RE: solution to NAT and multihoming

2001-01-29 Thread James P. Salsman
If you want to be part of the global address space and you are behind a NAT box, get a PPP account outside your NAT box and connect to it with TCP or SSH or SSL or UDP or HTTP or whatever (see for example the use of PPP over telnet, in the www.ora.com Turtle PPP book.) What IPv4 NAT issue

Re: solution to NAT and multihoming

2001-01-29 Thread Perry E. Metzger
"James P. Salsman" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: If you want to be part of the global address space and you are behind a NAT box, get a PPP account outside your NAT box and connect to it with TCP or SSH or SSL or UDP or HTTP or whatever (see for example the use of PPP over telnet, in the

Re: Blast from the past

2001-01-29 Thread John Stracke
Jeff Weisberg wrote: quoth [EMAIL PROTECTED]: | I'm curious when HOSTS.TXT finally died completely. My memory isn't what it used to be, but at rochester.edu, I'm thinking it had to be in use until at least 89 or 90. It was in use on the math department Sun workstations when I was at

Re: What happen to ip6.int ?

2001-01-29 Thread Rahmat M. Samik-Ibrahim
B. Elzem zgrce wrote: can anyone tell me what is ipv6.int? please :-)) (shortly also i ll search) You can start by reading http://www.iab.org/iab/DOCUMENTS/statement-on-infrastructure-domains.txt Anyway, I could not recall the genesis of ipv6.int. Perhaps: in the beginning, everything was

Re: What happen to ip6.int ?

2001-01-29 Thread Bill Manning
% % B. Elzem zgrce wrote: % % can anyone tell me what is ipv6.int? please :-)) (shortly also i ll search) % % You can start by reading % http://www.iab.org/iab/DOCUMENTS/statement-on-infrastructure-domains.txt % % Anyway, I could not recall the genesis of ipv6.int. Perhaps: % in the

Re: What happen to ip6.int ?

2001-01-29 Thread Rahmat M. Samik-Ibrahim
Bill Manning wrote: ip6.int was pre ITU. http://www.itu.int/aboutitu/history/history.html On 17 May 1865 after two and a half months of arduous negotiations, the first International Telegraph Convention was signed by the 20 participating countries and the International Telegraph Union