At 02:15 29/11/01, Jeffrey Altman wrote: >I have Cable Modem service from Time Warner Road Runner in NYC. >The way they work it you get up to 5 IP addresses for each cable >modem you have.
This is typical of most {NB: not all, most} currently deployed residential IP/Cable Modem networks in at least US and Canada. >The problem I have run into is that the modem gets >assigned the number of addresses you pay for up front. > >The modem then assigns them, one to each MAC address it sees until the >number of addresses is used up. Now if you connect a switch to the >cable modem the LAN and WAN MAC addresses of the switch will be seen >by the modem and two of your IP addresses will become inaccessible. >As far as I can tell there is no way to specify to the modem which >MAC addresses should be issued IP addresses. The DOCSIS standards used in many countries (including the EuroDOCSIS variant with 8 MHz downstream channel width that is sometimes used in Europe) do not permit the operator to configure the information into the DOCSIS cable modem in the manner you would like, as near as I can tell. So the cable network operator isn't being malicious, just limited by the currently deployed technology. >This means that for the first three addresses you get one computer. >Four addresses for two computers, five addresses for three computers. Understood, though a strictly-compliant Ethernet bridge device ought only have a single MAC address (not 2 or more). While many low-cost devices aren't strictly-compliant to the Ethernet standard, the Ethernet spec does say one MAC per box (not one MAC per network interface). Sun, for example, is strictly compliant with this part of the spec even if their systems have multiple interfaces, so compliance with the Ethernet spec isn't unheard of. Ran [EMAIL PROTECTED]