
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 16:48:09
Subj: Re: Wierd problem, can't connect to certain hosts on network

From: Lee Aroner  <leea@psynet.net>

Is it possible the router has bridging turned on?

LRA

------------------------
  From: Khairil Yusof <mohd.k.yusof@bohm.anu.edu.au>
  Subject: Re: Wierd problem, can't connect to certain hosts 
on network
  Date: Mon, 13 Dec 1999 16:37:02 +1000 (EST) 
  To: "comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip" 
<@news:comp.os.os2.networking.tcp-ip@192.168.16.2>


> Sorry.. just solved it.
> 
> Removed net entry in routes and then created a host route 
entry to 
> help. Strange why it would not connect only to these two 
host 
> entries..
> 
> Any explanations why?
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ----------------------------------------
>        ICQ : 5783742	                            
>   Homepage : http://hayai.freeshell.org
> PGP Key Id : 0x6FFEFD7F
> 
> 

---------------End of Original Message-----------------

--------------------------------------------------------
Name: Lee Aroner
E-mail: Lee Aroner <leea@nospm.psynet.net>

(Please remove "nospm." to reply...)

Date: 12/15/1999
Time: 07:42:07

 _,_ /|
 \`o.O' ACK!
 =(___)=
    U

"It's trivial to make fun of Microsoft products, but it takes a real man to
make them work, and a god to make them do anything useful"  - Anonymous

--------------------------------------------------------

--- WtrGate+ v0.93.p7 sn 165
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(1:109/42)

+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: David @ Thackernet.com                            15-Dec-99 16:30:26
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 16:48:09
Subj: Re: Desktop On-call--How to send Ctrl-Alt-Del to host?

From: "David Thacker" <David @ Thackernet.com>

IBM's support of this great product definitely comes up short, eh?  I have
DTOC 2.5 on an OS/2 server, accessing from an NT client.  I cannot get DTOC
to send a CTRL-C or CTRL-BREAK.  It just sends a plain C even when I have
the CTRL button toggled.

I've never tried a C-A-D sequence, as it would reboot my OS/2 server machine
if it worked...

Good luck getting this resolved.  DTOC is a great product but there are just
a couple niggly things they need to refine.

dAvid tHacker

L. Engelhart <engel003@mc.duke.edu> wrote in message
news:3856E472.90814F40@mc.duke.edu...
> I have Desktop On-call 2.5 installed on a host NT 4 workstation.  If
> someone is logged in on the host, I can control it remotedly from any
> browser.
>
> However, I can't figure out any way to log on remotely.  The emulation
> buttons for Control and Alt seem to work individually with TAB, ESC,
> etc.  But I can't figure out any way to send Ctrl-Alt-Del.
>
> According to this product description, it should be possible, even with
> the earlier version (2.0).
>
> http://www.jp.ibm.com/esbu/E/dtoc/features2.html
>
> Anybody figured this out?  Both NetOp and PCAnywhere have explicit
> configuration for this.  Seems a real shortcoming if DToC doesn't.


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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: engel003@mc.duke.edu                              15-Dec-99 18:31:03
  To: All                                               15-Dec-99 21:17:22
Subj: Re: Desktop On-call--How to send Ctrl-Alt-Del to host?

From: "L. Engelhart" <engel003@mc.duke.edu>

Support, we don't need no stinking support.  We're IBM customers after all.
:-)

I've also got a copy installed on a Warp Server.  That's been working pretty
well, although it's quite sluggish with screen refreshes (even in monochrome
mode).  For example, it takes a long time to scroll to the end of an audit log
file.  Also, the problem with full-screen sessions is irking.  For instance, I
can't look at the Lotus Notes/Domino monitor screen via DToC.  Otherwise it's
quite useful.

But this problem with the NT version is really weird.  How can they even make
an
NT version without it being able to get around the login?  This has got to
some
kind of configuration issue.  There's obviously no question of any useful
remote
control maintenance without being able to restart the computer, then logon
again
when it comes back up--especially since in the Windows world so many
installations or updates require a reboot.

If my NT  workstation host is sitting waiting for logon (the little 'Welcome'
window asking for Ctrl-Alt-Delete) I can connect to it with DToC.  The browser
title bar tells me that that I'm connected to such and such computer, and I
get
a window asking for user ID and password.  It takes the ID and password, then
passes me through to the desktop where I see the logon screen.  So far so
good.
Obviously, the http server on the host is working at that point.

However, not only can I not send a Ctrl-Alt-Delete, but I can't drag the
welcome
window around with the mouse either.  So, it's not taking mouse or keyboard
input at all at that stage.  If I then physically go the workstation and do
Ctrl-Alt-Delete, the IBM client window comes up.  But even then, I can't use
DToC to type in the password and click OK.   Only after logon does keyboard
and
mouse input work again.

So there's something about that logon stage that interferes with mouse and
keyboard input.

I did notice that after installation, the IBM network client had stopped
working.  That is, instead of the client coming up I just got the regular
Windows logon.  After I re-installed the client it seemed to work fine, but
perhaps this is involved somehow.  I'll try next uninstalling the IBM client
first, then re-installing DToC.  If that doesn't work, I'll probably install
all
the available services and protocols to see if that makes any difference.

I just wish I knew how to contact the person or persons at IBM Japan who know
all about this product.


David Thacker wrote:

> IBM's support of this great product definitely comes up short, eh?  I have
> DTOC 2.5 on an OS/2 server, accessing from an NT client.  I cannot get DTOC
> to send a CTRL-C or CTRL-BREAK.  It just sends a plain C even when I have
> the CTRL button toggled.
>
> I've never tried a C-A-D sequence, as it would reboot my OS/2 server machine
> if it worked...
>
> Good luck getting this resolved.  DTOC is a great product but there are just
> a couple niggly things they need to refine.
>
> dAvid tHacker

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: engel003@mc.duke.edu                              15-Dec-99 20:16:09
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 00:43:20
Subj: Re: Desktop On-call - Version 3.0

From: "L. Engelhart" <engel003@mc.duke.edu>

I was doing another search on IBM Japan and found this page which refers to a
DToC Version 3.0.

http://www.jp.ibm.com/pspjinfo/javadesk/v201.html

There also seem to be fix packs for versions 3.0 and 2.0 here:

ftp://service.japan.ibm.co.jp/pub/ps/fixpak/personsw/dtoc/

Nothing in English of course.  And since there's no mention of a Version 2.5,
maybe the English Version 2.5 is the Japanese Version 3.0.

I'm curious about those fixpaks though.

Anyway, if anyone reads this who can translate the Japanese for us, we'd
appreciate it.



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From: engel003@mc.duke.edu                              15-Dec-99 20:42:29
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 00:43:21
Subj: Re: Desktop On-call--a little progress

From: "L. Engelhart" <engel003@mc.duke.edu>

I made some progress.  I first removed the IBM networking client, then removed
DToC, then re-installed DToc.  At that point, I found that I could log in to
the host perfectly, of course this was just the standard Windows login.

Subsequently, I re-installed the IBM preferred client and it broke the DToC.
So now we know who doesn't play together nicely.  Just removing the IBM client
doesn't fix it either.  DToC has to be re-installed to make it work.

I don't have any more time this evening, but at next opportunity I'll try with
the IBM coordinated client, different orders of installation, etc.  I wish I
had a utility that would tell me each and every file and Registry key that was
added or changed by these applications.



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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: mcmorran@norfolk.infi.net                         15-Dec-99 20:57:23
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 00:43:21
Subj: Re: Netscape not showing everything...

From: mcmorran@norfolk.infi.net (Peter McMorran)

In <l5DXdjUKqvGX-pn2-PdQdYKyHUkZd@rdesk.pes.com>, on 12/15/99 
   at 04:45 AM, rcb@spamx.sandersnet.com (Roger Brett) said:

>Hello,
>I've had a problem with the last two versions (at least) of
>Netscape  Communicator (4.04 & 4.61).  The problem is that
>certain things don't  show up on a web page, such as the search
>string entry field at the  Lexmark knowledgebase web site. 
>Also, at "www.recycledsoftware.com"   I can't see the pricelist
>below the category frame.  I can see all of  the above when
>using the W9x version.

