[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> I have network like this
>  Host----(10.14.201.0/24)---Router1---(10.14.1.0/24)----Router2--->Internet

> My host configuration 
>  Redhat Linux 5.2, kernel 2.0.36
>  eth0 10.14.201.108/24
> Router1 configuration
>  Novell Netware 4.1.x
>  eth0 10.14.201.1/24
>  fddi0 10.14.1.5/24
> Router2 configuration
>  Redhat Linux 5.2, kernel 2.0.36
>  fddi0 10.14.1.37/24
>  eth0 203.130.137.140/28

> I want my host to be web/mail server. I want my host is given legal IP 
> 203.130.137.141/28. I have read Net3-HOWTO, but I'm still confused.

You shouldn't actually need to use tunnelling to achieve this,
provided you have control over the configuration of all of the routers
involved. If so, you would add an appropriate host route for the
address 203.130.137.141 to each of the routers.

If there is another router between Router2 and the Internet, and you
don't have control over it, then you would need to configure Router2
to perform proxy-ARP for that address. This would also be necessary if
you wanted 203.130.137.141 to be accessible to the other hosts on the
203.130.137.140/28 network without having to add a host route to each
of them.

-- 
Glynn Clements <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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