Date: Fri, 1 Oct 2004 07:11:24 +0000 From: "Mikhail P." <miha@ghuug.org> To: Juhani Tali <juhani@kernel.ee> Cc: freebsd-net@freebsd.org Subject: Re: confusion with natd Message-ID: <200410010711.24829.miha@ghuug.org> In-Reply-To: <415CFE85.8040005@kernel.ee> References: <200410010543.42789.miha@ghuug.org> <415CFE85.8040005@kernel.ee>
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On Friday 01 October 2004 06:51, Juhani Tali wrote: > I would set it up like so: > > This one in host B > > > natd -interface rl1 > > And this in host A > > > natd -port 8568 -interface tun0 > > You need to translate all the 192.168.0.x to tunnel's address and you > cannot do it in host B, because it has no direct connection to 192.168.0.x. Did not quite understand what you meant here. I can translate 192.168.0.0/24 into tunnel, but as my original message states, only packets to HOST_A fall into that route, any other packets (even ipfw has "ip from 192.168.0.3 to any") travel out regular way (not via tun0). That's the most confusing part ("any != "any"), and I'm stuck there. HOST_B (which is seen as "192.168.0.1" to LAN) has direct connection to 192.168.0.x, and basically it acts as a gateway for 192.168.0.x, so I dance from there. > Another solution is with routing, so host B has direct access to the > 192.168.0.x network. Tried that already as - on HOST_A (remote host) - route add 192.168.0.0/24 192.168.10.2 After that, I can ping 192.168.0.x directly (no NAT) from remote VPN host and backwards. This, however, does not change anything apart from giving me direct access to "HOST_A <<-->> 192.168.0.0/24". > > > I have been pulling hair off my poor head for few hours on this issue, > > but did not come to solution, so I'm looking for advises. > > Juhani Tali regards, M.
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