On 1 jul 2013, at 23:33, [email protected] wrote:

> Mr. Carlson, I really appreciate your help.
> 
> Answers to your question are below.
> 
> 
> On Jul 1, 2013, at 3:20 PM, James Carlson wrote:
> 
>> On 07/01/13 16:45, [email protected] wrote:
>>> It still cannot see the internet.
>> 
>> Is 192.168.0.1 your NAT box (your "router")?
>> 
> 
> 192.168.0.1 is the cisco router.
> 
> 192.168.0.4 is the physical nic of the machine.  (theotokos.dsicons.net)
> 
> 192.168.0.3 is the "routert3" zone.

Hang on a second. Which vmic is 192.168.0.3? vnic3? If so, I think you are in 
trouble.

I'm struggling to make sense of what you are trying to do here. To me, it seems 
like you are creating a very complicated network setup for something that is 
very straight forward.


Let's get back to some basics. Can you ping 192.168.0.1? Can you ping anything 
else on your local network?

I suspect that the ICMP-redirects are screwing you over big time. I'm with 
James on this one, DO NOT USE THEM. There are certainly cases where they are 
useful, but this does not seem to be one. From what I can tell, you are to do 
NAT and port mapping.

I'd recommend you drop all the ICMP redirects for now - it's probably where 
things goes wrong and it's not the right solution for your problem. If you 
still insist that you need the redirects, capture a few ping requests with 
tcpdump and let us have a look at what is going on.

//Marcus
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