It was really a stupid problem. Thanks a lot :) Vincent. > On 9/18/05, Vincent Blondel <vincent@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Hi Fedora Users, >> >> I am trying to configure my Fedora system as a router but this is not >> working. >> >> In my opinion, configuring Linux as a router is nothing more than >> >> "echo 1 >/proc/sys/net/ipv4.ip_forward". >> >> This is my current situation. >> >> Distro : Fedora FC3 ( last update today ) >> >> machine A --> fedora router --> machine B. >> >> machine A : 192.168.3.1 <http://192.168.3.1> netmask 255.255.255.0<http://255.255.255.0> >> defaultroute 192.168.3.2 <http://192.168.3.2> >> Fedora router : eth1 192.168.3.2 <http://192.168.3.2> netmask >> 255.255.255.0 <http://255.255.255.0> >> eth2 192.168.2.1 <http://192.168.2.1> netmask 255.255.255.0<http://255.255.255.0> >> >> echo 1 >/proc/sys/net/ipv4.ip_forward" >> iptables : no rules defined ( everything ACCEPT ) >> >> machine B : 192.168.2.2 <http://192.168.2.2> netmask 255.255.255.0<http://255.255.255.0> >> >> When I try to ping, from machine A 192.168.3.2 <http://192.168.3.2> and >> 192.168.2.1 <http://192.168.2.1>, no problem but when I try to ping >> 192.168.2.2 <http://192.168.2.2> or when I try connect on >> the webserver running on 192.168.2.2 <http://192.168.2.2>, I don't get any >> answer. >> >> I know this question is very stupid but it seems I miss something. So can >> somebody help me to solve this problem ??? >> > > Did you set 192.168.2.1 <http://192.168.2.1> as the default gateway on > 192.168.2.2 <http://192.168.2.2>? > > Best regards, > Bernd. > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list