Sorry to bother the list with this, but if someone could give me a pointer, I'd dearly appriciate it. Here is the question. If I have two NIC's, eth0 and eth1, each works, and can ping the network segments they are attached to, how do I go about getting machines behind eth0 to be able to ping (or talk to, not really just ping) machines behind eth1. I'm almost certain that this is setup in the route.conf file, but I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. Any suggestions? Thanks, L
On Wednesday 27 March 2002 21:34, you wrote:
Sorry to bother the list with this, but if someone could give me a pointer, I'd dearly appriciate it. Here is the question. If I have two NIC's, eth0 and eth1, each works, and can ping the network segments they are attached to, how do I go about getting machines behind eth0 to be able to ping (or talk to, not really just ping) machines behind eth1. I'm almost certain that this is setup in the route.conf file, but I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. Any suggestions?
Thanks, L Have you set ip_forward=yes in /etc/rc.config?
steven@springl.fsnet.co.uk wrote:
On Wednesday 27 March 2002 21:34, you wrote:
Sorry to bother the list with this, but if someone could give me a pointer, I'd dearly appriciate it. Here is the question. If I have two NIC's, eth0 and eth1, each works, and can ping the network segments they are attached to, how do I go about getting machines behind eth0 to be able to ping (or talk to, not really just ping) machines behind eth1. I'm almost certain that this is setup in the route.conf file, but I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. Any suggestions?
Thanks, L
Have you set ip_forward=yes in /etc/rc.config?
If it's still not working, try using yast2 to setup routing. If you can't figure it out, post your routing table (the output of /sbin/route -n). JHS
participants (3)
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Fent, Lee
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John Scott
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Steven Jan Springl