Re: Firestarter: Linux as a firewall

2002-10-18 Thread Vidiot
>>Does firestarter use IPTables as the underlying software to do its work >>? > >By default, yes. It stores it's IPTables in it's own directory. >Anthony Firestarter is a perfect thing to use to set up your firewall, as it also turns on masquerading to allow internnal boxes talk to the outside.

Re: Firestarter: Linux as a firewall

2002-10-18 Thread Anthony Abby
>Does firestarter use IPTables as the underlying software to do its work >? By default, yes. It stores it's IPTables in it's own directory. Anthony -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@;redhat.com?subject=unsubscribe https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/

Re: Firestarter: Linux as a firewall

2002-10-18 Thread Todd A. Jacobs
On 17 Oct 2002, Aly Dharshi wrote: > Does firestarter use IPTables as the underlying software to do its work Firestarter will use either iptables or ipchains, depending on which is running when you configure the firewall. -- "The only thing that helps me maintain my slender grip on reality is

Firestarter: Linux as a firewall

2002-10-18 Thread Aly Dharshi
Does firestarter use IPTables as the underlying software to do its work ? Cheers, Aly. On Thu, 2002-10-17 at 11:46, Paul DiMarco wrote: > > IMO, I would purchase a LinkSYS or D-Link router. For $100 CDN I can sleep > better at night knowing that I am safer than the average bear. ;) >