Hi

My answer sure sounds silly, but I think that you don't need 'diald' at
all with your configuration.

It's your ISDN-router's job to bring the link up and down on demand.

Just set the defaultroute to eth1 on your 'gateway' machine and to the
IP of eth0 for the other machines on your lan and it should work.

Of course, you need a local 'name to IP-address' resolution system that
works (either with 'hosts files' or name server), so that your
isdn-router doesn't get kicked for traffic that is supposed to stay
local.

Yann

----- Message d'origine -----
De : Bart Blanquart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
� : <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Envoy� : dimanche, 21. novembre 1999 22:01
Objet : Using ethernet-cards with diald


> Hi,
>
> I'm trying to setup diald using regular ethernet-cards
> (I have an isdn-router connected to a linux-box which
> acts as firewall/proxy).
>
> On the side of the router I have eth1, which I would
> like to bring up and down using diald.
> On the other side I have eth0 which is the connection
> to the internal network.
>
> However, this does not seem to work... I specified --
> in diald.conf -- that diald should use eth1 (mode dev)
> but when it should bring up a link it uses eth0
> instead of eth1 -- with the following message:
>
> diald[PID]: Old eth1 , New device : eth 0
>
>
> Is it possible to use diald to control ethernet-cards
> (not isdn-ethernet, as the isdn4linux people use)?
> If not, is there an alternative?
> If yes: how do I get it to work?
>
> Thanks for any info,
>
> bt
>
>
> __________________________________________________
> Do You Yahoo!?
> Bid and sell for free at http://auctions.yahoo.com
>
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-diald"
in
> the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>


-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-diald" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to