>Is this an HTML rev. compatibility problem?  Has anyone else
>noticed  this anomoly?

>Thanks,
>R.Brett

Hi, Roger,

This may be a problem with the fixed font. It defaults to Courier
New, which is installed with WinOS2. If this font is not
available, data entry fields shrink to zero height, etc. Try
changing the fixed font (Edit->Preferences->Appearance->fonts) to
plain Courier, and make sure the size is reasonable. This was
reported for Comm 4.61; I don't know about 4.04.

HTH,
Peter

-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------
mcmorran@norfolk.infi.net (Peter McMorran)
-----------------------------------------------------------

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From: andrew@netneurotic.de                             16-Dec-99 03:16:23
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 00:43:21
Subj: Re: Realtek and OS/2

From: andrew@netneurotic.de (Andrew J. Brehm)

John Poltorak <jpolt@bradnet.legend.co.uk> wrote:

> In <1e2tqhe.1roh9jsw9udn8N@dialup-362.germany.ecore.net>,
> andrew@netneurotic.de (Andrew J. Brehm) writes: >Maybe somebody can help
> me... > >I have two machines, one running OS/2 (occasionally). > >While
> the network works fine under Linux, BeOS, and Windows (on one >machine),
> OS/2 is somewhat isolated. > >I installed the network adapter correctly
> (as I understand) with the >drivers that came with the adapter. I had to
> copy the driver (pcind.os2) >manually, because the setup script didn't do
> it. > >ifconfig lan0 correctly shows that the IP address assigned to the
> >adapter is 192.168.0.41 and I can ping that address from the same
> >machine. > >However, I cannot ping 192.168.0.42 (the other machine) and
> neither can >I ping 192.168.0.41 from the other machine. The OS/2
> workstation is >simply isolated. > >Since the adapter works fine under
> BeOS, Windows, and Linux, I assume >something must be wrong with the
> software configuration, but what could >it be?
> 
> Can you supply contents of your protocol.ini, lantran.log and setup.cmd?

<d:\ibmcom\lantran.log>
IBM OS/2 LANMSGDD [08/01/96] 5.05 is loaded and operational.
IBM OS/2 NETBEUI 5.00.0
NETBEUI: Using a 32-bit data segment.
IBM OS/2 NETBIOS 4.0
Adapter 0 has 255 NCBs, 254 sessions, and 20 names available to NETBIOS
applications.
NETBIOS 4.0 is loaded and operational.
Installing NETWKSTA.200 Version 5.0. IBM LAN Redirector (Sep 24, 1996)

IBM LANVDD is loaded and operational.
IBM OS/2 LAN Netbind
</end>

<d:\ibmcom\macs\protocol.ini>

;
; Realtek RTL8029 Ethernet Adapter  protocol.ini sample
;

  DriverName = PCIND$
  AdapterID = @00123456789A     ; This item is only required when more
                                ; than one RTL8029 adapters exist on
                                ; the same system.
</end>

<d:\ibmcom\protocol.ini>
[PROT_MAN]

   DRIVERNAME = PROTMAN$

[NONETADP_nif]

   DriverName = NULLNDS$

[IBMLXCFG]

   NONETADP_nif = NONETADP.NIF
   NETBEUI_nif = NETBEUI.NIF
   TCPIP_nif = TCPIP.NIF
   RTL8029_nif = RTL8029.NIF

[NETBEUI_nif]

   ETHERAND_TYPE = "I"
   USEADDRREV = "YES"
   OS2TRACEMASK = 0x0
   SESSIONS = 254
   NCBS = 255
   NAMES = 21
   SELECTORS = 15
   USEMAXDATAGRAM = "NO"
   ADAPTRATE = 1000
   WINDOWERRORS = 0
   MAXDATARCV = 4168
   TI = 30000
   T1 = 1000
   T2 = 200
   MAXIN = 1
   MAXOUT = 1
   NETBIOSTIMEOUT = 500
   NETBIOSRETRIES = 3
   NAMECACHE = 1000
   RNDOPTION = 1
   PIGGYBACKACKS = 1
   DATAGRAMPACKETS = 10
   PACKETS = 269
   LOOPPACKETS = 8
   PIPELINE = 5
   MAXTRANSMITS = 6
   MINTRANSMITS = 2
   DLCRETRIES = 10
   FCPRIORITY = 5
   NETFLAGS = 0x0
   Bindings = NONETADP_nif
   DriverName = netbeui$

[TCPIP_nif]

   Bindings = NONETADP_nif
   DriverName = TCPIP$
   IfType = 6

[RTL8029_nif]

   RamAddress = 0x0D0000
   DriverName = PCIND$

[NETBIOS]

   DRIVERNAME = NETBIOS$
   ADAPTER0 = NETBEUI$,0

</end>

<d:\mptn\bin\setup.cmd>
route -fh
arp -f
ifconfig lo 127.0.0.1
ifconfig lan0 192.168.0.41 netmask 255.255.255.0
REM ifconfig lan1 
REM ifconfig lan2 
REM ifconfig lan3 
REM ifconfig lan4 
REM ifconfig lan5 
REM ifconfig lan6 
REM ifconfig lan7 
REM ifconfig sl0  
ipgate off
</end>

Any ideas?



-- 
Fan of Woody Allen
User of MacOS, BeOS, LinuxPPC
Supporter of Pepperoni Pizza

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From: mcmorran@norfolk.infi.net                         15-Dec-99 21:03:22
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 00:43:21
Subj: Re: netscape unable to locate the server

From: mcmorran@norfolk.infi.net (Peter McMorran)

In <BBL54.3095$Mz6.772813@news1.rdc2.pa.home.com>, on 12/15/99 
   at 12:13 PM, tvoltagg@home.com said:

>I'm having the same problem (I need the win-os/2 version for
>Quicken).  How does one ensure dos nameserver support?


>In <slrn85e7d9.4a.peter@eepjm.newcastle.edu.au>,
>peter@seagoon.newcastle.edu.au (Peter Moylan) writes: >Acastle6
><acastle6@aol.com> wrote:
>>>I have aol and I installed netscape 4.08.  How can I fix this message? 
>>>Netscape unable to located server: home.netscape.com  The server does not
have
>>>a DNS entry.  Check the server name in the location (URL) and try again.
>>
>>There never was a Netscape 4.08 for OS/2, as far as I know.  Are you trying
>>to run a Windows version of Netscape on OS/2?  It can be done, I'm told,
>>but it's the hard way to do things.
>>
>>The most likely problem is that you don't have DOS nameserver support
>>properly installed.  If you switch to the native OS/2 version of Netscape
>>the problem should go away.

The DOS/WinOS2 ETC environment variable must point to a directory
containing a resolv file. The default autoexec.bat in the boot
directory sets this to x:\tcpip\dos\etc where there is a resolv
file maintained somehow -- possibly by DOIP. If you don't have
this, possibly due to a different autoexec.bat, or if the file is
missing, WinOS2 programs won't find the nameserver. To avoid
fussing with two resolv files, folks have reported success
pointing the DOS ETC to the same place as the OS/2 value,
normally x:\MTPN\ETC.

