On Sunday 29 June 2003 11:05 pm, PAGE,RAYMOND wrote:
> Not all of this may be 100% accurate, but is to the best of my
> current knowledge.
Understood.
> A bridge is merely a router with one to one connections (as
> opposed to a star). The modem is able to turn off it's DHCP, DNS,
> and NAT abili
On Sunday 29 June 2003 10:00 pm, PAGE,RAYMOND wrote:
> Turns out that I hadn't saved my pap.secrets file. Updated it,
> but didn't back it up to disk. So I now have internet
> connectivity and can ping the internet, yeah :)I was curious
> if I still require pump, ie. what does pump handle so
Turns out that I hadn't saved my pap.secrets file. Updated it,
but didn't back it up to disk. So I now have internet
connectivity and can ping the internet, yeah :)I was curious
if I still require pump, ie. what does pump handle so that I might
be able to get rid of it? Fifth bullet or s
Hello Raymond, Lynn list
Hello Lynn, Raymond, I don't think the modem is a router, the internal
"modem" addres is probably only for maintainance
btw, be carefull, that this is a "private" ip and might be blocked by
shorewall, if you try to do maintainance.
So if it is internal network --> LEAF -
On Saturday 28 June 2003 09:02 pm, PAGE,RAYMOND wrote:
[...]
> eth0 is definitely connected to the modem, and ?trying? to talk to
> the modem. The modem has an IP of 192.168.7.1. The internal nic,
> eth1, is able to connect to internal boxes. It's ip is
> 192.168.0.1. I know it works because I
Eric and LEAF list(original correspondence was with Eric),
Eric, thanks for being so polite and all. Let me give you some
more information on my setup. The Bering Firewall I'm trying to
setup is going to be connected between my lan and dsl modem. I'm
currently running a WinXP box there with