On Fri, Aug 09, 2002 at 10:15:59AM +0100, Sean Cardus wrote: > eth0 = IP: aaa.bbb.80.144 Network: aaa.bbb.80.128 Mask: 255.255.255.128 > eth1 = IP: xxx.yy.234.131 Network: xxx.yy.234.128 Mask: 255.255.255.192
If you want to be able to use both IPs from either network (a common occurance even if you didn't plan it), you should probably turn off RP_FILTER in the kernel. This is most easily accomplished by setting the spoofprotect=no option in the /etc/network/options file. A reboot or /etc/init.d/network stop/start will then set the option. I'd also suggest you use tcpdump -n -i ethX on each interface (watch eth0 on tty1, eth1 on tty2 so you can be sure), and make sure packets are actually reaching your interfaces. -- Ted Deppner http://www.psyber.com/~ted/