Cheers,
Peter

-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------
mcmorran@norfolk.infi.net (Peter McMorran)
-----------------------------------------------------------

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From: operagost@e-mail.com                              16-Dec-99 02:23:21
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 00:43:21
Subj: Re: Injoy Firewall

From: "Stephen Eickhoff (remove the - to reply)" <operagost@e-mail.com>

Thanks to both of you for flaming me. I am certainly not a nutcase, I've been
using OS/2 for 5 years. Yes, as I matter of fact I DO take such comments
seriously. I DID send an e-mail last week and DID NOT receive a response.
Whether you two received great service is _irrelevant_. I did NOT. I have the
1.2 version, the latest, and ever since it was set up originally with 1.1 I've
gotten constant disk activity. I'd post my config files to prove it to you,
but I don't really feel like changing all the ip addresses in my filters.
There's a lot of config files, perhaps I made a mistake, but firewall.cnf in
the root appears to have logging disabled:

SETTINGS        Logging-Control = Disabled,
                Permit-Incoming = YES,
                Permit-Outgoing = YES,
                Account-Interval = 1800,

Same with firerule.cnf:

TEMPLATE                Rule-Status = Enabled,
                        Comment = "no comments",
                        Protocol = IGNORE,
                        Source-Port = IGNORE,
                        Service = IGNORE,
                        Source = "any",
                        Source-Netmask = "255.255.255.255",
                        Destination = "any",
                        Destination-Netmask = "255.255.255.255",
                        Rule-Action = 0,
                        Alert-Type = Alert-Off,
                        Log-Control = Disabled,
                        Log-Mask = "rule date time msg prot source dest
service"
                        Log-File = "firewall\firewall.log",
                        Log-Size = 2000,
                        Account-Control = Disabled,
                        Account-Type = Service,
                        Mapping-Dest-IP = "any",
                        Mapping-Dest-Port = IGNORE,

This is the default filters.cnf:

TEMPLATE        Filter-Root = Yes,
                Filter-Status = Always,
                Filter-Scope = Outgoing-Packets,
                Action = Drop-Packet,
                Offset-Relativity = Data-Start,
                Source-Netmask = "255.255.255.255",
                Destination-Netmask = "255.255.255.255",

This is firewall.cnf in the firewall directory:

SETTINGS        Logging-Control = Disabled,
                Permit-Incoming = YES,
                Permit-Outgoing = YES,
                Account-Interval = 60,

I won't list all my rules, but all had Log-Control = Disabled.

So tell me again, both of you, where the loose nut is? Or is it just an
ID-10-T error? 

Mike Ruskai wrote:
> 
> On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 06:51:56 -0500, Michael W. Cocke wrote:
> 
> >I suspect you may be having other problems - like a loose nut between
> >the keyboard and the chairback.
> >
> >a) Turning logging off in the Injoy firewall turns logging OFF unless
> >you've done something else, too.  It's very straightforward.
> >
> >b) Injoy tech support is flat-out amazing.  Over the last few years I've
> >gotten used to the idea that manufacturer tech support was worthless.
> >Bjarne just forced me to rethink that opinion.  He spent 4 hours with me
> >yesterday helping me debug something that wasn't even an Injoy problem -
> >and didn't charge me, either!
> 
> I should second this.  Before InJoy Firewall was released, I had it
> installed and had a number of conversations with InJoy tech guys,
> resolving problems, including real-time testing at their FTP site, for a
> bug that they fixed quite quickly after finding.
> 
> This was both before and after I registered the product.
> 
> I'd probably be able to say the same thing about the InJoy dialer (which
> I'm using until I have another high-speed medium available - neither cable
> nor DSL available here), but I haven't had any problems that necessitate
> contacting them.
> 
> --
>  - Mike
> 
> Remove 'spambegone.net' and reverse to send e-mail.

-- 
----------------------------------
         Stephen Eickhoff
          Havertown, PA
----------------------------------

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From: tvv@sbs.kiev.ua                                   15-Dec-99 16:52:24
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 02:11:09
Subj: Re: Injoy Firewall

From: tvv@sbs.kiev.ua (Vit Timchishin)

On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 04:20:38, "Stephen Eickhoff (remove the - to reply)" 
<operagost@e-mail.com> wrote:

> I've only been able to get a maximum of about 25Kbps, and an average of a
> measly 10Kbps out of my 640Kbps ADSL. I suspected three things:

AFAIR Bell Atlantics is using PPPoE. If so, you can try SafeFire PPP. Users 
already reported that they has no problems with this provider and that they
are 
happy with speed.
 
Check http://www.lgs.kiev.ua

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygon...               15-Dec-99 16:11:08
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 02:11:10
Subj: Re: Injoy Firewall

Message sender: retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygone.net

From: "Mike Ruskai" <retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygone.net>

On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 04:20:38 GMT, Stephen Eickhoff (remove the - to reply)
wrote:

>I've only been able to get a maximum of about 25Kbps, and an average of a
>measly 10Kbps out of my 640Kbps ADSL. I suspected three things:
>
>1) I don't have a "home run", so the digital data has to travel up an old
>single pair about 50 feet to my apartment, thereby negating the fact
>that the CO is right outside the building.
>
>2) Bell Atlantic's network just sucks.
>
>3) The logging of EVERY FRIGGIN CONNECTION by Injoy Firewall was bogging
>down my poor old P90.
>
>Since, after reading the documentation several times, there seems to be
>NO WAY of completely turning off logging (I tried, it doesn't work), I
decided
>to simply make the log file read-only. That seems to have done the trick. I
>instantly managed to max out at 640Kbps and get an AVERAGE of 25-30 Kbps now.
>I'd really rather have some logging, just on certain ports. It's a shame that
>FX's tech support still hasn't answered my e-mail. Maybe English is the wrong
>language or something? They didn't mind taking my money!
>
>Unless you have a much better machine than mine (A P90 with 48 MB RAM and a
>2.1GB Seagate Hawk), I recommend setting gwpm.log read only, at least to see
>what happens.

I used that program when I had a cable modem, and I had no performance
problems at all.  Speaking of average transfer rates is a bit misleading,
since there are many bottlenecks on the Internet.  I was never the
bottleneck, and had rates as high as 500KB/s from external servers.  The
typical rate was around 75KB/s.  This is through the gateway, mind you,
which was a Pentium/200 machine.  It was not struggling at all.

Of course, I didn't use the PM version of the gateway, though I did try it
briefly.  It did not create a log file that I can find.

I suspect that your results are coincidental.


--
 - Mike

Remove 'spambegone.net' and reverse to send e-mail.


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From: retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygon...               15-Dec-99 16:14:24
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 02:11:10
Subj: Re: Injoy Firewall

Message sender: retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygone.net

From: "Mike Ruskai" <retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygone.net>

On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 06:51:56 -0500, Michael W. Cocke wrote:

>I suspect you may be having other problems - like a loose nut between 
>the keyboard and the chairback.
>
>a) Turning logging off in the Injoy firewall turns logging OFF unless 
>you've done something else, too.  It's very straightforward.
>
>b) Injoy tech support is flat-out amazing.  Over the last few years I've
>gotten used to the idea that manufacturer tech support was worthless.  
>Bjarne just forced me to rethink that opinion.  He spent 4 hours with me
>yesterday helping me debug something that wasn't even an Injoy problem -
>and didn't charge me, either!

I should second this.  Before InJoy Firewall was released, I had it
installed and had a number of conversations with InJoy tech guys,
resolving problems, including real-time testing at their FTP site, for a
bug that they fixed quite quickly after finding.

This was both before and after I registered the product.

I'd probably be able to say the same thing about the InJoy dialer (which
I'm using until I have another high-speed medium available - neither cable
nor DSL available here), but I haven't had any problems that necessitate
contacting them.


--
 - Mike

Remove 'spambegone.net' and reverse to send e-mail.


