On Tue, 22 May 2001 01:26:56 EDT, Chris Wagner writes: >We should probably clarify "non-routable" by saying "non-publicly routable".
Well, we could also say RFC1918, couldnŽt we ;-? >Routers have no concept of restricted ip ranges other than what is programed >into them. As long as you are debugging from a place that "knows about" >your private ip's, there shouldn't be a problem. At GE we cross privates to >go from public to public all the time. Well, there are several issues, none of them really bad, but if you want a clean setup..: - DNS, youŽll have to set up split DNS for your RFC1918- and external IPs - in Real Life, you sometimes _will_ have to debug from the outside of your network - in Real Life, someone else _will_ debug from the outside (and quite probably complain about the RFC1918-IPs or simply be fed up) cheers, &rw -- / Ing. Robert Waldner | <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> \ \ Xsoft GmbH | T: +43 1 796 36 36 692 /