On Tuesday 23 September 2008 21:51:03 Joseph Rawson wrote: <snipped cause it was getting long ;)> > I figured that there would be problems bridging wireless devices. This is > why I didn't reply to you on your first couple of posts. When I saw the > script that you wrote, and saw that it uses eth1, that's when I figured > that you weren't using wireless. I'm a absolute noob when it comes to > using wireless. I'm on my third laptop using built in wireless, and I still > have yet to actually use it further than testing it in windows to see if it > works before I install debian. > > I'm sorry, from what I was reading, I was thinking that you were just going > to use regular ethernet to run you're VM's. The only thing I know to do to > get the VM's available over the wireless is to use DNAT and port > forwarding. This might be ugly, since you may have to use different port > numbers on the wireless, and that might be harder for the other machines on > the network. I don't know what you are using the VM for. If you're using > the VM for web development, you may want to look into configuring > mod_proxy, then you can reach the VM over a standard port with a slightly > different url. It's been a long time since I've done that myself, but it's > pretty easy to setup.
Yea I've made that mistake a couple of times re: ethx
I'm currently looking in to the ipw2200-ap drivers, these might solve my
problem, cause it seems like you can only bridge a wifi card that can act
like a AP. hopefull I come up with a solution.
As for what the VMs are, basically:
1. Debian dev server (needs to mount NFS and other bits and peices so
DNAT
would be a nightmare :(
2. A winbloze test box, unfortunately still need to test that IE can
read the
sites.
Will keep the list posted...
--
Thank you,
Clifford W. Hansen
PHP Developer / Linux Administrator
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