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From: retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygon...               15-Dec-99 16:18:16
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 02:11:10
Subj: Re: Netbios over tcp/ip questions

Message sender: retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygone.net

From: "Mike Ruskai" <retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygone.net>

On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 09:18:17 -0500, Michael W. Cocke wrote:

>This is the first time I've ever tried to set up netbios over IP, and I 
>have a few questions:
>
>I'm trying to connect from one system to another over the internet, and 
>I'd like to share drives on them using warp peer.  Questions of security
>aside(I already have ipsec & pluto working - thank you Bjarne!), I'm 
>having problems setting it up.
>
>I have netbios, tcp/ip, and netbios over tcp/ip configured for the 
>appropriate interfaces.  I can ping from one to the other successfully. 
>
>My questions: Is the NET USE syntax supposed to work for drive sharing 
>over this link? How?  Is there a way to check if the netbios layer is 
>working, other than by trying a NET USE?

Yes, and yes.  You'd want to use NET VIEW to see a list of available
machines.  Since it is NetBIOS, sharing and connecting work as usual.  The
only difference is under the covers, when SMB packets are routed over
TCP/IP, and sent to port 139 on the machine in question.


--
 - Mike

Remove 'spambegone.net' and reverse to send e-mail.


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From: andrew@netneurotic.de                             16-Dec-99 08:41:13
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 04:48:29
Subj: Re: Realtek and OS/2

From: andrew@netneurotic.de (Andrew J. Brehm)

Andrew J. Brehm <andrew@netneurotic.de> wrote:

> Lorne Sunley <lsunley@mb.sympatico.ca> wrote:
> 
> > You do not have the TCP/IP protocol bound to your network card!!!!!
> 
> Ok?`
> 
> > Use MPTS to remove the "no network adapter" and bind
> > the TCP/IP protocol to the network card.
> 
> I'll try.
> 
> This is something I never thought about on Linux and BeOS...
> 
> Thanks.

> > Set up the Network Drivers and Protocols properly
> > and it will work.

It's working now.

Only sad that programs like fdisk (or other color programs) don't run in
telnet sessions. However, other than that, OS/2 does the job.

I have not tried "setboot" yet, but I am sure it will run.

The idea is (and was) to be able to reboot the machine into any OS
(except Windows, since Windows doesn't have a telnetd afaik), from a
remote location. Boot Manager boots into OS/2 by default, and OS/2 can
reconfigure Boot Manager to boot into another OS once. Pretty neat.

-- 
Fan of Woody Allen
User of MacOS, BeOS, LinuxPPC
Supporter of Pepperoni Pizza

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From: retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygon...               16-Dec-99 06:33:04
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 10:28:06
Subj: Re: Injoy Firewall

Message sender: retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygone.net

From: "Mike Ruskai" <retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygone.net>

On Thu, 16 Dec 1999 02:23:43 GMT, Stephen Eickhoff (remove the - to reply)
wrote:

>Thanks to both of you for flaming me. I am certainly not a nutcase, I've been
[snip]

You might want to look up the term "flaming".

Nothing I posted qualifies.


--
 - Mike

Remove 'spambegone.net' and reverse to send e-mail.


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From: bj@fx.dk                                          16-Dec-99 13:46:29
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 10:57:20
Subj: Re: Injoy Firewall

From: Bjarne Jensen <bj@fx.dk>

Hi Stephen

I wonder if you missed this English response from F/X (you did
reply to it though):

http://x46.deja.com/getdoc.xp?AN=558265538&CONTEXT=945350589.166
1599803&hitnum=5

Instead of just asking questions about the problem, then you
publically tell the world that InJoy doesn't work as documented,
without caring much for the facts. People that have already made
up their mind, often don't care much about the facts anyway, so
those e-mails receive low priority. But it's not out because we
don't wish to support you and I welcome you to write me at
support@fx.dk, as long as your e-mails are serious.

Actually, a few people have recently received some offers from
our pirating friends in Ukraine that included a low price in
return for smudging InJoy publically and I suspected they had
gotten to you as well.

If you are seriously attemting to get rid of this problem,
then I think Graham C. Norris has already told you what the
problem is, namely that you have tracing turned on in the
gwpm.exe settings.

Good luck!

> seriously. I DID send an e-mail last week and DID NOT receive
>a response.  Whether you two received great service is
>_irrelevant_. I did NOT. I have the  1.2 version, the latest,


--Bjarne Jensen
F/X Communications


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

From: jpolt@bradnet.legend.co.uk                        16-Dec-99 14:50:09
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 10:57:20
Subj: Re: Realtek and OS/2

From: jpolt@bradnet.legend.co.uk (John Poltorak)

In <1e2w8ym.aw2y416hbeh8N@dialup-266.germany.ecore.net>, andrew@netneurotic.de 
(Andrew J. Brehm) writes:
>Andrew J. Brehm <andrew@netneurotic.de> wrote:
>
>> Lorne Sunley <lsunley@mb.sympatico.ca> wrote:
>> 
>> > You do not have the TCP/IP protocol bound to your network card!!!!!
>> 
>> Ok?`
>> 
>> > Use MPTS to remove the "no network adapter" and bind
>> > the TCP/IP protocol to the network card.
>> 
>> I'll try.
>> 
>> This is something I never thought about on Linux and BeOS...
>> 
>> Thanks.
>
>> > Set up the Network Drivers and Protocols properly
>> > and it will work.
>
>It's working now.
>
>Only sad that programs like fdisk

What's the problem with fdisk? It has a CLI if you prefer to run that. Try

fdisk /help

> (or other color programs) don't run in
>telnet sessions. 

You can run colour sessions through telnet - I have File Commander working 
perfectly. You need to tweak the server and client to make this work properly
using an odd combination of flags which aren't properly documented anywhere,
or if they are, they are not easily comprehended.

>However, other than that, OS/2 does the job.
>
>I have not tried "setboot" yet, but I am sure it will run.

It does.

>The idea is (and was) to be able to reboot the machine into any OS
>(except Windows, since Windows doesn't have a telnetd afaik), from a
>remote location. Boot Manager boots into OS/2 by default, and OS/2 can
>reconfigure Boot Manager to boot into another OS once. Pretty neat.
>
>-- 
>Fan of Woody Allen
>User of MacOS, BeOS, LinuxPPC
>Supporter of Pepperoni Pizza

--
John

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From: eickhsr@jm-usa.com                                16-Dec-99 11:57:07
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 13:28:02
Subj: Re: Injoy Firewall

From: Stephen Eickhoff <eickhsr@jm-usa.com>

Sorry Mike, that response should have been for Michael.

Mike Ruskai wrote:

> On Thu, 16 Dec 1999 02:23:43 GMT, Stephen Eickhoff (remove the - to reply)
> wrote:
>
> >Thanks to both of you for flaming me. I am certainly not a nutcase, I've
been
> [snip]
>
> You might want to look up the term "flaming".
>
> Nothing I posted qualifies.
>
> --
>  - Mike
>
> Remove 'spambegone.net' and reverse to send e-mail.

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From: eickhsr@jm-usa.com                                16-Dec-99 11:58:18
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 13:28:02
Subj: Re: Injoy Firewall

From: Stephen Eickhoff <eickhsr@jm-usa.com>

I'll check it, thanx.

"Graham C. Norris" wrote:

> Is this GWPM? If so, did you go into Control/Settings... and disable
> Trace Log?
>
> Graham.
>
> --
> *-* Please remove spam free prefix before replying *-*

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From: rcb@spamx.sandersnet.com                          16-Dec-99 17:17:26
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 16:52:16
Subj: Re: Netscape not showing everything...

From: rcb@spamx.sandersnet.com (Roger Brett)

Bingo!!!

Change the font from Courier New to plain Courier fixed it!!!  

Thanks.  This should be in the readme file.  I could swear I had the 
problem with the previous version (4.04) also.

RCB

On Thu, 16 Dec 1999 01:57:46, mcmorran@norfolk.infi.net (Peter 
McMorran) wrote:

> In <l5DXdjUKqvGX-pn2-PdQdYKyHUkZd@rdesk.pes.com>, on 12/15/99 
>    at 04:45 AM, rcb@spamx.sandersnet.com (Roger Brett) said:
> 
> >Hello,
> >I've had a problem with the last two versions (at least) of
> >Netscape  Communicator (4.04 & 4.61).  The problem is that
> >certain things don't  show up on a web page, such as the search
> >string entry field at the  Lexmark knowledgebase web site. 
> >Also, at "www.recycledsoftware.com"   I can't see the pricelist
> >below the category frame.  I can see all of  the above when
> >using the W9x version.
> 
> >Is this an HTML rev. compatibility problem?  Has anyone else
> >noticed  this anomoly?
> 
> >Thanks,
> >R.Brett
> 
> Hi, Roger,
> 
> This may be a problem with the fixed font. It defaults to Courier
> New, which is installed with WinOS2. If this font is not
> available, data entry fields shrink to zero height, etc. Try
> changing the fixed font (Edit->Preferences->Appearance->fonts) to
> plain Courier, and make sure the size is reasonable. This was
> reported for Comm 4.61; I don't know about 4.04.
> 
> HTH,
> Peter
> 
> -- 
> -----------------------------------------------------------
> mcmorran@norfolk.infi.net (Peter McMorran)
> -----------------------------------------------------------
> 

----------------------------------------------------------------------
---
Remove the "spamx." after the "@"
when auto-replying.

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From: mcrocker@micron.com                               16-Dec-99 10:23:18
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 16:52:16
Subj: Re: Firewall

From: Mark Crocker <mcrocker@micron.com>

Vincent Bernat <bernat@mail.dotcom.fr> writes:

> I would like to know what is the best firewall for a dial-up connection 
> for OS/2.
> NAT translation is optionnal, logging is important, complete control on 
> rules is important too.
> I have tried InJoy FW and SafeFire but both seems to be aimed at 
> permanent connexion (don't see the dial-up connexion as a lan adapter). 
> I have tried the one supplied with TCP/IP 4.1 but it lacks of 
> documentation and it doesn't want to log anything (LOG_DLL: OPENLOG: 
> facility=32, error code=3, dosopen: error code = 3).

I'm using IPGate from Maccasoft.  It's free, I use it for NAT and
(although I don't use this feature) it supports automatic dialing
whenever a tcp/ip request is made.

Check it out at: www.maccasoft.com/igate.

--
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
       Mark Crocker (Micron Technology Inc., Product Engineer)
		   http://www.webpak.net/~mcrocker
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

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From: alex@eddie.cis.uoguelph.ca                        16-Dec-99 21:20:16
  To: All                                               16-Dec-99 19:47:15
Subj: Re: Realtek and OS/2

From: alex@eddie.cis.uoguelph.ca (Alex Taylor)

On Thu, 16 Dec 1999 08:41:27 +0200, Andrew J. Brehm <andrew@netneurotic.de>
wrote:
> Only sad that programs like fdisk (or other color programs) don't run in
> telnet sessions. However, other than that, OS/2 does the job.

They don't?  They should.
Make sure your terminal type settings are suitable, maybe?
(Try using 'ANSI' emulation in your Telnet client, and maybe setting
TERM=os2ansi in OS/2 once you've logged in.)

> I have not tried "setboot" yet, but I am sure it will run.
> 
> The idea is (and was) to be able to reboot the machine into any OS
> (except Windows, since Windows doesn't have a telnetd afaik), from a
> remote location. Boot Manager boots into OS/2 by default, and OS/2 can
> reconfigure Boot Manager to boot into another OS once. Pretty neat.
 
I know... I really love this feature.

I just wish you could start telnetd as a detached process in OS/2, having
it sitting open on the desktop is annoying.


-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------------
 Alex Taylor                  BA - CIS - University of Guelph
 alex@eddie.cis.uoguelph.ca   http://eddie.cis.uoguelph.ca/~alex
-----------------------------------------------------------------

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From: operagost@e-mail.com                              16-Dec-99 23:36:08
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 03:47:21
Subj: Re: Injoy Firewall

From: "Stephen Eickhoff (remove the - to reply)" <operagost@e-mail.com>

I apologize, for some reason I didn't realize you were with F/X when I
responded. It does indeed turn out that the problem is in GWPM, I needed to
turn off the trace log. 

BTW, I am a registered user of both the firewall and dialer 5-user products. 

Bjarne Jensen wrote:
> 
> Hi Stephen
> 
> I wonder if you missed this English response from F/X (you did
> reply to it though):
> 
> http://x46.deja.com/getdoc.xp?AN=558265538&CONTEXT=945350589.166
> 1599803&hitnum=5
> 
> Instead of just asking questions about the problem, then you
> publically tell the world that InJoy doesn't work as documented,
> without caring much for the facts. People that have already made
> up their mind, often don't care much about the facts anyway, so
> those e-mails receive low priority. But it's not out because we
> don't wish to support you and I welcome you to write me at
> support@fx.dk, as long as your e-mails are serious.
> 
> Actually, a few people have recently received some offers from
> our pirating friends in Ukraine that included a low price in
> return for smudging InJoy publically and I suspected they had
> gotten to you as well.
> 
> If you are seriously attemting to get rid of this problem,
> then I think Graham C. Norris has already told you what the
> problem is, namely that you have tracing turned on in the
> gwpm.exe settings.
> 
> Good luck!
> 
> > seriously. I DID send an e-mail last week and DID NOT receive
> >a response.  Whether you two received great service is
> >_irrelevant_. I did NOT. I have the  1.2 version, the latest,
> 
> --Bjarne Jensen
> F/X Communications
> 
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Before you buy.

-- 
----------------------------------
         Stephen Eickhoff
          Havertown, PA
----------------------------------

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From: hemo_jr@attglobal.net                             16-Dec-99 19:13:23
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 03:47:22
Subj: Re: Samba and Warp 3 Connect

From: hemo_jr@attglobal.net (Matt Hickman)

In <38574F0A.A941634F@stcinc.com>, on 12/15/99 
   at 12:19 AM, Gregory Carvalho <GregoryC@stcinc.com> said:

>I have Warp 3 Connect with Fixpack 40 on it. I would like to get it to
>communicate with Samba. The Warp computer can ping the Samba computer.
>The Warp computer is not communicating with the nmbd on the Samba Server
>for WINS resolution, so PC Net commands are not functioning. Does anyone
>know how to make this configuration work?

Do you have TCPBeui set up in the Peer, in MPTS?  Do you have 
a TCPBeui name server and/or a names and broadcast list set
up in the MPTS configuration of TCPBeui?  The node type? This 
configuration needs to be set up for Samba connectivity.  This can a
lso be configured via DHCP.

-- 
Matt Hickman    
  I've got an aunt--who believes in astrology.... She doesn't look
  nutty, does she?  But she is and it's embarrassing because she
  just will talk about it and mother insists that I have to be
  polite.  If I could just tell her she has holes in her head, it
  wouldn't matter.  But oh  no!  I have to listen to her rave and
  pretend she is a sane, responsible adult--when she can't count
  above ten without an abacus.
                     Robert A. Heinlein (1907 - 1988)
                    _The Star Beast_  c. 1954

** Join the SETI@home club "The Heinleiners" go to
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/stats/team/team_17222.html

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From: hemo_jr@attglobal.net                             16-Dec-99 19:06:29
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 03:47:22
Subj: Re: Still Not Quite There?!

From: hemo_jr@attglobal.net (Matt Hickman)

In <835gha$16l$1@nnrp1.deja.com>, on 12/14/99 
   at 01:26 PM, heloman@my-deja.com said:

>I am running Warp 4.0 w/fp 12 and am connected to the
>RoadRunner system.

