There is a way to do this, but it is shady.  I didn't think I would ever see
a reason to use this, but your situation is described exactly in this
document.  If you are like most cable/dsl customers you have a bridge in
your house, and your address probably doesn't change all that often.  I
believe a friend said his only changes once every 3 months.  You would have
to modify your config when your address changed, but this would work.  Your
probably better off buying a Linksys for 100 dollars.  Unfortunately I don't
believe you can assign a secondary address when you have specified that the
interface uses dhcp, at least not on any of my routers.


http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/556/nat-on-stick.html

~-----Original Message-----
~From: hktco [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
~Sent: Wednesday, April 24, 2002 8:46 PM
~To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
~Subject: how to share 1 Ethernet interface. possible? [7:42487]
~
~
~I have only ***one*** ethernet interface on 2610 and it needs to be
~both a dhcp client and assigned a static IP. i.e. something like:
~
~int e0/0
~ ip address dhcp
~ ip add 192.168.1.254 255.255.255.0
~
~but in practice, it is NOT allowed. Also I tried to use subinterfaces,
~and again, it won't let me to achieve the above implementation.
~
~
~The reason I am doing this is that I am trying to share my broadband
~connection through the Cisco
~router. That's why it must be a DHCP client so that it can 
~grab an IP from
~the
~ISP.
~
~Then I'll need another ethernet interface to connect to my inside LAN!
~but pathetically, I have only 1 physical ethernet interface!!!
~
~Could there be any workaround? Thanks
~
~hktco
~
~
~
~




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