Niklas Bergh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Hmmm.. That ought to do it.. If you spawn a standard apache on the linux > machine, can your 10.* machines access pages from it successfully?
Yes. > If not, then I think this is a TCP/IP routing issue... Do the test and > we'll talk more it this is the issue. > > If they can.. Then I suggest that you crank up the loglevel on your > freenet server and track what really happens when your 10.* machines > tries to request something from http://192.168.1.10:8888/ I tried this but couldn't make any sense out of the *enormous* logfile generated. With logLevel set to Error nothing came up. With it set to Debug, it's 100,000+ lines in a short time. Can you tell me what should I search for in the logfile? A couple other things I tried. Moving my laptop off the 10.* segment, plugging it into my hub, and assigning 192.168.1.12 to it made no difference. I take this to mean that my wireless bridge isn't the problem. If I telnet to 192.168.1.10:80 from my 10.0.0.2 laptop, I can type in a request and have it served by Apache. Same with telneting to 192.168.1.10:22 - the ssh server answers. But if I telnet to 192.168.1.10:8888 from 10.0.0.2 the connection times out - ie, nobody answers. (Of course if I telnet to 8888 from 192.168.1.10 (my Freenet server), Fred 0.5 answers as expected.) I don't know if this means anything. Thanks for your help. _______________________________________________ Support mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://news.gmane.org/gmane.network.freenet.support Unsubscribe at http://dodo.freenetproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/support Or mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
