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Date:      Sun, 13 Apr 2003 12:04:12 -0400
From:      taxman <taxman@acd.net>
To:        Wayne Pascoe <freebsd@penguinpowered.org.uk>, Jonathon McKitrick <jcm@FreeBSD-uk.eu.org>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: How to connect laptop and desktop w/NICs
Message-ID:  <200304131204.13035.taxman@acd.net>
In-Reply-To: <20030413152629.GA886@marvin.penguinpowered.org.uk>
References:  <20030411121053.GA77709@dogma.freebsd-uk.eu.org> <20030413121355.GA96192@dogma.freebsd-uk.eu.org> <20030413152629.GA886@marvin.penguinpowered.org.uk>

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On Sunday 13 April 2003 11:26 am, Wayne Pascoe wrote:
> On Sun, Apr 13, 2003 at 01:13:55PM +0100, Jonathon McKitrick wrote:
> > So far, so good.  I can ping each machine from the other, and reset these
> > settings on startup.
> >
> > However, the laptop (which I decided to make a client of the desktop, now
> > that I have a modem for the desktop) cannot ping past the gateway.  I
> > have the default router set to the desktop, but something else must be
> > wrong.
> >
> > Do I need to have inetd or natd running explicitly for this to work?
>
> Do you have
> gateway_enable="YES"
> in /etc/rc.conf ? If not you need to add this.

from rc.conf(5) it doesn't seem that gateway_enable starts natd.  Then what is 
the difference?
I'm a networking moron and in a similiar situation as Jonathon, and I was 
wondering which options to use.

Thanks,

Tim



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