L PROTECTED]
> > Subject: Re: How do I set the source address on a multi-homed host?
> >
> > > Having said that: technically, you specify source addresses for
> > > connections by calling bind(2) prior to calling connect(2).
> >
> > If you fail
> >
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Daniela
> Sent: Tuesday, February 15, 2005 1:30 PM
> To: Jan Grant
> Cc: Alin-Adrian Anton; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: How do I set the source address on a multi-homed host?
On Tue, 15 Feb 2005, Daniela wrote:
> Well, if the OS selects the source IP, can't I just modify the code that
> selects it? Will this work all the time, or just when the application lets
> the OS select an address for it?
It should "just work" - that is, the source address for internal packes
On Sunday 13 February 2005 09:37, Jan Grant wrote:
> On Sat, 12 Feb 2005, Daniela wrote:
> > Yes, this happens when I connect from my machine (which functions as a
> > router with NAT to allow the other LAN machines connect to the internet)
> > to another LAN machine. When the router establishes a
On Sun, Feb 13, 2005 at 07:49:05PM +0200, Alin-Adrian Anton wrote:
> I really don't see why you use A-class netmask. It's very probable that
> a C-class netmask would suffice:
They already are using a /24 (class C) network. Take another look at
the mask - 0xff00. In any case, the network '
Am Samstag, 12. Februar 2005 16:05 schrieb Daniela:
> On Friday 11 February 2005 21:27, Alin-Adrian Anton wrote:
> > Daniela wrote:
> > > I have two NICs (one inside and one outside interface) with NAT
> > > activated. The problem is that every time I establish a connection with
> > > a machine on
Daniela wrote:
On Saturday 12 February 2005 16:06, Volker Kindermann wrote:
Hi Daniela,
Yes, this happens when I connect from my machine (which functions as a
router with NAT to allow the other LAN machines connect to the internet)
to another LAN machine. When the router establishes a connection t
On Sun, 13 Feb 2005, Jan Grant wrote:
> On Sat, 12 Feb 2005, Daniela wrote:
>
> > Yes, this happens when I connect from my machine (which functions as a
> > router
> > with NAT to allow the other LAN machines connect to the internet) to
> > another
> > LAN machine. When the router establishes
On Sat, 12 Feb 2005, Daniela wrote:
> Yes, this happens when I connect from my machine (which functions as a router
> with NAT to allow the other LAN machines connect to the internet) to another
> LAN machine. When the router establishes a connection to another point in the
> intranet, the sour
On Saturday 12 February 2005 16:06, Volker Kindermann wrote:
> Hi Daniela,
>
> > Yes, this happens when I connect from my machine (which functions as a
> > router with NAT to allow the other LAN machines connect to the internet)
> > to another LAN machine. When the router establishes a connection t
Hi Daniela,
Yes, this happens when I connect from my machine (which functions as a router
with NAT to allow the other LAN machines connect to the internet) to another
LAN machine. When the router establishes a connection to another point in the
intranet, the source address used is my official I
On Friday 11 February 2005 21:27, Alin-Adrian Anton wrote:
> Daniela wrote:
> > I have two NICs (one inside and one outside interface) with NAT
> > activated. The problem is that every time I establish a connection with a
> > machine on my LAN, it uses the address of the outside interface as the
>
Daniela wrote:
I have two NICs (one inside and one outside interface) with NAT activated. The
problem is that every time I establish a connection with a machine on my LAN,
it uses the address of the outside interface as the source of the packets,
which creates problems with my firewall. How do I
Daniela wrote:
I have two NICs (one inside and one outside interface) with NAT activated. The
problem is that every time I establish a connection with a machine on my LAN,
it uses the address of the outside interface as the source of the packets,
which creates problems with my firewall. How do I
I have two NICs (one inside and one outside interface) with NAT activated. The
problem is that every time I establish a connection with a machine on my LAN,
it uses the address of the outside interface as the source of the packets,
which creates problems with my firewall. How do I tell my machin
Hi all
I have a fbsd 4.7 box that has 2 nics rl0 & rl1. On rl0 i have a public
ip address and on rl1 I have a private 10.20.30.0/24, and I'm running
squid proxy for my private ip's.
Now i've added a 3rd nic rl2 which has an ADSL router connected to it
(another internet source).
What I wanted to
On Fri, Dec 27, 2002 at 12:55:24AM -, Timmer wrote:
> This machine runs a web server (and a few other things), so all that traffic
> must happen on the T1. However, the T1 is significantly slower than my cable
> connection, so I would like the machine to use the cable connection for
> downlo
Hello
I am trying to set up a FreeBSD 4.7-STABLE machine so that it has one network
card and two IP addresses, each on a different logical network. Here's the
configuration:
Logical Net 1: (Cable, 3M)
IP ADDR: 192.168.1.2
NETMASK: 255.255.255.0
GATEWAY: 192.168.1.1
Logical Net 2: (FRAC-T1, 384K
18 matches
Mail list logo