On 10/28/2004 at 14:41 Jonathon McKitrick wrote:
>On Thu, Oct 28, 2004 at 08:15:26AM +0100, Dick Davies wrote: >: * Jonathon McKitrick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [1049 04:49]: >: Hang on - you got a basestation? What does it plug into, the link to >your ISP >: or one of your ethernet ports on the server? Or does the dhcp server >connect >: through the basestation too? > >We got a base station. It has both a modem serial jack and an ethernet >jack. My network has a wireless hub (with wired jacks as well, of course) >connected to my desktop box. > >: I'm a little confused because the BS will have its own DHCP server if I >remember >: right. > >Really? Okay, I didn't know that. I was looking at the preferences page >on >the apple and trying to figure out how to set up TCP/IP. I was under the >assumption the BS was just another hub, and I had to assign it an address. >Since you got me going with DHCPD, I tried that, but it didn't work. Are >you suggesting all I need to do is patch the BS to my hub and set the >laptop >to get the DHCP address itself? If so, how do I get my desktop box to >recognize the BS? Most base stations have a DHCP server, but you need to turn it on. Read the docs on the base station, then log in and see. I set my base station so that 192.168.1.n , where 128<n<256 is assigned by the BS, and the rest is reserved for static IPs. I'm guessing that this bs has dhcp and NAT built in, because it has a modem port. Even if it didn't though, most of them do. You can use FreeBSD to serve DHCP, but I don't know of any advantage to doing that. _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"