Sorry, I was so stressed that don'i even saw what I was writting.
The machine is a HP laptop, centrino. I'm connecting with cable to a network in a student residence. It connects directly to the internet. The network has a DHCP server, and I receive the IP address by DHCP. Yes, I think it has a router. In windows everything works fine, but I need the Linux to work. I tried Fedora and Suse. Both give me the same error. In Mandriva 2005 it works well, but I don't like mandriva very much.
Thank you for the help.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Claude Jones" claude_jones@levitjames.com To: "For users of Fedora Core releases" fedora-list@redhat.com Sent: Sunday, December 04, 2005 2:17 PM Subject: Re: problem with network
On Sun December 4 2005 8:48 am, João Gomes wrote:
I installed Fedora But now I have a problem with the network. I can't receive the IP address by DHCP. When it's starting the network, it shows me a message saying Invalid Argument.
Please help me!
For people to help you, you'll have to provide more information. Is your machine a stand-alone? Is it on a network? Is it connected directly to the internet? What kind of machine? Do you want this machine to get its address from another machine? Is there a dhcp provider like a domain controller or router? Start with some answers to the above details, and someone should be able to help you. -- Claude Jones Bluemont, VA, USA
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On Sun December 4 2005 10:10 am, João Gomes wrote:
Sorry, I was so stressed that don'i even saw what I was writting.
The machine is a HP laptop, centrino. I'm connecting with cable to a network in a student residence. It connects directly to the internet. The network has a DHCP server, and I receive the IP address by DHCP. Yes, I think it has a router. In windows everything works fine, but I need the Linux to work. I tried Fedora and Suse. Both give me the same error. In Mandriva 2005 it works well, but I don't like mandriva very much.
A couple of things come to mind.
First, make sure that your network card is set to receive its address via dhcp.
Secondly, you have to make sure that your firewall settings aren't blocking dhcp.
There are so many ways to configure a fresh install, that it would be hard to tell you specifically where to go to check/change those settings. For instance, I use the KDE desktop, and you have the option to check Network and Security Level settings from System Settings in the K menu. If you want a quick and dirty check of these two issues, boot into KDE (an option at your login screen), and you can check those two things that way.