Re: Behind a router

2008-02-04 Thread Jeremy Gransden
My apologies to you and the list. thanks, jeremy ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: Behind a router revisited

2008-02-04 Thread Mel
On Sunday 03 February 2008 14:47:47 Eugen wrote: The configuration files for FreeBSD are shown below. The output of ifconfig and netstat are also shown for BSD and Linux. What confuses me is the fact that having the same router settings, when I boot in Linux the network is usable, while in

Re: Behind a router revisited

2008-02-04 Thread Eugen
I disabled the firewall in /etc/rc.conf. The message from ping is: ping: sendto: Network is unreachable How do I set the metric to 1 at boot? Is there a setting I have to put in /etc/rc.conf or somewhere else? It still baffles me why Linux works on the desktop, Windows works on the laptop

Re: Behind a router

2008-02-03 Thread Christian Baer
On Sun, 3 Feb 2008 02:24:43 -0500 Jeremy Gransden wrote: please fix the line wrap in your email. It is unreadable And you really neaded to quote over 600 lines just to write that? Regards, Chris ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list

Re: Behind a router

2008-02-03 Thread Christian Baer
On Sat, 2 Feb 2008 21:49:55 -0800 (PST) Eugen Udma wrote: I took the liberty of cleaning up you post. Please fix your line wrap! One word per line is not what I call easy reading. I had a working minimal FreeBSD system until I put it behind a wireless router. Since then, my network

Behind a router revisited

2008-02-03 Thread Eugen
I edited my original post for the wrapping problem and, as a result of Christian Baer response, I tried the default settings, so now I have the original (empty) /etc/dhclient.conf. Same result. I had a working minimal FreeBSD system until I put it behind a wireless router. Since then my network

Behind a router

2008-02-02 Thread Eugen Udma
I had a working minimal FreeBSD system until I put it behind a wireless router. Since then, my network is not accessible anymore when I boot BSD. On the same desktop I have a Gentoo Linux system which works just fine, even if I didn't touch any of it's

Re: Behind a router

2008-02-02 Thread Jeremy Gransden
On Feb 3, 2008 12:49 AM, Eugen Udma [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I had a working minimal FreeBSD system until I put it behind a wireless router. Since then, my network is not accessible anymore when I boot BSD. On the same desktop I have a Gentoo Linux system

Accessing DOCSIS diagnostics from within/behind FreeBSD router

2003-12-08 Thread J. Seth Henry
Guys, I'm not sure if this is even a FreeBSD question, but googling hasn't turned up much on it, so I thought I'd toss this one out there. I have a Motorola SB5100 cable modem directly attached to a FreeBSD router (running ipfilters/ipnat). The external network is a comcast segment, and is

Re: Accessing DOCSIS diagnostics from within/behind FreeBSD router

2003-12-08 Thread Steve Bertrand
I have a Motorola SB5100 cable modem directly attached to a FreeBSD router (running ipfilters/ipnat). The external network is a comcast segment, and is assigned a dynamic IP. The internal network is routed on 192.168.1.x, where the router is 192.168.1.254. The trick is, the cable modem

Re: Accessing DOCSIS diagnostics from within/behind FreeBSD router

2003-12-08 Thread Lowell Gilbert
J. Seth Henry [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: I'm not sure if this is even a FreeBSD question, but googling hasn't turned up much on it, so I thought I'd toss this one out there. I have a Motorola SB5100 cable modem directly attached to a FreeBSD router (running ipfilters/ipnat). The external

Reaching FTP on internal network behind NAT/router FreeBSD 4.7

2003-03-10 Thread Sanne Taaij
I run FreeBSD 4.7 My goal is to connect from the internet to my FTP which is running on my internal network at internal ip:. So I figured to use port redirection on my FreeBSD NAT/router.Which consists of 2 nic, rl0 public ip and rl1 internal ip. -- /etc/rc.conf

Re: Reaching FTP on internal network behind NAT/router FreeBSD 4.7

2003-03-10 Thread James Long
On Mon, Mar 10, 2003 at 11:42:11PM +0100, Sanne Taaij wrote: My goal is to connect from the internet to my FTP which is running on my internal network at internal ip:. So I figured to use port redirection on my FreeBSD NAT/router.Which consists of 2 nic, rl0 public ip and rl1 internal