Hello,
Sorry for the late answer.
Thanks for the tcpdump thing. I've tried it and I saw nothing on the link.
So I verified that the parallel port was correctly configured and ... it
was (I was able to print things
on my printer).
No error/warning messages about plip.
So, I returned back to my computer shop and looked at what precisely had
I bought:
A SERIAL null-modem ?
I thought null-modem was only dedicated to parallel port ?
So, I bought a PARALLEL null-modem and now it works fine (with kernel
2.4.19).
Your sincerely,
Yann COLLETTE
Riley Williams wrote:
> Hi Yann.
>
> > I'm trying to connect a laptop to a my home computer using a PLIP
> > connection. On both computers, I've a Linux Mandrake 9.0 with a
> > kernel 2.4.20.
>
> I've never specifically used PLIP but there are some points to be
> cleared up in your email...
>
> > In /etc/hosts, I have pc.home.org 198.168.0.1 and laptop.home.org
> > 198.168.0.2
>
> Do you mean 192.168.0.1 and 192.168.0.2 respectively? The addresses
> you quote are valid across the Internet rather than being reserved
> for local LAN use.
>
> > For /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny, I've followed the
> > PLIP-HOWTO advices. I've configured the parport_pc module (for
> > both pc):
> >
> > insmod parport_pc io=0x378 irq=7
> >
> > The kernel messages are fine with this configuration.
> > Then I load the PLIP module (insmod plip).
>
> That looks fine so far...
>
> > On the laptop, I do:
> >
> > ifconfig plip0 laptop.home.org pointopoint pc.home.org \
> > netmask 255.255.255.255 up
> > route add -host pc.home.org dev plip0
> >
> > And on my home computer I do:
> >
> > ifconfig plip0 pc.home.org pointopoint laptop.home.org netmask >
> 255.255.255.255 up
> > route add -host laptop.home.org dev plip0
>
> I seem to remember that pointopoint implies netmask 255.255.255.255
> in which case the latter could be omitted.
>
> > On the laptop, when I ping the pc, nothing happens and on the pc,
> > when I ping the laptop, nothing happens too.
>
> Are your systems set up to respond to ping's ?
>
> As a better test of connectivity, run `tcpdump -i plip0` on one end,
> then run the ping on the other. That will show you whether there's
> any traffic going over the link. Swap them over and you'll check the
> other direction as well. Use CTRL-C to stop tcpdump.
>
> > I don't know where I am wrong:
>
> > - Maybe my parport is not really bidirectional on my laptop (how
> > can I know if a parport can communicate ?)
>
> The above tcpdump test will show that.
>
> > - Maybe there's a problem with the way I configure the PLIP module
> > (I don't known how to dive into the kernel sources to extract
> > information about how to configure a module. There are no
> > information about the PLIP module in the kernel documentation).
>
> Other things to check:
>
> * What type of parallel port do you have?
>
> This is normally configured in the BIOS setup, from the following
> options - the higher up this list, the better.
>
> EPP 1.9
> EPP 1.7
> EPP/ECP
> ECP/EPP
> ECP
> Normal
>
> * Is your cable wired correctly? Depending on the type of parallel
> port, you need one of two different sets of wiring - either the
> "Standard LapLink" or the "Wide LapLink" cable.
>
> The tcpdump test above will answer this question. Simply put, if
> there is traffic passing both ways then the cable is correct.
>
> * Do you have a firewall set up on either system? If so, disable it
> and see if that fixes the problem.
>
> Personally, I was stung by the last item recently, and that's with a
> standard Ethernet link where there's less to go wrong to start with.
>
> Best wishes from Riley.
> ---
> * Nothing as pretty as a smile, nothing as ugly as a frown.
>
> ---
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>
>
>
>
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