Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2001 09:56:06 +1100 From: Tony Landells <ahl@austclear.com.au> To: "Doug Young" <dougy@gargoyle.apana.org.au> Cc: "Tony Landells" <ahl@austclear.com.au>, "Mike Meyer" <mwm@mired.org>, freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: suroute ?? Message-ID: <200103202256.JAA18788@tungsten.austclear.com.au> In-Reply-To: Message from "Doug Young" <dougy@gargoyle.apana.org.au> of "Wed, 21 Mar 2001 08:46:18 %2B1000." <01ab01c0b18f$98ca2c40$8300a8c0@apana.org.au>
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dougy@gargoyle.apana.org.au said: > Topology is typical ISP except that many of the "clients" have 2 / 8 / > 16 public IPs. A quick workaround is to to enable NAT, however that > defeats the object of running servers on the LAN .... all appear from > outside to have the gateway IP address. Adding a route to the LAN > subnet after connection has been established doesn't appear to be > sufficient. I can't be the first to encounter this issue ... surely > there has to be a more straightforward solution than messing around > with apparently fragile perl scripts ?? I'm sorry, but what is a "typical ISP"? For example, where are the modems that people are dialling in to? Directly on a FreeBSD box? On a terminal server networked to a FreeBSD box? Are you running a routing protocol of some sort? What is it? How do you start PPP/SLIP for the dialins? Is it done from their login scripts, or are you using something else? Tony -- Tony Landells <ahl@austclear.com.au> Senior Network Engineer Ph: +61 3 9677 9319 Australian Clearing Services Pty Ltd Fax: +61 3 9677 9355 Level 4, Rialto North Tower 525 Collins Street Melbourne VIC 3000 Australia To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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