On Monday 24 June 2002 7:31 pm, George Garvey wrote: > The DSL I'm having problems with is connected through a router that > translates a single IP to 5 IPs, only one of which I'm using. I'm told > by the ISP that I can use any 2 of the 5 on the internet. At least, > that's my understanding.
Um, what are the other three for, then ? If you can only use 2 IPs, why has the ISP given you any more ? > This system also has a GRE tunnel. I've turned of IPSEC until I get the > nat worked out. Good idea :-) > If I ping an internet IP from the LAN, I'm pretty sure it goes out to > the internet with the source IP still the LAN IP, without translation. I'm not so sure about that (why do you think that's what's happening ?). If you look at your log entry for the nat POSTROUTING table: > Chain POSTROUTING (policy ACCEPT 16 packets, 1439 bytes) > pkts bytes target prot opt in out source > destination 16 1184 SNAT all -- * eth1 0.0.0.0/0 > 0.0.0.0/0 to:XX.XXX.XXX.XXX (Sorry about the way my email client has re-wrapped it...) You can see that 16 packets / 1184 bytes have matched this rule, which means that they've been SNATted to XX.XXX.XXX.XXX Also, I see that your FORWARD rules are logging no packets through them. What does your routing table look like ? Antony.
