Address range is .202 to .210, all part of a class C net. This provides .204 - .207/30 leaving the remaining five orphaned. Nice, huh?
JS
At 08:05 AM -0400 5/28/2003, you wrote:
At 01:17 AM 5/28/2003 -0400, you wrote:Dan,
I can get only one /30 net; .204 to .207 (I'm learning what to ask the next time).
is this out of the block of 9 addresses or a separate subnet? i'm a little confused now... if it's a separate subnet they
route to you, none of this is relevant anymore. one fly in the ointment: you'll need a separate subnet on the crossover
cable between the inside port of the router and the EXT of the gnatbox. note: you can run private IPs on this segment
and configure the cisco to NAT any private IPs that exit the router to the DSL segment (due to, say, traceroutes)...
I've been experimenting with Win2k Server as a router in my test setup. Not optimal but at least available. There is however, an electronics flea market this weekend. I've seen Cisco routers there before. Given that what shows up is usually somewhat out of date, are there any specific common models you might suggest?
not many have two enet ports. don't remember specific models, but you'd want two enet.
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