On Tue, Mar 01, 2005 at 05:51:43PM -0600, Brian Fahrlander wrote: > On Tue, 2005-03-01 at 22:44 +0000, fellons wrote: > > Your /etc/hosts needs help. > > 127.0.0.1 localhost.localdomain localhost home <-- Fine > 192.168.0.1 home.bear.net bear <-- problem > 192.168.0.2 pegasus.bear.net pegasus <-- problem > > There are 'reserved' ranges of IP addresses, 192.168.*.* is one, > 172.something-or-other is another, and there's 10.10.*, too. These > won't route- routers drop them instead of passing them on to other > routers who might find them. The non-routable address space: 192.168.0.0 -> 192.168.255.255 172.16.0.0 -> 172.31.255.255 10.0.0.0 -> 10.255.255.255 > > Try: > 127.0.0.1 localhost.localdomain localhost > 192.168.0.1 home.local home > 192.168.0.2 pegasus.local pegasus > > This needs to be in the /etc/hosts of both machines. I believe the > MS world calls this hosts.sam or something similarly ignorant, but if > you make both machines aware of these addresses, all is well. The 'hosts.sam' is a sample hosts file. To use it under Windows, copy the hosts.sam to hosts and edit that file. -- Jim Kaufman Linux Evangelist public key 0x6D802619, CISSP# 65668 --- Life. Don't talk to me about life. -- Marvin the Paranoid Android