Well we did some further testing on my laptop last night at the TriLUG meeting, and the setup really is quite odd. It seems that his static IP gets assigned to the local interface, and a static route to a MAC address gets assigned to the ethernet card - although I don't quite know how DHCP is setting that up. Unfortunately, time and reception didn't allow us to slap tcpdump on the interface and log the DHCP traffic, but perhaps someone can reason out how DHCP would define that. I'm including a copy of the routing table that was on my Mac while it was connected via DHCP, for reference purposes.

Internet:
Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Netif Expire
default 172.29.251.133 UGSc 5 10 en0
65.76.244.243 127.0.0.1 UHS 0 1 lo0
127 127.0.0.1 UCS 0 0 lo0
127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 UH 90 12887 lo0
169.254 link#4 UCS 0 0 en0
172.29.251.133 0:7:35:b1:2:53 UHLW 6 0 en0 1182 =>
172.29.251.133/32 link#4 UCS 1 0 en0


Internet6:
Destination Gateway Flags Netif Expire
::1 ::1 UH lo0
fe80::/64 fe80::1 Uc lo0
fe80::1 link#1 UHL lo0
fe80::/64 link#4 UC en0
fe80::20a:95ff:fea5:29de 0:a:95:a5:29:de UHL lo0
fe80::/64 link#5 UC en1
ff01::/32 ::1 U lo0
ff02::/32 ::1 UC lo0
ff02::/32 link#4 UC en0
ff02::/32 link#5 UC en1



Aaron S. Joyner


On Jul 8, 2004, at 2:46 PM, Joseph Mack NA3T wrote:

On Thu, 8 Jul 2004, Aaron S. Joyner wrote:

Well, I don't have any red roses, or lapels for that matter, but I can
hop if you like.  :)

I'll hop too. That should do it.

In the interest of full disclosure, I haven't
setup my Nextel connection under Linux directly - what I have is a
802.11b access point in my car, which is directly connected to the modem
via Ethernet. The AP leases a private address via DHCP and shared that
via NAT over the 802.11b.

sounds like dhcp is all that's required :-(

I then use what ever I please (usually my Palm Tungsten C) for wireless
Internet access, any where near my car (which is usually near my
person).


We can certainly hook up your modem to my laptop and experiment with
routing - I'm running OS X on a PowerBook and we can take a close look
at the routing tables to figure out how things should be.

yes

If we really
want to test it out on Linux, there's never a shortage of Linux
notebooks at the TriLUG meeting - I'm sure we can coax someone into
trying out Nextel Broadband.  :)

of course. great idea

Thanks Joe

--
Joseph Mack NA3T EME(B,D), FM05lw North Carolina
jmack (at) wm7d (dot) net - azimuthal equidistant map
generator at http://www.wm7d.net/azproj.shtml
Homepage http://www.austintek.com/ It's GNU/Linux!
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