linux,faqs,howtos,man,forum,squid,mount,ntfs,bandwidth,gnu,opensource,directory
 
Home | Forum | MAN Pages | Tutorials | Directory | HOWTOs | About Me | Contact
You are Browsing Linux HOWTOS
 
FAQS
- Advanced Routing & Traffic Control
- General FAQ
- Squid Proxy Server
- Sendmail
- Fetchmail
- Postfix
- Connecting Mobile Phone
- Paging from Linux
- Standard Commands
- Some common terms
Linux HOWTOs
- Single List of HOWTOs
- Alpha-HOWTO
- Bridge
- DB2-HOWTO
- FBB
- Infrared HOWTO
- Firewall Piercing
- - Infrared-HOWTO
- Linksys-Blue-Box-Router-HOWTO
- MIDI-HOWTO
- Modem-HOWTO
- Network-Install-HOWTO
- Qmail+MH
- RPM-for-Unix-HOWTO
- SRM-HOWTO
- Tango-HOWTO
- USB-Digital-Camera-HOWTO
- VPN-HOWTO
- Wireless-HOWTO
- XML-RPC-HOWTO

- ADSL Bandwidth Management
- Compile Apache
- Make a Bootdisk
- Linux-Windows9x-Grub
- Linux-Windows
- Linux Crash Recovery
- Optimise Squid
- Block websites in Squid
- Broadcast webcam in linux
- Compile RedHat Linux kernel
- Implement Firewall Security
- Increase Harddrive Performance
- Mount NTFS filesystem
- Patch / rebuild SRPM
- Secure Linux
- Set up a DHCP Server
- Set up an FTP server
- Set up Linux as a Router
- Use Cron
- Samba
Miscellaneous
- All Ports
- Spammers fetch email addresses
- Mounting NTFS in linux
- Linux Gazette
- Linux Directory
- Linux Man

linux,man,pages,linux man pages,squid,ntfs,mount
 

4.4. Setting up a PPP server

This document provides guidance on how to configure your Linux PC as a PPP server (allowing other people to dial into your Linux PC and establish a PPP connection).

You should note that there are a myriad of ways of setting up Linux as a PPP server. This document gives one method - that used by the author to set up several small PPP servers (each of 16 modems).

This method is known to work well. However, it is not necessarily the best method.

 
Random Linux Commands
Bash
The "Bourne- Again Shell". Used as the default shell (command line) on most Unix distributions. Bash features command and filename completion (tab key), and a searchable history of commands that have already been entered (up-down arrow keys).

Common Linux terms
Linux-FAQs Search
linux,faqs,howto,howtos,man,manpages,directory,forum


Linux-FAQs Forum Categories
- About Forum
- Hardware Troubleshooting in Linux
- Linux Entertainment
- Resources
- Software toubleshooting and configuration
Linux-FAQs Man Pages
- About Forum
- Hardware Troubleshooting in Linux
- Linux Entertainment
- Resources
- Software toubleshooting and configuration
All Linux-FAQs Forums
- Crash Recovery
- FAQs
- Forum Talk
- Games
- General
- Linux Audio Support
- Linux Hardware / Driver
- Linux Installation Support
- Linux misc.
- Linux Networking
- Linux Newbies
- Linux Printing Support
- Linux Security
- Linux Video Support
- Mail Server
- Multimedia
- Tutorials
- Web Proxy Server
- Web Server

linux,man,man pages,faqs,howtos,forum
 
Powered by HTML
Linux-faqs.com Copyright, All rights reserved www.linux-faqs.com. Peeyush Maurya.