Give 'er a shot.  Should work like a charm.  Just put your [EMAIL PROTECTED] username in the WAN config for PPPOE and watch it fly.  You'll need to do some playing with "Virtual IPs" so you can handle the 1 to 1 NATs, but shouldn't take too long of poking through the interface to figure it out.

--Bill

On 9/9/05, Darin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Its just a bridge.  Its a pretty old modem with very basic functions. About 3-4 years old.  http://www.chipweb.de/dsl/index.php?menu=2&id2=33

Darin -


Bill Marquette wrote:
Right now I'm running on a borrows 5100a which bridges the PPPOE only.  Works fine.  I don't know anything about the 5360, is it terminating the PPPOE, or is bridging the PPPOE?

--Bill

On 9/9/05, Darin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
What if you dont have the Cayman router anymore?  I'm just using a standard Speedstream 5360 modem that has no routing or firewall capabilities.

Bill Marquette wrote:
Yup, I have SBC's static offering.  With the Cayman router that comes with that offering you can terminate PPPOE on the modem and allow for the 5 addresses to be used on the ethernet side with pfSense.  You then have the option of bridging those IPs to inside (or DMZ) and putting real addresses on your machines, or doing a 1 to 1 NAT.  The other option is to terminate PPPOE on the pfSense box - you still get the option to do 1 to 1 NAT, but you lose the bridging option (I think, I haven't tried that setup, can't see how it would work though).

I've done both setups, started with terminating PPPOE on the pfSense box, moved to terminating on the router so I could work on CARP and am back to terminating on pfSense because my Cayman died.

--Bill

On 9/9/05, Darin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have DSL with 5 static IPs through SBC. I've also been a FreeBSD user
for a few years now, and currently have a firewall up and running on 4.11
The 5 statics are actually a /29 block, and the IP info is passed down
through the PPP session.  In order to use the statics on other machines,
I have to use the nat functions in the PPP daemon and assign a public IP
to a private IP.  Here is an example from my ppp.conf on how this is done:

nat enable yes
nat same_ports yes
nat addr 192.168.1.5 1.2.3.4
nat addr 192.168.1.6 1.2.3.5

This is the only way I was able to assign those public IPs to another
box.  I could not get it to work using natd.
Will pfsense be able to do this?  I installed 82.4 on a test machine
just to get a feel for the interface and didnt really see any provision
for it.
Any idea how something like this would work?

Thanks for your time.

Darin -

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