I’m happy with opensuse 11.3 on eee 4g, ethernet is working good, I can connect to wireless, but somewhy DNS servers are not resolved, so skype is working, but cannot browse in normal way. Dunno, maybe I did something wrong. Where can I fix this thing?
Hi,
I got the same problem. try deleting /etc/resolv.conf file
Here is collectNWdata output:
http://pastebin.com/P6xVCegx
!!! CND0180I: The system can’t ping external IP address 195.135.220.3
!!! CND0150E: There might be a problem with the default gateway definition 88.119.110.1 on interface wlan0
!!! CND0240E: knetworkmanager for network configuration enabled but a YAST network card configuration for wlan0,eth0 exist
On 11/11/2010 05:36 AM, algyzas wrote:
>
> Here is collectNWdata output:
> http://pastebin.com/P6xVCegx
>
> !!! CND0180I: The system can’t ping external IP address 195.135.220.3
> !!! CND0150E: There might be a problem with the default gateway
> definition 88.119.110.1 on interface wlan0
> !!! CND0240E: knetworkmanager for network configuration enabled but a
> YAST network card configuration for wlan0,eth0 exist
You have a routing, not a DNS, problem. When you are connected to the wired
interface, please run the ‘/sbin/route -n’ command and post the output. Then
disconnect the wire, make a wireless connection, and rerun the command.
The extraneous YaST configuration files are not a problem.
On 11/11/2010 09:06 AM, algyzas wrote:
>
> http://pastebin.com/r1Sn5aTC
>
> Here you are
From that output, I gather that the route to the outside world is different for
wired than for wireless. Could you please describe the setup. For example, I
would use the following for my configuration:
Internet ==(coax)== Cable Modem ==(Ethernet Cable)== Access Point/router
Computers may be connected to the AP/router either by wire or by wireless.
Dunno, I don’t have modem at home, only cable, installed using ethernet connection, afterwards changed MAC address of eth0 like it is written here
This Is How To Change A Mac Address
because the connection is tied to the address of one computer’s network card. Afterwards I tried wireless, regulated something according to what I’ve found in wiki, but as you can see, no success :\
The cable modem shouldn’t rely on the mac address of your system. It should grab the mac address of your router. Then the router assigns you the appropriate IP address not caring which mac you’re using. If you have multiple devices with the same MAC address you’re going to confuse the hell out of your router and you most likely won’t be able to connect.
No modem or router here in my house, only cable. And my IP several years is the same
On 11/11/2010 02:36 PM, algyzas wrote:
>
> rodhuffaker;2251350 Wrote:
>> The cable modem shouldn’t rely on the mac address of your system. It
>> should grab the mac address of your router. Then the router assigns you
>> the appropriate IP address not caring which mac you’re using. If you
>> have multiple devices with the same MAC address you’re going to confuse
>> the hell out of your router and you most likely won’t be able to
>> connect.
>
> No modem or router here in my house, only cable. And my IP several
> years is the same
AFAIK, there must be some kind of box connected to the cable. That is a modem.
Perhaps it is a card in your computer, but those are rare.
How are you doing wireless if you do not have a router? Is the wireless provided
by someone else? Give us the diagram of how things are connected.
sounds like his wireless is 4g, cel phone wireless.
Wireless is eduroam, it is not at home, but in university. I don’t have it at home.