Excuse my ignorance, but to what RoadRunner system are
you referring?  I know of a couple -- E.g.  the IAK when it
came out was had an internal IBM code name of Road Runner.
anyone with a RRSxxx@ibm.net got the RRS in their ID for
"Road Runner Support"

-- 
 Matt Hickman 
  How can the whole universe move?  Yet, it does move, in a 
  spiritual sense.  With every righteous act we move closer to the
  sublime destination of Jordan's Plan. 
                         Robert A. Heinlein (1907 - 1988)
                         "Universe" c 1941 (ASF)

** Join the SETI@home club "The Heinleiners" go to
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/stats/team/team_17222.html

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From: hemo_jr@attglobal.net                             16-Dec-99 19:30:13
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 03:47:22
Subj: Re: Realtek and OS/2

From: hemo_jr@attglobal.net (Matt Hickman)

In <BIc64.38846$eh2.669350@news2.rdc1.on.home.com>, on 12/16/99 
   at 09:20 PM, alex@eddie.cis.uoguelph.ca (Alex Taylor) said:

>I just wish you could start telnetd as a detached process in OS/2, having
>it sitting open on the desktop is annoying.

So what's so bad about doing a "Start /min telnetd ..."?

-- 
Matt Hickman    
  The old bastard had always thought himself as wit.  He was half
  right.
                Robert A. Heinlein (1907 - 1988)
               _Glory Road_ 1963       

** Join the SETI@home club "The Heinleiners" go to
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/stats/team/team_17222.html


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From: hemo_jr@attglobal.net                             16-Dec-99 19:36:29
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 03:47:22
Subj: Re: netscape unable to locate the server

From: hemo_jr@attglobal.net (Matt Hickman)

In <BBL54.3095$Mz6.772813@news1.rdc2.pa.home.com>, on 12/15/99 
   at 12:13 PM, tvoltagg@home.com said:

>I'm having the same problem (I need the win-os/2 version for Quicken). 
>How does one ensure dos nameserver support?


Make sure the DOS box you are using has 
  ETC=c:\tcpip\dos\etc
set.

-- 
Matt Hickman    
        I saw three big, hairy male men promoted over my
        head and not one of them could do a partial   
        integration without a pencil. 
                           - Robert A. Heinlein
                           _The Rolling Stones_ (1952)

** Join the SETI@home club "The Heinleiners" go to
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/stats/team/team_17222.html

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From: jim.danvers@mindex.com                            16-Dec-99 23:06:23
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 03:47:22
Subj: Re: Connecting to a Linux server

From: Jim Danvers <jim.danvers@mindex.com>

Lorne, et all ...

How do I tell what the current version of MPTS is?  I learned about the
inetver
thing earlier tonight.   :)

-=- J.D. -=-

Lorne Sunley wrote:

> On Fri, 10 Dec 1999 05:02:54, "Barry" <72764.2166@csi.com> wrote:
>
> > I have 2 computers networked.  Computer #1 runs Red Hat Linux 6.0, 
Computer
> > #2 is a dual boot OS/2-WIN98 computer.  If I boot Computer #2 to WIN98 and
> > set it up to use either DHCP or manually entering of the IP address, I do
> > connect to the Linux box and see the shares.
> > If I boot computer #2 to OS/2 and setup TCPIP to manually enter the IP
> > address, I do connect to the Linux box and see the shares.
> > However, If I change the TCPIP settings to automatically get IP address
using
> > the Linux computer's DHCP server (and that is the only change I am
making),
> > reboot, I do NOT see the Linux box.  I know the DHCP is working okay on
the
> > OS/2 side since the DHCP monitor shows a valid lease with the correct IP
> > address (the same IP address that shows when I boot WIN98 using DHCP).  Of
> > course if I change back to manually entering the IP address, the shares
then
> > show up.  Any ideas?
> >
>
> What version of MPTS do you have installed?
>
> There are bugs in the earlier releases of MPTS and it's
> DHCP handling. If you haven't tried it yet update the
> MPTS level to WR8610.
>
> --
>
> Lorne Sunley

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From: sma.spam-not@rtd.com                              17-Dec-99 04:37:18
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 03:47:22
Subj: Re: Connecting to a Linux server

From: James Moe <sma.spam-not@rtd.com>


Jim Danvers wrote:
> 
> Lorne, et all ...
> 
> How do I tell what the current version of MPTS is?  I learned about the
inetver
> thing earlier tonight.   :)
> 
  INETVER gives the current versions of the MPTS tcpip protocol stack.
To see the current version of everything on your system run SYSLEVEL.
Make life easier by re-directing the output to a file first then use an
editor to look at the stuff. Search for TCP for tcpip components.

-- 

sma at rtd dot com
Remove ".spam-not" for email

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From: jim.danvers@mindex.com                            16-Dec-99 22:58:02
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 03:47:22
Subj: Warp v4.0 w/FP9 applied - now what?

From: Jim Danvers <jim.danvers@mindex.com>

Hello...

I have been using / playing with this version of Warp now (on and off)
for the past few weeks.  Currently I have v4 with FP 9 applied on a mutt
i233mmx box w/128 meg of memory.  I have netscape communicator 4.61
installed on it and that is the extent of my s/w installs @the PC.  I
have an external usr sportster 28.8 modem as well that I have managed to
create a dialup entry for in the "Dial other providers" thing and even
managed to get it to connect and work the first time, straight outta the
box!  :)

Now...

I have been doing some lurking in the OS/2 new groups here and see a lot
of chatter regarding something called InJoy and also different versions
of the IP stack.  I ran the "inetver" command on my box and it responded
with a 4.00e version for my current level of TCPIP.  While Injoy was
easy to find and download - this thing with the IP upgrade remains kind
of a mystery (to me anyway...)  Do I have to ~purchase~ an upgrade for
the IP stack on an OS/2 box??  Maybe this is a really dumb question -
but I really can't seem to get a lot of info on it.  Do later Fixpacks
have the updated stack?  I went with FP9 because some other folks who I
have been exchanging e-mails with, and I feel are reliable and have
treated me well with respect to OS/2 related questions, kinda gave me
the impression that it was a relatively stable and solid FP, whereas
some of the more current ones may still have some kinks to work out.
Apparently the device driver updates split thing happens either at FP10
or just after it (11)?  Yes?

Should I be concerned with the IP stack that I'm running at?  Any show
stoppers?  Is there some ~need~ to obtain 4.61 (or later) of the IP
stack?  ~Is~ there a later one that 4.61 or is that (4.61) currently the
most reliable and stable?

Sorry for rambling....  I have lots of questions.

-=- J.D. -=-

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From: jim.danvers@mindex.com                            16-Dec-99 23:25:18
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 03:47:22
Subj: Re: Firewall

From: Jim Danvers <jim.danvers@mindex.com>

Hey you guys...

(Warning:  new guy here)

You guys are, for the most part, way above my head when it comes to OS/2 speak 
-
I have what may seem like a totally stupid question, but what is the deal with
the 4.1 tcp/ip stack?  Does that come with one of the fixpacks?  Can I
download
it?  Are ya supposed to buy it?  (hope not...)  If so (have to buy), then from
where, how much, and last but not least - why? :(  Seems like everyone else
gives
thier stuff away...

Long story short - I have just installed Warp v4 and applied FP9.  I don't
know a
lot about OS/2 but do like what I see with it so far and I think that I could
put
it to work on a box or two that I have here in the house on my little network. 
 I
am principally interested (@ present) in learning about the current version of
the IP stack, and will also be exploring some sort of proxy server type
solution
- I currently use a windows product on a '95 box that work ok - but I have an
older compaq deskpro 5120 (p120) that I think warp would run just fine on and
could act as the proxy / gateway.  Dial on demand will be required as there is 
no
cable modem service avail to me where I live.  Even more ideal would be if the
proxy / gateway s/w could be cfg'd to run in OS/2 with out the gui being
loaded
as this would buy me back some additional resources.  Is this a "do-able"
thing?

Thanks in advance folks...

