Re: starting appletalk daemons: socket: Invalid argument


Subject: Re: starting appletalk daemons: socket: Invalid argument
From: David Blache (alterego@austin.rr.com)
Date: Sun May 07 2000 - 16:40:41 EDT


on 5/7/2000 9:11 AM, Moritz Kaiser at ariser@fs.tum.de wrote:

> On Sun, 7 May 2000, David Blache wrote:
>
>> on 5/6/2000 5:05 PM, Moritz Kaiser at ariser@fs.tum.de wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> the first thing to do is to check, whether your NIC is working. Try ping,
>>> or analyze your /var/log/messages regarding your NIC.
>>> On my machine this looks like this:
>>> 8<-------------------*snip*
>>> May 5 23:48:47 x kernel: 3c515.c:v0.99 4/7/98 becker@cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov
>>> May 5 23:48:47 x kernel: 3c515 Resource configuration register 0x008f,
>>> DCR0483.
>>> May 5 23:48:47 x kernel: eth0: 3c515 at 0x280, 00:10:4b:9c:7e:ef, DMA3,
>>> IRQ 15
>>> May 5 23:48:47 x kernel: 64k word-wide RAM 1:1 Rx:Tx split,
>>> autoselect/10baseT interface.
>>> May 5 23:48:47 x kernel: 1 3c515 cards found.
>>> 8<-------------------*snip*
>>
>> I'm not using NIC (mainly because I don't know enough about it, or how to
>> configure it). If anyone would like to give a brief explanation of what it
>> is, and whether or not I should be running it, I'd be appreciative.
>>
> NIC=Network Interface Card. Your (probably) Ethernet Adapter. Any module
> oder kernel driver has to be run for you to be able to connect to any LAN.
> If your kernel doesn't support any NIC's you have to build a new one.
> *grin*
> In "make menuconfig" you'll find NIC-support at "Network device support".
> But in most cases your kernel already is supporting certain standard
> NICs. But check this out anyway.

The NIC is working fine. I was under the impression NIC was some sort of
different way of networking. (Oops.)
 
>>> Then ensure your kernel has appletalk support enabled. Otherwise build a
>>> new kernel including appletalk support.
>>
>> It wasn't enabled. I've enabled it.
>>
>> But when I reboot the machine atalk starts up, but afpd and company do NOT
>> start up. Can someone give me a clue as to why not? The atalk.init script
>> is in /etc/rc.d/init.d/atalk.init. Seems like that should be enough to get
>> afpd and friends going. But I always have to run the script manually to get
>> them going after a restart. :/
>>
> Are the netatalk daemons running after beeing started manually? Watch for
> it by typing "ps aux | grep afpd" and "ps aux | grep papd" and
> "ps aux | grep atalkd".
> If not, there might be a general problem with networking, as mentioned
> above.

Yes, they run fine but only if I launch the atalk.init script manually after
restarting. Immediately after a restart, the only thing that appears to be
running is atalkd. The others are not running for some reason.



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b28 : Wed Jan 17 2001 - 14:30:39 EST