Alright, found out I was editing the wrong line in the QEMU menu script
file for windows. Now it seems to work a lot better. I am still
wondering if it is possible to setup my guest OS as a bridging interface
within the simulated environment? And with 3 nics can I redirect ports
to individual NI
I am assuming the nics work with -user-net properties, with a simulated
router/firewall DHCP server at 10.0.2.2. Is it possible to manually
assign an IP (such as 10.0.2.5; is 10.0.2.3 still a nameserver?) and
still have access to the internet?
Wolfgang Richter wrote:
>Basically, what I want to a
Basically, what I want to accomplish is this. eth0 and eth1 are in
bridging mode, with eth0 supposedly leading out to the internet, and
eth1 supposedly connecting an internal network to the internet. eth2
connects to a third network, but that doesn't really matter too much.
eth0 wants a few ports
I am trying to simulate three NIC's, with redirected ports from the host to my
simulated system. I want port 22 to go to NIC 1, and port 443 to go to NIC 3.
Is this possible? So far, I think only eth0 seems to be working on my guest OS,
so maybe my -redir tcp:22::22 -redir tcp:443::443 are screw