Date: Wed, 28 Jun 1995 00:31:56 -0700 From: David Greenman <davidg@Root.COM> To: Rob Snow <rsnow@legend.txdirect.net> Cc: John Beukema <jbeukema@hk.super.net>, Hackers <hackers@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: packet forwarding Message-ID: <199506280731.AAA00673@corbin.Root.COM> In-Reply-To: Your message of "Thu, 29 Jun 95 02:14:40 CDT." <Pine.BSF.3.91.950629020541.408A-100000@oasis>
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>On Tue, 27 Jun 1995, David Greenman wrote: >> >> >I have the EXACT same problem, and I dont really understand why. If I > ^^^^^ > read 'ALMOST the EXACT' >> >default to my ppp machine from my non-ppp machine then shouldnt my ppp machine >> >default to my ISP? >> >> Perhaps I'm missing something, but why would your ISP send packets for >> 10.x.x.x back to you? The "10" net is supposed to be local-only. > >#define PPP ppp machine with lp0 to LOST and tun0 to ISP > starts at 204.57.120.200 and gets reassigned to > 204.57.120.[50-100]. ifconfig lp0 inet PPP LOST > >#define LOST 204.57.120.201 with ifconfig lp0 inet LOST PPP > >#define ISP 204.57.120.3 > > >LOST can always ping/rlogin to PPP. >PPP can always ping/rlogin to LOST. >PPP can always ping/rlogin to ISP. >(except Netscape hangs with a DNS lookup failure if it is the program >that starts an ondemand connection, but that's another story) > >LOST can NEVER ping/rlogin to ISP. You need to add 'options GATEWAY' to your kernel config file. -DG
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