s/firewall/bridge/ - that's what I had, but with real ips.
I'm currently working to convert to a firewall with nat.
The firewall box runs OpenBSD, but I'm not very experienced with that. I am
going to spend lots of time RTFM. Tips/samples, anyone?
Lisa
> -----Original Message-----
> From: plug-discuss-admin@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us
> [mailto:plug-discuss-admin@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us]On Behalf Of George
> Toft
> Sent: Saturday, February 09, 2002 12:10 PM
> To: plug-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us
> Subject: Re: cox.net FYI
>
>
> Hi Lisa,
>
> I highly recommend this configuration (bear with the ASCII art):
>
> Cox ---- modem --- firewall --- hub/switch ---- computer
> +--- computer
> +--- computer
> +--- computer
> +--- computer
>
>
> The main benefit here is that your ISP only sees one MAC and
> you can have as many computers on the backside as you have
> money/electricity to support (my record was 10 computers on
> a cable modem service that only allowed one computer per IP
> address).
>
> Another benefit is when the CSR tells you to reboot Windows,
> you log into the firewall (of course it's a Linux box, right?),
> type (as root):
> ifdown eth0; sleep 10; ifup eth0; ifconfig -a
> (assuming eth0 is the public side) then go to your workstation,
> play the Windows boot up music so they think you've rebooted,
> and then you can get down to troubleshooting the real issue.
>
> The firewall uses DHCP on the public side, private IPs on
> the backside, and is a Linux box with NAT enabled. I have
> two examples of this setup on my web site (one for cable and
> one for DSL).
>
> Regards,
>
> George
>
>
> Lisa Winkler wrote:
> >
> > I have been using 2 @home ips. They stopped working yesterday. I
> couldn't reach a DHCP server, so I couldn't get a cox ip.
> >
> > I finally got through to tech support (the wait is 1.5 hours) and
> the guy told me to plug the modem directly into the computer instead
> of going through the hub. I know this is on their standard list of
> things to tell the user to do and explained to the guy that it
> wouldn't solve anything if the DHCP server was unreachable. Finally
> I agreed to do it anyway. I was connected instantly!
> >
> > The t.s. guy explained that the software on their DHCP server (it's
> probably running windows!) is having problems when the modem reports
> that there are 2 different MAC addresses behind it. Apparently when
> this happens it just refuses to respond to my request. He says they
> are working on it, doesn't know when it will be fixed, but until it
> is you won't be able to have 2 computers with real-world IPs
> connected because if they are both up at the same time the DHCP
> server will refuse to assign them ips. I guess this is my official
> kick in the ass to try to get NAT working (instead of a bridge as I
> am currently using).
> >
> > Anyway, just a public service in case anyone else is dead in the
> water but still reading mail!
> >
> > Lisa
> >
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