Firstly thanks to everyone who answered :)

>but, i can't see why you would want to bind one routable and one
>unroutable address to the one card...  :-?

Well I have run short of IP Addresses, I only have a measly C Class, and 
need more, so I am going to make a private range, existing on the same 
ethernet segment, NAT'd or Squid'ed (haven't decided) to the registered 
addresses, including internet.

The NAT/squid machine is the one with the two ip addresses obviously.

This will also allow me some control over what they access, as some will 
only have access to one webserver. Now that I think about it I could 
multihome the webserver as well (AIX) but I don't think I want to go that way.

Our internet router won't route any of the 10.10.n.n packets.

Any flaws in my plan?

Brock Henry

At 12:24 22/08/2000 +1000, you wrote:
> > Can I have two IP Addresses on one machine, a registered 203.n.n.n and a
> > private 10.10.n.n for example?


>but, i can't see why you would want to bind one routable and one
>unroutable address to the one card...  :-?

*************************************************************************
Brock Henry - [EMAIL PROTECTED] (H) - [EMAIL PROTECTED] (W)

Adventure? Excitement? A Jedi craves not these things.
************************************************************************* 



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