On Sat, 2005-11-05 at 11:34 -0500, Robert Fitzpatrick wrote:
I have a problem seeing certain IP's in my own subnet assigned by the ISP, looking for help on how I can get it to work.
I have my SuSE Linux workstation with 192.168.1.25 behind a NAT router which is the default gateway for the workstation at 192.168.1.1. Now, I have a second IP in my wks within the subnet assigned by the ISP let's say 1.2.3.43/29, this is to allow hosting of some services, no firewall in place, yet. I have another Linux server at 1.2.3.44/29. I cannot see the other Linux server from my workstation. Perhaps routing can accomplish this for me, but I'm totally stupid on how to set that up, can someone suggest?
What brand of net router do you have? Most allow port forwarding to internal machines for supported services, i.e. mail HTTP etc. Why not have the nat router get the address from the ISP, use your internal network of 192.168.1.x and port forward. Why do you feel that you need internet routable addresses to provide services? The limitation is probably with your nat router not being able to handle more than one subnet. -- Ken Schneider UNIX since 1989, linux since 1994, SuSE since 1998