It should start at 10.0.0.2 from what you described.
Next, it should give 10.0.0.1, then some other
number... the first number after the 10.0.0.1 is
the router/gateway you are hooked into, and gives
you at least part of your answer... from there,
you can possibly go backwards to find your address.
Or, you can simply telenet to some box OUTSIDE your
small subnet (onto the internet) and look at the
IP you are connecting from.  That would be the
router's IP, since it is doing the masquerading.

Bill Ward

-----Original Message-----
From: Patrick O Neil [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 11, 2000 12:30 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: recipient.list.not.shown; @nswcphdn.navy.mil
Subject: RE: connecting laptop to my desktop


I hadn't thought of using traceroute...but I tried it and 
it failed to give me my IP.  It starts the trace at...
10.0.0.1.  Crap (I would like to sometimes know what my
IP is so I can try to access my system from remote sites).

-----Original Message-----
From: Hossein S. Zadeh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, January 10, 2000 10:06 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: recipient.list.not.shown
Subject: RE: connecting laptop to my desktop


On Mon, 10 Jan 2000, Patrick O Neil wrote:
You should not have any problem to setup your laptop to use any IP address
in your private network address range (as you said, 10.0.0.3 for example).

I think a traceroute should reveal IP address of the router:
/usr/sbin/traceroute www.netscape.com


cheers,
Hossein



-- 
To unsubscribe: mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe"
as the Subject.


-- 
To unsubscribe: mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe"
as the Subject.


-- 
To unsubscribe: mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe"
as the Subject.

Reply via email to