Yes. It's called IP aliasing. I don't have time to go into details but there's a 
HOW-TO on it. Works like this:

eth0 192.168.0.1
eth0:1 192.168.0.2
eth0:2 192.168.0.3
eth0:3 192.168.0.4

etc.....

Every distro does it differently. In red hat do it in Linux conf - mine says something 
like "IPs...  192.168.0.80-89" (as in .80 through .89)

Hope that helps sorry I can't give more details...

        JW

At 01:31 PM 10/3/2000 -0400, you wrote:
>I am in the following predicament:
>
>I have a machine with one NIC and only one line run from a wiring closet to that 
>machine.  The machine NOW needs to be accessible to two separate logical networks: 
>10.0.1.0 and 192.168.1.0   Is it possible to assign two IP addresses to eth0?  One of 
>my associates wants to convert this machine from a Linux box running Apache to a 
>Win98 machine running Xitami.  He said he can configure NICs in Win98 to have two IPs 
>simulataneously.  Can Linux do this as well?
>
>George Lenzer
>
>--
>***********************************
>George H. Lenzer
>Owner - D.L. Media
>Lakewood, Ohio 44107
>
>--He who dies with the most toys
>--is still dead.
>
>***********************************
>--
>
>
>
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