Yes, I have reset mozilla a number of times (even rebooted - although I shouldn't have to). Yes:
I can use wget http://firestuff.org/projects/ecncheck-0.9.6.tar.bz2 and it works;
mozilla does not work, neither does lynx.
-Lane Peter Eddy wrote:
By the way Mozilla can get confused and be unable to resolve host names if your network settings change while it's running. If you can resolve host names and get stuff with wget but not mozilla (which is what I think you're saying) then you may just need to restart mozilla. Make sure that it's really shutdown too, "pkill -9 mozilla" to be sure.
Peter
Lane Inman wrote:
Thank you Jack;
Could you please explain what I am doing with ecn_check... Interestingly, I used wget with this (correcting to http://firestuff.org/projects/ecncheck-0.9.6.tar.bz2) and it worked, but I can't see it through the web.
Second Question: Is there a particular reason this is not packaged with fedora if it is of help???
-Lane Inman Ph. D. Candidate Systems Science - ETM Portland State University
Jack Bowling wrote:
On Fri, May 21, 2004 at 08:05:33PM +0200, Alexander Dalloz wrote:
Am Fr, den 21.05.2004 schrieb Lane Inman um 19:33:
I have read this thread and am having similar problems;
I however am connecting directly to a hub which is connected to DSL; and I have a fedora core 1 machine on the same network which is working fine. Additionally, I can ssh, scp and amule with no problems it just seems like the web.
Lane Inman
You can't reach any website or just failing some certain addresses?
You did try to deactivate ECN without success?
Ecncheck is a useful tool for this purpose:
http://firestuff.org/projects/ecncheck-0.9.6.ta.bz2