Hi all: I am working on the chamges to the write up for OSIE and will post it all shortly. Meanwhile.. We have gone live with the SWGFL 2MB connection which means that my problems of not getting my Linux machine to work have been compounded. Interestingly enough the proxy that they are using is running squid but I can't seem to get my machine working. I know it is probably not desirable, but is it possible to use the one eth card as the link between the SWGFL network (i.e. their proxy and DNS) and my internal network? I currently have Win 2000 running with WinProxy and it has 2 IP addresses and runs quite happily as the school's proxy between the two systems. I am not managing it with Linux perhaps due to my lack of network skills. I have set eth0 with 2 IP addresses but in the rc.conf file it shows them as IP0 and IP4. Will this work? If I masquerade, do I need 2 cards? Do I need to set my host machine on the SWGFL class A network and masquerade to my internal machine on the C network? Malcolm, if you are there you did say you would help me out after OSIE :) Does the offer still stand?? Paul
We have gone live with the SWGFL 2MB connection which means that my
of not getting my Linux machine to work have been compounded. Interestingly enough the proxy that they are using is running squid but I can't seem to get my machine working. I know it is probably not desirable, but is it
to use the one eth card as the link between the SWGFL network (i.e. their proxy and DNS) and my internal network? I currently have Win 2000 running with WinProxy and it has 2 IP addresses and runs quite happily as the school's proxy between the two systems. I am not managing it with Linux perhaps due to my lack of network skills. I have set eth0 with 2 IP addresses but in the rc.conf file it shows them as IP0 and IP4. Will this work? If I masquerade, do I need 2 cards? Do I need to set my host machine on
----- Original Message ----- problems possible the
SWGFL class A network and masquerade to my internal machine on the C network?
Two cards are preferrable for security. range of references. Sorry about one of these being on SuSE. See http://www.redhat.com/support/docs/tips/firewall/firewallservice.html for a basic introduction. Then go on to http://www.ecst.csuchico.edu/~dranch/LINUX/index-linux.html which red hat refer to. http://www.ecst.csuchico.edu/~dranch/LINUX/TrinityOS/cHTML/TrinityOS-c-10.ht ml has even more detail and includes ideas for a single card masquerade setup.Since David Ranch is the author of the masquerading how-to, this seems a reasonable place to start. This e-mail is intended for the addressee shown. It contains information that is confidential and protected from disclosure. Any review, dissemination or use of this transmission or its contents by persons or unauthorized employees of the intended organisations is strictly prohibited. The contents of this email do not necessarily represent the views or policies of East Norfolk Sixth Form College, it's employees or students.
participants (2)
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John McCabe
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ptaylor