On Tuesday 09 September 2008 11:54:48 Paul Smith wrote: > On Tue, Sep 9, 2008 at 11:36 AM, Tony Molloy <tony.molloy@xxxxx> wrote: > >> Thanks again, Tony. The new results: > >> > >> # /sbin/service network status > >> Configured devices: > >> lo eth0 > >> Currently active devices: > >> lo eth0 vmnet8 vmnet1 > >> # > > > > OK you have both the NetworkManager service and the network service > > running. You shouldn't have both running at the same time. > > > > Do you have a static IP address, is this a laptop. > > > > You can switch one or other service off with > > > > # service NetworkManager stop > > or > > # service network stop > > > > To make the change permanent and survive a reboot do > > > > # chkconfig --level 345 NetworkManager off > > or > > # chkconfig --level 345 newtork off > > Thanks again, Tony. I am using a desktop and not a laptop, and my IP > is dynamic. Thus, which one of the two services should I stop > permanently? > > Paul For DHCP adresses you can go with either. Try NetworkManager first by disabling the network service with # chkconfig network off and then rebooting. Then # service NetworkManager status should tell you NetworkManager is running and # service network status should tell you network is not running. Then wait a few minutes and do ( it takes ntpd a few minutes to synchronise ) # /usr/sbin/ntpq -p If you see one of the time servers with an * in front of it then ntpd is working and synchronised to that server. Hope this helps, Tony -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines