I appreciate your responses.
I can access the the outside world from both my other computers: a XP
system and a RHEL4 linux server.
Using route -n I get the same results as is the output you list below.
My linux server returns the last column as eth0 since it is connected
through a cable.
This happens with the F5 box whether or not I have the firewall running
or WEP enabled on the router, or any combination of these.
I feel like it is some small configuration problem because this HP
machine worked fine with my network with Windows 98 running on it before
I installed Fedora 5.
I have tried the KDE wifiwireless and it tells me no signal trying to
find my Network. I do not think this is correct because I have not
moved the computer or the router and the wireless connection worked when
W98 was on the machine. When I scan for networks it shows the networks
in the neighborhood that I have seen before.
If you tell what information might help us, I can pipe the command's
results to a txt file and include them in a reply since I have samba
working. I just do not know what I need to look at anymore.
Thank you
Andy Green wrote:
Wolfgang Gill wrote:
My problem is that I can access all my computers from the HP and they
can access the HP, BUT I can not get outside my LAN.
Sounds like the ISP's DNS addresses are missing.. Does the router forward
How about no default route is configured?
route -n
should have a line at the bottom marked up as UG, this is where your
machine sends packets if they don't match any of the other routes. Mine
looks like this for example, so 192.168.0.1 is the router that goes out
to the world
# route -n
Kernel IP routing table
Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use
Iface
192.168.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0
wlan0
169.254.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.0.0 U 0 0 0
wlan0
0.0.0.0 192.168.0.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0
wlan0
-Andy
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