> eth0 is connected to the WAN (DSL modem/router), and ath0, eth1, and
> eth2 are all meant to allow other systems to connect to the LAN via
> DHCP.  Should I be configuring eth1 and eth2 as 192.168.0.1?

No.  Consider the case where your system needs to send an IP packet to
192.168.0.100.  How will it know what card to use to send that?
You've told it that 192.168.0.100 is on ath0...or eth1....or eth2.
They should be separate networks...

I'm pretty confused.  I'm trying to get the system in question to
behave like a solid-state router that you can plug an ethernet jack
into and be on the network.  How should eth1 and eth2 be configured in
/etc/conf.d/net ?

- Grant
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