-=- J.D. -=-

Mark Crocker wrote:

> Vincent Bernat <bernat@mail.dotcom.fr> writes:
>
> > I would like to know what is the best firewall for a dial-up connection
> > for OS/2.
> > NAT translation is optionnal, logging is important, complete control on
> > rules is important too.
> > I have tried InJoy FW and SafeFire but both seems to be aimed at
> > permanent connexion (don't see the dial-up connexion as a lan adapter).
> > I have tried the one supplied with TCP/IP 4.1 but it lacks of
> > documentation and it doesn't want to log anything (LOG_DLL: OPENLOG:
> > facility=32, error code=3, dosopen: error code = 3).
>
> I'm using IPGate from Maccasoft.  It's free, I use it for NAT and
> (although I don't use this feature) it supports automatic dialing
> whenever a tcp/ip request is made.
>
> Check it out at: www.maccasoft.com/igate.
>
> --
>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>        Mark Crocker (Micron Technology Inc., Product Engineer)
>                    http://www.webpak.net/~mcrocker
>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

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From: wrook@walkabout.org                               17-Dec-99 01:33:05
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 03:47:22
Subj: TCP/IP 4.1 Buffer space

From: Wilson Rook <wrook@walkabout.org>

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
--------------6D27D18291F8512615CA18A2
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit



I am running  a Warp 4 compter, fp12, tcpip 4.1 as a dns server.  I have
gotten the folloiwng error

setsockopt:  no buffer Space Available

The computer will run for 2-3 days just fine - then IP will lock up.

Any Ideas?

--------------6D27D18291F8512615CA18A2
Content-Type: text/x-vcard; charset=us-ascii;
 name="wrook.vcf"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Description: Card for Wilson Rook
Content-Disposition: attachment;
 filename="wrook.vcf"

begin:vcard 
n:Rook;Wilson (Bill)
tel;fax:(231) 861-2680
tel;work:(231) 861-2615
x-mozilla-html:FALSE
adr:;;4708 First Street, P.O. Box 37;New Era;MI;49446-0037;USA
version:2.1
email;internet:wrook@walkabout.org
fn:Bill Rook
end:vcard

--------------6D27D18291F8512615CA18A2--

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From: timurkz@saxz.mmbankz.ruz                          17-Dec-99 09:24:19
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 03:47:22
Subj: Re: Firewall

From: "Timur Kazimirov" <timurkz@saxz.mmbankz.ruz>

Hello Jim,

On Thu, 16 Dec 1999 23:25:36 -0500, Jim Danvers wrote:

>You guys are, for the most part, way above my head when it comes to OS/2
speak -
>I have what may seem like a totally stupid question, but what is the deal
with
>the 4.1 tcp/ip stack?  Does that come with one of the fixpacks?  Can I
download
>it?

There is a difference between tcp/ip 4.1 stack and commercial product IBM
TCP/IP for OS/2 4.1 (this package includes it's own new MPTS with tcp/ip 4.1
stack).

You can get tcp/ip 4.1 (and higher) stack on your Warp 4.0 machine simply
by applying MPTS fixpacks wr08610+wr08620 (for a free). To say more simply,
stack 4.1 means "how to work with tcp/ip protocol", while TCP/IP 4.1 means
"how to work with tcp/ip protocol and set of applications that can work with
this
protocol". Any tcp/ip application like OpenChat or WGET can work with both
versions of stack, but applications designed especially for 4.1 stack cannot
run
on old versions of stack.
As an addition, I can say that some programs designed for old tcp/ip stack
won't run on 4.1 stack too (IBM sendmail 2.02, for example).

After applying 8610/8620 MPTS fixpacks you will get buil-in tcp/ip packet
filter
(very often this is named "firewall"). Using this filter you can limit access
to your
computer while online, but maintaining this require additional knoweledges.

With best regards,
Timur Kazimirov

-- Remove all "z" from my address to reply



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From: timurkz@saxz.mmbankz.ruz                          17-Dec-99 10:21:15
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 05:13:08
Subj: Re: TCP/IP 4.1 Buffer space

From: "Timur Kazimirov" <timurkz@saxz.mmbankz.ruz>

On Fri, 17 Dec 1999 01:33:11 -0500, Wilson Rook wrote:

>I am running  a Warp 4 compter, fp12, tcpip 4.1 as a dns server.  I have
>gotten the folloiwng error
>
>setsockopt:  no buffer Space Available
>
>The computer will run for 2-3 days just fine - then IP will lock up.

What DNS server do you use? That shipped with TCP/IP 4.1?
Have you applied any fixpack for MPTS and TCP/IP 4.1?


With best regards,
Timur Kazimirov

-- Remove all "z" from my address to reply



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From: jknott@ibm.net                                    17-Dec-99 05:54:20
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 10:29:26
Subj: Re: Netbios over tcp/ip questions

From: jknott@ibm.net (James Knott)

Do you have the other computer listed in the RFCNAMES.LST file?  This 
is done in MPTS.  Click NetBIOS over TCP/IP and then on edit.


In article <gunaalzrvfgrelnubbpbz.fmswiw3.pminews@netnews.worldnet.att.net>,
"Mike Ruskai" <retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygone.net> wrote:
>On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 09:18:17 -0500, Michael W. Cocke wrote:
>
>>This is the first time I've ever tried to set up netbios over IP, and I 
>>have a few questions:
>>
>>I'm trying to connect from one system to another over the internet, and 
>>I'd like to share drives on them using warp peer.  Questions of security
>>aside(I already have ipsec & pluto working - thank you Bjarne!), I'm 
>>having problems setting it up.
>>
>>I have netbios, tcp/ip, and netbios over tcp/ip configured for the 
>>appropriate interfaces.  I can ping from one to the other successfully. 
>>
>>My questions: Is the NET USE syntax supposed to work for drive sharing 
>>over this link? How?  Is there a way to check if the netbios layer is 
>>working, other than by trying a NET USE?
>
>Yes, and yes.  You'd want to use NET VIEW to see a list of available
>machines.  Since it is NetBIOS, sharing and connecting work as usual.  The
>only difference is under the covers, when SMB packets are routed over
>TCP/IP, and sent to port 139 on the machine in question.
>
>
>--
> - Mike
>
>Remove 'spambegone.net' and reverse to send e-mail.
>
>

-- 
E-mail jknott@ca.ibm.com
_________________________________________________________________________
The above opinions are my own and not those of ISM Corp., a subsidiary of
IBM Canada Ltd.

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From: wrook@walkabout.org                               17-Dec-99 07:33:25
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 10:29:26
Subj: Re: TCP/IP 4.1 Buffer space

From: Wilson Rook <wrook@walkabout.org>

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
--------------F13C7340C02AE789DD3CEBD5
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Sorry for the thin info - It was at the end of a long day.

I am running bind 8.2.1 port for os/2.  The TCPIP Level is 5.3007/1/6.  I
have not added the 8610 or 8620 FP.
I have 2 other computers that are also running this configuration.

The big differance is that I have the 4.1 Stack Firewall active.   I also am
running daytimed for time service.

Thanks, Wilson Rook

Timur Kazimirov wrote:

> On Fri, 17 Dec 1999 01:33:11 -0500, Wilson Rook wrote:
>
> >I am running  a Warp 4 compter, fp12, tcpip 4.1 as a dns server.  I have
> >gotten the folloiwng error
> >
> >setsockopt:  no buffer Space Available
> >
> >The computer will run for 2-3 days just fine - then IP will lock up.
>
> What DNS server do you use? That shipped with TCP/IP 4.1?
> Have you applied any fixpack for MPTS and TCP/IP 4.1?
>
> With best regards,
> Timur Kazimirov
>
> -- Remove all "z" from my address to reply

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Content-Disposition: attachment;
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begin:vcard 
n:Rook;Wilson (Bill)
tel;fax:(231) 861-2680
tel;work:(231) 861-2615
x-mozilla-html:FALSE
adr:;;4708 First Street, P.O. Box 37;New Era;MI;49446-0037;USA
version:2.1
email;internet:wrook@walkabout.org
fn:Bill Rook
end:vcard

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From: zayne@omen.com.au                                 17-Dec-99 16:00:26
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 20:07:15
Subj: Re: Netbios over tcp/ip questions

From: zayne@omen.com.au (Mooo)

"Mike Ruskai" <retsiemynnaht@spammoc.beoohaygone.net> wrote:

>Yes, and yes.  You'd want to use NET VIEW to see a list of available
>machines.  Since it is NetBIOS, sharing and connecting work as usual.  The
>only difference is under the covers, when SMB packets are routed over
>TCP/IP, and sent to port 139 on the machine in question.

