RE: Quickie... Hopefully!

2004-10-01 Thread Richard Marriner
your reply.. Richard > -Original Message- > From: Kevin Glick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Friday, October 01, 2004 3:54 PM > To: 'Richard Marriner' > Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: RE: Quickie... Hopefully! > > Richard, > > I&#x

RE: Quickie... Hopefully!

2004-10-01 Thread Kevin Glick
Richard, I've done the same thing a few times. To get the full description, check the ifconfig man page and look for "alias". There's two problems with doing this: first, BSD can't have two default routes. Windows allows you to set two default gateways, and it works because of the "Route Discov

Re: Quickie... Hopefully!

2004-10-01 Thread Kris Kennaway
On Fri, Oct 01, 2004 at 03:36:52PM -0700, Richard Marriner wrote: > Yes, I have tried that, but it doesn't send the reply out the route that it > received it on. OK, please provide more details then. I'd guess you're doing something wrong, e.g. using the wrong subnet for the aliased address. Kr

Re: Quickie... Hopefully!

2004-10-01 Thread Glenn Sieb
Richard Marriner said the following on 10/1/2004 6:25 PM: Dear list, Just wondering if there is anyway (preferably simple.) to have two ip addresses on the same NIC that are different networks. First, I would test things out by adding an ifconfig alias (man ifconfig) and adding a new route

RE: Quickie... Hopefully!

2004-10-01 Thread Richard Marriner
d Marriner > Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: Quickie... Hopefully! > > > On Fri, Oct 01, 2004 at 03:25:07PM -0700, Richard Marriner wrote: > > Dear list, > > > >Just wondering if there is anyway (preferably simple.) > to have two ip > > addresses

Re: Quickie... Hopefully!

2004-10-01 Thread Kris Kennaway
On Fri, Oct 01, 2004 at 03:25:07PM -0700, Richard Marriner wrote: > Dear list, > >Just wondering if there is anyway (preferably simple.) to have two ip > addresses on the same NIC that are different networks. > > A little background. We are in the process of changing ISPs, we now have > t