On Thu, 2007-02-15 at 12:23 +0200, Hans van der Merwe wrote: > On Thu, 2007-02-15 at 10:17 +0000, Russell Jones wrote: > > Art Fore did not write: > > > I have a Dell D820 running Suse 10.2 with WinXP under parallels. I have > > > WinXP logged on to the corporate network and can access the network. > > > > > > Linux uses the Wireless network to access the internet. The connection is > > > lost now and then. It can access the internet. > > > > > > There is an OpenSuSE 10.1 server on our corporate network. It provides > > > SMB shares and runs PostgreSQL and Apache. Since it is on the same subnet > > > we have to access it using the ip address, though it is not joined to the > > > domain. > > > > > > Our corporate network and some other network use the IP ranges > > > 10.18.0.0/16 and 192.168.0.0/16. [hmm...] > > What are the subnet masks? > > > They are not connected via the internet as connections to it through the > > > corporate network are via a proxy server and vpn. > > > Both network cards show up with ifconfig. I changed the default route > > > from the windows network gateway to the > > > wireless network gateway. > > > > > > What I don't understand: I can access the linux server on the windows > > > network. SMB, postgres and http are all available from my Linux laptop > > > which is on a different network [IP range? Subnet?]. > > > How does this work? I did not think it was possible. I discovered it by > > > accident accessing the http. I thought it > > > [was provided by?] was from win xp & firefox, but it was firefox in linux. > > > > > > I am glad about this, but I am curious how it works. > > > > > > Art (paraphrased) > > > > > It could be that Parallels (henceforth //s) provides bridging between > > adapters. Also, note that a single adapter can have as many IPs as you > > could reasonably ask for. > > > > But there's a lot you've not said: which adapters are visible to which > > operating systems? Are you running anything else under //s? How is //s > > configured? > > > > Russell Jones > > See it traceroute provides some info. > > > E-Mail disclaimer: > http://www.sunspace.co.za/emaildisclaimer.htm
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