curtis, what was the previous setting?

sai


On 4/8/08, Curtis Maurand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> The problem turned out to be packet state maintenance.  I set it to "Keep
> State" for all of my rules having to do with NAT and tunnels and it solved
> all of the problems.  It was one of those "duh." moments. :-)
>
> Its kind of interesting that Windows 2000, 2000 Server, XP and 2003 Server
> didn't seem to care about the setting.
>
> Thank you to all who had suggestions on these two problems.
>
> Sincerely,
> Curtis Maurand
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "RB" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: [email protected]
> Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 2:15:34 PM (GMT-0500) America/New_York
> Subject: Re: [pfSense Support] Strange problem
>
> On 3/18/08, Curtis Maurand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Like I said, it works fine on the same hardware if I run Windows, but
> not if
> > I run Linux.  I've used IE and firefox on Windows, IE, firefox, epiphany
> and
> > konqueror on Linux.  I wish I had a MAC to test with.  :-(
>
> I have one, and it works fine on my various networks.
>
> OS and hardware likely aren't the issue here.  Have you done something
> like 'export http_proxy="http://foobar:8080";' in your profile on the
> Linux box, or set up a port redirect with iptables, or any one of the
> other thousands of ways to muck with your http traffic on   a Linux
> client?  Have you tried using wget, curl, or lynx?
>
> Try the tcpdump from your pfSense system; it'll be the most immediate
> and apparent.  If you see appropriate traffic (which at the moment I
> honestly doubt you will), then there's something really strange with
> your pfSense setup.  Otherwise, you know it's something on the client.
>
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