roland <roland <at> cat.be> writes: > > On Wed, 08 Sep 2010 09:52:27 +0200, JB <jb.1234abcd <at> gmail.com> wrote: > > > roland <roland <at> cat.be> writes: > > > >> ... > >> Is there a way to tell the server at site A to pass all traffic > >> 192.168.0.0/24 to site B? > >> ... > > > > Hi, > > iptables, FORWARD, forwarding ? > > JB > > > Can you give me an example. I'm not familiar with iptables. Would not like > to do the wrong thing. > > Thanks Hi, it would be inappropriate for me to give you specific rules on how to activate iptable forwarding on your live system (it is not a place to experiment if you are not familiar with iptables). I can tell you that once you become familiar with iptables, it will be easy. Please get familiar with it, it is an important application in area of firewall and routing. This is netfilter/iptables main site: http://www.netfilter.org/ Find Documentation section: FAQ, HOWTOs, Tutorials Search Google for: iptables forwarding iptables forward example This is more technical summary: $ man iptables $ man ip6tables Do it, it will pay off for the long run for you. Experiment on your non-production desktop/laptop with Fedora, CentOS, RedHat. The package that is installed (per dafault) is: $ yum list iptables It can be operated via: - command line - GUI (example of GNOME menu) System-Administration-Firewall JB -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines