Hi all
I am trying to config leftupdown script to add new route to routing
table T1 when my road-warrior client connect to my bering box and delete it
when disconnected. How could I config in leftupdown script I found the
sample script from http://www.wavesec.org/secwlan_updown but I don't
Hello,
I am a newbie LEAF user, and I am afraid that this message might be
somewhat off topic, but...
I have installed the Bering LEAF, and it seems to be working well
except that my PPP connection is slow and unreliable. I suspect that
this is nothing to do with LEAF, but I do need to diagnose
Hi all
Now I could enable road-warrior with rsa and using leftupdown script to
add specific route for new connection. I found that when 2nd client connect
to my firewall with rsa. first client will disconnected. Anyone know why
please tell me???
Thanx.
Hello
Somebody knows if there is a Weblet cgi, that would be a simple billing
system, enabling/disabling PCs and measuring the PC connection time, and
check all this with a browser?
Thanks
Herbert
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Hi All,
I am configuring two Bering firewalls with an ipsec gateway, linking the two
private subnets on each firewall.
I have setup the ipsec configuration, but I am struggling with Shorewall. I
realise I need to allow UDP port 500 and protocols 50,51. But I am not sure
how to apply this in the
Again, I could well be wrong here, but:
I believe the delay occurs when the ssh daemon cannot resolve the
client IP address.
Updating the /etc/hosts file is the simplest way of ensuring
that the client IP address is resolvable, but you could also
use a DNS server. Just make sure that
At 12:03 PM 4/2/2003 +0100, Dave Whiteley wrote:
Hello,
I am a newbie LEAF user, and I am afraid that this message might be
somewhat off topic, but...
I have installed the Bering LEAF, and it seems to be working well
except that my PPP connection is slow and unreliable. I suspect that
this is
You have to replaced the pppd package with one listed here:
http://leaf.sourceforge.net/devel/jnilo/bering/latest/packages/pppd/
Look at the README for a better explanation.
-Ping
-Original Message-
On Tuesday 01 April 2003 02:36 pm, Jorn Eriksen wrote:
Hi there,
I'm trying to get
What happens if you run ttcp between the routers?
Samuel Abreu de Paula wrote:
I have 2 wisp station with Orinoco Gold Cards connected to one Orinoco AP1000, with
the distance about 1Km and 500m from the AP! The communication with the LAN Network
connected to AP1000 is 100%...
But when i try to
ttcp-t: buflen=8192, nbuf=512, align=16384/0, port=5001 tcp - 200.253.187.169
ttcp-t: socket
ttcp-t: connect
ttcp-t: 4194304 bytes in 117.03 real seconds = 35.00 KB/sec +++
ttcp-t: 512 I/O calls, msec/call = 234.07, calls/sec = 4.37
ttcp-t: 0.0user 0.3sys 1:57real 0% 0i+0d 0maxrss 0+2pf 0+0csw
At 11:23 AM 4/2/2003 -0500, Simon Bolduc wrote:
Hey all,
I'm running a few Dachstein boxes (with Seawall), and I'm having some
issues with one of them. My roommate runs a P2P application that opens a
huge number of connections. The application can be setup to only allow a
certain number of
Thanks for the suggestions Ray,
I know iptables has an option to limit the amount of connections to a
certain port per [second/hour/day]. But I'm really looking for something
that would control the amount of connections going to his computer/that port
on his computer...perhaps I'll try bering
At 02:29 PM 4/2/2003 -0500, Simon Bolduc wrote:
Thanks for the suggestions Ray,
I know iptables has an option to limit the amount of connections to a
certain port per [second/hour/day]. But I'm really looking for something
that would control the amount of connections going to his computer/that
Simon Bolduc wrote:
For now I'll mess around with the MASQ timeout setting and see where that
gets me.
Good idea. If you're running out of masq ports, this should help the
problem, although if your buddie's peer-peer app is *really* seeing a
lot of unique connections, even this might not
Hi Tom,
I had read this doc prior to posting. It reads
a) Open the firewall so that the IPSEC tunnel can be established (allow the
ESP and AH protocols and UDP Port 500).
The doc then moves onto b), without giving an example.
Regards,
Simon.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL
Simon
Tom has really written a very nice documentation, read more
Simon Chalk wrote the following at 23:54 02.04.2003:
Hi Tom,
I had read this doc prior to posting. It reads
a) Open the firewall so that the IPSEC tunnel can be established (allow the
ESP and AH protocols and UDP Port 500).
See below.
At 08:16 PM 4/2/2003 -0600, Matthew Schneider wrote:
Hi,
Here is my situation:
I have a Linksys BEFCMU10 Cable modem and a firewall running Dachstein CD
protecting my internal network (192.168.1.0). The cable modem has a status
page that can be accessed through a web browser at
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