> This is posted with the hope someone can look at the current state of > my Freerunner connection to the desktop and just see something that is > not right. I am sure the answer is simple and am reluctant to ask the > community for non-FR help but perhaps others are struggling with > similar network issues in getting their FR hooked up to the Internet. > > My basic setup: > router - 192.168.1.1 > desktop - 192.168.1.200 > freerunner - 192.168.1.202
You mean it looks something like this: 192.168.1.1 192.168.1.200 192.168.1.202 router--------switch-------desktop----------freerunner / / other_stuff 192.168.1.x and everything on the left has a netmask of 255.255.255.0? If that's so forget about the FreeRunner talking to anything but the desktop. In fact, be suprised and grateful if it's doing that much. The routing table you gave is horrible and it will stop working if you re-start the non-usb network interface on your machine. You need different subnets on the two desktop NICs to have any hope. The only possible way around this fact is to use ethernet bridging instead of routing on the desktop, and that's such an ugly hack that I refuse to work up directions for configuring it. I've never seen it done on a network that worked right. Your desktop needs to act as a ROUTER for the FreeRunner. A router by definition is connected to two or more *different* networks. From the perspective of the stuff on the left, the 192.168.1.192/26 subnet the FreeRunner is on is not a different network - it's a few addresses on the same network. (This is what netmasks are about. Basically, they tell the computer how big the neighborhood is.) Which means they aren't sending packets for the FreeRunner through the desktop, they're just ARPing and expecting the FreeRunner to respond, but since it's on a different network, it can't hear the ARPs. Packets from the FreeRunner probably do reach their destinations, but the reply packets don't come back, which means you don't get a ping response and can't establish any kind of connection. The easiest way to fix this is probably to use your half-working setup to SSH into the FreeRunner and reconfigure it to use, say, 192.168.2.202, then do the same with the desktop side of the USB ethernet connection. Then kill the iptables rules in your nat table POSTROUTING chain. You can either: 1) Leave them gone and put a static route to 192.168.2.192/26 in your router, specifying your desktop's 192.168.1.x address as the gateway OR (exclusive, do not do both of these things) 2) specify on the desktop an iptables rule to NAT all packets coming from the USB network - something like 'iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 192.168.2.192/26 -j MASQUERADE'. Whichever you choose, you'll need the FORWARD chain in the filter table in its current permissive state. You'll also want to double-check that sysctl net.ipv4.ip_forward=1. The simplest way to check this is 'cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward'. Hope that helps. _______________________________________________ support mailing list support@lists.openmoko.org https://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/support