Hi, I've been having fun and games (not) getting dialup networking to work on Fedora Core 4. I eventually got it working in what I consider a dodgy manner, and would like to know if there's a proper solution. Initially, I've just used FC4 as terminals behind a Red Hat 9.0 server. It managed dial-up fine, the only messing around I remember having to do was putting "/sbin" in front of "ifup ppp0" in the modemlights utility. The "neat" program set up all the parameters needed for dialup quite fine. I recently updated that Red Hat 9.0 box to Fedora Core 4, and dial-up wouldn't work. I had to do all of the following: I had to manually enter "ln -s /dev/ttyS0 /dev/modem" before I could dial up. I had to put that into "/etc/rc.local" so I didn't have to type the command line after any reboots (the link disappears). (I gather there's a change in how /dev is going to be handled, but some understandable documentation is in need, and the GUI tool that created the modem settings really should have done the job for me properly, in the first place.) So now I can, albeit awkwardly, dial up. Onto the next step, making it easy to connect and disconnect. The modemlights utility didn't work because it wanted to bring up a ppp0 interface, and that's not how neat created the configuration (it named if after the name of my ISP, e.g. Optus). So I renamed my entries in neat to ppp0 and ppp1, instead of my two ISPs. But makes it hard to work out what's what in the list of connections in neat. I hadn't tried changing the modemlights configuration to use my ISP name instead of ppp0, I'd done more experimenting than I wanted to at the time, and phone calls cost too much to make several just to try out all the permutations. The next step was getting internet connection sharing through it to the rest of my LAN. Try as I might I couldn't find any option in a GUI to enable it. Previously I'd used some kernel configuration tweaking GUI to first start it, but I don't see anything similar. I've also done hte same thing, previously, by entering the following in a command line, "echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward", but that doesn't survive a reboot, and I've also put that line into the "/etc/rc.local" post start-up script. Is there some proper way to get /dev/modem set properly, differently from what I did? And is there some other proper way to enable IP forwarding differently from what I did? (Both using "/etc/rc.local".) I don't mind doing it that way, though if there's a proper way, and this turns out to be a kludge, I'd rather do it properly. The interaction between modemlights and neat needs a bit of sorting out. The way neat sets up configurations, by default, doesn't work with it. And modemlights probably isn't the only thing that expects the configuration to be called ppp0. -- Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists.