You can, but it affects which IP's are assigned by the DHCP server to the 
remote segment by which "Router" Passed the information on, in this case 
the "bogus IP Address" thereby creating another IP subnet, which isn't 
what i want to do.

Anyways, the AP hardware did the bridging as I expected it to passed the 
DHCP requests over to the wireless segment and the WISP box.

Thanks for all your help.

--Pat

On Wed, 18 Dec 2002, Vladimir I. wrote:

> Note that you can have a bogus IP address on one of the
> interfaces. It wouldn't affect L3 bridging.
> 
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote about "Re: [leaf-user] WISP and Bridging":
> 
> > I solved this another way since the dhcrelay didn't like the same IP 
> > Subnet on both sides.
> > 
> > I put the DHCP server on the WISP box and took it off the AP.
> > 
> > I wonder if the AP is going to pass that information from it's wireless 
> > interface to the wired interface... Hrm I should test that right now.
> 
> 



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