No. I can successfully ping "localhost", but nothing else; cannot ping
other equipment inside my network nor internet IPs.
Jeff
Thanks for the responses. I tried "apt-get . .
.", but it failed
because,
of course, DNS doesn't work so the package
server(s) cannot be found.
Likewise, the Other | Update . . . feature did not work.
Like all the equipment in my home office, I set DNS to public servers at
OpenDNS, so the djigzo's DNS settings are:
DNS 1: 208.67.222.222
DNS 2: 208.67.220.220
DNS 3: [blank[
Weird. Can you ping 208.67.222.222 ?
Martijn
Jeffery Hallett/Mindea wrote on 05/26/2011 08:46:55 AM:
> From:
>
> Jeffery Hallett/Mindea
>
> To:
>
> users(a)lists.djigzo.com
>
> Date:
>
> 05/26/2011 08:46 AM
>
> Subject:
>
> Re: Newbie problem with setup
>
Thanks for the responses. I tried "apt-get . .
.", but it failed
> because, of course, DNS doesn't work so the package
server(s) cannot
> be found. Likewise, the Other | Update . . . feature did not work.
>
> Like all the equipment in my home office, I set DNS to public
> servers at OpenDNS, so the djigzo's DNS settings are:
> DNS 1: 208.67.222.222
> DNS 2: 208.67.220.220
> DNS 3: [blank[
Jeff
>On 01/-10/-28163 08:59 PM, lst_hoe02 at kwsoft.de wrote:
>> Zitat von jhallett at
mindea.com:
>>
>>> Hi Martin.
>>> I downloaded and setup the VMWare image. How do I best check and
test
>>> DNS?
>>
>> Maybe "dnsutils" should be included so one can test DNS resolution
with
>> "dig"?
>
>Yes I'll do that since I had to install dnsutils more than once when
>installing the Virtual Appliance. I try to keep the Virtual Appliance
as
>clean as possible to make it more secure and make
it less likely that
>updates should be installed. dnsutils (and Telnet) however are tools
>that come handy. I will add them when the virtual appliance is updated.
>
>>
>> If you test the Appliance at Home or behind some cheap broadband
router
>> it might be the problem that some of these
devices don't support MX
>> record queries.
>>
>> You can try to install "dig" with "sudo apt-get install
dnsutils" and
>> then test the MX resolution with "dig somedomain MX".
>
>And if you need telnet (to manually test SMTP connection) you can
>install it with
>
>sudo apt-get install telnet
>
>PS. make sure you install all updates first (can be done from the
>console Other -> update
>
>Kind regards,
>
>Martijn