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Simple (?) Network Question
Message
From
24/07/1999 20:49:22
 
 
To
24/07/1999 20:02:16
Jay Johengen
Altamahaw-Ossipee, North Carolina, United States
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Troubleshooting
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00245148
Message ID:
00245787
Views:
15
>Thanks guys... I've gotten the two computers to finally see one another, but now I can't get the client laptop to use my ADSL connection on the server. Whenever I try to set-up a new connection it always wants a phone number. When I use the wizard, I answer the best I can, but it always says it can't find the connection on the network. I've looked through the WinIpCfg and since I'm a bit unfamiliar with all the IP address stuff I'm sure I'm just not setting something up correctly. Making sure I added the NetBEUI got them talking and I read somewhere that I had to make sure I had the TCP/IP setup on both machines in order to let them both use the same internet connection. I've updated to Windows 98 Second Edition... Do I need to do something regarding a proxy? Also, I don't want to do anything that compromises my existing ADSL connection on my primary machine. I would REALLY apprection ANY additional help in getting this to work... I'm so close I can almost taste it...
>

There are new configuration options in SE to permit the machine with two NICs to act as a Proxy server for all the machines in the workgroup. In order to get this working, both machines will have to be running TCP/IP on their common NIC (if you go this route, I'd recommend simplifying the network configuration by only using TCP/IP and enabling NBT (NetBIOS over TCP/IP) on both machines. You'll want to have both machines assigned a fixed IP address on their common NIC; Dragan's suggestion of using 10.0.0.1 and 10.0.0.2 is a good one; make certain that your subnet mask is set to 255.255.255.0, and that the machine with the DSL line is set to act as the gateway.

I'm running SE here, but I have a connection through Proxy Server on my NT Server, so I haven't tried to configure the Win98 proxy. There's a useful whitepaper on Microsoft's website that might be worth a read; try Share a Single Internet Connection Among Multiple PCs with Windows 98 Second Edition; it runs through the basic setup needed to make things work.

>ED: You were right; I just needed to take the time to learn it...
>
>Thanks! Renoir
>
>>>I'm trying to connect a laptop using a 10/100 3Com PCM/CIA card to a 10/100 3Com card in my desktop PC. I have two cards in the desktop - the first card is used to access an ADSL line and the second was supposed to give the laptop access to the desktop. I never been comfortable (nor successful) in trying to do anything related to network settings, configurations, protocals and all the other stuff that I desperately need right now. All three cards check out fine in the device manager and I've gotten both machines to at least show themselves (and appropriate shared drive) in the network neighborhood, but I just can't seem to get them to see each other. I even went out and purchased a developer's Windows 98 book and all it did was encourage me to pay to have this done. Can anyone give me a hand or some references that could help? I really didn't think this would be that difficult...
>>
>>Welcome to my favorite toothache. I had to play with situations like this a dozen times in the last few years (since none of our customers are rich enough to have an NT server).
>>
>>Check the Browse Master property: control panel/network/file and print sharing/properties. Set it to Enabled on one machine, and to Disabled on all the others. Don't leave it set to Automatic. Reboot'em all (it will demand it, anyway). Then, try to Find Computer - and gradually they'll show up. It takes them some time to poll each other, as you will notice if you rename one of machines: the old name may hang around for a while, sometimes days. You may try to pop into a DOS window and NET USE R: \\othermachine\c, sometimes it works before the machines see each other, or it bombs out with error 53 - if you get a 53, then you didn't do it (yet).
>>
>>One thing works better than others: forget about NetBEUI and IPX/SPX and set it to TCP/IP only. Assign IP addresses to the machines (we usually go with 10.0.0.1, 10.0.0.2 etc, with IP mask of 255.255.255.0) and use the machine with 10.0.0.1 as the gateway. No DSN, no gadgets, just the gateway. Worked in almost all of the cases where we had various network problems.
>>
>>HTH, else shoot Bill, not me.
EMail: EdR@edrauh.com
"See, the sun is going down..."
"No, the horizon is moving up!"
- Firesign Theater


NT and Win2K FAQ .. cWashington WSH/ADSI/WMI site
MS WSH site ........... WSH FAQ Site
Wrox Press .............. Win32 Scripting Journal
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