Well, I recently had a power failure and when I rebooted there was a problem with the startup. I figured FC would take care of it just like windows does and there'd be no problem. I'm not so sure it did, a file may have gotten corrupted somewhere. Anyway, I am on version 6 and have been meaning to upgrade but I didn't have the time but rather than spend any more time on this I am going to do a fresh install of FC9. I'm sure that will take care of it. Thank all, Jim > Date: Tue, 24 Jun 2008 12:21:37 -0400 > From: maximilianbianco@xxxxxxxxx > To: fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: Network connection issue > > Jim Douglas wrote: > > Cable Modem. It is a valid IP. I have a second HD connected to this computer and when I switch to it I can connect to the internet no problem, I am posting from it right now.. > > > > I am thinking I may have had the "Services" window open and clicked on something by accident.... > > > > pinging is fine, a remote Ip times out... > > > > Jim > Your dual booting fedora and windows? Fedora 8 or 9? What are the first > two numbers of your IP? > > An ip that starts with 169.254.x.x is not valid on any network(not > strictly true), if you have one of these then you are not getting a > valid ip via dhcp. If your address begins with 192.168.x.x or 172.16.x.x > then you have a private ip, which seems likely if you can ping the > gateway but not a remote host. Please copy and paste the commands your > using to ping from the terminal. Is the network manager service running? > What is the status of the network service? Look in the services GUI and > note the icon's color and the plug next to it. Highlight the service and > you will get the details. So on my f9 box the network manager shows a > green icon and a plug that looks plugged in( service enabled and > running), while the network service shows a red icon and a plug that is > plugged in(service disabled and running). > On an F8 box the GUI is slightly different and does not show the helpful > little icons but if you highlight the service it will give you a few > details. The network manager should be running and the network service > should show the interfaces that are configured to start at boot time and > currently active interfaces but there probably/shouldn't be a check in > the box next to it. > > Remember what you do every step of the way or even *better* take notes > so you don't have to remember :^) > > Why did you have the services tab open in the first place? > Have you been playing with the firewall config? > > > -- > "You don't know the power of the dark side" --Darth Vader > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Earn cashback on your purchases with Live Search - the search that pays you back! Learn More |
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