On Mon, Aug 06, 2001 at 07:19:58AM -0400, Michael W. Cole wrote:
| I have a linux on Mac IIci, MacOS9.1 and Win95 attached to a AOpen
| Internet Hub which is then attached to a NetGear Gateway Router (model
| RT311) which is attached to the cable modem. I have tried to configure
| all three machin
I have a linux on Mac IIci, MacOS9.1 and Win95 attached to a AOpen
Internet Hub which is then attached to a NetGear Gateway Router (model
RT311) which is attached to the cable modem. I have tried to configure
all three machines to be hosts on the local network. The only one that
I can't seem to g
1) If you don't have the IP masquerading howto, I mirror the Linux
Documentation Project at http://www.wtop.com/LDP/
2) I use the following setup to get around the above:
a) I run apache on the Linux box that is connected to the Internet with
cached proxy service enabled. This allows the other m
Read the IP-Masquerade mini-howto that you should find in
/usr/doc/HOWTO/mini on your linux machine provided you installed the linux
docs.
You need to put the local machines in a non-routable subnet. This is
usually in the 192.168.1.xxx class C that is reserved for systems not
directly on the ne
"Ross D. Gardler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
[snip]
> I would like to get the Win95 machine talking to the Linux Machine
> and to the Internet via the cable modem. How do I do this?
[snip]
> Any pointers?
I haven't had to do this myself, but there is documentation about it.
Look at the Ethern
I have two machines, one is a Win95 machine, one is a Linux machine.
The Linux machine has a cable modem connection to the Internet.
I would like to get the Win95 machine talking to the Linux Machine and to the
Internet via the cable modem. How do I do this?
The Linux machine has two Ethernet c
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