peasthope@shaw.ca wrote: > http://142.103.107.138/ So now I am really confused. carnot is already on the public internet with 142.103.107.138? I thought that you had it on a private network and were trying to tunnel it onto the public internet. I am really confused now. Sorry. > My network is documented in > http://carnot.yi.org/NetworksPage.html > with a link under "Miscellaneous Links" in the home page. Since those are old diagrams they don't show where carnot fits into things. On which wire will carnot be placed? That part I am not clear about. Thanks. > The configuration in the diagram is current. > dalton = 142.103.107.137 > carnot = 142.103.107.138 And of course carnot isn't on the diagram so I feel I am just missing the mark here. > If carnot had extra space on a bus, I'd think of adding a second Ethernet > card with address 142.103.107.138. What is carnot's first card's address and which wire is it hooked to? > The existing Ethernet on carnot would be 172.24.2.2 connected to > dalton's 172.24.2.1. If carnot is already on 142.103.107.138 then why does it need a private address and what looks like an openvpn point to point link between it and dalton? > The second Ethernet on carnot would have no cable attached of > course. No wire? Then why have it? I am much confused! > Can two addresses be assigned to one interface? Yes. Easily. Simply add the other address. I prefer to use the 'ip' tool for these kinds of things. Make sure you have the 'iproute' package installed. Then you can say # ip addr add 192.168.1.100/24 brd 192.168.1.255 dev eth0 label eth0:0 # ip addr del 192.168.1.115/24 dev eth0 label eth0:0 and you can put those in up and down directives in your /etc/network/interfaces file. allow-hotplug eth0 iface eth0 inet static address 172.16.1.200 netmask 255.255.255.0 network 172.16.1.0 broadcast 172.16.1.255 gateway 172.16.1.1 up ip addr add 192.168.1.100/24 brd 192.168.1.255 dev eth0 label eth0:0 down ip addr del 192.168.1.100/24 dev eth0 label eth0:0 That adds an address with a label when the interface comes up and removes it when the interface is brought down. It enables two different subnets to co-exist on the same wire. This machine knows about both subnets and can talk to either. A machine with an IP on only one of those subnets would only know about that one and not the other. It isn't a security arrangement since if an interface were in promiscuous mode it would observe all packets on both networks. It is useful in some situations such as IP renaming transitions and other cases. Bob
Attachment:
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature