search for: guadawireless

Displaying 5 results from an estimated 5 matches for "guadawireless".

2003 Oct 22
1
WinXP/2k can't connect to Linux ADS member
Hi, I have a linux box configured with samba-3.0.1pre1-1 joined to my Win2k ADS domain. I can succesfully use kinit and smbclient -k without entering a user/pass to connect to things on my network. Winbind, getent, wbinfo, ... everything works great however, from WinXP and Win2k client hosts I cannot connect to my linux shares. From Win95/98 clients works great. Always that I connect from
2003 Nov 25
0
No credentials cache found
...e = 36000 renew_lifetime = 36000 forwardable = true krb4_convert = false } ===================================== -- Yo uso software libre, ?Y tu? ?Qu? es el software libre? consulta: http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.es.html Fernando Ruza e-mail: feruza@terra.es web: http://guada24.guadawireless.net Tlf: 661123845 Yahoo! Messenger id: fruza Linux user: #273644 (http://counter.li.org) Debian Sid (Kernel 2.4.20 & ext3) "In an internet without fences ... who needs 'gates'"
2005 May 13
2
In/out calls from/to same sip provider
Hi. I'm new to asterisk and, one way or the other, I manage to get it working for me. But I'm having a hard time getting calls going to and coming from the same provider, since the definition of the peer in sip.conf seems to be different AND not compatible for incoming and outgoing call. Outgoing calls need a "secret" and "username" definition in the peer context of
2003 Nov 19
1
Samba 3.0 client connection error
Hi I successfully joined the AD as member server, smbclient \\\\hostname\\homes -U username works, but on a windows 2000 client connecting to the homes share using \\hostname failes with [2003/11/13 16:39:46, 1] smbd/sesssetup.c:reply_spnego_kerberos(172) Failed to verify incoming ticket! [2003/11/13 16:39:46, 1] smbd/sesssetup.c:reply_spnego_kerberos(172) Failed to verify incoming ticket!
2005 May 18
1
SIP/nat situation
Hi. We are trying to set up asterisk to service a wireless community in our town. We have about 30/40 wireless working nodes each one with a 10.34.x.x/24 subnet for users. Each one of these addresses can potentially have a 192.168.x.x/x subnet. On top, the wireless nodes, themselves, are linked in 172.16.x.x/x subnets. On top of the top, there is internet and cool things for people, like