David, As you suggested, I set the QDIO Home to 192.168.3.1 and the Linux guest (CentOS) to 192.168.3.2.
After the windows command route 192.168.3.0 mask 255.255.255.0 192.168.0.4, pinging 192.168.3.2 still does not work. The tracert 192.168.3.2 command doesn't even reach 192.168.0.4. And I am sure that the 192.168.3 network is not in use. I also turned all firewalls off. Should I turn to subnetting? Best regards, Antoon Vekeman Software Product Research Software Solutions for DB2 http://www.sprdb2.com B-2288 Bouwel Belgium On Mon, 13 Aug 2007 11:07:18 -0400, David Boyes wrote: >> After the Windows command route add 192.168.1.0 mask 255.255.255.0 >192.168.0.4, it is >> impossible to ping 192.168.1.2. Pinging 192.168.1.1 works (there is a >virtual lan 192.168.1 >> on the harware router). >That's your problem. IP addresses must be unique. If 192.168.1.x is in >use elsewhere, then you need to use a different range for your Linux >guests and modify the route command appropriately. >Try renumbering the Linux guests to 192.168.2.x or some unused number.