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Date:      Thu, 14 Nov 2002 10:32:04 -0600
From:      "Jack L. Stone" <jackstone@sage-one.net>
To:        Jonathan Arnold <jdarnold@buddydog.org>, questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Internet blocked out?
Message-ID:  <3.0.5.32.20021114103204.010b46c8@mail.sage-one.net>
In-Reply-To: <3DD3C889.7000304@buddydog.org>
References:  <004101c28bf5$1f1bd000$0100a8c0@sun> <004101c28bf5$1f1bd000$0100a8c0@sun>

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At 11:00 AM 11.14.2002 -0500, Jonathan Arnold wrote:
>> 	[rc.conf]
>> 	ppp_nat=YES
>
>Thanks for the idea, but I don't use PPP and, according to the rc.conf
>in /etc/default, this is the default setting anyway.
>
>I've got it fixed, sort of. My machine has two NICs (one to the world and
>one to my internal network). It seems the NIC that all the servers are
>using is the internal one now, although up until this latest upgrade, it
>had been the one to the outside world. Here's my rc.conf lines:
>
>ifconfig_dc0="inet 66.92.76.224  netmask 255.255.255.0"
>ifconfig_dc1="DHCP"
>defaultrouter="66.92.76.1"
>hostname="amazingdev.com"
>
>If I comment out the ifconfig_dc1 line, all is well. It is DHCP because
>I have a Linksys router on my internal network, so it picks up the
>192.168.* address just fine if it is in there. How can I get it so that
>the "default" NIC is the 66.92 one, not the 192.168 one? I tried
>switching the order of the lines in rc.conf but that doesn't help.
>

It's my understand that if you have the router, you sould not have the
second NIC installed. You need to route using the router setup.... methinks.

Best regards,
Jack L. Stone,
Administrator

SageOne Net
http://www.sage-one.net
jackstone@sage-one.net

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