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Typically you shouldn't have to reboot. Just stop and start the
networking. On my machine (a Debian system) it is just:
/etc/init.d/network stop
/etc/init.d/network start
If I remember correctly on a redhat system it would be
/etc/rc.d/init.d/network stop
/etc/rc.d/init.d/network start
Someone correct me if I got the redhat commands wrong.
-jeremy
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Jeremy Hinegardner EMAIL:PROTECTED
Research Assistant http://meru.cecs.missouri.edu
University of Missouri - Columbia
Multimedia Communications and Visualization Laboratory
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On Wed, 27 Jan 1999, Jason McIntosh wrote:
> Thanks!
> Rebooting the system seems to have fixed the problem. I had changed the
> hostname stuff in the 2 files, /etc/hosts and /etc/sysconfig/network but I
> hadn't rebooted. Didn't realize you needed to. One last question on
> mail. How does one setup linux to be a sntp/pop server? Is it built in?
> Thanks
> Jason
>
> ***********************************************************************
> *Jason McIntosh http://www.missouri.edu/~c717990 *
> * University of Missouri, Columbia *
> *Vice President - UMACM(Association for Computing Machinery) *
> * *
> * "Love endures all things" *
> * May God guide your hand in all that you do. *
> ***********************************************************************
>
>