Yes, it is stupid.
And you didn't actually ask a question, so I don't know how you expect a yes/no answer to it.
There is AFAIK nothing wrong with gcc32 c++. Glancing at your errors, I would guess that something included <linux/blah> when it should not have? If you can't figure it out, perhaps add -fsave-temps and look at the cpp output file (.ii) to get a clue what's wrong.
Hi,
There is AFAIK nothing wrong with gcc32 c++. Glancing at your errors, I would guess that something included <linux/blah> when it should not have? If you can't figure it out, perhaps add -fsave-temps and look at the cpp output file (.ii) to get a clue what's wrong.
No problems compiling C++ under FC1. Do it for a good few hours a day.
TTFN
Paul
As there is no text based setup->networking-> network configuration in Fedora Core 1 I tried the redhat-config-network. It does let me define several network interfaces and routes. Only little probem is that if to reboot the box the routes and interfaces are defined, but routing is disabled (/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward content is 0).
I find it strange that there is no "enable routing" option in redhat-config-network as it was in this previous text based setup->networking->.
Routing will start working if to "echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward".
Is this a bug or does I get it all wrong?
Ivo Sarak wrote:
As there is no text based setup->networking-> network configuration in Fedora Core 1 I tried the redhat-config-network. It does let me define several network interfaces and routes. Only little probem is that if to reboot the box the routes and interfaces are defined, but routing is disabled (/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward content is 0).
I find it strange that there is no "enable routing" option in redhat-config-network as it was in this previous text based setup->networking->.
i had never seen that this was possible. i have done it always via /etc/rc.local or via my firewall-script
Routing will start working if to "echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward".
other possibilities are
# grep ip_forw /etc/sysctl.conf net.ipv4.ip_forward = 0 change it to "1" # sysctl -p
# redhat-config-proc network / ip / ip[2] / ip_forwarding save and activate your configuration
Is this a bug or does I get it all wrong?