Weblog devoted to Sun Ray's, Pinball etc. Paul Shore's Weblog

Monday Dec 06, 2004

My Sun Ray @ home kit arrived this morning consisting of:

1 x Sun Ray 1, 1 x Sun Ray keyboard, 1 x Sun Ray mouse, 1 x Cisco VPN router + Instructions.

Of course, instructions are only as a last resourt!

I was missing was a couple of ethernet cables, but I have a few of these spare so that didn't effect the setup. I have a connection spare on my KVM, so I dug out the extra KVM cable and hooked in the new Sun Ray, connected ethernet cable to the back of the Cisco and the Cisco to my home network and switched on.

And waited

And the Sun Ray on screen icon stayed at 22B

And waited

Still 22B, go get the discarded instructions, check everything - all OK

Sent an email to the guy who had set it up, who thought it might be the firmware on my home network router. In order to rule it out, I download an update, selected the update firmware option from the Linksys, all went smoothly until the reset and then nothing. No response from the routers web server. I could ping it, but it wasn't routing to the internet, wasn't running DHCP services and wasn't responding on its management web page. Arrg!

Ok, swap for the other Linksys with the wireless connection, reconfigure it to give out DHCP services and connect it to the cable modem. Reset the cable modem, internet is back on-line! Off to the Linksys page, find the manual (last resourt again), follow the instructions to reset the original router, nothing - it isn't even responding to the reset sequence. First problems that I have had with any Linksys kit in five years of usage. I will take another look at it later this week when I am over the flu (yes 5 days later and I am still feeling rough).

OK, the new Linksys has the up to date firmware and I am still having a problem. OK, lets take a look at the Sun Ray icon. Its showing a valid Sun Ray server address inside Sun, so I log into this Sun Ray server from my home machine and ping my Sun Ray terminal. VPN connection is working fine, must be the Sun Ray server.

Its not the Sun Ray server that I had expected, its one based out of the Coventry office and from the auth.props file it doesn't have LAN based connections enabled, which is probably the reason why the Sun Ray is stuck at 22B. (Note: you need to be root to run utadm -l to check if LAN connections are enabled, but an ordinary user can read the auth.props file).

As my home directory isn't in the Coventry office and they are about to make Coventry a serverless office this doesn't make a lot of sence. Couple of emails and a few phone calls later and the router is reconfigured to point the Sun Ray at the Sun Ray servers in Guillemont park. The Sun Ray now has a login screen!

Insert my Sun Java Badge and login - cool! I can now securely hot desk from Home to Coventry to London to Guillemont.

Paul

Comments:

Paul,

Sorry to see it did not go as smooth for you.

dl

Posted by Dan Lacher on December 06, 2004 at 09:59 PM GMT #

How/Where did you get your SunRay @ Home kit?

Posted by Azeem Jiva on December 06, 2004 at 10:54 PM GMT #



isn't it so cool!

i'm sorry that things got off to a rough start.

sun ray at home totally changes the game. no more laptop to lug around in that underground you guys got over there.

mary

Posted by mary on December 07, 2004 at 12:25 AM GMT #

Paul, Just curious what kind of Cisco VPN router you are using? I am looking to provide the same service to some of my employees and I am looking for how different people are setting up the SunRay's at home. thanks jason

Posted by Jason on December 07, 2004 at 03:01 AM GMT #

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