On Tue, 2013-08-06 at 16:21 -0700, Marc Chamberlin wrote:
Thanks James I will set your suggestion aside for the moment however as I am pursuing a test path at the moment. I have set up a test network identical to the way I showed it in my first email, and have switched the non-routable 169.254.x.x addresses in the network to a routable 10.10.10.x network. While the Canopies will not hold these 10.10.10.x address should there be a power cycle, I am just wanting to see if I now can get my Machine B to see/ping my Machine A. I modified my route table according... And no joy! Still cannot ping Machine A from Machine B.
Any ideas? From your suggestion, are you implying that I need to turn off the NAT functionality of my router for the 192.168.20.x network?
Marc, If you still can't make it work, please show us 1) routing table content on both Router A and B, and on the gateway SuSE box("ip route" or "route"). Then 2) traceroute result from/to Machine A to from Machine B, which Koenraad suggested. You need to turn off NAT on the GW machine if other part of your network want to send packets to 192.168.10.0/24 network. NAT will hide the subnet behind (192.168.10.0/24 your case) and only outside address of the GW box(10.10.10.?/32) is reachable and you need to set up port forwardings from the 10.10.10.? to each machine behind the GW. Toshi -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org