Книга: Linux Network Administrator Guide, Second Edition
Configuring INN: the Basic Setup
Configuring INN: the Basic Setup
One of the greatest obstacles beginners may face is that INN requires a working network setup to function properly, even when running on a standalone host. Therefore, it is essential that your kernel supports TCP/IP networking when running INN, and that you have set up the loopback interface as explained in Chapter 5, Configuring TCP/IP Networking.
Next, you have to make sure that innd is started at boot time. The default INN installation provides a script file called boot in the /etc/news/ directory. If your distribution uses the SystemV-style init package, all you have to do is create a symbolic link from your /etc/init.d/inn file pointing to /etc/news/boot. For other flavors of init, you have to make sure /etc/news/boot is executed from one of your rc scripts. Since INN requires networking support, the startup script should be run after the network interfaces are configured.
- 4.4.4 The Dispatcher
- About the author
- Chapter 7. The state machine
- Chapter 5 Installing and Configuring VirtualCenter 2.0
- Appendix E. Other resources and links
- What NAT is used for and basic terms and expressions
- Example NAT machine in theory
- The final stage of our NAT machine
- Kernel setup
- User-land setup
- Compiling the user-land applications
- The conntrack entries