Date: Fri, 11 Nov 2005 19:36:49 +0200 From: Perttu Laine <plaine@gmail.com> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: route how to? Message-ID: <c6ef380c0511110936n31b6c787kbc0c065583da6de4@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <44ek5nccv7.fsf@be-well.ilk.org> References: <c6ef380c0511110915i57759494gb3bd1cab37a17396@mail.gmail.com> <44ek5nccv7.fsf@be-well.ilk.org>
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On 11 Nov 2005 12:29:00 -0500, Lowell Gilbert < freebsd-questions-local@be-well.ilk.org> wrote: > > Perttu Laine <plaine@gmail.com> writes: > > > I'd like to add route to my computer so one ip would be forwarded to > > "/dev/null". So all other connections would work normally, but > connection to > > for example 192.168.10.1 <http://192.168.10.1> <http://192.168.10.1> > would not work. How can this > > be done? And I propably need same for IPv6 too. I'd like to this with > route > > instead of firewall 'cause this is temporary and kernel of that compute= r > > don't have pf enabled at the moment. > > > > Oh. And if I add this route, how can delete it later? > > I usually do this kind of thing with a firewall, but the routing table > is a good way too. > > "man route" will explain everything you need to do. > I asked because I'm not very familiar with route and don't want to broke everything. :) But is this ok: route add 192.168.10.1 <http://192.168.10.1> 127.0.0.1<http://127.0.0.1> or does it matter what I put as gateway? -- kpn @ IRCnet
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