On 3/27/2013 1:52 PM, Les Mikesell wrote: > On Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 12:32 PM, Robert Benjamin <benjie1@xxxxxxx> wrote: >>> The reason I think this is the problem is the post where you said you >>> could log in after a very long delay. About the only thing that can >>> cause a very long delay is the system waiting for DNS responses on >>> what it thinks is a working network interface. The next things >>> needed for further diagnosis would be the output of the 'ifconfig' >>> command after you are able to log in, and the results from 'cat >>> /etc/resolv.conf. The first should show the IP address assigned by >>> DHCP from the router, and the second will have the DNS nameserver >>> address(es). >> In the last post on the forum is the output of ifconfig. It closely >> resembles what was shown there and stated that my output should resemble >> the one already there in post 29 ,and it does. There was no suggestion >> to try cat /etc/reslov.conf. Can do that from the root login. Will wait >> til I get a reply from the forum. Plenty of suggestions from here and >> the forum and I'll keep up with both. The delay was almost an hour BTW. >> Thanks again. The router works perfectly fine and quickly for win 7, >> Ubuntu 12.2 and Mint 14. > The IP address looks like what you would get from a typical home > router, so that's probably OK. A quick test for DNS would be the > 'dig' command. If it quickly returns a screenfull of root > nameservers and addresses, then DNS is not the problem. If it > doesn't, then check what you have in your /etc/resolv.conf file. > dig returned a lot of root nameservers instantly. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos