> On Sep 3, 2020, at 12:38 PM, Brian Brombacher <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>>>> On Sep 3, 2020, at 12:15 PM, Ernest Stewart <[email protected]> 
>>>> wrote:
>>> Theo de Raadt <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> Oh my. Have you considered hiring a consultant?
>>> 
>>> Of course. As you have already noticed, I have no idea about how to do what 
>>> I'm trying to do. But a consultant is out of my budget.
>>> 
>>> Are you guys saying all I have to do is the following, and packets will 
>>> automatically be routed correctly?:
>>> 
>>> computer1)
>>> /etc/hostname.re0: 192.168.1.10 0xffffff00
>>> /etc/hostname.re1: 192.168.2.10 0xffffff00
>>> /etc/hostname.re2: 192.168.3.10 0xffffff00
>>> /etc/hostname.re3: 192.168.4.10 0xffffff00
>>> /etc/mygate:
>>> 192.168.1.1
>> 
>> Much better.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> computer2)
>> /etc/hostname.re0: 192.168.2.11 0xfffffff0

One last thing: change Computer 2’s re0 netmask to 0xffffff00

>> /etc/hostname.re1: 192.168.2.128 0xfffffff0
>> /etc/mygate:
>> 192.168.2.10
> 
> You’ll need a route rule on computer1 like this to make computer 5 talk to 
> the rest of the computers:
> 
> route add -net 192.168.2.128/28 192.168.2.11
> 
>> 
>> computer3)
>> /etc/hostname.re0: 192.168.3.11 0xffffff00
>> /etc/mygate:
>> 192.168.3.10
>> 
>> computer4)
>> /etc/hostname.re0: 192.168.4.11 0xffffff00
>> /etc/mygate:
>> 192.168.4.10
>> 
>> 
>> computer5)
>> /etc/hostname.re0: 192.168.2.129 0xfffffff0
>> /etc/mygate:
>> 192.168.2.128
>> 
>> 
>> Computer1's physical connections are like this:
>> re0->ISP router(192.168.1.1)
>> re1->Computer2 re0
>> re2->Computer3 re0
>> re3->Computer4 re0
>> 
>> Computer2's re1 is connected to Computer5's re0.

Reply via email to