to pppd when using PAP authentication so that it can select the
appropriate secret from /etc/ppp/pap-secrets.
-Microsoft also has a variant of CHAP which they apparently think is
-more secure than standard CHAP because they don't store secrets in
-clear text on the server. However, a bogus client only needs to know
-the encrypted secret to gain access, so the only extra security is
-that the bogus client would need to run something other than Windows.
-There is a client-side implementation of Microsoft's CHAP in ppp-2.3;
-see README.MSCHAP80.
+Microsoft also has a variant of CHAP which uses a different hashing
+arrangement from normal CHAP. There is a client-side implementation
+of Microsoft's CHAP in ppp-2.3; see README.MSCHAP80.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
cp vmunix /
and reboot. Modload should then work.
+
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Q: I'm running Linux (or NetBSD or FreeBSD), and my system comes with
+PPP already. Should I consider installing this package? Why?
+
+A: The PPP that is already installed in your system is (or is derived
+from) some version of this PPP package. You can find out what version
+of this package is already installed with the command "pppd --help".
+If this is older than the latest version, you may wish to install the
+latest version so that you can take advantage of the new features or
+bug fixes.
+
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Q: I'm running pppd in demand mode, and I find that pppd often dials
+out unnecessarily when I try to make a connection within my local
+machine or with a machine on my local LAN. What can I do about this?
+
+A: Very often the cause of this is that a program is trying to contact
+a nameserver to resolve a hostname, and the nameserver (specified in
+/etc/resolv.conf, usually) is on the far side of the ppp link. You
+can try executing a command such as `ping myhost' (where myhost is the
+name of the local machine, or some other machine on a local LAN), to
+see whether that starts the ppp link. If it does, check the setup of
+your /etc/hosts file to make sure you have the local machine and any
+hosts on your local LAN listed, and /etc/resolv.conf and/or
+/etc/nsswitch.conf files to make sure you resolve hostnames from
+/etc/hosts if possible before trying to contact a nameserver.