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Re: Network problem/question.



On Sun, 2002-05-19 at 22:42, tony mollica wrote:
> Thanks for the reply.  What I need to do is
> have the  windows clients on the LAN side 
> (192.168.100.0/24) be able to access a shared
> directory on a win2000server box on the WAN 
> side (10.x.x.0/24) and still preserve my Linux masq.
> I cannot change the IP's on the WAN side with
> the exception of the masqing machine as they 
> are remotely administrated.

Maybe I'm misunderstanding things, but it sounds like the 
win2000server is going to be exposed to the internet, and
thus on the same network as the router and the Masquerader's 
eth1.  So, it will need a routable IP address.  Thus... the 
masqueraded Winboxen won't have to do anything.

> Glen Lee Edwards wrote:
> > 
> > May 9, at 18:26, tony mollica sent through the Star Gate:
> > 
> > >Hello.  I have a mixed network of Linux (Debian) and windows
> > >machines in the arrangement below.
> > >     _______      ______      ______
> > >    |       |    |      |    |      |
> > >--->|router |----| Linux|----|switch|---(192.168.x.x network)
> > > T1 |_______|    |______|    |______|
> > >                     |
> > >               eth1    eth0
> > >     WAN        IP Masq Machine      LAN
> > >
> > >Real IP addresses on the router side with the
> > >192.168.x.x on the switch side.  I need to put
> > >a another box on the router side but still
> > >have the internal LAN clients access this
> > >computer from the inside.  The new computer
> > >is required to be windows, and there will be
> > >only windows clients accessing it.
> > 
> > How you configure it will depend on what you need to use it for, and if you have
> > a single dynamic IP address (which is assigned to the router) or a static subnet
> > from your ISP.
> > 
> > Most likely you have a dynamic address for your router.  In that case, the WAN
> > side of the router gets that address, the LAN side is most likely assigned
> > something in the 10.0.0.x range.  You can have the router do this, or you can
> > assign the IP addresses yourself - 10.0.0.1 to the LAN side of the router,
> > 10.0.0.2 to eth0 on the Linux box, and 10.0.0.3 to the new Windows box.  Then,
> > in Linuxconf, set up your routes to other hosts to show that to get to the new
> > Windows box routing has to go through the 10.0.0.x subnet.

-- 
+---------------------------------------------------------+
| Ron Johnson, Jr.        Home: ron.l.johnson@cox.net     |
| Jefferson, LA  USA      http://ronandheather.dhs.org:81 |
|                                                         |
| "I have created a government of whirled peas..."        |
|   Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, 12-May-2002,                   |
!   CNN, Larry King Live                                  |
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