routing en debian Ayuda

2008-12-02 Thread Luis A. R. Paz
hola amigos tengo una gran interrogante a ver si estoy haciendo algo mal en mi red yo tengo una red 10.16.0.0/16 pero de ella estoy usando nadamas 10.16.1.0 10.16.2.0 10.16.3.0 y 10.16.4.0 /24 las 4 redes ahora yo en la red 10.16.0.0 quiero separar unas maquinas fisicamente del resto de

routing in debian

2005-06-29 Thread Khanh Cao Van
I have 2 PC A and B , The A has 2 ethernet card call eth0 ( IP 10.0.0.4/24 ) and eth1 ( 192.168.60.2/24 ) . I have enable fowarding between those 2 ethernet : cvkhanh:/etc/network# cat options ip_forward=yes The B has one ethernet card eth0 ( 192.168.60.4/24 ) and the default gateway is

Config file for routing in debian

2005-05-08 Thread Deboo Geek
Where does debian store it's config in for the routes that show up with the route command? I have an eth0 card and running pppoe to connect to my ISp service. But the route that is already there is set to use the ip of the ethernet card as the default gateway. I need to set this up manually

GRE Routing Cisco -- Debian Linux

2002-11-11 Thread Reece Anderson
Hi All, I've been trying for a few hours trying to get some GRE routing to work, i can't find much documentation other then getting a linux to linux gre point setup. Ive got a cisco point as the server with the following. interface Tunnel10 ip unnumbered Loopback0 no ip redirects ip mtu 1500

Re: GRE Routing Cisco -- Debian Linux

2002-11-11 Thread Bob George
Reece Anderson wrote: I've been trying for a few hours trying to get some GRE routing to work, i can't find much documentation other then getting a linux to linux gre point setup. Ive got a cisco point as the server with the following. [...] I've got some notes up on exactly this as part of

Re: GRE Routing Cisco -- Debian Linux

2002-11-11 Thread Bob George
Reece Anderson wrote: [...] Ive got a cisco point as the server with the following. interface Tunnel10 ip unnumbered Loopback0 no ip redirects ip mtu 1500 ip route-cache flow tunnel source 203.9.148.97 tunnel destination 202.182.90.10 tunnel mode gre ip I just noticed you're tyring to

Howto OSPF routing on Debian ?

1998-11-26 Thread Guido Bozzetto
What's the simplest way to adding OSPF routing protocol on a Debian 2.x host ? I suppose that is to use the RPM file of gated, I've founded: gated-R3_6Alpha_2-1.src.rpm but this a source file :-((, someone have a best idea ? The use of the original source: gated-pre-3.5.10.tar.gz I think

Re: Routing with Debian?

1998-04-20 Thread Florian Attenberger
On Sun, 12 Apr 1998, Jonas Bofjall wrote: Here is my situation: I want to connect a laptop to the Internet using a PLIP connection to my Ethernet-connected workstation. This pretty much sums up what I have tried (except for those ifconfig's): on laptop: route add workstation-ip plip0

Re: Routing with Debian?

1998-04-14 Thread Jonas Bofjall
On Mon, 13 Apr 1998, Jens B. Jorgensen wrote: The usual timeout for ARP entries is 30 seconds IIRC. That doesn't mean that some hardware might do something different. I went home unsuccesful and then returned today, two days after I fought with this, because I had some ideas I wanted to try.

Re: Routing with Debian?

1998-04-14 Thread David Wright
On Tue, 14 Apr 1998, Jonas Bofjall wrote: On Mon, 13 Apr 1998, Jens B. Jorgensen wrote: The usual timeout for ARP entries is 30 seconds IIRC. That doesn't mean that some hardware might do something different. I went home unsuccesful and then returned today, two days after I fought with

Re: Routing with Debian?

1998-04-13 Thread Jonas Bofjall
On Sun, 12 Apr 1998, George Bonser wrote: The router finds the hardware (or MAC) address by broadcasting a request to the network. It basicly asks Does anybody here know what the MAC This is the ARP request described in the NAG. But there is also some kind of cache which can be viewed with

Re: Routing with Debian?

1998-04-13 Thread Jens B. Jorgensen
Jonas Bofjall wrote: On Sun, 12 Apr 1998, George Bonser wrote: The router finds the hardware (or MAC) address by broadcasting a request to the network. It basicly asks Does anybody here know what the MAC This is the ARP request described in the NAG. But there is also some kind of cache

Routing with Debian?

1998-04-12 Thread Jonas Bofjall
Here is my situation: I want to connect a laptop to the Internet using a PLIP connection to my Ethernet-connected workstation. This pretty much sums up what I have tried (except for those ifconfig's): on laptop: route add workstation-ip plip0 route add default gw workstation-ip on workstation:

Re: Routing with Debian?

1998-04-12 Thread Alain Toussaint
The router finds the hardware (or MAC) address by broadcasting a request to the network. It basicly asks Does anybody here know what the MAC address is for the interface ip-address. and someone will respond with it. As for your routing problem ... do you have a real IP address assigned to