* diald at both ends of the PPP link?
@ 2003-03-05 1:16 John Hardin
2003-03-30 22:37 ` Mike Jagdis
0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: John Hardin @ 2003-03-05 1:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-diald; +Cc: jaggy
All:
Great to see diald is still alive - I have fond memories from when I was
still in dialup-land at home... :)
Anyway, I'm investigating demand-dial PPP solutions for modem banks, and
good old diald looks like the best solution so far.
However, I have one question that's not covered in the FAQ: how well
does it work where either system can initiate the PPP session? system1
and system2 are both running diald - can they be configured to call each
other on demand?
Thanks!
--
John Hardin KA7OHZ <johnh@aproposretail.com>
Internal Systems Administrator voice: (425) 672-1304
Apropos Retail Management Systems, Inc. fax: (425) 672-0192
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
There is no problem that cannot be solved by the appropriate
application of high explosives.
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12 days until Children of Dune on SciFi
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
* Re: diald at both ends of the PPP link?
2003-03-05 1:16 diald at both ends of the PPP link? John Hardin
@ 2003-03-30 22:37 ` Mike Jagdis
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Mike Jagdis @ 2003-03-30 22:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: John Hardin; +Cc: linux-diald
John Hardin wrote:
> However, I have one question that's not covered in the FAQ: how well
> does it work where either system can initiate the PPP session? system1
> and system2 are both running diald - can they be configured to call each
> other on demand?
Fine. I used it like that for several years, both modem and ISDN. In
fact the reason I ended taking over diald from Eris was because there
were some things that needed to change to handle double ended demand
dialling.
In particular, pay attention to the died-retry-count option. If both
ends can demand dial you want to set this to 0 so that the link is
_only_ brought up if there is traffic. The default is 1, which tells
diald to assume that the other end is dumb and that if the link goes
down while diald has active connections it must bring it straight
back up again (even if no packets are currently flowing) because the
other end won't even if it has packets to send. The default is fine
for ISP type links but if both ends demand dial it leads to links
that bounce up and down and up and down and ...
Mike
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