Nope, 
my ISP hooks straight up to a nic in my pc, and assigns
me a real ip, here is some of the ifconfig -a info:

ep0: flags=8843<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
        inet6 fe80::260:8ff:fe03:2109%ep0 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x1 
        inet 24.225.23.88 netmask 0xffffff00 broadcast 24.225.23.255
        ether 00:60:08:03:21:09
        media: Ethernet 10baseT/UTP


-Darryl

>
>
>On Fri, 14 Mar 2003 11:33:08 -0600
>"Darryl Hoar" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Greetings,
>> I have posted several questions regarding an arplookup failure 
>> message I have been receiving.  I have google'd until my 
>> eyes are falling out, and have found nothing that explains
>> how to FIX the problem.
>> 
>> I am running 4.7-stable on a box.  It is my firewall, nat box.
>> ep0 is connected to my ISP's dsl.  ep1 is connected to 
>> my internal private LAN.  My internal lan uses the private
>> ip addresses 192.168.1.x.   I have two machines on my
>> internal lan, not including the firewall box.
>> 
>> I am getting 
>>   /kernel arplookup failure: 10.1.1.1 not on local network.
>> 
>> my ISP assigns a real IP to my ep0 interface usings dhcp.
>> 
>> what is causing this and how do I stop it ?  I have added a 
>> rule to block 10.x.x.x in, but it has not stopped the messages.
>> 
>> I can ping 10.1.1.1, and if I down ep0, I cannot ping 10.1.1.1.
>> 
>> I have alerted my ISP to this problem (thought 10.x.x.x weren't
>> suppose to be routed).
>
>Darryl,
>
>What IP addresses does your DSL router use, possibly 10.x.x.x ?
>
>Regards,
>
>Stephen Hilton
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
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