On Thu, 2009-02-26 at 12:58 -0700, Robin Laing wrote: > Rick Bilonick wrote: > > I installed F10 64-bit from the DVD iso on a 64-bit Intel 4-cpu > > computer. I had problems getting the wired network connection to work on > > network "A" UNTIL I realized that the "network" daemon was for some > > reason turned off by default. Once I turned it on via services, > > networking worked fine (using a static IP). (There is an annoying bug in > > the F10 gui for networking - the net mask gets changed to the gateway ip > > which of course screws up networking - this appears to be fixed once you > > upgrade the system but I had to manually fix the eth0 script to get the > > netmask to the correct value.) > > > > Now I've installed the same DVD iso on a dual 64-bit AMD Opteron system > > that previously had run F8 (networking worked fine on network "A"). I've > > made sure network is on. I've manually configured the eth0 script to > > avoid the buggy network gui netmask problem. I can ping the gateway on > > network "A". For some reason I cannot ping the DNS on this network. I > > can connect to my home computer using its IP address using ssh. But I > > cannot view web pages using the URL's. I switched to a different > > ethernet port on a "different" network "B" with different fixed IP and > > DNS that I know works (I use it for my F8 laptop every day) and although > > I can ping the gateway and DNS, I still cannot view web pages. I just > > now hooked my Ubuntu 8.10 laptop to network "A" and it connects > > flawlessly and I can view web pages so I know the port works - both > > ports on networks "A" and "B" work fine. But I cannot get the F10 AMD > > computer to connect to either network and view web pages (I do as I said > > get some connection using IP addresses and ssh). > > > > Any ideas on what is wrong? This is very frustrating. If I could get a > > network connection I could upgrade the computer but I can't get to > > square one. > > > > P.S. I've looked at the eth0 script, the resolv.conf and hosts files and > > everything looks fine. I've tried turning different things on and off > > (like IPv6 and peer) but nothing makes a difference. I'm using DNS1, > > DNS2, and DNS3 in the eth0 script and these appear appropriately in the > > resolv.conf file. > > > > I have never had this much trouble getting a wired network connection - > > it almost always works by default. > > > > Rick B. > > > > My rule for this issue is to remove network manager. > > On two desktop computers with static IP addresses was. > > -install F10 from DVD. > -apply all the updates. > -install yumex. {I like it better than packagekit} > -install system-config-network > -turn off networkmanager > -remove networkmanager > -run system-config-network > -enter in settings > -restart networking > -ensure networking is running properly > -test by rebooting. > > As others have suggested, check /etc/sysconfig/network* > as well as /etc/resolve.conf > > > -- > Robin Laing > The network problem has been resolved. Now networking works but after having to reboot because the keyboard locked up, now F10 refuses to boot to a graphic display. I can get to a shell and install updates via yum. Rick B. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines