Trent Shipley wrote:
On 2007-01-17 23:42, Daniel P. Stasinski wrote:
  
On 1/17/07, Trent Shipley <trent_shipley@???> wrote:
    
What is involved in setting up a proxy server and using it from both Linux 
      
and
  
Windows? (I have a dual boot machine.)  Where would I look for 
      
documentation?
  
(A "how to" perhaps.)
      
A cheap router/switch from Fry's or even Walmart will serve you better
and have less risks than a proxy server.

Daniel
    

So ISP will use DHCP to assign different IPv4 addresses to each computer that 
connects via the switch?

I have a LAN set up.  How will the LAN work if each ethernet card is bound to 
a DHCP assigned address and host name?

  
    If you get a router then it will request a public IP address from your ISP through DHCP if you're not on static addressing. The router then acts as a DHCP for your internal network and will give out addresses in the 192.168 range. The router then will "masquerade" (also known as NAT, Network Address Translation) your internal network requests. That just means it keeps track of what each computer on your network is requesting so when those packets come back they are sent to the correct computer. The router also acts like a firewall for external requests. If an inbound packet was not requested by a computer on your network and there is no specific port-forwarding rule for that packet then the router will drop it.


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Jon M. Hanson (N7ZVJ)
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