bruce wrote:
Hi John!!
I've forgotten something, as I thought this was working at one time, so it's
back to the basics....
You haven't said whether you're using network mangler. It will not work
with network mangler.
to begin, i have two boxes:
box1 -->>> box2
box1
eth0 - 192.168.1.2
box2
ath0 - 192.168.1.5
eth0 - 192.168.2.5
from box1, i can ping box2/ath0 as they're on the same subnet. i can't ping
box2/eth0.
from box2, i can ping box1. on box2, i can ping both nics.
how the heck do i setup box2 so box1 can ping box2/eth0??
is there a route cmd i can try on box2 that does a forward of traffic? is
man route
this even possible? i'm pretty sure it should be possible. while i'm
focusing on just a single box to connect to box2/eth0, i want to have all
the boxes in my system eventually connect to box2/eth0, just like they do
with box2/ath0... i shouldn't have to have a route cmd on each box,
particulary as some boxes are windows, and don't have route!!
so.. what's the simple solution for this issue?
i can post my iptables/route output on box2...
thanks
-----Original Message-----
From: fedora-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:fedora-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of John Summerfield
Sent: Saturday, November 24, 2007 6:46 PM
To: For users of Fedora
Subject: Re: ip masquerading
bruce wrote:
hi...
i have a situation where i have a system with two connections, one
wireless,
one eth connetion. i can currently connect with the wireless ath0 to my
network/internet/etc...
however, when i activate the eth0 at the same time, i can't access the
network via ath0. as far as i can tell, i need to implement ip masquerade
to
have eth0 map, to ath0...
my test ip addresses are:
ath0 - 192.168.1.33
eth0 - 192.168.2.33
any thoughts/comments/pointers...
You don't need IP masquerading, unless this system's going to be a
gateway to the Internet for other computers.
You don't need IP masquerading if some other device is already doing it.
The other device does need enough routes to access everything connecting
through it, but in the usual case (you only have one subnet) that's how
it's working. In your case, I assume you're using a "hardware" router
and it's IP address is 192.168.1.1 or 192.168.1.254 (these are defaults
for some brands). If it can be configured to route traffic to
192.168.2.33 via 192.168.1.33, then you don't need IP masquerading, you
just need to configure the route.
You do need both interfaces active at the same time, and network manager
cannot do that at present, I've just engaged in a lengthy discussion
about that either on this list, or on -test.
I don't know whether network manager can be configured to do one network
and not the other.
In addition to configuring both network interfaces to be active at the
same time, you also need to enable forwarding in /etc/sysctl.conf
Here's script I run for myself, for a similar task. It doesn't show
everything, and it won't suit you without some work.
[root@localhost ~]# cat bin/startrelay
#!/bin/bash
ifdown eth0
ifconfig eth0 172.17.0.1
route add -net 192.168.9.0 gw 172.17.0.19 netmask 255.255.255.0 eth0
service dhcpd restart
[root@localhost ~]#
ath0 in this system provides access to the Internet via a Linux system
function as an Internet gateway. It's configured via system-network-config.
"ifdown eth0" takes down the configuration established by
system-config-network for eth0, I don't want this configuration to be
standard.
--
Cheers
John
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