On 6/12/05, THUFIR HAWAT <hawat.thufir@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 6/12/05, Michael A. Peters <mpeters@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Sun, 2005-06-12 at 19:19 +0100, THUFIR HAWAT wrote: > > > > > > > > in terms of hardware, do I need a crossover cable? > > > > I don't know - I would suspect yes, but I don't know. > > If you do, then a hub would also work (as well as allowing other boxes > > to use your linux box as a gateway) > > > > Some linksys equipment is autosensing now and doesn't matter what cable > > you use. > > I have the internet connection (802.11b network adapter) plugged into > eth0. a hub is plugged into eth1. the PAP2 is plugged into the hub, > and a telephone into the hub. > > on boot I got a message about lost packets, but it went by too fast. > I've installed firestarter. I need to set up dhcp, perhaps. how do I > ping, or ipconfig the hub? > > > thanks, > > Thufir Hi Thufir, Here is another idea. I don't know if this will work, it seems like it might, but since you already have a hub, it's at least worth a shot. Plug your 802.11b AP into the hub, then the computer (one ethernet port) and the VOIP device both into the hub. This might not work because of the differences between hubs and routers, but it just might. And you won't have to setup your computer to run NAT (though, since you have two NICs, it might be something you want to do later). Oh, and as far as your last question, a hub is meant to be transparant (which is one difference from a router) so you shouldn't see it. It should be just like talking directly to the VOIP device. You just don't need a crossover cable if using a hub. You might not need a crossover cable anyway if the device can sense whether it needs to do crossover or not (as mentioned by someone else above). Jonathan