I've got something in mind that I want to make sure is sane before I go try to impliment it on my home network.
First, have a private network. 192.168.0.0/24. Transparent proxying of outbound HTTP requests. Easy enough, I've done it before. Now, getting an IP. Client machine A sends out a DHCP request with a known hostname. Gateway gets the request, makes request on the internet connection with the same MAC as the client. Gateway gets response back from ISP, assigns a local IP to the client and forwards everything for the new public IP to machine A. Client machine B sends out a DHCP request without a hostname. Gateway assigns local IP without going to the ISP. The idea I'm ultimately getting at is isolating the traffic on my home network from the public network, while not breaking things that might need to phone back in for the people who live here (acting like they're not NAT'd and firewalled, basically), while still allowing VMWares and machines brought by visitors to get online without getting a public IP. Is this workable? -- .''`. Baloo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : :' : proud Debian admin and user `. `'` `- Debian - when you have better things to do than to fix a system
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