Sorry I wasn't clear.  What my mind was thinking wasn't coming across.  I
hope this helps.

I have a firewall that runs on a Sun Ultra 5.  It is a dhcp client on the
WAN side and a dhcp server inside the house.  The firewall connects to a
switch that has several things connected to it including other computers
(running various operating systems), switches that service other parts of
the house and a Linksys wireless G access point.

I have a company HP laptop that runs Windows XP.  The laptop has a built
in 802.11 capability and a PCMCIA card.  The card works fine, but the
built in will get through the WAP fine, but won't get an IP address from
the firewall.

Is there some log file where I can look for error messages to try to
troubleshoot this.

Thanks again, and I hope this helps explain things.

  -------- Original Message --------
  Subject: Re: dhcp error message
  From: Joachim Schipper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  Date: Fri, February 01, 2008 8:46 am
  To: Jim M <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  On Thu, Jan 31, 2008 at 07:38:26PM -0700, Jim M wrote:
  > my /var/log/messages file is filled over and over with the line
  > (obviously the date/time varies)
  >
  > Jan 31 20:17:00 balrog dhclient: send_fallback: No route to host
  >
  > The machine is a firewall and has no graphic capabilities. It is a
  dhcp
  > client to get my the IP address for the home network and a dhcp
  server
  > for all the machines in the house. What does this error message
  mean?
  > The firewall works fine as the default router for all the wired
  Ethernet
  > machines in the house. But, I have laptop with built in 802.11 and
  a
  > PCMCIA card as well. When I use the PCMCIA card, everything works
  fine.
  > With the built in 802.11, however, it connects to the WAP, but does
  not
  > get an IP address from the firewall. I can't figure out why the
  > difference and would appreciate any advice on how to troubleshoot
  this.

  I'm not certain this is useful, but that *is* the message you get if
  pf
  blocks a packet. However, dhclient does some unusual stuff to be able
  to
  send packets even when the interface is down, and usually bypasses pf
  because of that.

  Otherwise, it's not really clear to me which host is which and which
  host is doing what, so I'm afraid I can't really help you. A little
  clarification sent to the list might be useful here.

  Joachim

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