Date: Mon, 24 Jul 2000 14:57:02 +0200 From: "Miklos Niedermayer" <mico@bsd.hu> To: Udo Schweigert <ust@cert.siemens.de> Cc: "Roberto Nunnari, AGIE" <roberto.Nunnari@agie.ch>, isdn@freebsd.org Subject: Re: AVM Fritz!Card pnp Message-ID: <20000724145702.F314@bsd.hu> In-Reply-To: <20000724130727.A94126@alaska.cert.siemens.de>; from ust@cert.siemens.de on Mon, Jul 24, 2000 at 01:07:29PM %2B0200 References: <390EB6D8.1089A80A@agie.ch> <20000502122511.A66256@alaska.cert.siemens.de> <390EBD65.2EBDDEFA@agie.ch> <20000502124235.A66656@alaska.cert.siemens.de> <392CF53E.DE8CC0B4@agie.ch> <20000525112228.A53021@alaska.cert.siemens.de> <397C2D82.76A4F9DC@agie.ch> <20000724130727.A94126@alaska.cert.siemens.de>
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Hi! Udo Schweigert: > You should not use ppp (instead ISDN uses sppp). You should have something > like this in your /etc/rc.conf: Why shouldn't he use ppp? It's a lot flexible and can operate in sync mode too. Maybe, SPPP is mode stable ...? Don't know, ppp is stable enough, i think. > After a reboot a simple ping (or any other non-local netcommand) will start > your isdn-connection. What about controlling what kind of network traffic could bring up the interface up, and what traffic could keep it alive? This was a *very* important thing when i set up our isdn routers. -- mico@bsd.hu To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-isdn" in the body of the message
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