RE: PPPoe [7:1249]

2001-04-19 Thread Choi, Howard CW
Vincent, If your router has built-in PPPoE client, DHCP and NAT, then you can use PPPoE/NAT to achieve what you want. You need to enable DHCP on your PC. Howard Choi CCNP, CCDP, CCDA, CCNA -- From: Vincent To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: PPPoe [7:1249] Date: Friday, April 20, 2001 1:09AM

Re: PPPoe [7:1249]

2001-04-19 Thread Jason J. Roysdon
But as he's posting to a Cisco list, he's probably curious about getting it to work with a Cisco router ;-p Cisco TAC's DSL section has a number of PPPoE sample configs: http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/794/ The hardest thing will be getting your PVC info from your clueless ISP helpdesk: http:/

Re: PPPoe [7:1249]

2001-04-19 Thread Allen May
I think you're referring to NAT. This allows you to have one or more public IP addresses on the outside interface and allow inside connections to translate on the router for internet access. - Original Message - From: "Vincent" To: Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2001 12:09 PM Subject: PPPoe

Re: PPPoe [7:1249]

2001-04-19 Thread Nurudeen Aderinto
You can use Linksys DSL router Yu can get more infomation on it from : http://www.computers4sure.com/product.asp?productid=109800 Regards, Nurudeen --- Vincent wrote: > hi; > > Currently, I subscibe to ISP ADSL service, can I > use my router to > function as PPPoe clients. So the netw