- NTL cable broadband with Linux
- Posted by Paul Cager on May 23rd, 2006
What should I be aware of before signing up to NTL cable broadband? I
have an NTL phone line, so NTL is my only broadband option.
I'll usually be using Linux (though I can dual-boot Windows). Are there
any Linux-specific gotchas? I assume they'll try to give me a USB modem
which won't work with Linux - is there any way to get them to provide
an ethernet-linked modem instead (or a router!)?
I might also want to run a web-server on my PC. Do NTL block inward
connections on port 80 (or indeed on any other port)?
Thanks,
Paul
- Posted by Chris Whelan on May 23rd, 2006
Paul Cager wrote:
One of the good things about NTL is that they provide a modem with both USB
and ethernet. They actively encourage using the ethernet connection.
http://www.ntlworld.com/helpsupport/ethernet/
I have a small home network with a mix of 'doze and 'nix OSes so I can't
answer your question regarding a stand-alone connection with Linux. I'm
sure if you Google there will be lots of help however.
HTH
Chris
--
Remove prejudice to reply.
- Posted by Roger Hamlett on May 23rd, 2006
"Paul Cager" <news8573@paulcager.org> wrote in message
news:1148386929.228460.34200@y43g2000cwc.googlegro ups.com...
Ethernet works fine. This is coming from a Windows box, through a Linux
box as Firewall/mail server/Virus scanner, onto ntlworld.
You can elect to connect via the set top box, or a seperate modem unit. I
went with the latter, and paid for the modem (you have a choice of buying
it, or leasing it). The modem supplied, was a SurfBoard SB3100, which
connected directly to my Linux box without problems.
I have been having a problem recently, with an ICMP ping, but this doesn't
appear to be ntlworld, but one of the routers coming into the UK
There are a couple of good 'readme' files on the web, which give the names
of everything on ntl http://homepage.ntlworld.com/robin.d.h.walker/cmtips/
The section 'Doing without the broadband installer', has just about
everything needed. :-)
Remember that your ip address will not be fixed (though it is stable for
_long_ times), and that your upload speed will be a tiny fraction of the
available upload speed (depends on which bandwidth service you are on).
Best Wishes
- Posted by Paul Black on May 23rd, 2006
Paul Cager wrote:
As mentioned, the cable modem is both USB and ethernet. The USB side
does work on Linux although when I used to use it a few years ago I
found that the driver would fail irretrievably (i.e. require reboot) or
crash the kernel about once a week.
Whether the driver has improved in that time I don't know.
No.
--
Paul
- Posted by Stephen Patterson on May 23rd, 2006
["Followup-To:" header set to uk.comp.os.linux.]
On 23 May 2006 05:22:09 -0700, Paul Cager wrote:
The usual modem (or at least the one I got from them) has ethernet & USB. The
ethernet just works, though it is locked to the MAC address of whichever PC you
get it activated for.
They don't seem to block common ports, certainly running smtp, ssh & web
servers all work fine.
I'd also suggest you install bind & point it at some none-ntl servers (such as
the main root ones) as ntl's dns servers don't run too well.
--
Stephen Patterson :: steve@patter.mine.nu :: http://patter.mine.nu/
GPG: E3E8E974 :: Jabber: patter@jabber.earth.li
"At night, the razor weasels come."
- Posted by Mark McIntyre on May 23rd, 2006
On 23 May 2006 05:22:09 -0700, in uk.telecom.broadband , "Paul Cager"
<news8573@paulcager.org> wrote:
Nope, connect up via the ethernet on the modem and off you go.
The CM has ethernet as well.
Nope, works fine, I run a webserver, mailserver and various other
things from my headless FC4 box in the shed.
--
Mark McIntyre
- Posted by Arthur Buse on May 24th, 2006
Mark McIntyre wrote:
There is a web page by an enthusiast, about NTL and Blue Yonder
cable modems here:
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/robin.d...ips/index.html
- Posted by John Taylor on May 24th, 2006
Doz wrote:
I think the confusion could be that the NTL connection is locked to the
MAC address of the Cable Modem. This connection is made when you register.
If you get a replacement modem then you need to register again.
When I first got my NTL Broadband connection, I was unable to register
because the MAC address of the modem had already been registered
elsewhere, so it refused to let me register it again. It took quite a
time on the phone to support, before I could convince them to unregister
it first, so that I could get online. [ At the time they insisted that
it only worked with windows, and refused to do anything until I tried it
with windows first. In the end I made a few clicking noises on he
keyboard, and told that that it still did the same with windows ;-) ]
Regards
JohnT
- Posted by Roger Hamlett on May 24th, 2006
"John Taylor" <johnt@example.com> wrote in message
news:mtKdnWMJfuGFw-nZnZ2dnUVZ8tOdnZ2d@bt.com...
'online', under the bit that handles 'moving house'. I too have met this
one.
However the reason for the 'confusion', is that some of the modems
themselves, register the net card to which they are attached. The
SurfBoard unit does this, but it is resettable through the modem's
diagnostic page. Some units time this out after a while, and others
support multiple addresses. It depends on the modem firmware loaded. On
the SurfBoard for example, there is different firmware for the 'business'
accounts, and this allows multiple cards to attach.
Best Wishes