VLANs are your friend, otherwise DHCPD is not going to understand how to
properly answer your request for different networks on the same interface.
- On 14 Jan, 2017, at 11:59, Gregory P. Ennis po...@pomec.net wrote:
| Everyone,
|
| I am trying to set up a second internal network
On 1/15/2017 10:19 AM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
Thank you for such a good explanation. It seems apparent to me that a
better way to do what I wanted would be to have two wireless routers,
one wifi being controlled by the dhcpd server that assigns ip addresses
through it to known and trusted
Date: Sun, 15 Jan 2017 14:05:37 -0800
On 01/15/2017 10:19 AM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
> It seems apparent to me that a
> better way to do what I wanted would be to have two wireless routers,
> one wifi being controlled by the dhcpd server that assigns ip addresses
> through it to known and
On 01/15/2017 10:19 AM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
It seems apparent to me that a
better way to do what I wanted would be to have two wireless routers,
one wifi being controlled by the dhcpd server that assigns ip addresses
through it to known and trusted connections with one subnet, and the
other
On 01/15/2017 09:11 AM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
> All I can say is that when I looked at the dhcpd.conf examples and read
> the man pages as well as the explanations of how dhcpd works, we should
> be able to use dhcpd for more than one subnet :
You can, provided they're on different physical
On 01/15/2017 09:11 AM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
All I can say is that when I looked at the dhcpd.conf examples and read
the man pages as well as the explanations of how dhcpd works, we should
be able to use dhcpd for more than one subnet :
You can, provided they're on different physical
> -Original Message-
> From: CentOS [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of Kenneth
> Porter
> Sent: Sunday, January 15, 2017 12:28 PM
> To: centos@centos.org
> Subject: Re: [CentOS] BackupPC
>
> On 1/15/2017 8:28 AM, TE Dukes wrote:
> > I found the cygwin-rsync package and in
On 1/15/2017 8:28 AM, TE Dukes wrote:
I found the cygwin-rsync package and in the process of setting that up.
I'll join that list and see if I can find it.
Here's the message of interest with links to zip and installer:
https://sourceforge.net/p/backuppc/mailman/message/3022/
---
This
Date: Sun, 15 Jan 2017 11:57:35 -0500
> I have not been able to make any headway resolving this problem;
Personally, I don't understand how you expect the DHCP server to decide
which scope to use when a new connection appears on the network.
DHCP discovery queries are presented from 0.0.0.0 to
> I have not been able to make any headway resolving this problem;
Personally, I don't understand how you expect the DHCP server to decide
which scope to use when a new connection appears on the network.
DHCP discovery queries are presented from 0.0.0.0 to 255.255.255.255, not to
a particular
> -Original Message-
> From: CentOS [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of Kenneth
> Porter
> Sent: Sunday, January 15, 2017 10:43 AM
> To: centos@centos.org
> Subject: Re: [CentOS] BackupPC
>
> The BackupPC mailing list is pretty helpful:
>
>
Everyone,
I am trying to set up a second internal network (192.168.0.0/24) and
have not been able to get dhcp to start when I have the following in my
dhcpd.conf file :
subnet 192.168.0.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
range 192.168.0.110 192.168.0.130;
option subnet-mask
The BackupPC mailing list is pretty helpful:
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users
Like John R. Pierce, I use rsync to back up my Windows clients. There
was an updated cygwin rsync link posted to the BackupPC list not long
ago. It's pretty simple to set up.
---
This
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