Yes, this -should- work.  I would not work for me however as my ISP
blocks ports 138 and 139 (amongst many others) to 'protect' Windows
users apparently.  I'm told this is very commonly done by ISP's and
for pretty much the same reason.

This will bring you down and there is no way I know of to redirect
these ports to other less 'blocked' ones.

Craig

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From: GregoryC@stcinc.com                               17-Dec-99 12:22:28
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 20:07:16
Subj: Re: Samba and Warp 3 Connect

From: Gregory Carvalho <GregoryC@stcinc.com>

Matt Hickman wrote:
> 
> In <38574F0A.A941634F@stcinc.com>, on 12/15/99
>    at 12:19 AM, Gregory Carvalho <GregoryC@stcinc.com> said:
> 
> >I have Warp 3 Connect with Fixpack 40 on it. I would like to get it to
> >communicate with Samba. The Warp computer can ping the Samba computer.
> >The Warp computer is not communicating with the nmbd on the Samba Server
> >for WINS resolution, so PC Net commands are not functioning. Does anyone
> >know how to make this configuration work?
> 
> Do you have TCPBeui set up in the Peer, in MPTS?  Do you have
> a TCPBeui name server and/or a names and broadcast list set
> up in the MPTS configuration of TCPBeui?  The node type? This
> configuration needs to be set up for Samba connectivity.  This can a
> lso be configured via DHCP.
> 

I have NetBIOS, TCP/IP, and NetBIOS over TCP/IP configured in MPTS as
protocols for a 3C905. I entered the IP address of the WINS (Samba has
it's WINS capability enabled) in the NetBIOS Name Server Address. The
node type is B-Node.

Thanks,
Gregory Carvalho		GregoryC@stcinc.com
Simplified Technology Company	http://www.stcinc.com
In God I Trust!

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From: PGegen@UKans.nolospamare.edu                      17-Dec-99 21:35:06
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 20:07:16
Subj: Re: DOCSIS modem ?

From: PGegen@UKans.nolospamare.edu (Dr. Peter Gegenheimer)

On Wed, 15 Dec 1999 02:56:54, racette@cablevision.qc.ca (Martin Racette) 
wrote:

 Hi guys,
 
 I have to switch to DOCSIS modem, 
 because my ISP, and I know from work 
 that I need to run in Win98 
 "WINIPCFG.EXE" to make the modem find 
 the IPs it requires, but how can I do 
 something like that in Warp ??????

You run <install dir>/tcpip/bin/tcpcfg.exe. This is normally run by opening 
the "OS/2 System" folder, then the "TCP/IP Internet Folder", then launching 
"TCP/IP Configuration". You do NOT want the folder for dial-up connections, 
rather the one for direct internet connection. 

You want to configure "Lan Interface 0" -- click on "[] Enable", then select 
"0 Automatically, using DHCP" if your cable co is providing IP numbers 
automatically each time you log on; or, if not, then select "0 Manually, using
.." and type in the 2 IP's needed (your cable co. will have given them to 
you). 

Note that "router" and "gateway" are the same, and "netmask" or "subnet mask" 
are the same -- but check w/ cable co. if their names don't match IBM's! 

If you have automatic IP assignment via DHCP [dynamic host configuration 
protocol?], there is a tool called  <install dir>/C:/MPTN/BIN/dhcpmon.exe with
you should put in your startup folder. (Please don't ask why it's not in the 
Internet Utilities folder...) This monitors the status of your DHCP 
connection: shows the negotiation that your computer and the cable co undergo 
to assign your IP, what the current IP is, and how much longer you have to go 
on its "lease." This will help debug errors & connections. 

o----------------------------------------------------------------------o
| Dr. Peter Gegenheimer       | Vox: 785-864-3939  FAX: 785-864-5321   |
| Department of               |   PGegen@UKans.nospam.edu              |
|   Molecular Biosciences     |   http://rnaworld.bio.ukans.edu/       |
| University of Kansas        |"When you have excluded the impossible, |
| 2045 Haworth Hall           |  whatever remains, however improbable, |
| Lawrence  KS  66045-2106    |  must be the truth."      S. Holmes    |
o_____________________________|________________________________________o

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From: mcrocker@micron.com                               17-Dec-99 14:50:19
  To: All                                               17-Dec-99 20:07:17
Subj: Re: Firewall

From: Mark Crocker <mcrocker@micron.com>

Jim Danvers <jim.danvers@mindex.com> writes:

> You guys are, for the most part, way above my head when it comes to
> OS/2 speak - I have what may seem like a totally stupid question,
> but what is the deal with the 4.1 tcp/ip stack?  Does that come with
> one of the fixpacks?  Can I download it?  Are ya supposed to buy it?
> (hope not...)  If so (have to buy), then from where, how much, and
> last but not least - why? :( Seems like everyone else gives thier
> stuff away...

Unfortunately, the 4.1 stack is ONLY available with an expensive
subscription to the "Software Choice" service that IBM offers.  Most
things on this service are currently free, including the previous
version of the tcp/ip stack, but that will end on the 31st.  From then
on, ALL upgrades will require a subscription!  OS/2 will stop being an
OS you buy and start being one you rent.

  See: http://www-4.ibm.com/software/os/warp/swchoice/

> Long story short - I have just installed Warp v4 and applied FP9.  I
> don't know a lot about OS/2 but do like what I see with it so far
> and I think that I could put it to work on a box or two that I have
> here in the house on my little network.  I am principally interested
> (@ present) in learning about the current version of the IP stack,
> and will also be exploring some sort of proxy server type solution
> - I currently use a windows product on a '95 box that work ok - but
> I have an older compaq deskpro 5120 (p120) that I think warp would
> run just fine on and could act as the proxy / gateway.  Dial on
> demand will be required as there is no cable modem service avail to
> me where I live.  Even more ideal would be if the proxy / gateway
> s/w could be cfg'd to run in OS/2 with out the gui being loaded as
> this would buy me back some additional resources.  Is this a
> "do-able" thing?

Yes, I believe it is doable.  I am currently doing something even more
demanding.  My ancient 486 is pulling triple duty as my firewall,
print server and phone server (ie: answering machine).  I am using the
IPGate software mentioned below with a DSL connection and two other
machines connected to the local network.  If a 486 can handle that,
your p120 aught to work just fine.

> Mark Crocker wrote:

>> Vincent Bernat <bernat@mail.dotcom.fr> writes:

>>> I would like to know what is the best firewall for a dial-up
>>> connection for OS/2.  NAT translation is optionnal, logging is
>>> important, complete control on rules is important too.  I have
>>> tried InJoy FW and SafeFire but both seems to be aimed at
>>> permanent connexion (don't see the dial-up connexion as a lan
>>> adapter).  I have tried the one supplied with TCP/IP 4.1 but it
>>> lacks of documentation and it doesn't want to log anything
>>> (LOG_DLL: OPENLOG: facility=32, error code=3, dosopen: error code
>>> = 3).

>> I'm using IPGate from Maccasoft.  It's free, I use it for NAT and
>> (although I don't use this feature) it supports automatic dialing
>> whenever a tcp/ip request is made.

>> Check it out at: www.maccasoft.com/igate.

--
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
       Mark Crocker (Micron Technology Inc., Product Engineer)
                   http://www.webpak.net/~mcrocker
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

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