On Tue, Oct 06, 1998 at 09:37:11AM +, Pere Camps wrote:
> First question: can I make an eth behave as a point-to-point if
> there are only two eth cards in the network?
I don't know. Never tried. But it won't help you much. You'll need the proxy
arp anyway.
> > Example: Assume Adresses 1
Nils,
> It is not the computer that needs an IP address, every single network
> interface on the computer will need a unique IP address (except if you have
> point-to-point interfaces, but that doesn't apply in your situation)
First question: can I make an eth behave as a point-to-point i
Toby,
> Then use ipfwadm to forward any packets from your LAN to the Net.
> A good help is the HOWTO docs on Network and Firewalls.
I'm trying to make a simple setup with ipfwadm: just to move all
the packets from one eth to the other, but I've yet to succeed.
I'll keep trying th
On Mon, Oct 05, 1998 at 11:34:15AM +, Pere Camps wrote:
> I've just installed two ethernet cards on my system and now I have
> problems routing some stuff between the two networks.
>
> eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:A0:24:52:32:41
> inet addr:147.83.61.17 Bcast:147.8
First you need to assign a local IP(your LAN) to the Ether card that is
connected to you LAn. AN the One connect to the NET the IP you got from your
ISP.
Then use ipfwadm to forward any packets from your LAN to the Net.
A good help is the HOWTO docs on Network and Firewalls.
Hope it helps
Toby
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