Time to either downgrade your expectations, downgrade your hardware, or upgrade your software. What do you want to use IPCOP for, anyway? Just a simple firewall?
Dan Martin ummar143@shaw.ca wrote:
On 2012-09-23, at 3:13 PM, Adam Thompson wrote:
Sounds like IPCOP isn't compatible with your hardware. Isn't it based on a fairly old kernel? If this is a brand-new machine, its SATA controller might not even be recognized by that kernel. Have you tried any other Linux distro or LiveCD on this hardware? -Adam
Roundtable mailing list Roundtable@muug.mb.ca http://www.muug.mb.ca/mailman/listinfo/roundtable
I think you are right, Adam.
I tried dd'ing directly to a SATA drive, put it in the machine, and it again booted but this time IPCop setup could not find hard drives.
I googled the "No hard disk found" error and found http://www.ipcops.com/phpbb3/viewtopic.php?p=82706
Post subject: Re: During installation error "No Hard Disk found"Posted: Sat Jan 14, 2012 9:55 pm VonSkippy wrote: @taustin - It WILL be part of the NOT YET RELEASED version 2.1.0
Which is vaporware, at least for now.
IPCop v1.9.x is based on a 1.4 kernel. I don't know what kernel IPCop v2.0.3 uses, but I'm guessing it can't see my SATA drive, and I have no IDE drives in the machine.
Yikes. I have an old pentium with an IDE drive with XP on it - but only 1 ethernet port. I'd hate to rob my new machine of it's PCI network cards to stick in the old clunker!
Dan Martin GP Hospital Practitioner Computer Scientist ummar143@shaw.ca (204) 831-1746 answering machine always on
Roundtable mailing list Roundtable@muug.mb.ca http://www.muug.mb.ca/mailman/listinfo/roundtable
Dan Martin ummar143@shaw.ca wrote:
On 2012-09-23, at 3:13 PM, Adam Thompson wrote:
Sounds like IPCOP isn't compatible with your hardware. Isn't it based on a fairly old kernel? If this is a brand-new machine, its SATA controller might not even be recognized by that kernel. Have you tried any other Linux distro or LiveCD on this hardware? -Adam
Roundtable mailing list Roundtable@muug.mb.ca http://www.muug.mb.ca/mailman/listinfo/roundtable
I think you are right, Adam.
I tried dd'ing directly to a SATA drive, put it in the machine, and it again booted but this time IPCop setup could not find hard drives.
I googled the "No hard disk found" error and found http://www.ipcops.com/phpbb3/viewtopic.php?p=82706
Post subject: Re: During installation error "No Hard Disk found"Posted: Sat Jan 14, 2012 9:55 pm VonSkippy wrote: @taustin - It WILL be part of the NOT YET RELEASED version 2.1.0
Which is vaporware, at least for now.
IPCop v1.9.x is based on a 1.4 kernel. I don't know what kernel IPCop v2.0.3 uses, but I'm guessing it can't see my SATA drive, and I have no IDE drives in the machine.
Yikes. I have an old pentium with an IDE drive with XP on it - but only 1 ethernet port. I'd hate to rob my new machine of it's PCI network cards to stick in the old clunker!
Dan Martin GP Hospital Practitioner Computer Scientist ummar143@shaw.ca (204) 831-1746 answering machine always on
Roundtable mailing list Roundtable@muug.mb.ca http://www.muug.mb.ca/mailman/listinfo/roundtable
On 2012-09-23, at 5:58 PM, Adam Thompson wrote:
Time to either downgrade your expectations, downgrade your hardware, or upgrade your software. What do you want to use IPCOP for, anyway? Just a simple firewall?
Yes, a firewall. Not dead simple, but hopefully not rocket science either.
I am in the process of downloading the iso for ubuntu 12.4. If it can handle my hardware, I'll be spending some time with iptables.
Dan Martin GP Hospital Practitioner Computer Scientist ummar143@shaw.ca (204) 831-1746 answering machine always on
Yes, a firewall. Not dead simple, but hopefully not rocket science either.
I am in the process of downloading the iso for ubuntu 12.4. If it can handle my hardware, I'll be spending some time with iptables.
I don't know if it will help with your hardware, but pfSense (FreeBSD-based) is another very nice firewall distro. Smallish download, and simple to configure.
Yes, a firewall. Not dead simple, but hopefully not rocket science either.
I am in the process of downloading the iso for ubuntu 12.4. If it can handle my hardware, I'll be spending some time with iptables.
On 2012-09-23, at 7:37 PM, Tim Lavoie wrote:
I don't know if it will help with your hardware, but pfSense (FreeBSD-based) is another very nice firewall distro. Smallish download, and simple to configure. _______________________________________________ Roundtable mailing list Roundtable@muug.mb.ca http://www.muug.mb.ca/mailman/listinfo/roundtable
pfSense looks good. Documentation a little less clear than IPCop, but good reviews. It will mean learning about pf, and abandoning my experience with iptables.
I am tempted by eBox Platform, since it can function with a full Ubuntu install and can do a lot of things other than firewall. Yeah, I know - doing other things with it makes it less secure, and the whole point is to make the network secure. I will probably use pfSense.
Thanks Tim, for bringing it to my attention.
Dan Martin GP Hospital Practitioner Computer Scientist ummar143@shaw.ca (204) 831-1746 answering machine always on
On 2012-09-23, at 23:21, Dan Martin ummar143@shaw.ca wrote:
Yes, a firewall. Not dead simple, but hopefully not rocket science either.
I am in the process of downloading the iso for ubuntu 12.4. If it can handle my hardware, I'll be spending some time with iptables.
On 2012-09-23, at 7:37 PM, Tim Lavoie wrote:
I don't know if it will help with your hardware, but pfSense (FreeBSD-based) is another very nice firewall distro. Smallish download, and simple to configure. _______________________________________________ Roundtable mailing list Roundtable@muug.mb.ca http://www.muug.mb.ca/mailman/listinfo/roundtable
pfSense looks good. Documentation a little less clear than IPCop, but good reviews. It will mean learning about pf, and abandoning my experience with iptables.
I am tempted by eBox Platform, since it can function with a full Ubuntu install and can do a lot of things other than firewall. Yeah, I know - doing other things with it makes it less secure, and the whole point is to make the network secure. I will probably use pfSense.
Thanks Tim, for bringing it to my attention.
Dan Martin GP Hospital Practitioner Computer Scientist ummar143@shaw.ca (204) 831-1746 answering machine always on
Roundtable mailing list Roundtable@muug.mb.ca http://www.muug.mb.ca/mailman/listinfo/roundtable
(trying again from a real keyboard)
On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 11:21:56PM -0500, Dan Martin wrote:
pfSense looks good. Documentation a little less clear than IPCop, but good reviews. It will mean learning about pf, and abandoning my experience with iptables.
Hi Dan,
The web GUI is decent for many tasks, so you may find that you can get by without digging into pf.
Cheers, Tim